When outrage meets consequence â and Wisconsin reminds the nation where it stands.
Days after being permanently banned from Lambeau Field for her viral outburst during the NLCS, Shannon Kobylarczyk â infamously nicknamed âBrewers Karenâ â has fired back in spectacular fashion.
In a heated social-media tirade that quickly went viral, she lashed out not only at the Green Bay Packers, but at football itself â calling the sport âa hollow industry hiding behind fake patriotism.â She accused the league of âacting moral for the cameras,â and mocked Wisconsin fans as âblind loyalists who worship a logo more than real values.â
Her comments exploded across national headlines, reigniting debate over respect, fandom, and accountability in American sports.
đ The Ban That Sparked the Fire
The backlash stems from footage captured at the National League Championship Series earlier this month.
Kobylarczyk was seen shouting âCall ICE!â at a Latino U.S. veteran in the stands â a clip that instantly drew condemnation nationwide.
Within 48 hours, Packers President & CEO Ed Policy issued a rare, strongly worded national statement:
âHer words were Un-American, Disrespectful, and Entirely Against What Wisconsin Stands For. We donât tolerate hate â not in Green Bay, not in Titletown, not under the American flag.â

Policy confirmed that Kobylarczyk is now permanently banned from Lambeau Field and all Packers-related events â a decision that earned praise from leaders, players, and fans alike.
đ Her Counterattack â and the Internet Erupts
But instead of apologizing, Kobylarczyk escalated. In a late-night post viewed more than 15 million times, she claimed the Packersâ decision was âperformative moralityâ and accused the team of âusing patriotism as a prop.â
She wrote that âfootball isnât sacred â itâs a circus where billionaires pretend to care about America.â
Her remarks ignited a firestorm online, with Packers fans, veterans, and community groups flooding comment sections to defend the team.
âShe insulted every Wisconsinite who believes in decency,â one fan wrote.
âYou can dislike a sport, but you donât disrespect a state built on respect.â
Even neutral observers said the reaction was swift because Green Bayâs fanbase isnât just loyal â itâs generational. The Packers arenât a corporate brand; theyâre a community-owned symbol of Midwest values.
đ Ed Policy Stands Firm â âWeâre Not Backing Down.â
Asked by reporters whether the Packers would reconsider the ban, Policy was direct:
âOur stance remains exactly the same. Weâre not punishing disagreement â weâre rejecting disrespect.â
Sources inside Lambeau Field said Policy has received thousands of supportive letters and emails since issuing the ban, many from long-time shareholders of the Packersâ fan-ownership program.
Packers legend LeRoy Butler also weighed in:
âGreen Bayâs about love, not hate. The NFL needs more leaders like Ed Policy.â

đŤ Titletown Unites â and the Nation Takes Notice
While the controversy swirled online, something remarkable happened offline:
Fans gathered outside Lambeau Field, waving American flags and holding signs that read âRespect Lives Hereâ and âFaith ⢠Family ⢠Football.â
Local media described the scene as âa peaceful stand for decency.â
At Sunday service in De Pere, a local pastor referenced the story during his sermon:
âYou can disagree with a teamâs call, but never forget â Green Bay still believes in grace and dignity.â
đđ Beyond the Rant â A Reminder of Who We Are
Sports columnists across the country say the episode has become more than a social-media scandal â itâs a mirror for how fans and franchises define American values.
In an op-ed, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel columnist Dana Clark wrote:
âThis wasnât just a ban. It was Green Bay drawing a line between fandom and humanity â and reminding America that decency isnât political.â
For millions who love the Packers, that message matters more than any touchdown.
Because in Titletown, football isnât about outrage â itâs about community.
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đđđşđ¸Â BREAKING NEWS: Green Bay Packers President and CEO Ed Policy Has Released a Powerful National Statement After the âBrewers Karenâ Scandal â Condemning Her Words as âUn-American, Disrespectful, and Entirely Against What Wisconsin Stands For.â â smp
Packers Leadership Speaks Out
The state of Wisconsin woke up to a rare and powerful message from Green Bay Packers President and CEO Ed Policy, who addressed the viral âBrewers Karenâ controversy that has dominated national headlines.
In his statement, Policy called the remarks made by Shannon Kobylarczyk â the woman caught on video shouting âCall ICE!â at a Latino U.S. veteran during the National League Championship Series â âUn-American, Disrespectful, and Entirely Against What Wisconsin Stands For.â
Policy went further, confirming that Kobylarczyk is now permanently banned from Lambeau Field and all Packers-related events.
âWe donât tolerate hate â not in Green Bay, not in Titletown, not under the American flag,â Policy declared.
His words instantly went viral, earning praise across social media and being shared by thousands of Packers fans, veterans, and even rival NFL communities.
The Incident That Sparked a Firestorm
The controversy began during Game 2 of the NLCS between the Milwaukee Brewers and the Los Angeles Dodgers at American Family Field.
In a video that spread across every major platform, Shannon Kobylarczyk â quickly nicknamed âBrewers Karenâ by users online â was seen shouting âCall ICE!â at Ricardo Fosado, a Dodgers fan of Latino descent and a U.S. military veteran.
Fosado, visibly shocked, stood his ground, stating that he had served in two wars and was a proud American citizen.
The confrontation escalated when Kobylarczyk allegedly tried to grab his phone, prompting security intervention.
Both individuals were later escorted out of the stadium, but public outrage centered almost entirely on Kobylarczykâs behavior â seen as an example of casual racism and xenophobia that still haunts parts of American sports culture.
Within 24 hours, her employer, ManpowerGroup, confirmed she had been terminated, citing âa zero-tolerance policy toward discrimination or harassment.â
She also resigned from the Make-a-Wish Wisconsin Board of Directors.
Green Bay Draws a Line
While the Brewers organization quickly condemned the behavior, the Green Bay Packers became the first NFL team to publicly comment on the matter â and they did so with unmistakable force.
In a detailed statement released Wednesday morning, Ed Policy connected the incident to a larger responsibility shared by all sports organizations:
âThe values of sports â teamwork, respect, and unity â mean nothing if we stay silent in the face of hate,â Policy said.
âLambeau Field is sacred ground to millions of Americans. Itâs a place where people of every color, language, and background stand together. That will never change.â
Policyâs words were widely interpreted as a direct rebuke not just of Kobylarczykâs comments, but of the broader climate of division spreading across the nation.
Fans and Players React
The reaction from Packers Nation was immediate and emotional.
On X (formerly Twitter), the hashtag #TitletownUnited began trending within hours of Policyâs announcement.
Fans flooded the teamâs official posts with messages of support:
âThis is why we love Green Bay â itâs not just football, itâs family.â
âLambeau stands for something bigger than wins. Thank you, Ed Policy.â
Packers players also joined the chorus.
Linebacker Rashan Gary reposted the statement with a heart and flag emoji.
Quarterback Jordan Love added:
âRespect â thatâs the standard. Always.â
Even rival fans chimed in, with one Chicago Bears supporter writing:
âI hate the Packers every Sunday, but today⌠respect.â
A Statement Bigger Than Football
Analysts say Ed Policyâs firm, values-driven response reflects the Packersâ deep-rooted community identity â a team owned by the people, for the people.
In a time when sports can often feel divided by politics or race, Green Bayâs stand has become a model of what leadership can look like in 2025 America.
Political commentators praised the message as âsimple but patriotic,â with CNN describing it as âthe moral playbook other teams should follow.â
At the close of his statement, Policy summed up the teamâs position with words that will likely echo through Lambeau for years:
âThe Packers donât just play in America â we represent it.
And in our house, hate has no home.â đđđşđ¸

