NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell may be proud of the antics of his league from this last weekend, but he may also be the most out of touch sports leader in history.

While the owners and players have been busy verbally massaging each other with virtue lotion, the fans of pro football have been increasingly more vocal:

From Jersey burnings to players being uninvited, backlash to the #TakeAKnee protest grows https://t.co/J5BZqoGMzZ pic.twitter.com/2YMHVTzzsu — CNN International (@cnni) September 27, 2017

More from CNN:

If Monday was filled with images of players and vets taking the knee, Tuesday brought numerous examples of the backlash to what has gone from an expression of protest to a divisive issue. Fans burned jerseys; clubs disinvited athletes and some government agencies also made headlines for their reaction.

Here are a couple of examples from that post:

In Ohio, Geauga County Sheriff Scott Hildenbrand is prohibiting the county's deputies from working any off-duty details at NFL games, according to a Facebook post Hildenbrand said he attended the Cleveland Browns vs. Indianapolis Colts game on Sunday, where many players knelt while police officers and others in the stadium stood for "The Star-Spangled Banner." He mentioned that his uncle was a Vietnam veteran and that he felt "almost the entire league disrespected every veteran that ever fought or died for this country." "If they do not have respect for us and our Country only bad things will come of that. We will not be a part of these activities," he wrote on Facebook.

And: