FS1's morning dumpster fire Undisputed has been a clearing house for far-left sports punditry, so it was only cemented Friday morning when co-hosts Shannon Sharpe and Skip Bayless shamefully ripped Green Bay Packers fans as white people more interested in “heartland patriotism” than protesting during the National Anthem.

A portion of the show’s opening hour was spent expressing their disappointment with Packers fans, starting with Sharpe stating that he was “absolutely not” surprised that fans didn’t do what had been demanded of them.

“What it comes down to, what the Packers fans and a lot of people across America, they don't give a damn about this issue. Let's make that abundantly clear and I think it laid itself out. When Aaron Rodgers, in his tone, he let you know that he was disappointed because this was an opportunity,” Sharpe declared.

Sharpe also took a few minutes to have the gall to mock the fans who chanted U-S-A:

So, what they told — they was chanting U-S-A. For a second there, I wasn't sure if Green Bay, Wisconsin was in the U-S-A and, then again, I was like who was they playing Mexico? Costa Rica? Maybe the Russian national team. Chicago, Green Bay, two cities that are in America. Hey, I digress on that.

Somehow, Sharpe also roped Americans of all incomes with millionaire team owners as collectively not concerned about the plight of minorities and others who don’t feel they have full equality in the United States.

“I'm not shocked in the slightest that this is what is taking place because, although they tried to change the narrative, be it the Anthem, the flag, the military, it comes down to as simple as this. I can't make it any more abundantly clear than what I'm about to say. A lot of Americans do not give a damn about this issue and they say look, I come to cheer you, you are there to entertain me. If your politics align with mine, I will listen to you. If they don't, shut your mouth and just play the game and leave me be,” Sharpe declared.

While Bayless broke with Sharpe over his attacks on the American flag, Bayless was in lockstep.

He fretted that he “was shocked by what I did not see in the stands in Green Bay, Wisconsin at Lambeau Field last night” by having “fully expected to see about 82,000 people lock arms because the leader of Packer nation, the great Aaron Rodgers, the mayor of Green Bay, the Governor of Wisconsin, the maestro of all things Packers, the Pied Piper had — it was beyond a request.”

“He had all but ordered everybody in the stadium let's just do this, let's lock arms,” he added.

Just as Sharpe mocked Packers fans chanting U-S-A, Bayless bemoaned how “vast portions of the stadium in which people were just standing alone with hand over heart, no locked arms” and, my goodness, “going so far as to go beyond hand over heart.”

“They were saluting the flag, almost like they were rebelling against the request to lock arms. Saluting the flag. What...I just didn't see this one coming. So, it enlightened me. I'm not saying in a positive way. It just enlightened me to the bottom line...Donald Trump...did win the state of Wisconsin and it felt like he won again last night. That's how it came across or maybe I go bigger picture. Maybe heartland patriotism won last night. That's what was on display,” Bayless callously argued.

The former First Take star took a shot at Rodgers for reportedly giving tickets to police officers and also admitted that he realized Thursday night “that too many white Americans immediately close their eyes and their ears and their hearts and their minds to the message.”

He concluded by continuing to blindly maligning Packers fans without knowing a single thing about each of the 82,000 people at Lambeau Field:

They just didn't want, boom, it's over. Again, it's just Green Bay, Wisconsin or that area, Packer nation, 82,000 strong in that stadium, but it looked like a whole bunch of people had shut off that message. It was long ago lost because they're not with their black Green Bay Packers. They're not going to show support not at the expense of that flag and that anthem. Nope. Sorry. So it made me wonder was the mark missed? Was it the wrong way to protest? Did it? Because I keep telling you, I think Colin Kaepernick had national impact but I don't have any scientific data. I'm just going off my gut feeling and my own instinct.

Here’s the relevant transcript from FS1's Skip and Shannon: Undisputed replay on September 29: