“Just constant harassment,” said Mets fan Jeremiah Charles, describing the way his group was treated by Nats Park staffers and security personnel. “When we would stand up, they would come down and say you have to sit down. We were like seriously? It’s a ballgame. You’re not allowed to stand up and cheer for your team?”

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A different view?

“They start cussing, they’re standing the whole time, they’re being rude, there’s kids around,” said Nats fan B.J. Treuting, who said he was pleased with the performance by Nats Park staffers. “If people are out of line, if they’re making your experience at the ballgame not a positive one, you’re going to get reported. It’s not a sports bar, it’s not 21 and older. It’s a public baseball game, and if you can’t act the way they ask you to, you’re going to be asked to leave.”

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A Nationals spokeswoman said in a statement that the team strives “to foster a family-friendly environment for our fans and visitors alike. We have a robust Guest Conduct Policy which is administered by our ushers and staff.”

The team’s policy says that staff members “will proactively support a family-friendly environment,” free from assorted behaviors such as “foul or abusive language or obscene gestures,” “interference with other guests’ ability to experience the event,” intoxication, “excessive taunting” and other actions deemed inappropriate.

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Fans “are encouraged to report any inappropriate behavior to the nearest guest experience representative, security guard or Guest Services staff member,” the policy says. Fans can also anonymously report unruly behavior by texting “NATS.”

A Nationals spokeswoman said the Mets fans in that section were warned for using profanity Wednesday night. That seems to be a matter of dispute. Another Mets fan in section 108, Evan Halperin, told me that the visiting fans chanted “Werth-less” at Werth when he first took the field, and were told it was against the rules to chant at players, even if they weren’t being profane. When the Mets fans stood to cheer during a late-inning rally, Halperin said, they were told that was against the rules, too.

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“There was little to no profanity from our group,” he wrote. “One person was removed for cursing but he wasn’t with our group.”

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“I found it distasteful to have Nats staff threaten to eject ticket-paying customers for the simple crime of rooting for the other team,” wrote Kraushaar, who — again — is a Nats fan.

Gnats officials harassing #Mets fans once again #NationalsParkistheWorst Posted by Jeremiah Charles on Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Another Mets fan who was sitting one section away said he didn’t hear profanity from the Mets fans, but that he did hear Nats fans cursing at the visiting fans. He also said he saw an usher tell the standing and cheering Mets fans to sit down.

“I asked them if there’s a rule against standing and cheering. He said yes there is,” said the fan, who asked that his name not be used.

Another Nats fan, Chris Weir, told me he was sitting behind the Mets bullpen during Tuesday night’s game, when a smaller group of Mets fans were loudly and repeatedly chanting similar taunts at Werth. Those fans also earned a visit from an usher and security officials, and wound up angrily departing.

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Weir said the Mets fans were being annoying and over the top, but “they weren’t vulgar or anything like that,” he said. “The ushers at Nationals Park are pretty strict, more than any other place. You go to an Orioles game, it sometimes can be out of control, especially up in the bleachers. If it was a Nationals fan yelling at [Yoenis] Cespedes, I wouldn’t have minded it.”

When Kraushaar tweeted about the fans being warned for their chants, he received dozens of incredulous responses about safe spaces and micro-aggressions. But Treuting, who has season tickets in Section 108, said Wednesday night’s incidents can’t be judged outside of the context of previous visits from the same group of Mets fans, who have made games unpleasant for ticket holders. He said a similar group came to a game in May, “and they were awful — they were cussing, they were arguing.

“I get the banter back and forth, but it got to the point that security had to come down,” Treuting said. And every half inning or inning there was something else they were doing: the Werth-less chants, the booing, the cussing, starting confrontations. You pay money to go watch the baseball game: not to be a jerk, to scream and yell over and over for nine innings straight.”

One Mets fan in the section, Treuting said, was thrown out of Wednesday night’s game and responded by spiking a beer in the walkway. At a previous game, he said, Mets fans in his section got sloppily drunk and began cursing next to a mother and two young children. Nats Park security, he said, “handled it extremely well.”

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But Charles, a Mets fan who now lives in Alexandria, said his group feels like they’re being treated unfairly by Nats Park staffers. He said he grew up regularly rooting for the Mets on the road at Phillies games, and that while he got grief from Philly fans, he didn’t run into trouble with game staffers.

“I’ve literally never seen anything like the environment from the [Nats] organization,” he said. “It’s just become a thing now: we show up en masse as a group, and it’s like, ‘Okay, we’re gonna make these guys an example and give them a hard time.’ ”