Now, his wife is upset, accusing him of "overreacting and making a big deal out of nothing." He wants to know who is in the wrong, and Reddit users were happy to share their thoughts.
This story originally appeared inFor Greenville, South Carolina, Fluor Field is a field of dreams come true.
The stadium is home to the Greenville Drive, the High-Ateam for the Boston Red Sox, complete with a replica of Fenway Park's Green Monster — the popular nickname for its massive, left field wall.But its big pitch is community.
"We were really embraced by the community, and then we began to learn all that acan do for a community," said Craig Brown, a former high-powered Manhattan advertising executive who built the stadium for $20 million in 2006.
Brown still owns the stadium and the team.
"Fluor Field has become the front porch of the community. In the South, the front porch is where the family gathers. That's very much how we operate the place," Brown told CBS News."Authoritarian governments often choose to silence and forget history, while democratic societies choose to preserve the truth and refuse to forget those who gave their lives - and their dreams - to the idea of human rights," he added.
"Not only do we refuse to forget history, we will implement our core values every day."U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Tuesday praised the courage of the Chinese people who were killed in the bloody crackdown.
"Today we commemorate the bravery of the Chinese people who were killed as they tried to exercise their fundamental freedoms, as well as those who continue to suffer persecution as they seek accountability and justice for the events of June 4, 1989," Rubio said in a statement."The CCP actively tries to censor the facts, but the world will never forget," he said, referring to the Chinese Communist Party.