Sarah Palin is ripping top executives at ESPN as "a journalist embarrassment" after company officials moved to suspend baseball analyst and former World Series hero Curt Schilling over recent tweets he posted (since deleted) comparing Muslims to Adolph Hitler.

"Your intolerant PC police are running amok and making a joke of you," Palin continued in a Facebook rant, which made it appear that she was totally oblivious of the fact even Schilling has now apologized for his own actions.

"I understand and accept my suspension," Schilling later tweeted of his original post, where the Washington Post reported he waxed, "It's said only 5-10% of Muslims are extremists. In 1940, only 7% of Germans were Nazis. How'd that go?"

In his latest post, he added, "Bad choices have bad consequences and this was a bad decision in every way on my part."

Try telling that to Palin.

"There's been crude, rude bile spewing from the once-great sports network for years now," she wrote. "Trust me. I know. My name and reputation's been in it."

As Exhibit A, she referred to an incident in 2011 in which Mike Tyson, in an interview with an ESPN affiliate in Las Vegas, made graphic comments about interracial sex, Palin and a rumored relationship she once had with retired NBA star Glen Rice.

"One ESPN affiliate's on-air rant featuring their misogynist, animalistic 'analysts' grunting and giggling through an entire x-rated celebration of violence against women didn't even draw a chirp from ESPN's wussified leaders," she posted.

As for the Schilling episode in particular, she added, "Was he wrong? No! In fact his stats were too generous in estimating Muslims' attitudes."

By Palin's calculus, nearly 90 percent of all Egyptian Muslims favor death to anyone seeking to leave the religion. She added other Muslims in other places share that type of sentiment, including in America, making them what she would classify as "extreme."

Palin admonished the network for siding with the enemy by disassociating itself from Schilling, albeit temporarily,

"By denying the accuracy of Schilling's tweet, ESPN shows its weakness as it buys into the propaganda of ISIS and other terror organizations, helping mislead the public about the very real threat of terrorism," she wrote.