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Sports Title: NFL Anthem Protests Continue As Owners Dither, Trump Agitates, Fans React NFL Anthem Protests Continue As Owners Dither, Trump Agitates, Fans React by Bruce Haring National anthem protests continued during Week 7 in the National Football League, although the headcount of those kneeling or otherwise acting out during the song has greatly diminished, mirroring media coverage of the actions. Both protesting players and those opposed to their tactics now seem locked-in on their respective stances on the righteousness of the protests. The same players who protested in previous weeks either stayed in the locker room, kneeled or sat, while many teams stood and locked arms in a compromise maneuver. On the other side, President Donald Trump keeps trying to stir the pot against their actions, this week by calling on Americans to sign a petition asking the NFL to make it mandatory to stand. The league has merely said players should stand, but has, so far, refused to order them to do so. Fans also register disapproval in various ways, some through stated boycotts, others by turning off their television or not attending games. One fan even hired a plane to fly over the Jacksonville Jaguars stadium during its game with a banner reading, Be American. Boycott the Jags and the NFL. Meanwhile, most team owners seemingly wring their hands and hope it all goes away, with a few outspoken exceptions. Commissioner Roger Goodell, owners, player representatives and others met in New York for two days this week, with declining TV ratings and other signs of diminishing fan interest the main topics. Little to nothing was publicly resolved at the meetings, as players right to free speech and the desire by owners to have the football business prosper seem on separate planets. There has been some vague talk of providing a platform for player social activism outside of the games, but those plans seem to have little appeal on either side. Former 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who started the anthem protests last year, added to the NFL woes this week. He filed a grievance with the NFL Players Association over his seeming banishment from the league. Kaepernick, a free agent, has not been signed by any team, even as some quarterbacks viewed as lesser-talents in some quarters have been enlisted by teams. He has hired high-profile attorney Mark Geragos to represent him. In this weeks Sunday games, all members of the Carolina Panthers, Chicago Bears, Green Bay Packers, Baltimore Ravens and Jacksonville Jaguars stood for the anthem. However, one of the biggest protests was again registered by the San Francisco 49ers. For the second week in a row, the 49ers had seven players kneel. Safety Eric Reid, linebacker Reuben Foster, linebacker Eli Harold, safety Adrian Colbert, cornerback KWann Williams and receiver Marquise Goodwin all took a knee during the anthem. The rest of the 49ers locked arms and stood. Dallas Cowboy David Irving held a fist over his heart during the national anthem and then briefly raised it after the songs conclusion. Tennessee Titans wide receiver Rishard Matthews remained in the locker room during the national anthem before the teams game with the Cleveland Browns, as he has for four consecutive weeks. His teammates stood, but linebacker Wesley Woodyard and defensive lineman Jurrell Casey raised a right fist after the anthem. All members of the Browns stood. At Miami, receiver Kenny Stills, tight end Julius Thomas and safety Michael Thomas continued their weeks-long protest, remaining in the tunnel during the national anthem. The Dolphins have instituted a team rule that all players must stand if they are on the sidelines, but gave them the option to remain in the tunnel. The three players were loudly booed by the crowd when they emerged. The three players previously have taken a knee, most prominently in the Dolphins game in London against the New Orleans Saints in week four. Their opponents today, the New York Jets, stood as a team with arms locked, joined by owner Christopher Johnson. Speaking of the Saints, most of that team knelt in unity before the national anthem in their game against Green Bay, then rose to stand during the actual song. Several players and coaches locked arms. The Indianapolis Colts continued wearing their black t-shirts during warm-ups. The shirts say We Will on the front and Stand for equality, justice, unity, respect, dialogue, opportunity on the back. However, all players on the Colts stood with arms locked during the anthem for the third week in a row. The sound of the national anthem prompted about 50 people to kneel outside of the Minnesota Vikings U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis in protest of police violence. They drew stares, boos and some limited support from passing fans, according to a news report. The protesters organized chants and held up cardboard signs that read Got privilege? and Stop pretending your racism is patriotism. Inside the stadium, the Vikings had several team members link arms during the anthem, but otherwise stood. In Buffalo, no members of the Buffalo Bills kneeled. However, four players stood behind their teammates line, including Mike Tolbert, Kaelin Clay, Shareece Wright and Jerel Worthy. In the late afternoon games, outspoken Seattle Seahawks defensive lineman Michael Bennett and several teammates sat on the bench before their game against the New York Giants at New Jerseys MetLife Stadium. Bennett was joined by injured player Cliff Avril, Sheldon Richardson, Frank Clark, Marcus Smith, Quinton Jefferson, Branden Jackson and Nazair Jones. Linebacker Michael Wilhoite took a knee, while center Justin Britt stood with his hand on Bennetts shoulder and guard Oday Aboushi did the same with Jones. New York Giants defensive end Olivier Vernon again knelt during the anthem. He was not in uniform and inactive. Vernon, one of the highest-paid Giants, has knelt for the previous three games, the only Giants players to have protested so extensively. In Los Angeles, left tackle Russell Okung, who has been outspoken that the players should continue their protests, stood with his teammates during the national anthem, but raised his right fist. Okung attended the New York meetings with owners to discuss how protests would be handled moving forward. For the Pittsburgh Steelers, some team members took a knee in the end zone prior to the national anthem before their game with the Cincinnati Bengals, then joined their teammates to stand on the sidelines. = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = Comment: Or as NFL Commissioner Goodell puts it to the American people, the NFL still has about 6 or 7 players protesting. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 11.
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By William Sullivan What we are witnessing in the media narrative around the NFL protests is the prevailing modus operandi of contemporary leftists seeking to introduce their identity politics into all aspects of American life, even where those politics are unwelcome for most Americans. In fact, we actually saw the left orchestrate something quite similar just a few years ago. Consider the words of an article from 2014 by Neal Gabler, in which he argued that the NFL is the Last sports bastion of white, male conservatives. In it, the author cites an Experian Simmons study, noting, in clearly accusatory terms, that 83% of NFL fans were found to be white (sin of sins!), 64% were male, 51 percent were 45 years or older, only 32% made less than $60K per year, along with the fact that registered Republicans were 21% more likely to be NFL fans, and finally, that NFL fans were 59% more likely than the average American to have played a round of golf in the last year. The NFL, Gabler offers, is just a place where rich old angry white men can enjoy their world on Sunday even if that world may be crumbling around them. The author doesnt hide his disdain for the NFL and its fans, whom he believed to be the political villains of the day. But why were they villains? Well, his most prominent argument centered on the Michael Sam draft saga, which was proof that they were all homophobes. You see, the media had constructed a narrative that Michael Sams draft position, and his subsequent success or failure in the NFL, represented a referendum on NFL fans opinion on homosexuality and same-sex marriage. If Sam was drafted low or unsuccessful, it could only be the homophobia of these villains that was to blame. [snip]
The author doesnt hide his disdain for the NFL and its fans, whom he believed to be the political villains of the day. But why were they villains? Well, his most prominent argument centered on the Michael Sam draft saga, which was proof that they were all homophobes. Interesting snip. It and Gabler reveal the self-loathing, homofascist agenda behind the NFL mask.
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