I know this is extremely off topic but I'm interested in your opinions on this polarizing issue. A lot of professional athletes in this country have come under scrutiny for kneeling or taking a knee during the anthem to protest various perceived injustices.
Obviously President Trump put his two cents in and condemned it as "disrespectful". Problem is we don't how much of Trumps opinion is early campaigning /pandering, payback for the way the NFL shafted him when he tried to be an owner, or just outright misdirection to keep our focus off bigger issues. Some people hate it outright and some people invite the protest but detest the method and platform.
What do you guys think? Honestly I could give a **** if you spin around and dump a bucket of applesauce on your head during the anthem, it makes no difference to me what others do. I know I like to stand and cross my heart but if some even in a position of representing a franchise(pro athletes), want to protest that way, good on them.
That's a right the military is supposed to be fighting for. Instead a lot of people are wagging their finger "shame on you" thinking these athletes are disrespecting the military.
What do you think?
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Réponse de censorshipsucks06
le 28 septembre 2017 à 19h04
Then that's REALLY petty and ignorant of the players. They don't like Donald Trump and what he said, so they take what has traditionally been one of the few truly unifying moments in the country, and use that as their focal point? For the ones who took a knee for that silly reason, they deserve all the backlash they are getting. They and a lot of other people fall right into the land mine traps Trump intentionally or accidentally sets for them.
Réponse de MurphAndTheMagicTones
le 28 septembre 2017 à 22h41
But that's what got the majority of players...not to mention coaches and even owners...to get involved. Trump basically insulted the whole lot. He demanded the owners take action against those who kneeled and called them SOBs. Now it's become a matter of team unity, working as one. All the players share a common enemy, the person still insulting them two days later while taking the better part of a week to acknowledge what's going on in Puerto Rico (and insulting them in the process as well).
I originally agreed that the kneeling was the wrong forum to protest the mistreatment of blacks because (to me) the flag represents all of us. All 325 million Americans. But then Trump made it political. Honestly, I half-expected him to try to rescind the NFL's anti-trust exemption, but I'm guessing someone in his admin (Kelly, most likely) told him that would be a cut-and-dry impeachable offense.
Trump's approval ratings would go up at least 15% if he just STFU and stayed off of Twitter.
Réponse de censorshipsucks06
le 28 septembre 2017 à 23h54
Wow. TRUMP made it political? Please. Let's not exaggerate things Murph. It was already very political. Did Trump pour gas on it? Yes. But let's not kid ourselves, it was already a big issue. And it was political. And you say "Now it's become a matter of team unity, working as one. All the players share a common enemy". Be very careful about using absolutes. Only a 100+ players actually protested. That's a far cry from "All the players". And they are finding out that using the Anthem as the focal point for their protest really isn't such a great idea after all.
Thankfully, if tonight is any indication, the players have come to their senses.
Réponse de ArcticFox12
le 29 septembre 2017 à 00h01
Bratface, I'm well aware of how Irish people were treated in this country and by our brethren in the UK. My English ancestors definitely persecuted my Irish ancestors.
There's a long brutal history of racism is the country and we should combat it in the most positive ways we can Think of collectively.
My point was that this anthem to me personally represents the change I want to see in this country so I honor that anthem. What needs to happen is that these protesting players need to be heard. They've raised awareness, they've put the nation and the world on notice ,now let's discuss how to work toward fixing the issues they're protesting.
There's needs to be an endgame.
Réponse de ArcticFox12
le 29 septembre 2017 à 00h09
I'm sure there are some players trying to build those bridges that get lost and buried underneath all the negativity. I also think more needs to be done. The NFL should commit some resources to funding a committee with current players involved addressing the social issues they're protesting.
Réponse de CalabrianQueen
le 29 septembre 2017 à 00h20
Your conclusions never follow the previous statement. It's syllogism, nonsense or not on topic. What does being Muslim have to do with supporting slavery? Why do you put African Americans in quotes and what does any of it have to do with the thread topic?
Everything you say sounds like you copied it from Glenn Beck's diary.
Réponse de CalabrianQueen
le 29 septembre 2017 à 00h27
Football is most popular in the Midwest and the South. Likely most of the conservatives who agree with his SOB comments are in the Midwest and the South. Trump won the election with solid support from the Midwest and the South. He knows exactly what he's doing.
Calculated pandering to his base.
Réponse de Knixon
le 29 septembre 2017 à 01h49
Did you miss the part about Muslim countries - in Africa - being a big part of the slave trade, selling their own people and conquered neighbors into slavery? And that some muslim countries practice slavery even today? Black athletes and prisoners - lots of muslim recruiting in prisons - embracing islam out of some idea of "solidarity" or "path to freedom" or whatever, makes about as much sense as jews embracing naziism. And most "African americans" in this country have even less of a connection to Africa than I do to Ireland or Scotland or Germany. Meanwhile Charlize Theron was actually born in Africa, that makes her more African-American than most black athletes. But the very term is turning into PC nonsense anyway. A while back I watched some Olympics events, and the American TV announcers kept referring to black athletes competing from Guyana or whatever as "African-American." Ridiculous. But they just can't help themselves.
Réponse de znexyish
le 29 septembre 2017 à 18h12
Bring back Rosanne Barr. She does the anthem right.
Réponse de Knixon
le 29 septembre 2017 à 19h07
I thought this put it well too:
These colors don’t run (or pass or punt)
by Tarzana Joe
Réponse de znexyish
le 29 septembre 2017 à 19h25
So Football is America and America is Football ? Makes sense in a way. And anything that interrupts equation is trouble with a capitol T and that rhymes with P and that stands for Patriotism. I think this all started with all those fancy and foreign foods you can get at the concession stand. None of this jibber jabber when all you could get was hotdogs and peanuts at the old ball park.
Réponse de Knixon
le 29 septembre 2017 à 19h33
That sounds more like baseball than football, but okay. I actually care not one particle for any kind of "professional sports," it has nothing to do with the actual quality of one's city of residence or whatever. But for those who do (somehow) think stuff like football is important, it's important for that reason among others, and the solidarity should come first.
P.S. I tried to do a better job with the poem's layout but the auto-formatting "features" (I'd call them bugs) of this site made it impossible.
Réponse de poptop-3
le 30 septembre 2017 à 00h06
Perfect.
Réponse de CalabrianQueen
le 30 septembre 2017 à 07h35
Again disjointed nonsense.
Réponse de Knixon
le 30 septembre 2017 à 13h51
I'm sorry if your comprehension is limited to simple ideas like "See Spot Run." But since you've only recently been to college and it's not nearly as rigorous as it used to be, I'm not really surprised.