Colin Kaepernick: Disrespectful to the US |
Colin Kaepernick and his protests during the playing of the
National Anthem before football games should never have begun. America is not
perfect. Since it is a democratic republic, the United States exists by the
rule of law. Leaders are elected. There is a lot of bureaucracy in this
country. America struggles with hate, conflicted politics, unending wars, an
economy that is sometimes predatory, and the span between the ‘haves’ and the ‘have
nots’ has never been wider. So, Kaepernick thinks his protest will do…what?
Let’s see…is Kaepernick’s taking a knee at the National
Anthem change anything? No. Will his protest put anyone back to work? No. Just
what is he ‘raising awareness’ about? I haven’t heard anything. He just decided
to protest because the United States isn’t perfect. Well, as imperfect as this
country is, it is still the freest nation in the world. Don’t believe it? Go shopping
for another country and move. Try it out.
I respect protest. I have protested for peace during the
early days of the Iraq War. I have protested for civil rights in New Jersey
during my tenure as an NAACP volunteer. In both cases, both kinds of protest
were specific. I protested the war in Downtown Manhattan as part of a group
that had its specific ideas about Iraq – and why the U.S. shouldn’t be fighting
there – broadcast on television, in the newspapers and online. When it came to
the NAACP, we protested establishments that were, in the group’s view,
demonstrating bias based on race and color. Before and during the protests, the
targets of those protests were met with and very specific goals for policy
changes were submitted to the persons concerned.
How is Kaepernick’s protest different? Because he doesn’t
make a clear case about what he is protesting. Without that, I suppose he is
just protesting an imperfect world. He is not protesting whomever he believes
is doing wrong. He is protesting in front of scores of people who neither know nor
care about what he doesn’t like. He is protesting as part of his job as an
over-paid, only so-so quarterback talent for a poorly performing 49er team. His
message is to disrespect the American flag and our National Anthem because it’s
fun and can be done.
Baseball Hall-of-Famer Reggie Jackson |
According to CBS Sports, Kaepernick does give about $1
million per year to charity. Meanwhile, I guarantee you that the money he gives
to charity does 1000 percent more for real problems than taking a knee and
telling the country responsible for his success to ‘go blow.’
I haven’t watched much of the NFL this year, because I am
sick and tired of over-indulged, high-priced, mediocre players who have been
given everything and seem to give back only nonsense, guff and headlines for
stupidity. This Kaepernick is just the icing on the cake for me.
Reggie Jackson was a free thinker. I have met Reggie before, at a job I used to work at for a sports memorabilia company. By the way, he was nothing like the showman he portrayed during his Yankee days. He was a prince: modest, affable and just a total gentleman.
Reggie was probably the most
dangerous two-strike hitter ever in MLB ever, but certainly so in the late 1970s. He was considered a showboat and not a team guy by some people.
He made fun of most everything – but never the United States, its flag or its
National Anthem. Why? It’s a matter of class. Class can’t be bought or paid
for, it cannot be ordered through Amazon, someone can only fake class for so
long and then there is knowing that there’s a line and being cognizant of where
it is so someone doesn’t cross over it.
All-time great Roy White |
Colin Kaepernick gives the game a bad image. His actions
reflect not just on him and the 49ers, but the National Football League. By the
by, why the heck hasn’t anyone at the top of the NFL stopped this mockery?
The problem doesn’t begin or end at with Colin Kaepernick,
the 49ers or even the NFL. The problem is that athletes today act like spoiled
children, not role models. I weep for sports.
I have met, a few times, Roy White, the steady handed outfielder
for the New York Yankees during the Bronx Zoo days of the late 1970s. I have never asked him about how he would feel about someone protesting during a game. So, what I am giving is my own opinion, not his.
Roy was a
steady .290 hitter against some of the toughest major league pitching talent
that ever existed, from Nolan Ryan, in his prime, to Jim Palmer, Mike Cuellar,
Luis Tiant, Bill Lee, and so on. He is
grateful for his playing days, for the fans that followed his career. He is a
real gentleman and created his own business from the ground up during and after
his playing days. Roy White was also a black ball player when it wasn’t an
everyday thing. He suffered being under-paid, harassed for his color and a
mercurial fan base and club house that might make many of us shrink.
Why didn’t Roy White protest? Oh yeah, he is a grown man,
unspoiled by life. He understands the world as it is. He respects people,
especially his fellow players and fans, and he loves this country. Roy White
got noticed for his exceptional play at a time when the talent pool of MLB was
extraordinarily high, before expansion when people who should have still been
playing AA or AAA ball were in the minors and not playing in the show. He
didn’t get noticed because he took a knee for some ridiculous protest.
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