jshawaii22 wrote:When will white players, coaches, broadcasters, and anybody else understand that Social Media is a job killer.
Drew Brees is the latest that needed to learn to keep your damn hands off the keyboard and white people should never ever give opinions about how life is as a black man. It serves no purpose. Everything you say is twisted to whatever anyone thinks or says it is. Vic Fangio, Sacramento NBA Announcer, some white college coach, couple of sports talk radio hosts in Boston... it never ends. And this was only today.
Sad world, but PC now is whatever anyone thinks it is. Everyone is a target.
jshawaii22 wrote:...and he's still getting ripped by some of the 'white' press and others for not understanding whatever it is he's supposed to say as a 40 year old white guy who doesn't and hasn't lived as a oppressed black man.
jshawaii22 wrote:Skip Bayless, who is about as lily white as there is, kept using the term "WE" when talking to Shannon about 'race relations' and you could see Shannon squeezing to not say anything back that directly implicates his partner ($$$$$$$$$$) as the problem, not the solution.
Your career on the air is on the line everyday.
Why do white people think they have to have a solution? Racism in America is inbred and goes back to the first slaves arriving in America. That Father and Son wannabe KKK's in Georgia where they trailed and then used their cars to hunt down that supposed burglar, and murdered him, too. Where were the riots over that? To me, that was as systemic of the issue then the cop kneeling on the man's neck is.
Both are exactly where we are in America right now... 2020.
I like watching "LivePD" and "Cops" - if you notice, the propensity is to force black drivers out of their cars to 'incite' them so they can be taken down, and yes, the knee in the back is the standard procedure to detain and maintain control and almost everyone yells "I can't breath" - even the in-studio cops laughed about how often those offenders use that as an 'excuse' to try to get the cops off them and generally the white kids, especially and often is for 'pot' get told to 'go sit on the sidewalk' with their legs crossed. And That's the world and it's live.
Aseahawkfan wrote:A problem needs to be fixed. If you're not helping fix it or aren't interested in helping fix it, why not stay quiet and avoid headaches.
trents wrote:Because if you are a celeb you won't be allowed to stay quiet.
Besides, Brees' original Tweet was balanced and filled with truth. I think it was his way of trying to make a meaningful contribution to the fix. Trouble is, a lot of people these days love to traffic in emotion and don't care about truth.
Aseahawkfan wrote:People have different versions of the truth. If Brees had stayed quiet or just said I support justice in this situation rather than discussing the matter of kneeling which has already been a divisive issue, he would have been fine. Plenty of celebrities are not saying much and not much is being said of them. You put a simple show of support and you're done. Not hard to do.
This matter has been plaguing our nation for ages. It's been a matter of incremental improvements. So just let the people involved and wanting to put it out there do it without distraction.
What more needs to be said? I don't think anyone wants people treated like that by any officers of the law. So anything not focused on fixing that issue is a waste of breath. Fact is someone baited Brees into discussing something inconsequential to the conversation and he took the bait when he should have stayed focused on the issue at hand.
trents wrote:There is no such thing as different versions of the truth. People may emphasize different facets of the truth but truth is truth. And in his original statement Brees did an excellent and balanced job of covering all facets of the truth in the matter at hand. He expressed respect for the sacrifice made by our fathers to maintain our precious freedoms, condemned the mistreatment of George Floyd, showed understanding of the anger of the black community and condemned violence and anarchy. It was the balanced voice of truth and reason and he had nothing to apologize for in his statement. It's what we need to hear more of from more people in the black and the white community.
Kapernick's mistake was that he picked the wrong time and the wrong way to protest his concerns. How could you not associate his actions with disrespect for the country? The flag and national anthem stand for all of what America is about, good and bad. Since the incident, never have I heard him say he was not trying to show disrespect for the nation. That I know of, he has not issued any disclaimers to that effect. Whether or not he is loves his country as a whole is not clear at all from. As a celeb pro athlete he has a ton of access to the media and could have engaged the issues in more positive, constructive ways. Kap took the low road as Brees pointed out in his original tweet.
Zorn2Largent wrote:So the hypocrisy is so thick on this thread I can't breathe.
If Drew had said "f*** lthe flag, I'm not standing for any anthem so long as this continues" there wouldn't be this white whining about white men getting to say what they want. He'd be another Kaepernick. Ripped on repeatedly.
How dare anyone express feelings of disrespect for the flag!
See how this works with certainwhite people? And I say this as a native american. If it's not okay to criticize Brees then please delete all your criticism of Kaeprenick or stfu.
You can't have it both ways, but racists always try to.
Zorn2Largent wrote:My point wasn't directed at Brees, it was directed at those making the typical racist "PC" whine directed at people who complained about Brees statements. These same people have been ripping into Kaepernick. So their (driven by racism) stance is it's okay to deny Kaep a job, ridicule him, etc. for his beliefs, but how dare you do a fraction of that to Brees for having the (highly defended by Racists) opposite belief.
Is that clearer now?
If you're going to spend untold posts ripping Kaep you don't get to whine when Brees gets ripped too.
Zorn2Largent wrote:No,actually, you can't. If you CHOOSE to let the flag issue distract you from the underlying issue, then you CHOOSE to be racist. That's part of what racism is and does. You became racist the moment you made that choice.
You choose to be distracted as a way of not listening. You choose not to listen because you know if you don't hear us, you can't be challenged to change your racist beliefs. If you can't do that, then your heart can't be changed. If your heart doesn't change, then policies, laws and systemic racism doesn't change.
That's what's at stake if you CHOOSE to make the argument you just did.
So no, you literally can/t or you ARE racist.
Zorn2Largent wrote:Because instead of saying "it's terrible that you're kneeling during the anthem, but killing black people has to stop" They're saying "It's terrible black people are getting killed, but kneeling at the anthem has to stop."
And if that's too much for you to grasp, then I cannot say what I think about you without getting banned. Just the fact that you're still trying to dissemble this argument makes I find repugnant.
NorthHawk wrote:Here's Arian Fosters viewpoint:
https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2 ... some-dont/
c_hawkbob wrote:The point is the message, not the messenger.
c_hawkbob wrote:I didn't suggest it at all, I was responding to your suggestion. My point is the person that becomes the catalyst, whether King Kaepernick or George Floyd is secondary to the point of a movement.
trents wrote:Rosa Parks got the attention of the nation by moving to the back of the bus.
Collin Kapernick drew attention to himself and threw his country under the bus.
Another "truth" is that statistics do not support the idea that white officers target African Americans more often than do black officers. Just as many or more AA are killed by black cops as they are white cops and this article makes the point that black police offers seem to expect trouble more often from blacks just as much as white officers do:
https://psmag.com/social-justice/black- ... k-suspects
And this is a fascinating watch:
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=705551473535671
As I said earlier, a lot of this protesting is emotional hype rather than truth based.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:It strikes me more that Brees' comment wasn't really awful; he simply stated what he felt about the flag and what it means to him, and yet now he's been forced to abandon his belief. He disagrees with kneeling for the flag during the US national anthem. I did not hear him calling for kneeling to stop or recommending they not be allowed to play. He isn't the only one out there that feels that way. My brother and my best friend are both serving. Both have been deployed overseas separated from family, been shot at and targeted with bombs and saw close friends and comrades die under that flag. They know everyone in this country has the right to kneel if they want to, and that that is what they are serving for. Doesn't mean they have to agree with it or like it, and I won't brow beat them into apologizing for feeling that way. Brees has every right to feel the way he feels about it, just as everyone else does. Regardless of what the stated intentions are by the protesters; they can't control how others perceive. Life is full of our perceptions not matching up with the intention of others.
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