Colin Kaepernick Is Righter Than You Know

Will you boycott the NFL this upcoming season?

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SAS up there being a cornball brotha again
and saying because u work for somebody
and they cut the check
u gotta do whatever they tell u to do :smh:
 
SAS up there being a cornball brotha again
and saying because u work for somebody
and they cut the check
u gotta do whatever they tell u to do :smh:

Yeah he stays on that. He constantly boasts about being a capitalist and a slave to the state. One of those “Doesn’t matter if it’s not right, it’s the law” type
 
SAS buffoonery has nothing with being a capitalist or a "slave to the state" (whatever the hell that means). There are tons of idiot socialist and dumbass anarchist

He is a buffoon that believes order is more important that justice. And his respectability shtick is just OD. He blames black people way too much for the BS they face
 
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Stephen Anthony Smith is a tap dancing fool. We need to remember these idiots the next time they experience racism and want our help.

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SAS up there being a cornball brotha again
and saying because u work for somebody
and they cut the check
u gotta do whatever they tell u to do :smh:

Dude is the ultimate kiss *** company man. Welling to do anything for that check.

I don't even smoke but he sounded like a old tight *** talking about the NBA allowing players to smoke weed. :lol:
 
I wonder if the guy on the field holding the camera was refused service too?

BUT, BUT, BUUUUUUUTTTTTTTT respect the ANTHEM. Fake patriotism at its finest. Too many examples of people disrespecting the anthem, flag and the troops, yet are outraged when players are trying to bring awareness to real social issues. Many of these fake American Patriot types are the same ones that don't care when the troops come home with missing limbs, mental health issues and crappy support systems to help them cope. It's crazy how many vets make up the homeless population in this country. Maybe if these same people that are "boycotting" the NFL because of the protests would use that same energy to actually support the troops and demand better treatment for them, their patriotism wouldn't come off as a mask for their true motives aka racism, aka what about Chicago aka what ABOUT black on black crime.
 
Stephen A one of them bootstrap brothas, I made it why can't you. He needs to sit all the way down with that ****. His hairline still with fox sports too.
 
Releasing a statement saying sorry is too simple and disingenuous. People make mistakes and given the current climate, the Texans owner should understand that his apologetic words don't hold any weight at all. If he is genuinely sorry and fully understands the insensitivity and disrespect he has shown to his employees, he should personally go to each and everyone of the and ask for forgiveness.

He should humble himself, meet all who work for him, look them in the eye and explain his error and say sorry directly and be prepared to accept and respect all the responses he gets from them.

The issue is that the players feel like they are treated and viewed as solely as objects of revenue rather than men. If he can show them that he and they are on the same level as men, versus what is implicated by the statement he made, only then he can begin healing the wounds he created.

If in his heart, he feels like he is superior to them, then he deserves all the negativity that he has projected.
 
SAS buffoonery has nothing with being a capitalist or a "slave to the state" (whatever the hell that means). There are tons of idiot socialist and dumbass anarchist

He is a buffoon that believes order is more important that justice. And his respectability shtick is just OD. He blames black people way too much for the BS they face

What’s an anarchist?
 
He already equated the players to prisoners. Of course he doesn't like the protests for equality with a supremacy type of mindset like that. The ol' "be thankful you're not slaves" or "stay in your place" mentality. Everyone can recognize damage control when they see it. Letter, personal or public apology, press conference. It's only being done so he can continue to make money off of his "prisoners".
 
Report: Colin Kaepernick Excluded From Player-Owner Meetings
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https://deadspin.com/report-colin-kaepernick-excluded-from-player-owner-mee-1819951388

Despite certain NFL players proposing meetings that include him, and an NFL spokesperson indicating last week that he expected an invitation to be extended, Colin Kaepernick is being frozen out of meetings on social justice between the NFLPA and NFL owners, according to a report from Slate.

While Malcolm Jenkins, who co-founded a group known as the Players Coalition, said that Kaepernick was invited but did not attend player-owner meetings earlier this month, Kaepernick’s team was reportedly shut down when they reached out to both the NFLPA and the Players Coalition.

“We were verbatim told that Colin had no role,” Kaepernick attorney Mark Geragos told Slate. Kaepernick’s legal team also reportedly had no knowledge of a proposed meeting between Roger Goodell, Bob McNair, and Kaepernick before a letter from the Players Coalition was made public.

Emails obtained by Slate between Kaepernick’s lawyers and the NFLPA also appear to back the claim that Kaepernick has not been invited to any player-owner meetings, which have been scheduled by owners and the Coalition, without direct involvement from the Players’ Association.

Earlier in October, Kaepernick filed a grievance against the NFL alleging that his continued unemployment is the result of collusion among NFL owners.
 
Emails Show Colin Kaepernick Frozen Out of Discussions Between NFL Players and Owners
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http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slat...scussions_between_nfl_players_and_owners.html

Contrary to suggestions from the NFL and Malcolm Jenkins’ NFL Players Coalition, Colin Kaepernick has not been included in conversations about past and future meetings between players and owners. This is according to Kaepernick’s attorney as well as emails obtained by Slate.

“We specifically reached out to the [NFL Players Association] and to the Players Coalition [the group led by Jenkins] and we were verbatim told that Colin had no role,” Kaepernick’s attorney Mark Geragos told Slate when asked about reports that Kaepernick had been invited to attend a player/owner summit that’s scheduled for this week.

On Saturday, ESPN reported that “a coalition of NFL players has extended an invitation to [Houston Texans owner Bob McNair], commissioner Roger Goodell and unsigned quarterback Colin Kaepernick to a Monday meeting in Philadelphia at which they hope to address players’ ‘immediate concerns before additional progress can be made.’ ” Kaepernick’s legal team did not know about the proposed meeting prior to the public release of a letter with the proposed meeting details.

Jenkins, the Philadelphia Eagles safety who is one of the founders of the group calling for the Monday meeting, previously said Kaepernick had been invitedto an Oct. 17 meeting between players and owners. It was at that meeting that Texans owner Bob McNair reportedly said, in reference to NFL players, “We can't have the inmates running the prison.” (McNair claims the inmates/prison statement was about the relationship between owners and the league itself.) After that meeting, Jenkins told reporters that he didn’t know why Kaepernick hadn’t been in attendance, saying, “I can’t answer that question.” NFL spokesman Joe Lockhart also said earlier this week that he expected Kaepernick to be invited to the next player/owner meeting, adding, “We look forward to him joining the conversation.”

These claims are contradicted by emails between Kaepernick’s legal team and officials at the NFL Players Association. (The NFLPA and Jenkins’ NFL Players Coalition—a group that consists of 11 players, among them Jenkins and retired wide receiver Anquan Boldin—are separate entities.)

The email below, sent to NFLPA representatives by one of Kaepernick’s lawyers, notes that, as of Wednesday Oct. 25, Kaepernick had not been invited to any upcoming meetings.

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The second email, a reply to Kaepernick’s attorney from NFLPA general counsel Tom DePaso, acknowledges that the players association has not been involved in scheduling these player/owner meetings and suggests Kaepernick’s legal team reach out to Jenkins’ NFL Players Coalition.

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The final email is from Kaepernick’s legal team to Jenkins. In it, attorney Ben Meiselas requests that Jenkins put out a statement indicating Kaepernick was never invited to the first meeting. He also requests information about the upcoming meeting—the one Kaepernick has supposedly been invited to.

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Earlier this month, Kaepernick filed a grievance alleging that owners and possibly the league itself had colluded to keep him out of the NFL due to his role in instigating a league-wide protest movement. The confusion over the out-of-work quarterback’s involvement in meetings between owners and the players who have taken up the mantle of protesting racial injustice demonstrates that all parties appear reluctant to include Kaepernick in the ongoing discussion about these issues.

The email above from NFLPA general counsel Tom DePaso indicates that Jenkins and NFL executive vice president of football operations Troy Vincent had been the key go-betweens coordinating communication between players and the league. On Friday, ESPN reported that Vincent had called San Francisco 49ers general manager John Lynch before the Oct. 17 player/owner meeting to try to deter 49ers safety Eric Reid from protesting during the national anthem. Reid protested anyway, and did attend the Oct. 17 meeting.

On Saturday, Reid told the New York Times that he, like Kaepernick, was not made aware of this week's proposed meeting prior to plans for the meeting being revealed in public reports. “I’m not sure why a press release was sent out saying there’s a meeting when there’s no confirmation the NFL would attend the meeting,” Reid said. “There needs to be better communication.”

On Oct. 18, Seattle Seahawks defensive end Michael Bennett said there could be no rapprochement with the league until the issue of Kaepernick’s apparent blackballing had been addressed. “I think the first step to even being able to have a conversation is making sure that Colin Kaepernick gets an opportunity to play in the NFL,’’ Bennett said at the time.

A spokesperson for the NFL Players Association did not have comment on its role in setting up the player/owner meetings. The NFL and a representative for Malcolm Jenkins did not reply to requests for comment prior to publication.
 
After owner calls NFL players ‘inmates,’ most Houston Texans players take a knee
The players did not accept Bob McNair's apologies.
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HOUSTON TEXANS PLAYERS KNEEL AND STAND DURING THE SINGING OF THE NATIONAL ANTHEM BEFORE AN NFL FOOTBALL GAME AGAINST THE SEATTLE SEAHAWKS, SUNDAY, OCT. 29, 2017, IN SEATTLE. (AP PHOTO/ELAINE THOMPSON)

https://thinkprogress.org/texans-kneel-protest-9d0f7c0300e7/

On Sunday afternoon, before the Houston Texans faced off against the Seattle Seahawks in Washington, all but approximately 10 Texans took a knee during the national anthem.

This was a direct response to Texans owner Bob McNair after an ESPN report on Friday revealed that, during a meeting with other NFL owners, McNair said the league needed to put a stop to protests during the national anthem because, “We can’t have inmates running the prison.”

McNair’s comments were particularly jarring considering that the protests — which began at the start of the 2016 season when former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick took a knee during the national anthem — are a way to draw attention to police brutality and systemic racism, which the criminal justice system only exemplifies.

After McNair’s comments became public on Friday, many Texans considered walking out of practice; some even considered skipping Sunday’s game all together. However, almost all players — except for star wide receiver DeAndre Hawkins and running back D’Onta Foreman — opted to remain at the Texans facility on Friday, with players and coaches continuing to discuss McNair’s comments throughout the weekend. McNair issued two apologies, one on Friday and one on Saturday. He also reportedly spoke with the players directly on Saturday.

“As I said yesterday, I was not referring to our players when I made a very regretful comment during the owners meetings last week,” McNair said on Saturday in his second official apology regarding his comments. “I was referring to the relationship between the league office and team owners and how they have been making significant strategic decisions affecting our league without adequate input from ownership over the past few years.”

But an unnamed player on the Texans told Josina Anderson of ESPN that he did not accept McNair’s apology.

“I think as an owner and as a business man that is something you can’t really say,”the defensive player said. “My reaction is: that’s unacceptable and I don’t want to even hear an apology, or anything like that, because I feel like you knew what you said because you were in a room where you didn’t think it was going to leak out; so you said how you feel. So, that’s how I feel about it.”

Prior to this Sunday, no Texan had taken a knee during the national anthem. Offensive tackle Duane Brown was the lone Texan to officially join in on the protests, when he raised a fist during the anthem before one game last season. Brown was vocal about his disgust with McNair’s comments on Friday.

“I think it was ignorant,” Texans offensive tackle Duane Brown told ESPN. “I think it was embarrassing. I think it angered a lot of players, including myself. We put our bodies and minds on the line every time we step on that field, and to use an analogy of inmates in prison, that’s disrespectful. That’s how I feel about it.”
 
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