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like_that
Posts: 26,625
Sep 25, 2017 6:41pm
Uh oh, trouble in paradise?wildcats20;1873373 wrote:Hope you save your receipt.
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like_that
Posts: 26,625
Sep 25, 2017 6:44pm
Another take, I would like to see where everyone would stand if the players protested something else. Flip the script and they are protesting now something you believe in or don't believe in. What would the reaction be?
S
superman
Posts: 3,582
Sep 25, 2017 6:56pm
He hurt Tomlin's feels.like_that;1873382 wrote:Uh oh, trouble in paradise?
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Dr Winston O'Boogie
Posts: 1,799
Sep 25, 2017 7:35pm
I wasn't comparing the two. I said that we are far from being like Nazi Germany. Way down the list of reasons why is because patriotic displays aren't required here.SportsAndLady;1873333 wrote:I fail to see the comparison between the US and nazi Germany.
ptown_trojans_1
Posts: 7,632
Sep 25, 2017 7:37pm
Few thoughts:
1. I don't have a problem with the players taking a knee. Their right to voice their perceived injustice in this country how they see fit. I stand for the anthem, but I get their point of view and why they feel the need to take a knee. I grew up in a mixed race home and was the subject of racist rants and attacks growing up.
2. The players had to know the message would get muddled and distorted by politicians and the media (both left and right.) The intellectual art of the conversation and civil discourse about racism and perceived police brutality is missing in this country. Taking a knee for the anthem was not the right course of action. It did the exact opposite of start a civil dialogue. It fed the flames. Which led to Friday and...
3. Trump. His comments were below the The Office of the President and he should not have acted in that fashion on Friday. He took a complicated and charged issue, doused it in gas and lit the match. He did it to gain applause lines and cheers. It also did reinforce his views to his opponents that Trump is a borderline bigot and racist. He did nothing to advance the discussion and completely warped the issue to now either you are against the flag and country or with him and with the country.
4. Sports as an outlet. I get it. Sports for some are a way to get away from the world. I watch Ohio State to forget about how fucked up the world is for a few hours. But, sports and politics have always been close. Sports is littered with political figures and stories: Joe Louis, the great white hope, Jessie Owens, Jackie Robinson, Muhammad Ali, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Bill Russel, most of the Olympics, 1968 Mexico City, baseball after 9/11, and now today. I'm sure I'm forgetting some. But, the whole point that these guys should just shut up and play flies in the face of the history of sports and politics in this country. In some cases in history, sports has driven political change and dialogue. I wonder how many people on here would have been against some of the moments and figures I listed above. I'm guessing quite a few..
5. I wonder what happens next week. How do teams respond? Will this keep going, lead to actual dialogue perhaps? Or, will it just fade into the distance as Trump creates a new firestorm and the media rushes to cover it?
1. I don't have a problem with the players taking a knee. Their right to voice their perceived injustice in this country how they see fit. I stand for the anthem, but I get their point of view and why they feel the need to take a knee. I grew up in a mixed race home and was the subject of racist rants and attacks growing up.
2. The players had to know the message would get muddled and distorted by politicians and the media (both left and right.) The intellectual art of the conversation and civil discourse about racism and perceived police brutality is missing in this country. Taking a knee for the anthem was not the right course of action. It did the exact opposite of start a civil dialogue. It fed the flames. Which led to Friday and...
3. Trump. His comments were below the The Office of the President and he should not have acted in that fashion on Friday. He took a complicated and charged issue, doused it in gas and lit the match. He did it to gain applause lines and cheers. It also did reinforce his views to his opponents that Trump is a borderline bigot and racist. He did nothing to advance the discussion and completely warped the issue to now either you are against the flag and country or with him and with the country.
4. Sports as an outlet. I get it. Sports for some are a way to get away from the world. I watch Ohio State to forget about how fucked up the world is for a few hours. But, sports and politics have always been close. Sports is littered with political figures and stories: Joe Louis, the great white hope, Jessie Owens, Jackie Robinson, Muhammad Ali, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Bill Russel, most of the Olympics, 1968 Mexico City, baseball after 9/11, and now today. I'm sure I'm forgetting some. But, the whole point that these guys should just shut up and play flies in the face of the history of sports and politics in this country. In some cases in history, sports has driven political change and dialogue. I wonder how many people on here would have been against some of the moments and figures I listed above. I'm guessing quite a few..
5. I wonder what happens next week. How do teams respond? Will this keep going, lead to actual dialogue perhaps? Or, will it just fade into the distance as Trump creates a new firestorm and the media rushes to cover it?
G
gut
Posts: 15,058
Sep 25, 2017 7:47pm
If it does, would you give Trump credit for it?ptown_trojans_1;1873394 wrote:...lead to actual dialogue perhaps?
But I agree with everything you wrote. I often had similar reactions to how Obama handled similar issues - and often to applause and cheers - but for some reason people calling out Trump for this didn't see Obama as divisive.
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iclfan2
Posts: 6,360
Sep 25, 2017 8:22pm
Michael Bennett trying to profit off of this. (Tweeted from Rovell). Same guy who lied about his Vegas PD incident. Never let a good controversy go to waste.
http://www.blacksanta72.com/product/equality-hoodie
http://www.blacksanta72.com/product/equality-hoodie
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HitsRus
Posts: 9,206
Sep 25, 2017 9:10pm
So tired about hearing about 1st amendment rights in this situation. The First amendment applies to GOVERNMENT restricting the listed freedoms and prosecution. It extends only to public institutions, but does not extend to private business. It does not provide immunity to consequences outside of those public/government institutions.
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FatHobbit
Posts: 8,651
Sep 25, 2017 9:22pm
I agree that Obama was divisive but Trump takes it to a new obnoxious level. He is clumsy, inarticulate and has no filter in an unpresidential way. Time and again he takes every opportunity to sound like a jack ass.gut;1873398 wrote: But I agree with everything you wrote. I often had similar reactions to how Obama handled similar issues - and often to applause and cheers - but for some reason people calling out Trump for this didn't see Obama as divisive.
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like_that
Posts: 26,625
Sep 25, 2017 9:24pm
Yeah this whole kneeling shit was dying down until he decided to be a blowhard dipshit.FatHobbit;1873418 wrote:I agree that Obama was divisive but Trump takes it to a new obnoxious level. He is clumsy, inarticulate and has no filter in an unpresidential way. Time and again he takes every opportunity to sound like a jack ass.
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Heretic
Posts: 18,820
Sep 25, 2017 10:11pm
You do realize this whole situation blew up because the president (aka: GOVERNMENT) openly encouraged owners to fire those sons of bitches who did choose to kneel, don't you? Not that big of a line between the government punishing a person for exercising free speech and the government sanctioning said punishment.HitsRus;1873415 wrote:So tired about hearing about 1st amendment rights in this situation. The First amendment applies to GOVERNMENT restricting the listed freedoms and prosecution. It extends only to public institutions, but does not extend to private business. It does not provide immunity to consequences outside of those public/government institutions.
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HitsRus
Posts: 9,206
Sep 25, 2017 10:11pm
repslike_that;1873419 wrote:Yeah this whole kneeling shit was dying down until he decided to be a blowhard dipshit.
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HitsRus
Posts: 9,206
Sep 25, 2017 10:15pm
Agree 100% with that statement. But the arguement was made before and continues to be made even without Trump interjecting his sorry ass into this.Heretic;1873421 wrote:You do realize this whole situation blew up because the president (aka: GOVERNMENT) openly encouraged owners to fire those sons of bitches who did choose to kneel, don't you? Not that big of a line between the government punishing a person for exercising free speech and the government sanctioning said punishment.
T
thavoice
Posts: 14,376
Sep 26, 2017 1:04am
It is unfortunate that Alejandro Villinueva felt like he needed to apologize but I see his point.
While he was in the military they are heavy into UNIFORMITY. When a decision is made everyone is expected to follow on, unless it is illegal or unethical.
For instance, if you forget your winter hat, or gloves, no matter how cold many times everyone is forced to take those off. Some commands will make everyone in PT to wear the same colored socks since they allowed the wearing of black socks. You can add to a regulation, but not take away.
There is a very good reason for it.
So when the decision was made for them to not come out he felt compelled to apologize for not joining his teammates even though he did what he felt was right.
While he was in the military they are heavy into UNIFORMITY. When a decision is made everyone is expected to follow on, unless it is illegal or unethical.
For instance, if you forget your winter hat, or gloves, no matter how cold many times everyone is forced to take those off. Some commands will make everyone in PT to wear the same colored socks since they allowed the wearing of black socks. You can add to a regulation, but not take away.
There is a very good reason for it.
So when the decision was made for them to not come out he felt compelled to apologize for not joining his teammates even though he did what he felt was right.
S
superman
Posts: 3,582
Sep 26, 2017 6:57am
So the cheeto benito is tweeting again. What is he trying to distract us from?
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like_that
Posts: 26,625
Sep 26, 2017 7:37am
The healthcare bill officially died, so maybe that?superman;1873441 wrote:So the cheeto benito is tweeting again. What is he trying to distract us from?
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like_that
Posts: 26,625
Sep 26, 2017 7:42am
Can someone please entertain my question?!?!?!? What do you think the reaction would be if these guys protested something else. Let's say they kneel down to protest against abortions since that is a touchy subject. Do you think each side would be consistent with their current reactions? I don't.
Q
queencitybuckeye
Posts: 7,117
Sep 26, 2017 7:54am
The rancor would be about the same, only the sides would change. Partisan hypocrisy on a massive scale.like_that;1873445 wrote:Can someone please entertain my question?!?!?!? What do you think the reaction would be if these guys protested something else. Let's say they kneel down to protest against abortions since that is a touchy subject. Do you think each side would be consistent with their current reactions? I don't.
S
superman
Posts: 3,582
Sep 26, 2017 8:13am
Pretty much this. Although it would be funny to watch neocons talk about how disrespecting the flag is okay for such an important cause and liberals being super patriotic.queencitybuckeye;1873450 wrote:The rancor would be about the same, only the sides would change. Partisan hypocrisy on a massive scale.
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Laley23
Posts: 29,506
Sep 26, 2017 9:08am
My thoughts would remain the same. I'd be on the players side.like_that;1873445 wrote:Can someone please entertain my question?!?!?!? What do you think the reaction would be if these guys protested something else. Let's say they kneel down to protest against abortions since that is a touchy subject. Do you think each side would be consistent with their current reactions? I don't.
I dont particularly agree with what they are protesting in this case (police brutality), but am 100% with them kneeling. I do agree with other parts of the protest though. Blacks are still oppressed, and there is no question white priveage (especially male) exists in this country still.
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like_that
Posts: 26,625
Sep 26, 2017 9:46am
Who in particular are holding blacks back may I ask?Laley23;1873467 wrote:My thoughts would remain the same. I'd be on the players side.
I dont particularly agree with what they are protesting in this case (police brutality), but am 100% with them kneeling. I do agree with other parts of the protest though. Blacks are still oppressed, and there is no question white priveage (especially male) exists in this country still.
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OSH
Posts: 4,145
Sep 26, 2017 9:47am
I know what the two are. I guess reading the rulebook isn't enough to know that there's no "A62-63?" There's ZERO mention of "national anthem" in there.fish82;1873302 wrote:The rulebook and the league operations manual are two separate documents.
Rest assured that it's completely accurate.
http://time.com/4955704/nfl-league-rulebook-a62-63-national-anthem-rule/
http://blog.masslive.com/patriots/2017/09/facebook_post_citing_nfl_playe.html
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iclfan2
Posts: 6,360
Sep 26, 2017 9:51am
I personally can't think of any situation that a player could kneel during the anthem and I would think it was a good idea. However, the majority of people would completely turn their arguments around if it were for abortion or something like mentioned above, on both sides. Trump's dumbass certainly wouldn't be tweeting about it.like_that;1873445 wrote:Can someone please entertain my question?!?!?!? What do you think the reaction would be if these guys protested something else. Let's say they kneel down to protest against abortions since that is a touchy subject. Do you think each side would be consistent with their current reactions? I don't.
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like_that
Posts: 26,625
Sep 26, 2017 9:59am
I feel the same. It would still be disrespectful and we would see everyone flip roles. Trump also would tweet about it, except he would show support lol.iclfan2;1873473 wrote:I personally can't think of any situation that a player could kneel during the anthem and I would think it was a good idea. However, the majority of people would completely turn their arguments around if it were for abortion or something like mentioned above, on both sides. Trump's dumbass certainly wouldn't be tweeting about it.
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fish82
Posts: 4,111
Sep 26, 2017 10:04am
Which is probably why I didn't mention the rulebook, but referred to the operations manual, as did the original article on the topic.OSH;1873471 wrote:I know what the two are. I guess reading the rulebook isn't enough to know that there's no "A62-63?" There's ZERO mention of "national anthem" in there.
http://time.com/4955704/nfl-league-rulebook-a62-63-national-anthem-rule/
http://blog.masslive.com/patriots/2017/09/facebook_post_citing_nfl_playe.html
The original article is what Snopes originally face-planted on when trying to discredit it. That said, I'm not sure why facebook dummies calling it the "rulebook" instead of the operations manual somehow discredits it.
The fact is that it's league policy that players stand at attention for the anthem, and Goodell is once again being exposed as a hypocrite.