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https://nypost.com/2020/06/03/drew-brees-kneeling-rebuke-causes-michael-thomas-controversy/

Drew Brees’ kneeling rebuke angers Saints star Michael Thomas

By Mollie Walker

June 3, 2020 | 3:38pm |

When asked about the possibility of his fellow NFL players taking a knee in protest of police brutality during the 2020 season, Saints quarterback Drew Brees said he “will never agree with anybody disrespecting the flag of the United States of America or our country.”

In an interview with Yahoo Finance, Brees discussed how he views the American flag while he’s standing for the national anthem before games. He also compared the sacrifices his two grandfathers made during World War II to those who fought in the civil rights movements of the 60s.

“Let me just tell what I see or what I feel when the national anthem is played and when I look at the flag of the United States,” Brees, 41, said. “I envision my two grandfathers, who fought for this country during World War II, one in the Army and one in the Marine Corp. Both risking their lives to protect our country and to try to make our country and this world a better place.

“So every time I stand with my hand over my heart looking at that flag and singing the national anthem, that’s what I think about. And in many cases, that brings me to tears, thinking about all that has been sacrificed. Not just those in the military, but for that matter, those throughout the civil rights movements of the ‘60s, and all that has been endured by so many people up until this point.

“And is everything right with our country right now? No, it is not. We still have a long way to go. But I think what you do by standing there and showing respect to the flag with your hand over your heart, is it shows unity. It shows that we are all in this together, we can all do better and that we are all part of the solution.”

Saints receiver Michael Thomas seemingly responded to Brees’ comments Wednesday.

“He don’t know no better,” Thomas, 27, wrote on Twitter. “We don’t care if you don’t agree and whoever else how about that.”

Thomas, who has received Pro Bowl nods in three of his last four seasons with New Orleans, set the NFL record for receptions in 2019 with 149. He averaged 107.8 receiving yards per game.

Fellow Saints receiver Emmanuel Sanders also seemingly reacted to Brees’ comments, writing on Twitter, “Smh.. Ignorant.”

Los Angeles Chargers coach Anthony Lynn recently addressed Colin Kaepernick’s 2016 kneeling protests in a wide-ranging interview with the Los Angeles Times, claiming that Kaepernick, who hasn’t played in the NFL since that season of kneeling, was protesting criminal justice reform and police brutality, not the flag.

“People completely misunderstood Colin and what he was trying to do,” Lynn said. “People talked about disrespecting the flag . . . the flag covers a lot — patriotism and civil rights and other things. And Colin was speaking out against the injustice and a lot of people didn’t catch on to that because it was happening during the national anthem. They thought it was disrespectful to the flag.

“I was surprised by the number of people who didn’t know why he was protesting. I got letters from people. I had people walk up to me and ask, ‘Coach, what are you going to do if someone on your team protests?’ ….And once you broke it down, they were like, “Oh, we didn’t know that. We thought he was protesting the flag.” And that was the case for a lot of people I came across.”

A number of prominent NFL players have spoken out following the police-involved killing of George Floyd, a black man from Minneapolis. Players like Joe Burrow, D.K. Metcalf, Richard Sherman and Carson Wentz have voiced their opinions.

After a Blackout Tuesday hashtag circulated through social media on Tuesday, where people posted a black screen to reflect on racism and promote minority voices, a number of athletes, celebrities, companies and sports team participated – including Brees.
 
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https://nypost.com/2020/06/03/lebro...s-backlash-after-kneeling-controversy-erupts/

James leads the Drew Brees backlash after kneeling controversy erupts

By Mollie Walker

June 3, 2020 |

Drew Brees struck a nerve with his comments about how kneeling during the national anthem is “disrespecting the flag.”

Following the release of his interview with Yahoo Sports Wednesday, the longtime Saints quarterback was met with significant backlash for his response to a question about the possibility of NFL players kneeling — as Colin Kaepernick and others did in 2016 — during the national anthem this upcoming season. Brees said he can never support those actions.

Fans, his fellow New Orleans teammates and other athletes, like LeBron James, have denounced Brees’ comments.

“WOW MAN!!” James wrote on Twitter. “Is it still surprising at this point. Sure isn’t! You literally still don’t understand why Kap was kneeling on one knee?? Has absolute nothing to do with the disrespect of [the flag] and our soldiers(men and women) who keep our land free.

“My father-in-law was one of those men who fought as well for this country. I asked him question about it and thank him all the time for his commitment. He never found Kap peaceful protest offensive because he and I both know what’s right is right and what’s wrong is wrong! God bless you.”

Former NFLer and current ESPN analyst Ryan Clark also chimed in with his perception of Brees’ comments.

“Always knew who he was! Every time y’all came at me and said I couldn’t come home because I didn’t think he was Jesus. Oh well! Keep cheering,” Clark wrote on Twitter.

Jason and Devin McCourty of the New England Patriots called Brees’ interview a “disgrace.”

“This is a disgrace! To speak about your grandfathers as if there weren’t black men fighting next to them,” the McCourty brothers’ joint Twitter account wrote. “Those men later returned to a country that hated them. Don’t avoid the issue and try to make it about a flag or the military. Fight like your grandfathers for whats right!”

Jets star safety Jamal Adams was also clearly disappointed in Brees.

“Dammit Drew…,” Adams wrote.

ESPN Radio host Peter Rosenberg recorded a video response to a clip of Brees’ interview with Yahoo Finance to offer his thoughts as well.

“Shout out to Drew Brees for officially becoming the captain of the ‘you’re missing the point, white privilege, Hall of Fame’ club,” he said.
 
Anybody see the comments of the ex NFL executive about Kapernick? Guy said he was just bad for business for the NFL.
 
Anybody see the comments of the ex NFL executive about Kapernick? Guy said he was just bad for business for the NFL.

That's what it's always about with the NFL (and most businesses).

Public outcry over Kapernick's protest to highlight possible discriminatory policing = distance from it.

(**And remember, that really only caught fire in public because Trump went after it. Kaepernick had been kneeling for about a year prior to that point.)

Public outcry to evaluate possible discriminatory policing methods = embrace it.

For me, nothing that's happened in the past 10 days changes my view on it. I am the same as I was then. I don't like the kneeling in front of the flag, but they have a right to do it over an issue that they feel disenfranchised over. It's up to leadership (both sides) to get conversations going in a healthy, productive manner and see what's what and where to go. If we have a structural problem, let's fix it. If we have bad cops, get them out. If we have a poor training mechanism, change it. I don't know, I'm not an expert in that field, but to have a citizen die like that and then nothing for a few days is awful.

The pig socks Kaepernick wore and some of the other things didn't help the cause. That type of stuff divides even further. Scorched Earth stuff. That type of division and antagonism is the biggest problem in our society, in my expert opinion, LOL!
 
Kapernick inadvertently created the national anthem controversy and took the attention away from his the actual reasoning behind his protest. How exactly does kneeling during the national anthem solve police brutality?
 
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Positive is Kap did it peacefully and he was trying to make a point.

Negative was the pig socks he wore and the Castro shirt. He was trying to antagonize and in my opinion that got in the way of his message.

With that said we need to pay attention and do what we can to make things better over time. We can't change the past. And posting stuff about how we feel won't change anything either (I hate when folks say this one hasn't posted anything about this topic etc.). How we act is what is important and we need to be more sensitive to all.
 
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How exactly does kneeling during the national anthem solve police brutality?

It brings attention to the crisis. Not sure how effective it is, but nothing has been effective in stopping police violence. And I'd say it is more effective than a stupid-looking president violently removing protesters in Washington, D.C. so he can strut to a church to hold up a bible. What does that solve?
 
For me, nothing that's happened in the past 10 days changes my view on it. I am the same as I was then. I don't like the kneeling in front of the flag, but they have a right to do it over an issue that they feel disenfranchised over.

This. So I'm in Brees corner on this one.
 
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When I was at Seton Hall in the early 1970's, most black students would sit during the National Anthem at Walsh Gym basketball games. Was that any different from taking a knee today?
 
When I was at Seton Hall in the early 1970's, most black students would sit during the National Anthem at Walsh Gym basketball games. Was that any different from taking a knee today?
Kapernick was at work, the students were not. Big difference.
 
This. So I'm in Brees corner on this one.
Question if Drew Brees is so patriotic why didn’t follow his family and join the armed services to serve in the Middle East. Many of the heroes who served instead of him had no problem with taking a knee. This is what these heroes fought for, freedom and equality.
 
There were also african american soldiers that fought at WW2, took same risk as Brees grandpa. However when they came back stateside I am sure they were treated nothing like his grandpa at bars, restaurants etc. Brees is getting scorched by many of his union members from this. Some of which are thought very highly of beyond NFL and sports communities.
 
Kap was an employee. It wasn’t a first amendment issue. If an employee does something her/his employer doesn’t like or doesn’t want him/her to do, the employer has every right to tell him/her to stop absent a specific law or collectively bargained for right that says otherwise.

If Kap were a better QB would he have been back in the league - of course. Teams didn’t think the production outweighed the distraction.

No one takes issue with an athlete using his platform to effect positive change. When someone acts in questionable way, or in a way that leads folks to believe that athlete has other motives, you get divide. Had Kap used his celebrity to call a press conference to address police brutuality and racial equality, no one would have seriously condemned it. If he devoted time to organizations that combat these issues, same. He went about it a different way and that led to the firestorm.
 
Kap was an employee. It wasn’t a first amendment issue. If an employee does something her/his employer doesn’t like or doesn’t want him/her to do, the employer has every right to tell him/her to stop absent a specific law or collectively bargained for right that says otherwise.

If Kap were a better QB would he have been back in the league - of course. Teams didn’t think the production outweighed the distraction.

No one takes issue with an athlete using his platform to effect positive change. When someone acts in questionable way, or in a way that leads folks to believe that athlete has other motives, you get divide. Had Kap used his celebrity to call a press conference to address police brutuality and racial equality, no one would have seriously condemned it. If he devoted time to organizations that combat these issues, same. He went about it a different way and that led to the firestorm.
This from postgame of preseason game 3 in 2016
During a post-game interview, he explained his position stating, "I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color. To me, this is bigger than football and it would be selfish on my part to look the other way. There are bodies in the street and people getting paid leave and getting away with murder", referencing a series of African-American deaths caused by law enforcement that led to the Black Lives Matter movement and adding that he would continue to protest until he feels like "[the American flag] represents what it's supposed to represent".

Has also raised and donated to many charities and causes since then.

I agree with quality of player at position if he sustained career like what lamar jackson pat mahomes doing he would be in league now
 
There were also african american soldiers that fought at WW2, took same risk as Brees grandpa. However when they came back stateside I am sure they were treated nothing like his grandpa at bars, restaurants etc. Brees is getting scorched by many of his union members from this. Some of which are thought very highly of beyond NFL and sports communities.
Also wanted to point out this beyond weeks after 9/11 and super bowls, anthems were played prior to players on field before the 2009 NFL season...department of defense spent close to 7 mil from 2012 to 2016 or so on patriotism activations across 4 major north america leagues
 
This from postgame of preseason game 3 in 2016
During a post-game interview, he explained his position stating, "I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color. To me, this is bigger than football and it would be selfish on my part to look the other way. There are bodies in the street and people getting paid leave and getting away with murder", referencing a series of African-American deaths caused by law enforcement that led to the Black Lives Matter movement and adding that he would continue to protest until he feels like "[the American flag] represents what it's supposed to represent".

Has also raised and donated to many charities and causes since then.

I agree with quality of player at position if he sustained career like what lamar jackson pat mahomes doing he would be in league now

Certain things he said I wholeheartedly agree with. When you subsequently wear socks with pigs and shirts celebrating Castro, it not only undercuts your message but makes folks think the only reason you are doing it is to gain celebrity and possibly maximize post-career earnings, which he has. He knew plenty of people were going to have an issue with kneeling during the flag. He could have gained the same amount of attention by doing it a different way. By not electing to, again that causes people to think about the motives.
 
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https://nypost.com/2020/06/03/nba-voice-grant-napear-opens-up-on-all-lives-matter-firing/

NBA voice Grant Napear opens up on ‘All Lives Matter’ firing

By Mark Fischer

June 3, 2020 | 8:08pm | Updated


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It took three words — “All Lives Matter” — for longtime shock jock and Sacramento Kings TV play-by-play announcer Grant Napear’s career to go up in flames, but the 60-year-old’s remorse only goes so far.

“I don’t want to call it a mistake,” the Syosset, Long Island, native told The Post on Wednesday in a wide-ranging phone interview. Of the tweet and its aftermath, Napear said, “I don’t even know what adjective to describe it.”

Napear on Tuesday resigned from the Kings and was fired by his radio station, where he had an eponymous show known for its abrasive, New York flair.

Two days earlier, he had tweeted “ALL LIVES MATTER…EVERY SINGLE ONE!!!” in response to former Kings star DeMarcus Cousins, who asked Napear his thoughts on the Black Lives Matter movement.

Napear, who insists he did not know that “All Lives Matter” is a phrase often used to belittle the Black Lives Matter movement, became choked up at times when talking with The Post while defending himself against the notion he was denouncing the black community and has racist views.

“It makes me feel sick to my stomach because it is absolutely the opposite of who I am,” he said. “I am 60 years old. I will let the track record of my life and what I’ve done for my community and what I’ve done. … People who know me, of all races, I’ll let them tell the story.”

Napear said he was caught off guard by Cousins’ question, and said he had previously muted Cousins on Twitter because he “didn’t care to see all the banter” about Cousins after the Kings traded the former fifth-overall pick in 2017.

But the two have long had a shaky relationship.

“It was very turbulent, on and off,” Napear said of their relationship, which began when Cousins was drafted in 2010. “He was constantly in trouble, getting into suspensions. He was a very volatile personality. And I had a talk show and so there were times I had to be critical of him. I’m sure he did not appreciate my criticism.”

Such as in 2019, when Napear called Cousins “the rudest, crudest, most vile player that I have ever been around in my 31 years in the NBA,” after Cousins cursed out Raptors fans who cheered the injury of his then-Warriors teammate Kevin Durant, during the finals of that year.

Attempts to reach Cousins, who was waived by the Lakers in February, went unanswered.

“Lol as expected,” Cousins responded to Napear’s “All Lives Matter” tweet, which was followed up by two other former Kings players calling out Napear.

“Would expect nothing less from a closet racists,” tweeted Matt Barnes, whom Napear said has participated in his charity golf tournament.

“Demarcus we know and have known who grant is,” said former Kings All-Star Chris Webber, who is now an NBA on TNT analyst. “The team knows as well. I’ve told them many times. They’ve seen it. They know who he is,” said Webber, adding two clown emojis.

Webber did not respond to multiple interview requests.

“I have not once in my 32 years in doing the Sacramento Kings had any individual from either the radio station or the Kings mention anything in any way, shape or form about me and my relations with minorities, with any other group of people,” Napear said. “That is an absolute disgrace that that would ever be said. That is an absolute disgrace.”

Napear said he also has criticized Webber on and off the court, and claimed Webber and Cousins were “two of the most sensitive athletes” he’s ever been around.

Since the “All Lives Matter” tweet was posted, Napear’s critics have pointed to what they believe to be other examples of Napear crossing the racial line.

As the NBA investigated disgraced former Clippers owner Donald Sterling in 2014 after a clip of Sterling making racist remarks about African Americans was leaked, Napear was asked by a caller whether he thought Sterling was a racist.

“I said something like, ‘I don’t know if Donald Sterling is a racist, I don’t know, but what I do know is it is very interesting that, as the owner of the basketball team, he has a black general manager and a black head coach.’ That’s what was the context of the conversation. Until I read [the Sterling reference] in The Post [earlier this week], I had to go back and ask some coworkers to refresh where this even came from because it caught me off guard. I never ever defended Donald Sterling and the charges. Not one time.”

Napear’s response matches up with a Sacramento Bee report of the same incident. Napear said he didn’t face backlash at the time. Sterling lost control of the Clippers shortly after.

There also was a tweet in 2018, in which Napear agreed with a Twitter user who said they didn’t want to see protests at football games, a reference to former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick kneeling years earlier to protest police brutality.

To that, Napear said, “When I go to a play on Broadway, I want to go see a performance. I don’t want to see any political statements being made or any social issues because that’s not why I’m going. I have no problem with people protesting.”

Napear said multiple former black Kings players and colleagues have reached out to show their support, but he declined to reveal their names.

Chris “Mad Dog” Russo, who grew up with Napear, said Tuesday on his show that “to say that Grant Napear is a racist is absurd. In my knowledge of him … Grant Napear, trust me when I say this, this is me, is anything but a racist.”

The Post relayed Russo’s thoughts to Napear, who began to break down while speaking about his late father, Bert, who fought for civil rights on Long Island.

“The fact that you just told me that,” Napear said, “I’m sorry that I got so emotional, because if anybody knows me and what my family stood for, that’s Chris Russo.”

Napear says he doesn’t know what’s next for him, “just trying to get through today.”

He is on the board of the FUTURE Foundation of Sacramento, which provides college scholarships for those in need of financial aid. He has hosted an annual golf tournament for the cause since 1995, and said at his next meeting he will discuss how the foundation can be involved in the Black Lives Matter protests.

“If I can help out others and educate them the way I was educated, that’s great,” he said.
 
Feel bad for that guy. Who in their right mind would think saying "all lives matter" is racist?

A society that values the lives of one race over another is not one I want to be apart of. America is great because it values every life and the contributions of people regardless of race, creed, ethnicity, etc.
 
Yeah, reading that I would have made the same mistake as I have in the past always agreed with All Lives Matter. Never thought of it as a racist rebuttal to Black Lives Matter.

It's getting to the point that most anything you say is going to upset someone.

I agree Dan. It's twitter, facebook and all of social media that has stirred up this anger over the last 10-15 years in America. It's quite sad. People can't have a discussion anymore without retreating to their tribes.

Black Lives Matter. White Lives Matter. Asian Lives Matter. Every life matters! Treat everybody equal!
 
It's scary to think that personally I could have tweeted the same thing and lost my job. It's a reason that I never hit enter here without reading and rereading my posts.

Sometimes I post when I'm on the phone and after getting off and rereading what I said I edit it because of the possibility that my words might offend someone.

It's the current internet version of Hoya Paranoia.
 
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People today go looking for a reason to be offended. Once they are all bets are off and they either want to sue you for everything you have or they feel it gives them the right to destroy everything you have. In their eyes you aren’t allowed to complain or be offended though, you just have to put up and shut up because now everything that is wrong in their lives is your fault.
 
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I agree Dan. It's twitter, facebook and all of social media that has stirred up this anger over the last 10-15 years in America. It's quite sad. People can't have a discussion anymore without retreating to their tribes.

Black Lives Matter. White Lives Matter. Asian Lives Matter. Every life matters! Treat everybody equal!

I’m young enough where most of my generation is active on social media. I’m not, never have been, and never will be. Twitter can be fine when used properly for reporting real news - which often is not the case - but the rest is trash. I have young kids and when people ask what I fear most for them, it’s not who the President may be, it’s not social or geopolitical issues, it’s social media, period. And my generation is one that has driven the proliferation of it.
 
Kapernick inadvertently created the national anthem controversy and took the attention away from his the actual reasoning behind his protest. How exactly does kneeling during the national anthem solve police brutality?
No protest “solves” the problem it’s protesting. It is and always has been about visibility. If you can become visible enough that the topic gets into people’s daily lives over and over again, then it opens up dialogue. MLK marching didn’t “solve” racism, but putting together those movements and becoming impossible to ignore opened up the communication to push civil rights forward.
 
Feel bad for that guy. Who in their right mind would think saying "all lives matter" is racist?

A society that values the lives of one race over another is not one I want to be apart of. America is great because it values every life and the contributions of people regardless of race, creed, ethnicity, etc.
The issue is that “all lives matter” only arose AFTER “black lives matter” began in 2013. Not a single person is saying “only black lives matter” or “black lives matter more than others,” the entire point is that presently black lives matter LESS. The entire objective of repeating “black lives matter” is to bring attention to the systematic ways that they are worth less in our society, and that that should be changed. If your house is on fire and mine across the street is not, you’d probably be yelling “someone help keep my house from burning down!” Am I going to shout over you “we should keep EVERYONE’s houses from burning down, yours isn’t the only important one! Get off your soap box and quiet down, ALL these houses matter.” No. That would be absurd. The one that is experiencing a tangibly and urgently more dire situation is the one that would receive the attention. All lives will actually matter to our society WHEN black lives start mattering, and until then it’s foolish to claim they all do.
 
My take on the situation is probably closer to the middle. I have absolutely no problem with what Brees said short of any attempt to force his view on others, but I will add it should not have been said at this time. Nerves are too raw.

I also want to note that although I would never do what Kaepernick did I have not changed my initial opinion that he had every right to do what he did.
 
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This from postgame of preseason game 3 in 2016
During a post-game interview, he explained his position stating, "I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color. To me, this is bigger than football and it would be selfish on my part to look the other way. There are bodies in the street and people getting paid leave and getting away with murder", referencing a series of African-American deaths caused by law enforcement that led to the Black Lives Matter movement and adding that he would continue to protest until he feels like "[the American flag] represents what it's supposed to represent".

Has also raised and donated to many charities and causes since then.

I agree with quality of player at position if he sustained career like what lamar jackson pat mahomes doing he would be in league now

He only started his "protest" until his ass was benched for being terrible. For god sake he got beat out by Blaine Gabbert for the job. After losing the job to Gabbert he all of a sudden had an idea that he was some martyr. I always like to see what people do versus what they say. Kap wore pig socks and praised Fidel F'n Castro. This leads me to believe Kap is not a very smart man. Although he did earn a ton of money from his little tantrum.

For the person who asked if Brees is so patriotic why didn't he join the military? Does one have to choose a military career to love their country and appreciate how many people died for the country? Brees and every American are allowed to have their opinions (Kap can have his, he shouldn't be protesting at work) , the fact that all of these guys are shouting him down for speaking his opinion just shows how far society has devolved. Brees is a good dude, he's charitable and he cares about Louisiana/New Orleans. Let's burn him at the steak for loving the USA.
 
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The issue is that “all lives matter” only arose AFTER “black lives matter” began in 2013. Not a single person is saying “only black lives matter” or “black lives matter more than others,” the entire point is that presently black lives matter LESS. The entire objective of repeating “black lives matter” is to bring attention to the systematic ways that they are worth less in our society, and that that should be changed. If your house is on fire and mine across the street is not, you’d probably be yelling “someone help keep my house from burning down!” Am I going to shout over you “we should keep EVERYONE’s houses from burning down, yours isn’t the only important one! Get off your soap box and quiet down, ALL these houses matter.” No. That would be absurd. The one that is experiencing a tangibly and urgently more dire situation is the one that would receive the attention. All lives will actually matter to our society WHEN black lives start mattering, and until then it’s foolish to claim they all do.

and not a single person whose saying “all lives matter” is saying black lives don’t matter. Being inclusive of all people and believing in a standard that everyone on the planet deserves to be treated equally has somehow been made out to be wrong. In the example of the house on fire in a neighborhood, I don’t think anyone is arguing that you are going to prioritize the house that’s engulfed in flames. But that analogy fails because everything around that house isn’t perfect either, other houses have started to burn and there are plenty more that are simmering. You don’t think Asian Americans feel the same racism? Look at the incidents of racism towards them regarding COVID. What about Spanish people, many of which immigrated here for a better life but are stuck in service level jobs? What about poor white people, what about the challenge the middle and lower classes have?

There isn’t one house in the neighborhood that needs to be addressed, the WHOLE neighborhood needs to be addressed. Black lives matter may be the house that needs the fire truck the most, but that doesn’t means that saying we need to take care of every house in the neighborhood is wrong.
 
My take on the situation is probably closer to the middle. I have absolutely no problem with what Brees said, but I will add it should not have been said at this time. Nerves are too raw.

I also want to note that although I would never do what Kaepernick did I have not changed my initial opinion that he had every right to do what he did.

I too have no problem with with what Brees said but where you and I diverge is that if he felt so strongly that it was important for him to speak out at this time , likely knowing he would receive criticism for his comments, then who are we to deny him the opportunity to say what he wants to say and when he wants to say it because both are the foundation of free speech in this country .
 
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https://nypost.com/2020/06/04/drew-brees-apologizes-for-kneeling-controversy-im-not-the-enemy/

Drew Brees apologizes for kneeling controversy: I’m not the ‘enemy’

By Justin Terranova

June 4, 2020 | 8:51am


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Drew Brees does not believe he is the “enemy.”

The Saints quarterback apologized for his comments on Wednesday, when he told Yahoo Finance that he would never support players who kneeled during the national anthem. The comments were quickly rebuked by Brees’ teammates, others in the NFL, athletes like LeBron James and some New Orleans residents.

“I would like to apologize to my friends, teammates, the City of New Orleans, the black community, NFL community and anyone I hurt with my comments (Wednesday). In speaking with some of you, it breaks my heart to know the pain I have caused. In an attempt to talk about respect, unity, and solidarity centered around the American flag and the national anthem, I made comments that were insensitive and completely missed the mark on the issues we are facing right now as a country,” Brees wrote on Instagram with a photo featuring black and white hands gripped in solidarity.

“They lacked awareness and any type of compassion or empathy. Instead, those words have become divisive and hurtful and have misled people into believing that somehow I am an enemy. This could not be further from the truth, and is not an accurate reflection of my heart or my character.”

Brees’ comments came as nationwide protests have spread throughout the country over the police-involved killing of George Floyd. The 41-year-old Super Bowl champ attempted to clarify where he stands on racial issues.

I stand with the black community in the fight against systemic racial injustice and police brutality and support the creation of real policy change that will make a difference.

I condemn the years of oppression that have taken place throughout our black communities and still exists today.

I acknowledge that we as Americans, including myself, have not done enough to fight for that equality or to truly understand the struggles and plight of the black community.

I recognize that I am part of the solution and can be a leader for the black community in this movement.

I will never know what it’s like to be a black man or raise black children in America but I will work every day to put myself in those shoes and fight for what is right.

I have ALWAYS been an ally, never an enemy.

I am sick about the way my comments were perceived yesterday, but I take full responsibility and accountability. I recognize that I should do less talking and more listening…and when the black community is talking about their pain, we all need to listen.

For that, I am very sorry and I ask your forgiveness.
 
https://nypost.com/2020/06/04/drew-brees-apologizes-for-kneeling-controversy-im-not-the-enemy/

Drew Brees apologizes for kneeling controversy: I’m not the ‘enemy’

By Justin Terranova

June 4, 2020 | 8:51am


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Drew Brees does not believe he is the “enemy.”

The Saints quarterback apologized for his comments on Wednesday, when he told Yahoo Finance that he would never support players who kneeled during the national anthem. The comments were quickly rebuked by Brees’ teammates, others in the NFL, athletes like LeBron James and some New Orleans residents.

“I would like to apologize to my friends, teammates, the City of New Orleans, the black community, NFL community and anyone I hurt with my comments (Wednesday). In speaking with some of you, it breaks my heart to know the pain I have caused. In an attempt to talk about respect, unity, and solidarity centered around the American flag and the national anthem, I made comments that were insensitive and completely missed the mark on the issues we are facing right now as a country,” Brees wrote on Instagram with a photo featuring black and white hands gripped in solidarity.

“They lacked awareness and any type of compassion or empathy. Instead, those words have become divisive and hurtful and have misled people into believing that somehow I am an enemy. This could not be further from the truth, and is not an accurate reflection of my heart or my character.”

Brees’ comments came as nationwide protests have spread throughout the country over the police-involved killing of George Floyd. The 41-year-old Super Bowl champ attempted to clarify where he stands on racial issues.

I stand with the black community in the fight against systemic racial injustice and police brutality and support the creation of real policy change that will make a difference.

I condemn the years of oppression that have taken place throughout our black communities and still exists today.

I acknowledge that we as Americans, including myself, have not done enough to fight for that equality or to truly understand the struggles and plight of the black community.

I recognize that I am part of the solution and can be a leader for the black community in this movement.

I will never know what it’s like to be a black man or raise black children in America but I will work every day to put myself in those shoes and fight for what is right.

I have ALWAYS been an ally, never an enemy.

I am sick about the way my comments were perceived yesterday, but I take full responsibility and accountability. I recognize that I should do less talking and more listening…and when the black community is talking about their pain, we all need to listen.

For that, I am very sorry and I ask your forgiveness.

Here is my issue- what did Brees say that was insensitive. Where the heck are we going in Society? Are we really at the place where an announcer gets fired for saying that all lives matter?
 
He only started his "protest" until his ass was benched for being terrible. For god sake he got beat out by Blaine Gabbert for the job. After losing the job to Gabbert he all of a sudden had an idea that he was some martyr. I always like to see what people do versus what they say. Kap wore pig socks and praised Fidel F'n Castro. This leads me to believe Kap is not a very smart man. Although he did earn a ton of money from his little tantrum.

For the person who asked if Brees is so patriotic why didn't he join the military? Does one have to choose a military career to love their country and appreciate how many people died for the country? Brees and every American are allowed to have their opinions (Kap can have his, he shouldn't be protesting at work) , the fact that all of these guys are shouting him down for speaking his opinion just shows how far society has devolved. Brees is a good dude, he's charitable and he cares about Louisiana/New Orleans. Let's burn him at the steak for loving the USA.
Brees isn’t allowed to have his own opinion because group think won’t allow it. He’ll be beaten into submission or called a racist. His choice. Pathetic. As for Kap, he only cares about himself. Want to protest? Great! Go for it! Just don’t do it at work. I’m not paying to watch your temper tantrum (I am not saying protests are temper tantrums but if you do it at work to draw attention primarily to yourself then it’s a temper tantrum). When protesting becomes a professional career choice and you want to sell tickets for me to watch you promote your cause then fine because then I’m getting what I paid for if I choose to pay.
 
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Here is my issue- what did Brees say that was insensitive. Where the heck are we going in Society? Are we really at the place where an announcer gets fired for saying that all lives matter? WTF

It's mob rule and extremism out there now. If you don't conform to their world view, they shout you down and go after you for everything you have. Really scary.
 
Kind of strange that Biden and Obama didn’t solve institutional racism whatever they mean by it
during their 8 years but Joe will solve it if he is elected.Biden was sponsor of now infamous 1994
crime bill, but now along with every other position he has historically held he has flipped on to
pander to left.Terrible that 9 unarmed blacks have been killed by police in the last year just like
it is terrible that 18 unarmed whites have been killed by police in the last year.Long term killing
trend of police in these instances down about 75 percent in last 30 years but that doesn’t feed
the media narrative which implies situation getting worse not better.Getting tired of insinuation
that all white people are racists when a rogue cop kills an unarmed black persons.As everyone
who is at all knowledgeable knows 90 plus percent of black homicides are black on black crimes.
But that stat doesn’t advance the main stream media narrative so they will bury it.
 
Understand why Brees probably felt compelled to say something publicly in response to all the criticism, but how quickly the mob gathers on this stuff is remarkable. Drew Brees has probably done more good works for the City of NO and surrounding communities than anyone. And yet guys who haven’t done probably 1/50 are going criticize him for being a bad person for some words that some people take offense to, even if there was really nothing offensive about them?
 
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Just saw early on ESPN an NBA player's tweet telling him that the apology is weak and to get his ass on TV. Brees posted this first thing in the morning. I'm sure TV will follow.

And some are calling Brees clueless. He's more humane than probably most all the people attacking him.
 
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