11 Sep NFL Protest Continues without Solutions
As a Veteran Owned Company and the CEO of US Elite being a former Air Force Gulf War Veteran.
It truly hurts, know they are looking for reality tv attention.
So we have a handful of over paid athletes fully disrespecting the National Anthem. They sure love their American Million Dollar Contracts.
It’s time for Sponsors and Owners of NFL Teams to start letting go of these players.
Instead of protesting, maybe they should put scholarships on behalf of them. Maybe donating there money in community education. Stop the violence in the inner cities. Head to the Dakotas and stop the Oil digs!
Black Lives Activists goes on Phoenix Police Department “Shoot or Not Shoot”
https://www.youtube.com/shared?ci=9BXAzRNV3-8
Raising fists for “Black Power” is no different than the KKK.
How is this fixing the solution?
As for Kaepernick, Forty-niners coach Chip Kelly announced Kaepernick would serve as the team’s backup quarterback on next weeks game.
We will boycott buying any NFL apparel or any of these players who protest them National Anthem. As it is our right.
On Sunday, Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Marcus Peters raised his fist, four Miami Dolphins players knelt, and teams interlocked arms as a sign of unity. Each protest came during the playing of the national anthem at the start of their teams’ games.
Peters — who is black and told the press Friday that he salutes Kaepernick for his protests, calling it “a great cause” — raised his fist in protest at the start of a home game against the San Diego Chargers today. As he did, many of his teammates locked arms in an apparent show of solidarity.
Meanwhile in Seattle, Miami Dolphins players Arian Foster, Michael Thomas, Jelani Jenkins and Kenny Stills knelt during the national anthem at the start of their game against the Seahawks.
Across the field, Seahawks team members interlocked their arms in a gesture that they had announced earlier would be a “demonstration of unity.”
In a later game, several members of the Tennessee Titans raised their right fists before their game against the Minnesota Vikings.
Other individual players — including Seahawks cornerback Jeremy Lane, San Francisco 49ers safety Eric Reid, and Denver Broncos’ linebacker Brandon Marshall — have at times also followed Kaepernick’s lead in kneeling during the anthem.
Kaepernick who refused to stand for the national anthem during preseason games in protest over what he has referred to as America’s treatment of “Oppression ”
Peters said of Kapernick. ” I’m going to back him up.”
Peters’ gesture of raising his fist appears to add a new element of political symbolism to the growing wave of demonstrations in the league.
Tommie Smith and John Carlos, gold and bronze medalists in the 200-meter run at the 1968 Olympic Games, engaged in a protest on the victory stand in which they raised their fists in what is frequently described as a “Black Power salute.”
Peters’ actions appear to reference that moment, which became a lasting symbol of America’s civil rights movement.
Kaepernick is expected to continue to protest versus finding a solution.