His response came Wednesday in an interview with Yahoo Finance, when asked his opinion about players kneeling to protest police brutality once the NFL season begins this fall.
Brees
said respecting the National Anthem is not just about showing respect
to the military, but also to anyone who sacrificed for this country,
including those in the civil rights movement.
"And
is everything right with our country right now? No, it's not," Brees
said in the interview. "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."
"You
literally still don't understand why Kap was kneeling on one knee??"
James said in a tweet, referencing Colin Kaepernick. "Has absolute
nothing to do with the disrespect of (the flag of United States) and our
soldiers."
James went on to
discuss his own father-in-law who was in the Army, saying that he never
found Kaepernick -- who famously knelt during the national anthem to
protest police brutality -- disrespectful, "because he and I both know
what's right is right and what's wrong is wrong!"
Michael Thomas, a wide receiver on the Saints, didn't call out Brees specifically -- but he did retweet a comment from a journalist,
reading "How can anyone watch George Floyd get murdered and their first
response when asked about it is ResPEcC tHe fLAg." Thomas added a
puking emoji.
Malcolm Jenkins, a safety for the Saints, had stronger words. In a tear-filled four-minute video posted to Instagram, Jenkins expressed his hurt and disappointment in Brees, saying that he is part of the problem.
"When
I step off the field and I take my helmet off, I'm a black man walking
around in America and I'm telling you I'm dealing with these things, I'm
telling you my communities are dealing with these things, and your
response to me is don't talk about that here ... where is the place,
Drew?"
"When the world tells you
that you're not worthy, that your life doesn't matter, the last place
you want to hear it from are the guys that you go to war with and the
guys you consider to be your allies and your friends," Jenkins said.
"Even though we're teammates, I cant let this slide."
Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers also spoke up -- though he didn't reference Brees or his comments specifically.
"A few years ago we were criticized for locking arms in solidarity before the game," Rodgers said in an Instagram post.
"It has NEVER been about an anthem or a flag. Not then. Not now. Listen
with an open heart, let's educate ourselves, and then turn word and
thought into action."
Black players
make up about 70% of the NFL. In 2018, the NFL passed a policy to fine
players for kneeling during the anthem, which was done to protest police
brutality and racial injustice in the US. The punishment associated
with the policy was later nixed, though the policy itself still
remained.
__________
Drees couldn't stand the heat, so he apologized
Here is his sniveling apology:
EDITOR'S
NOTE: Drees didn't owe anyone an apology. Instead of having
"completely missed the mark," he was spot on! It is sad to see a man
who stood up for respect of flag and country completely cave in to a
bunch of ungrateful, unpatriotic assholes..
No comments:
Post a Comment