I
am not sure why the “National Anthem” and the so-called
American flag are part of our nation’s sports pageantry.
Before 2009, while the National Anthem was played, sports gladiators
were not required to suit up, stand up, and put their hands to their
hearts and why should they? The song that is sung is an insult to
people of color. When I hear “the land of the free and the
home of the brave”, I think, “the land of the thief and
the home of the slave”. The National Football League, paid by
the Department of Defense (seriously?) has paid for a fake cultural
hegemony, for the notion that we are all on the same page.
How
could we be on the same page? How could the men who have been hauled
out of their cars, pushed down to their knees, forced to justify the
reasons they are driving high-end cars be on the same page with the
men who “own” them, who may or may not support them, may
or may not kneel with them, have fealty with their masters?
Colin
Kapernick took to the knee, not because he disparaged the flag, but
because he disparaged the many ways that African American people were
being diminished by police brutality. Call the names, call the
names, the men and the women who have been unjustifiably killed, call
the names, and call the names of the many ways Back Lives Must
Matter. Call the names, call the names, of the structural racism
that cuts like a knife, or kills like a bullet. Call the names.
There
are those who have a story to tell about so-called disrespect to the
“American flag”. But the flag is drenched in blood.
Black men went to fight in World War I, and came back to this country
and were lynched because they refused to cede the sidewalk to white
people. What flag did they serve under, and why should we celebrate
it. And why do disingenuous fools, including Mr. 45, chide NFL
owners with strangely coded language, suggesting a lack of loyalty.
Where is the loyalty to the Black men and women who supported a
country that would not support them? The paradox of loyalty is that
African American people love a country that does not love us. We
pledge the flag, drenched in blood, because we want something better.
Colin
Kapernick took a stand, and many of his colleagues support him
because they cannot embrace a flag that supports the unjustified
killing of African American men. Colin Kapernick sacrificed his
career to make a point, and he has been focused and fierce about his
principles. Colin Kapernick, by kneeling, encouraged all of us to
stand up for our rights. Colin Kapernick is a hero!
This
protest is more, though, than Colin Kapernick. This protest is about
police brutality. This is a protest about the fake-Jake way some
would bond us together, linking arms and elbows, trying to make a
point. There is no point beyond the fact that young black men who
play football, baseball, and basketball see their brothers and
cousins on their knees, legs and arms splayed, in the face of
oppressive police forces. They freely kneel because others knelt
when they were required to, because they were not free.
We
can fly this flag all we want to, we can sing melodious songs about
“the star spangled banner”. But the flag we fly in the
name of sports is a flag that is drenched in blood. Players weren’t
required to stand at attention until 2009 because the Department of
Defense paid money to make it happen. I’d rather my tax dollar
be spent in different ways. I’d rather someone wash the blood
out of the flag!
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