I want to bring together two
seemingly unrelated recent rulings. The National Football League
settled with former San Francisco 49er quarterback Colin Kaepernick.
Three white Chicago cops who lied in their reports about the murder
of Laquan McDonald were acquitted by a judge. How are these two
rulings related?
Kaep’s
view is that America is not paying serious attention to the
unfettered abuse of police in communities of color, that the historic
white blanket of racism looms over every aspect of our lives. To
express his dissatisfaction, Kaepernick first began sitting on the
bench when the national anthem was sung. Blatant cop-killings forced
him to take it to the next level by “taking a knee.”
Other mainly Black NFL players joined the spontaneous actions.
The
actions of Kaepernick received national attention. It received the
condemnation of president trump and finally forced the quarterback
out of the NFL to become a free agent. It appeared that he was being
black-balled by the NFL. He subsequently sued the NFL for collusion
to prevent his employment by a franchise team.
The
conditions of his settlement are sealed but unconfirmed reports put
his take (along fellow team mate Eric Reid) at $60-80 million. Reid
has signed a 3-year deal with the North Carolina Panthers.
Black
teen Laquan McDonald was viciously gunned down by Chicago cops in
2014. The police video of the account was suppressed by Mayor Rahm
Emanuel until he won a hotly contested mayoral race. Although the
teen brandished a knife, the barrage of bullets came after he
attempted to flee the police—meaning McDonald was no longer a
threat.
Jason
Van Dyke has been convicted of second-degree murder in the McDonald
case and sentenced to seven years in prison. The police reports of
David March, Joseph Walsh and Thomas Gaffney conflicted with the
facts of the video. The three were charged with conspiracy when they
claimed the teen tried to attack them with a knife, obviously trying
to justify the lethal act of Van Dyke.
Judge
Domenica Stephenson said that the wide discrepancies between the
officers’ report and the video were not “proof that they
were lying.” The cops were acquitted and not required to be
accountable for their wrongdoings.
This
judgment and others like it across the country were exactly the
catalyst for the #TakeAKnee movement. Kaepernick’s protests
were part of ongoing resistance to racism in general and specifically
to racially-motivated practices of law enforcement.
The
NFL attempted to put a chill on the protest, with urging from donald
trump to come down hard on unpatriotic players. It tried to make an
example of Kaepernick but all this did was to confirm that racism in
America is alive and well. The front office was caught off-guard when
the then-St. Louis Rams came on the field with their “hands up”
after the murder of Mike Brown by a white Ferguson cop. They were
ready for a Kaepernick.
What
the NFL and the white structure fail to understand is that the debate
and protests around acts of racism and institutional racism are not
going away.
NBA
superstar LeBron James continued to use his national platform to
support Kaepernick. James said he hoped Kaep made a lot of money off
the NFL settlement that would set up him and his family for a long
time.
“Anybody
that would sacrifice their livelihood for the better of all of us, I
could respect that…he wanted to stand for something that was
more than just him. ”
In
the spirit of a few Black athletes before him, Kaepernick has used
his status to elevate an issue that white America continues to ignore
and earnestly take on—the issue of race. He added his voice to
the national debate about the treatment of Black and Brown people by
so-called law enforcers. He took on the powerful NFL and won. Whether
Kaepernick gets an NFL contract or not, his place in the struggle for
human dignity and racial justice is noteworthy.
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