YOU'RE FIRED!

It's a good thing that's not what I said. Like, at all. It's okay though, I know you have an insatiable need to portray anyone who disagrees with you as a racist so you are incapable of reading posts objectively.

Your words mate:

For me, it's really the complete lack of perspective these players have that bothers me so much. They think because they had to grow up in poverty (or at least what passes for poverty in the US) that they know what struggle is. They also think that just because they sweat during their workouts and practices that they've put in a "hard day's work." There are literally billions of people throughout the world who would do anything to live what is considered an "impoverished" life in the US and they would certainly do anything to get paid millions of dollars to play a game for a living. And that's what these players don't understand. They don't understand just how bad things truly can be in this world and, thus, don't understand just how good they have it here in the US. I didn't understand it until I was face to face with it every single day for a year. Pre-Iraq me would have completely supported this protest because pre-Iraq me had zero understanding of the world outside of western civilization.

This is a verrry old trope. The idea that any successful black person (this happens here too) had no grounds to complain about racism and injustice because they should be "grateful" for what they have and should just "shut up and play". That the tradeoff for non-white success is that you don't have a legitimate voice. "Don't know how good they have it" is a pretty common variation on that. Speaking for this country, I don't think I've ever seen an Aboriginal athlete challenge any sort of racism or injustice without getting that same response from a lot of people.
 
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Sorry for the long post, but I enjoy debating @Commodore ;)
Just saw a poll that shows 62% of NFL fans claim they will watch fewer games and purchase less merchandise specifically because of these anthem protests. Basically, NFL fans are going to protest the protest. Now whether or not those 62% make good on that threat is another question altogether, it does point to a potential crisis for the NFL. Losing 62% of your fan base can only spell disaster for the league. Especially since those who support these protests are only supporting it for the social issue it stands for. Otherwise, those people aren't the type that typically frequent NFL events or purchase their merchandise, so it's not like the NFL will be able to replace the 62% of their fan base they are alienating by allowing these protests to continue. It's okay though. These entitled little rich kids (that's essentially what these players are acting like) will learn just how much this country does not support what they are doing. I've already been seeing articles about how businesses in cities with NFL teams are refusing service to NFL players and coaches that don't stand for the anthem ... As commissioner of the league though, he has an obligation to protect the interests of the league. Right now, these protests are threatening the financially stability, and thus the future success, of the league as a whole. So while he may be following his conscience on this matter, he is failing in his responsibility to the league by allowing this to continue.
Rather than point-by-point this part to death, I'll just say that I reject this line of argument whole-hat, including the part about the commissioner "protecting the interests/financial stability of the league. The anti-protest snowflakes are really showing how self-absorbed and self-important they are. This whole threat of "Oh NFL you're offending/pissing off your fanbase, which consists primarily of flag waving, gun toting Americans who will boycott, boycott I say!... any day now... just you wait... its coming!" is nothing but a paper tiger. You (the royal you) wish that this was true so the owners would be cowed into submission by the almighty Mammon, and thereby whip their players into line... but its not gonna happen. The NFL will continue to thrive, protests and "counter-protests" notwithstanding. All these empty-threats of "We ain't gonna watch no more!" is just a bunch of snowflake/PC whining and is being rightfully ignored. You (the royal you) are going to continue to consume NFL to the tune of billions, and the protests will continue. No one is paying attention to the empty-threats cause the money is still rolling in. If anything the protests are increasing. Your (the royal your) threats aren't working, because they aren't credible.
Not really. It's more of when I pay for a ticket to an NFL game, I'm paying to be entertained, not to have someone's political message shoved in my face.
"Shoved in your face"? Dude that's a 15 yard penalty for hyperbole and a loss of down for melodrama. They're kneeling silently during the anthem, not picketing your abortion clinic and getting in your face calling you a murderer as you come in to work (or killing you), or screaming "Jew will not replace us!" at you (or running you over with their car)... or splashing paint all over your mink coat... or hijacking your plane... again, they're just kneeling. No one is "shoving" anything in your face. Frankly, if you bought a ticket, you're at the game, and unless you paid for seats in the first few rows, the players are too faraway to see, and you are perfectly free not to look at them anyway. Furthermore, you shouldn't be looking at them anyway, because I'm going to assume that while the anthem is being played, you personally are looking at the flag not the players, so you don't even see them kneeling. So again, I'm calling total BS on this "shoved in my face" stuff.
So again, it's not the cause that's being opposed, it's the methodology.
And this is a classic example of "Don't like the who/what gonna oppose the how, regardless." You oppose their cause. You are clearly on the record as opposing BLM etc, so don't try to pretend that its about the "methodology". That is just an excuse to oppose. There is no protest they could do that you would accept. Anyway, protesting is about creating a controversy/spectacle. The "I wish they would just protest in a way that dosen't offend me, or in a way I don't notice" is an illegitimate critique that people who oppose the cause always use. You've once again made my point.
Who here is opposing their right to free speech? No one here has said NFL players shouldn't be allowed to express themselves. People are only expressing disagreement with the methodology and expressing their own opinions on the matter. Are you going to try to sell the idea that disagreement and expressing a counter opinion is akin to opposing one's right to free speech? If you are, then I'd say it is you that is trying to oppose free speech.
You miss my point. What I am saying is that I want everyone who piped up in defense of the Kluxers and Milo, and the nazis etc... in the name of "free speech" and condemned all the naughty students and liberals and "SJWs" etc for "being against free speech" for condemning the Kluxers... to now come out just as passionately in favor of the NFL players and use the same "free speech" arguments they used to defend Nazis to now defend the NFL players. But they're not doing it. Instead all I'm hearing is a bunch of doublethink and cognitive dissonance.
Not to mention, they are protesting at their place of employment.
Irrelevant and you know it. Most importantly, you aren't their employer so you don't have any standing to say what conduct they can or can't engage in at their place of employment. Second, as I've already stated, your rights don't cease to exist when you clock in to work.
If I did what they did at my job while on company time (by "did what they did" I mean protesting in general since obviously the national anthem isn't played at the beginning of each shift), I'd be fired immediately
Also Irrelevant, and frankly untrue because 1) as you accurately point out the freaking national anthem isn't played at your workplace at the start of the workday, so your analogy fails completely. 2) The most direct analogy you can make is the pledge of allegiance at the beginning of the school day which students can and do protest without consequence (I know this firsthand because my mother's religion required me to protest the pledge), and 3) what would happen on your job is irrelevant, because they don't work at your job and you don't work at theirs, nor are you their employer. 4 ) Also, "the business at hand" issue is a red herring. The "business at hand" is playing football. The guys kneeling attend to the business at hand just fine. Your trying to make standing for the anthem part of their job, its not, period. They are football players not anthem standers. I've already debunked your point about the Operations Manual so its time to let that part of the argument go.
And plus, firing someone or imposing some other disciplinary action on them in general over their political opinion is not a violation of Constitutional rights unless the employer is a government agency or holds a government contract. The Constitution guarantees your right to free speech, but there's nothing in there about a right to a job.
You miss my point. The point you raise repeatedly gets missed or outright ignored when its brought up in the context of the so-called SJWs oppressing the Kluxers/nazis etc's free speech, so thanks for reminding everyone and again helping to make my point. When its Berkeley students protesting Milo or people counterprotesting Kluxers etc all the free speech passionados come out of the woodwork and accuse the students of "trying to oppress free speech" ignoring the legal parameters of freedom of speech that you mentioned. So I want them to ignore it now and defend the NFL players. They do it for the Nazis, why not for the NFL players? Well... I know why, I'm just pointing out the inconsistency.
It's not an implication from me, it's explicitly stated in the NFL Game Operations Manual. That means when players agree to play in the NFL, they are agreeing to abide by all of its policies as well.
I've already debunked this claim, complete with mutiple souce citations in the post you just responded to. Most importantly, again there is no penalty delineated in the Operations Manual for failure to stand. The only penalty described is for failure to be on the field/sidelines during the anthem. So Goodell couldn't punish them for kneeling even if he wanted to. So you're just wrong on this point about their employment obligations, period. That you would read the debunking and then repeat the same erroneous claim is... well...
Here is the rule....at least according to an unofficial site: Notice the use of the word "should" instead of "must." According to DifferenceBetween.Net:
I already explained that to @Commodore , he's just choosing to ignore it because he's so committed to his argument.
 
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This is a verrry old trope. The idea that any successful black person (this happens here too) had no grounds to complain about racism and injustice because they should be "grateful" for what they have and should just "shut up and play". That the tradeoff for non-white success is that you don't have a legitimate voice. "Don't know how good they have it" is a pretty common variation on that. Speaking for this country, I don't think I've ever seen an Aboriginal athlete challenge any sort of racism or injustice without getting that same response from a lot of people.

You have to view it through american hyper patriotism
Even an American Vetern decided to fly the US flag upside down in protest made national news and drew the usual comdemnation.
Or an Australian flying the Australian flag next to the US flag and people were outraged, they didnt know what flag it was or that Australia is the only nation that has followed the US into every conflict, all that mattered is it was disrespectful
 
@Sommerswerd What's the end game of these protests? What positive effect do you expect this to have? Do you think all of those booing fans care more about police brutality now?
 
@Sommerswerd What's the end game of these protests? What positive effect do you expect this to have? Do you think all of those booing fans care more about police brutality now?
First... "End-game?" I reject that question as irrelevant. Why does a protest need to have an "end-game"?... it doesn't. One of the points of protests is to make people aware that you are unhappy about something. Another is to raise awareness of the subject matter, in other words to create controversy, take people out of their comfort zone, get people talking about the subject matter. You're aware that the players are protesting and you're talking about it, so mission accomplished on both fronts. I also reject your "positive effect" question as completely off-base. Protests are not designed to create a "positive-effect", in fact, most protests... the "successful" ones anyway... produce a quite negative effect. That is the point, to create unrest, controversy, discomfort, disruption, etc... to show people that you are not happy or satisfied with the current state of affairs. Asking for the "positive effect" also ignores a glaring point that I keep pointing out over and over... "Positive" to who? You? I'm less concerned with what you consider to be "positive", because I'm guessing that what I would consider a "positive" result from these protests is in many cases something that you would consider negative. We aren't going to agree with what is "positive". So the "positive effect" question is a complete red-herring.

So on that note, about the booing fans... Let me answer that question with an anecdote. This past week a work colleague of mine stated exactly some of what @Commodore said... "Its not the cause I disagree with, its their methods... they shouldn't be disrespecting the country like that..." I listened to him, then replied similar to what I've said here (paraphrasing) "They chose the most respectful way to protest they could... kneeling silently is very respectful... would you rather they did what the guys in the Olympics did... stand with black-gloved fists raised, or turn their backs to the flag?" "No I guess, not" he said "I see what you mean, kneeling is a sign of respect, now that I think about it." Then I said to him... "What people really seem to want is for them to protest in a way that nobody notices or is offended by in any way." He laughed and said "Yeah, I never thought of it that way, but now that you say it, you're right, that is kinda what people want... which... yeah that's not how protests work, they're supposed to be offensive in a way to draw attention to the issue." So in summation, the protest on TV created an opportunity for me to talk to someone one-on-one about the issue and give them a perspective they had not considered, and maybe even change their mind a little. Does that answer your question?

Ultimately, the more you (the royal you) whine and howl about the protest, the more successful it is. The only effective way for you (the royal you) to oppose their protest is by ignoring it... which the conservative snowflake PC-police are completely unable to do because it hurts their feelings to have their precious status quo criticized.
 
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You have to view it through american hyper patriotism
Even an American Vetern decided to fly the US flag upside down in protest made national news and drew the usual comdemnation.
Or an Australian flying the Australian flag next to the US flag and people were outraged, they didnt know what flag it was or that Australia is the only nation that has followed the US into every conflict, all that mattered is it was disrespectful

Nah this isn't just an American thing. I guarantee you many Australians particularly in the media would have a hysterical freakout if an Aboriginal man knelt during the Australian anthem at a football finals match as a form of protest.

A black man by the name of Adam Goodes who is a two-time best and fairest winner, a premiershio captain, etc, just one of the greatest players half dozen in the last twenty years... finished his career being constantly and aggressively booed by opposition supporters. Why? Because he reacted to a racist taunt by a teenager and then in the aftermath said some mild things about racism and won an Australian of the Year award. He was pretty much hounded out of the sport because of some very quiet and pretty respectful words.

Hell, this year we had a week and thousands of words' worth of articles in the national press attacking a Muslim woman with a part time media gig at the ABC, for a seven word tweet ("lest we forget Manus Nauru Syria Palestine") on ANZAC Day that they thought was insufficiently respectful by mentioning our horrible refugee prisons and a couple of foreign conflicts.

I'm speaking from a position of familiarity with how white supremacy freaks the hell out over mild protest and use of symbolism.
 
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This is a verrry old trope. The idea that any successful black person (this happens here too) had no grounds to complain about racism and injustice because they should be "grateful" for what they have and should just "shut up and play". That the tradeoff for non-white success is that you don't have a legitimate voice. "Don't know how good they have it" is a pretty common variation on that. Speaking for this country, I don't think I've ever seen an Aboriginal athlete challenge any sort of racism or injustice without getting that same response from a lot of people.

Not once in that post do the words "black people should be grateful" appear. So again, that's not what I said, like, at all. You are just seeing what you want to see.

This whole threat of "Oh NFL you're offending/pissing off your fanbase, which consists primarily of flag waving, gun toting Americans who will boycott, boycott I say!... any day now... just you wait... its coming!" is nothing but a paper tiger.

And I said as much in my post. I mentioned that whether or not people follow through with that threat is uncertain, but the NFL still should take that poll as a warning sign, especially with the rising popularity of college football (and that rise started long before these protests started, so I'm not trying to say there's a correlation between the two). Of course, I really don't have a problem either way with the NFL since I've always been more of a college football guy anyway.

"Shoved in your face"? Dude that's a 15 yard penalty for hyperbole and a loss of down for melodrama.

Perhaps it is a bit unfair to say the players are shoving their protests in my face. It's more the media shoving it in my face by making a point to put the camera on each and every player that does it.

You are clearly on the record as opposing BLM etc, so don't try to pretend that its about the "methodology".

Now you are misrepresenting my position. I've said I oppose BLM because of their methods. They went immediately to violence without even trying any peaceful methods or attempting to bring change through normal legal channels (i.e. working to get friendly politicians elected, lobbying Congress, etc.). As to their stated cause, I don't oppose it but neither do I support it. I simply don't care one way or the other about it.

There is no protest they could do that you would accept.

Sure there is. Protesting doesn't always have to involve shouting in the street or making a spectacle of yourself. Protesting can involve going door to door to get signatures for a petition, writing letters to/calling your representative in Congress, or things like sit-ins or hunger strikes. In fact, BLM has staged quite a few sit-ins and you haven't seen me complain about those have you?

You miss my point. What I am saying is that I want everyone who piped up in defense of the Kluxers and Milo, and the nazis etc... in the name of "free speech" and condemned all the naughty students and liberals and "SJWs" etc for "being against free speech" for condemning the Kluxers...

Well that's because those students actually took action to stop someone from speaking. What action have fans or the NFL taken to stop NFL players from protesting? None. So no one is defending their right to free speech because it's not under attack right now. All that's happening is people are expressing their disagreement with the players, but no one is actively trying to suppress them. Compare that to Berkeley students who decided to riot and burn down half the neighborhood (calm down, hyperbole intended to illustrate point) to stop someone they disagreed with from speaking. Do you really not see the difference between these two situations? When NFL fans start blocking players from entering the stadium to play or throwing objects at players who protest, then you can make the claim that their right to free speech is under attack and demand people defend it.

he's just choosing to ignore it because he's so committed to his argument.

I'm ignoring it because you are arguing semantics. If standing were merely a suggestion, there wouldn't be penalties outlined for non-compliance. The fact that the NFL took the time to outline penalties for non-compliance shows that the NFL expects players, coaches, and teams to adhere to that policy. And since the rule doesn't specify exactly which part of that rule the penalty applies to, it is perfectly reasonable to assume the penalties apply to the entire rule. You are just seizing on the fact that whoever originally wrote the rule wrote "should" instead of "must" because they aren't a lawyer. It's arguing over every little word like this that makes everyone hate lawyers.

You know as well as I do that the NFL originally put that rule in the Game Operations Manual because they expected it to be followed. Otherwise they wouldn't have put it in there in the first place.
 
Uhhhh
 
when you complain about government, you're attacking the country/flag/apple pie... when I complain I'm a patriot exposing the evil doers
 
Yeah sweeties just because a message is hegemonic doesn't mean it's not political.
 
And I said as much in my post. I mentioned that whether or not people follow through with that threat is uncertain, but the NFL still should take that poll as a warning sign
Nah its not uncertain, as @JollyRoger pointed out, they've had a year to bring the NFL to its knees with their any-day-now boycott. It hasn't happened... I'm calling BS and so have the NFL owners. Warning sign? No... its just piss and wind, period.
Perhaps it is a bit unfair to say the players are shoving their protests in my face. It's more the media shoving it in my face by making a point to put the camera on each and every player that does it.
First of all, you're switching goalposts. You said "buy a ticket"... so where does "the media" come in to play? You're supposed to be at the game not watching it at home on TV. Second, "the media"? C'mon man, does Bob Costas come into your living room, tie you to the couch, snatch your remote and play keep-away with it, forcing you to watch NFL games all day? @Commodore I've heard you make enough personal- responsibility type arguments on these threads to give you a big tsk-tsk-tsk for making this argument... you know this argument is a load of squeeze don't you? You do, admit it.
They went immediately to violence without even trying any peaceful methods or attempting to bring change through normal legal channels (i.e. working to get friendly politicians elected, lobbying Congress, etc.).
This whole statement is flat-out untrue in multiple ways, but the fact that you believe this is part of what the protest is about. More importantly, as a practical matter only people who affirmatively support a cause can credibly claim the "I don't agree with the methods" position. If you aren't a supporter of the cause, the "don't support the methods" position is just euphemism/smoke-screen for opposition.
What action have fans or the NFL taken to stop NFL players from protesting?
Are you joking me with this question?:dubious: The President of the United States of America called on the NFL owners to Fire any player participating in the protest.
If standing were merely a suggestion, there wouldn't be penalties outlined for non-compliance.
But there aren't any penalties delineated for non-compliance. You just misread the rule in the first place, fell in love with your self-serving misinterpretation and are now continuing to misinterpret it in a self-serving way, despite the fact that your error has been clearly pointed out to you. The only penalty is specifically for not being on the sideline during the anthem. Its right there in the plain language of the manual, as I've pointed out to you multiple times. You're just refusing to see it because it debunks your favorite part of your argument, ie "the players aren't doing their job". You're just wrong man. Let it go.
You are just seizing on the fact that whoever originally wrote the rule wrote "should" instead of "must" because they aren't a lawyer. It's arguing over every little word like this that makes everyone hate lawyers.
Are you telling me that you really think the NFL, an organization worth billions, didn't have lawyers consulted in drafting the language in their Operations Manual? C'mon man you're way smarter than that. You don't think that manual was drafted by lawyers? Be serious. Obviously the manual was drafted by lawyers, so your argument about "semantics" and "wasn't drafted by lawyers" fails. Putting that aside, the sites I linked to include a statement from the NFL itself which debunks your argument. The NFL has stated plainly that they can not force the players to stand and under their operations manual and there will be no punishments for the protest. Check out the links I gave you for yourself. You keep making arguments that are soundly debunked by the sources I provided.

I understand perfectly that as a layperson, you will conflate "should" and "may" with "must" and "shall"... That makes perfect sense for a layperson to do. But I assure you, the NFL Operations manual was not written by a bunch of guys sitting around a kitchen table eating wings and drinking beer. The manual was written by professionals, people who are experts at the construction of rules and regulations, who would be intimately familiar with the difference between mandatory and suggestive language... ie lawyers. Then it was checked and re-checked... every word... again, by lawyers. This is not a layman's document. It is a operations manual for a multi-billion dollar corporation. It was written by lawyers, in consultation with lawyers and the placement of suggestive, versus mandatory language is 100% intentional. I know it sucks to be wrong, but you see I'm right here don't you?
 
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That 62% has had over a year and yet they still fill the stadiums and watch the games.
But that was before Trump told them what to think about the protests.
 
Stadium attendance and ratings are not down anywhere close to 62% since Trump told them how to think. Trump ought to strip this lying traitors of their citizenship.
 
By the way, should people who go to the concession booths during the anthem be thrown out of the stadium for disrespecting our country, I wonder?
 
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