[It is, in its very essence, a movement about race and white supremacy. It
is about the right of black athletes to speak out against a presidency that
targets and hunts all sorts of dissidents. A president who one day
threatens to start a nuclear war and, the next morning, paints a kneeling
footballer as a threat to American society. A society within which keeping
silent about politics was the only kind of response expected of
sportspersons.]

https://thewire.in/181458/colin-kaepernick-takeaknee-black-power-donald-trump-white-supremacists/

#TakeAKnee, Take a Bow: How American Sport Is Rekindling Dissent Against
Trump
BY PRIYANSH ON 26/09/2017 • 1 COMMENT

Not since the days of the Black Power movement have we seen collective
mobilisation by sportspersons of this magnitude against an oppressive
regime.

Colin Kaepernick hits it outta the park. Credit: edrost88/Flickr, CC BY 2.0

Priyansh is a freelance sports writer.

Huntsville, Alabama. The latest theatre to witness the absurdity that is
Donald Trump. It is no longer astounding that his politics is defined by
racism. But it is deeply worrying that the hatred President Trump spews is
getting viler by the day, probably informed by the desperation of his
embattled administration. Sample the latest bile.

“Wouldn’t you love to see one of these NFL owners, when somebody
disrespects our flag, to say, ‘Get that son of a b***h off the field right
now, out, he’s fired!’” Trump continued: “You know, some owner is going to
do that. He’s gonna say, ‘That guy disrespects our flag, he’s fired.’ And
that owner, they don’t know it. They don’t know it. They’re friends of
mine, many of them. They don’t know it. They’ll be the most popular person,
for a week. They’ll be the most popular person in the country.”

There was more. Tweets, as usual. The white supremacist masquerading as
President of the United States continues his show. He does not like the
tag, though. Only a few days ago, the White House demanded the sacking of a
female sports presenter, Jemele Hill, from ESPN for calling Trump a white
supremacist on Twitter.

What got the president’s goat this time is the widespread approval that
Colin Kaepernick’s politics seems to be gaining. In the year since the
ex-San Francisco 49ers quarterback kneeled during the national anthem to
protest police discrimination against black Americans, other footballers
have embraced his move. And the protests now are no longer limited to
Kaepernick’s colleagues.

Basketball players in the NBA have long known to be politically active,
arguably the most activism-prone group among professional sportspersons.
But on September 23, Bruce Maxwell became the first baseball player to
kneel during the national anthem. His words got to the crux of the issue.
The Oakland Athletics rookie catcher spoke with clarity – something we
would find nearly impossible to associate with Trump.

“This goes beyond the black and Hispanic communities because right now we
have a racial divide that’s being practiced from the highest power we have
in this country saying it’s basically OK to treat people differently. I’m
kneeling for a cause but I’m in no way disrespecting my country or my
flag,” said Maxwell, who’s the son of a US armed forces veteran.

After Trump’s rally on September 22, sportspersons, league commissioners
and team owners had their say over the weekend. The overwhelming response
was in support of athletes who took a political stand on the field of play.
Thankfully, the conversation is not stuck with the hoary adage that ‘sport
and politics don’t mix’. Thanks to past breakthroughs and current acts of
activism, we have now reached a point where our sportspersons are even
expected to speak out.

In fact, it is interesting that the chaos wrecked by Trump has managed to
alienate people who would usually keep mum or pitch their tent in Trump’s
camp. Robert Kraft, the owner of the New England Patriots, is a case in
point. He has publicly backed Trump’s politics but even he – among six
owners who made financial contributions to the president’s inauguration
fund not so long ago – expressed his disappointment at the comments. The
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell found Trump’s speech disrespectful.

The point worth making here is that team owners and league commissioners
are generally politically inept figures who offer spineless responses.
Something that ESPN was guilty of, in light of Jemele Hill’s tweet, when
its attempt to remove her from the programme Sportscenter floundered
embarrassingly. But in an extraordinary time like now, more and more
figures within the sporting world are finding it difficult to keep quiet.
When the NBA champions come out with an official statement to back their
player instead of expressing regret at a cancelled White House invitation,
the situation is no longer par for the course. Or Seattle Seahawks, for
that matter, whose players are no longer going to sing the national anthem.

The sheer volume of response and conversation generated by Trump’s remarks
makes it important to consider the collective ideas that underlie the
antagonism. It is worth emphasising that although #TakeAKnee began with
Kaepernick’s desire to bring public attention to police violence against
black Americans, it is a movement that has now acquired wider resonance.

It is, in its very essence, a movement about race and white supremacy. It
is about the right of black athletes to speak out against a presidency that
targets and hunts all sorts of dissidents. A president who one day
threatens to start a nuclear war and, the next morning, paints a kneeling
footballer as a threat to American society. A society within which keeping
silent about politics was the only kind of response expected of
sportspersons.

It is a discourse that has not come about as an immediate response to
Trump’s politics. After his victory in November last year, there was a
period of silence. A period, as it turned out, of reflection and discussion
for Colin Kaepernick. The quarterback receded from public life. But in his
‘quiet’ phase, he read books and engaged with people who were actively
involved in activism against the discrimination faced by black Americans.

A Bleacher Report profile of Kaepernick described the education the
quarterback went through, with his partner Nessa playing a pivotal role.
She introduced him to her Berkeley classmate Ameer Loggins, a doctoral
researcher in African diaspora studies. As Loggins said, “Me and Colin
started talking. And I gave him The Autobiography of Malcolm X. Black
Feminist Thought by Patricia Hill Collins was a text. Frantz Fanon’s The
Wretched of the Earth was a text. I might have said Ain’t I a Woman. But
what I was really trying to do was give a well-rounded presentation – to
develop a more nuanced framework to build upon.”

It is within this framework that Kaepernick embraced his role as an
activist. But his active exclusion by NFL teams owners for his politics
meant that he was unemployed at the start of this campaign. This led to a
firm pushback, with ‘The NFL Boycott’ movement gathering pace. But as
Kaepernick wished all along, this was a broader mission than just him
kneeling through a national anthem.

Not to argue that kneeling has little political value. In fact, it has come
to offer a powerful image. But it is important to generate new discourses
around race in public life, especially in times of the Trump
administration. Sport’s ability to effect real change is often overstated
but in this case, perhaps, there is room for optimism.

Of course, #TakeAKnee has also been a consequence of the larger debates
around race over the past year but it is another example of the
disaffection felt by the non-white American population. Its role in the
current situation is important because it provides another space to contest
Trump’s idea of America.

It also shows, particularly in Kaepernick’s case, that sportspersons can
come to develop a critical outlook on the world and speak perceptively. For
Kaepernick, in light of his forced exclusion from the NFL, it may have
become his only job. But as the likes of Marcus Bennett have shown, it is
not a burden that is Kaepernick’s alone.

[Facsimile of the letter by Michael Bennett describing the shocking way he
was treated by the police just for being "Black".]
View image on Twitter
 Follow
Michael Bennett ✔ @mosesbread72
Equality.
19:31 - 6 Sep 2017
 9,405 9,405 Replies   235,622 235,622 Retweets   407,233 407,233 likes
Twitter Ads information and privacy

Arguably, not since the days of the Black Power movement have we seen
collective mobilisation by sportspersons of this magnitude against an
oppressive regime. The gains are obvious now. We have a generation today of
black athletes who will not keep quiet about the insidious ways of racism.
James Baldwin’s words from 1961 boom in the air, “The real question which
faces the Republic is just how long, how violent, and how expensive the
funeral is going to be…”

Trump, with his questionable business acumen, is likely to stretch this
out. His comments on Friday suggest that his racism is going to flourish.
But a vigorous response has left him looking unhinged, with a few more
friends not fancying his company anymore. These are the kind of gains that
can be achieved as a result of collective pressure-building.

Those who do not agree with Trump will keep talking and fighting. Colin’s
mother Teresa Kaepernick, in response to Trump’s egregious words, had a
clever answer too. She took on the abuse and subverted it. It is the level
of intelligence Trump may find difficult to comprehend.

23 Sep
Jamil Smith  ✔ @JamilSmith
Trump referred to any NFL player who protests racism and police violence as
a “son of a bitch’ who should be fired. http://es.pn/2fokdRK
 Follow
Teresa Kaepernick @B4IleaveU
Guess that makes me a proud bitch!
09:16 - 23 Sep 2017
 5,983 5,983 Replies   57,894 57,894 Retweets   191,155 191,155 likes
Twitter Ads information and privacy

Over to you then, Mr President. We are watching.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to