Ottawa Citizen

NFL NOT ABOUT TO DISCIPLINE RAMS

- SALLY JENKINS

Boy, the St. Louis police really know how to cool things down, don’t they? They’ve taken a controvers­ial protest by a handful of football players, and mixed it with a whiff of bullying authority and a profound misunderst­anding of the First Amendment, to create a bigger and more heated argument than it had to be. Sound familiar?

Five pass catchers for the St. Louis Rams raised their hands in a “don’t shoot” gesture during their on-field introducti­ons Sunday, in a sign of solidarity with protesters in Ferguson, Mo., where a grand jury refused to indict Officer Darren Wilson in the shooting death of the unarmed teenager Michael Brown.

An infuriated spokesman for the St. Louis Police Officers Associatio­n, Jeff Roorda, called the display “unthinkabl­e,” and has demanded the NFL discipline Stedman Bailey, Tavon Austin, Chris Givens, Kenny Britt and Jared Cook for making their feelings known “so publicly.” But Roorda didn’t stop there. He added a veiled suggestion that the only thing protecting the Rams and the NFL from mob violence at games is the cops. And then he said: “I know that there are those who say that these players are simply exercising their First Amendment rights. Well, I’ve got news for people who think that way. Cops have First Amendment rights, too, and we plan to exercise ours.”

Set aside for a moment the vaguely threatenin­g tone of the “I’ve got news for people who think that way” statement. What’s even more disturbing about Roorda’s remarks is that he clearly doesn’t know what the First Amendment says, though he is a former cop and member of the Missouri state House of Representa­tives.

Whatever you may think about the Rams players, their gesture is a good excuse to sort out some First Amendment issues. What right did those players have to speak, and what right does the NFL or the police have to tell them to shut up?

To begin with, the First Amendment only protects free speech against government action. That’s all. It doesn’t protect the St. Louis players from NFL owners, or league commission­ers, or talk-radio hosts. But it does protect them from the government. So the person in danger of abusing the First Amendment here is not the football player with the edgy gesture in a public stadium. Or the NFL owner who might want to tell them to shut up to protect advertisin­g. It’s the government agent — like, say, a cop — who seeks to punish someone for expressing certain views.

Like it or not, private corporatio­ns or entities have the right to restrict speech of employ- ees, and they do it all the time. “Typically an employer can,” says Ken Paulson, president of the First Amendment Center. “You have no guarantee of free speech rights in the workplace, and if you think otherwise, try marching on your boss’ office and demanding a raise.”

In this case, the NFL has smartly decided that to discipline the players is the wrong move. The NFL audience is no doubt polarized on the issues in Ferguson, and to silence the players would seem to take a side. It would also smack of 1968, when Tommie Smith and John Carlos were expelled from the Olympic Games for their black-gloved salutes.

The players vaguely said afterward that their intent wasn’t to side with rioters against police: they weren’t out to divide or inflame but simply to recognize. Too often NFL teams seem to live above the problems of their cities. “I don’t want the people in the community to feel like we turned a blind eye to it,” Britt said.

Five members of the St. Louis Rams made an edgy gesture on Sunday. But they merely joined a long tradition of athletes using their celebrity for symbolic public protest, and the NFL was right to reject the call to punish them. Punish them for what? For showing an alertness and sensitivit­y to events in their community, and holding an opinion on them.

 ?? L.G. PATTERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? From left, St. Louis Rams players, Stedman Bailey, Tavon Austin, Jared Cook, Chris Givens and Kenny Britt raise their arms Sunday in reference to the events in Ferguson, Mo.
L.G. PATTERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS From left, St. Louis Rams players, Stedman Bailey, Tavon Austin, Jared Cook, Chris Givens and Kenny Britt raise their arms Sunday in reference to the events in Ferguson, Mo.

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