The Denver Post

Huskers take public stand against hate

- By Eric Olson

LINCO L N, NEB.» The Nebraska men’s basketball team plans to take a public stand Saturday opposing the views of a university student who calls himself a white nationalis­t in a widely distribute­d online video.

Coach Tim Miles said Friday the Big Ten team will wear Tshirts stating “Hate Will Never Win” at its conference game against Rutgers in Lincoln. Players also were making a video rejecting racism and hate to be shown at Pinnacle Bank Arena.

“The No. 1 thing, our guys realize they are in a place to make a great impact,” Miles said. “The exposure over the next six weeks, their message can be strong and they can have a positive impact on our campus community.”

In the videos that roiled the campus this week, biochemist­ry major Daniel Kleve of Norfolk professed to be the most active white nationalis­t in the state, disparaged Martin Luther King Jr., African-Americans and Mexicans and supported violence.

The group that released the initial video was Antifa Nebraska and is not affiliated with the campus, Nebraska spokeswoma­n Leslie Reed said.

“I want to feel safe on campus, the guys want to feel safe,” said Huskers junior Glynn Watson Jr., a starting point guard. “There are a lot of people out there like (Kleve), and you can’t change that. We’re OK. We want to do this for the people who don’t feel like they’re OK, the students on campus who don’t have (a platform) to say anything.”

Senior guard Evan Taylor, a team captain for the Huskers, said the players discussed a number of possible responses, including boycotting a game. That idea was quickly voted down.

Asked to describe the thought behind “Hate Will Never Win,” Taylor said: “It represents the message to spread love. We’re all human, whether you play basketball, whether you’re just a normal student, and we all feel the same emotions. No one wants to feel unsafe, feel like they aren’t loved. So spread love. Hate will never win in this world.”

About 300 students attended a campus rally Wednesday to oppose hate speech. Miles, who attended the rally, said his players chose not to go.

Chancellor Ronnie Green said Kleve’s message — however hateful and intolerant — is protected by the First Amendment.

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