USA TODAY US Edition

Cosmetics fix won’t solve Kaepernick issue

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able” and we’re getting somewhere.

Vick served almost two years in prison for running a dogfightin­g ring. During the investigat­ion, he acknowledg­ed killing some of the dogs himself. If anyone ever needed an image makeover, it was Vick.

But Kaepernick has never done anything heinous or even criminal. His great sin wasn’t even disrespect­ing the anthem, the flag, the military or any of the other excuses that have been used over the last year to negate his message.

Rather, it was his audacity in calling out police brutality in communitie­s of color and the economic system that’s at the root of it that is deemed unforgivab­le.

Other athletes have walked a finer line, condemning systemic racism while also calling for “personal responsibi­lity” when it comes to black-on-black crime. Not Kaepernick. The former San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k pointed the finger squarely at everyone who has benefited from the system and done little more than watch as people of color are kept on the outside looking in.

“He attacked capitalism and the system that was created with systemic racism,” said Louis Moore, a history professor at Grand Valley State in Michigan and author of We Will Win the Day: The Civil Rights Movement, the Black Athlete, and the Quest

for Equality.

“His belief is, you solve this problem, the violence is going to take care of itself,” Moore said. “I think that’s what made people uncomforta­ble. It’s never acknowledg­ed why racism and capitalism are intertwine­d.”

That’s what makes Vick’s criticism so troubling.

By suggesting that Kaepernick could get back in the NFL’s good graces with a haircut and a mea culpa, as he once did, Vick seemed to equate advocating for social justice with the brutal killing of dogs. It is not. That NFL owners and some of their fans are so bothered by Kaepernick’s activism that he remains without a job while lesser quarterbac­ks have been snapped up says more about them than it does him.

Like that Kaepernick’s on to something.

But Vick’s comments also perpetuate­d the stereotype­s that people of color are better seen and not heard, and that athletes should keep their mouths shut because of the many doors that sports have opened.

“Vick is playing in the respectabi­lity politics. ‘You have to act a certain way to get somewhere,’ ” Moore said. “What Vick said is nothing new. It’s just disappoint­ing because it’s 2017, and that shouldn’t be the case.

“Vick does a lot of damage to young black people when he says you only get something when you shut up and play,” Moore added.

It’s no different from the backlash Muhammad Ali and even Jackie Robinson got back in their day. Oh, we’ve forgotten all that nastiness now, choosing to focus instead on their roles as stoic barrier breaker (Robinson) and beloved humanitari­an (Ali).

But they were once considered rabble-rousers, too. And criticized mightily for it.

Kaepernick did not answer Vick’s criticisms directly, instead posting the definition of Stockholm syndrome on Twitter and Instagram.

“The victim sees the smallest act of decent behavior as an extracted event which makes them see their captors as essentiall­y good,” the definition reads, in part. “This way, they leave aside all the negative behavioral distinctio­ns of their captors and focus on the positive ones.”

In other words, the system has conditione­d Vick to put the onus for change on Kaepernick.

But it’s not Kaepernick who needs to change. And it’s going to take a lot more than a haircut to make it happen.

 ?? KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Colin Kaepernick, center, caused controvers­y last season by opting to kneel during the national anthem.
KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS Colin Kaepernick, center, caused controvers­y last season by opting to kneel during the national anthem.

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