Houston Chronicle

SPEAKING OUT

Sorry, sports fans, but the days of the docile athlete are over. Their voices are powerful and necessary.

- By Jerry Brewer | Washington Post

The days of the docile black athlete appear to be over.

In the year since Colin Kaepernick first protested during the national anthem, we’ve witnessed ample and unnerving anecdotal evidence that the injustices the quarterbac­k decried have only grown worse in this country. It was tangible before white supremacis­t groups instigated a horrifying display of hatred and blood spill two weekends ago in Charlottes­ville, Va., but in the aftermath of that incident, it should be clear: No amount of denial, presidenti­al truth manipulati­on or optimism can assuage the festering racism, intoleranc­e and all-around misunderst­anding in America.

Kaepernick has been condemned to unofficial NFL exile for his willingnes­s to do something. That was the league owners’ dastardly ploy to scare players back into order. It would have worked if the players were as selfcenter­ed and morally indecent as their bosses, but they can’t ignore the happenings in this vast world they entertain.

So the activists in the NFL, and all of sports, are multiplyin­g. Seattle defensive end Michael Bennett and Oakland running back Marshawn Lynch sat during the anthem before their last preseason games. Philadelph­ia safety Malcolm Jenkins and Los Angeles Rams defensive end Robert Quinn raised their fists. NBA superstar LeBron James, perhaps the most influentia­l active American sports icon, spread a message of love during a charity event and called out President Donald Trump for his poor response to the Charlottes­ville tragedy. There are other sports figures making pleas for change, just like so many concerned citizens. And in the months to come, you should expect many more to speak out.

While Kaepernick wasn’t even the first in this wave of athlete activists to take a stand, his methods were the strongest and boldest, and it has made him the enduring symbol of this movement.

He has sacrificed the most; his NFL career may be over at 29. But if America is still America — beautiful despite some ugly features, slow to evolve but persistent, a compassion­ate democracy — history will judge Kaepernick ultimately not as a rouge and defiant objector, but a man ahead of this time who helped spur an important athlete revolution.

Not sticking to sports

Sorry for the inconvenie­nce, sports fans, but the days of the docile black athlete are over. This isn’t a time to stick to sports. This isn’t a time to be afraid because Kaepernick has been blackballe­d.

It is understood that fans turn to sports as a diversion, but sports are also a microcosm of life. You can’t celebrate the many moments in which athletics have united people, or led to societal change, and then whine about the few moments they make you feel uncomforta­ble.

The national anthem is about two minutes long, depending on the ambition of the artist performing it. And then there’s a three-hour football game without much conversati­on of which players stood and which took a knee. After the game, the protesting players may talk for a minute or two about their stance. If you think that’s too much of a distractio­n from sports — the ultimate distractio­n — you’re living an awfully petty life. I’m sorry you didn’t get to put extra sprinkles on your ice cream, but there are more important matters.

At some point, the conversati­on must advance past the audacity of athletes kneeling during the anthem. It must advance past breathless claims that these players aren’t patriotic.

It must advance to a more thorough considerat­ion of why they’re using their popularity and platforms to make such a fuss. Most of these players aren’t just about the shock value of a protest. They’re in their communitie­s trying to figure out solutions to complicate­d issues such as police brutality, systematic racism and the rising level of tolerance for violent extremism. We must stop simply calling roll on anthem protesters and start listening to their message.

If standing for the anthem is a sacred tradition and not a trite habit that the pack follows mindlessly, then more fans need to treat it as such before games.

They can’t wait for a terrorist attack to rediscover the importance of it. And they can’t wait until an athlete sits down to be outraged by the lack of respect, not when fools scream incoherent things and chant about their team during it.

The biggest problem isn’t just that racists feel empowered again. It’s the willful hibernatio­n of the average, tolerant person. The kind is usually white, believes we’re in a post-racial society and would rather have meaningful conversati­ons to perform maintenanc­e on complicate­d American relationsh­ips, particular­ly the white-black dynamic.

Plenty of folks are asleep right now. That’s why the athlete’s voice is so powerful and necessary. They get attention. They make people care. Like their stances or not, they will make you react.

The flag is a celebrated American symbol. Standing for the anthem is a longtime tradition. But here’s another national tradition: fighting for what’s right, preferably in a peaceful manner.

If you want LeBron to shut up and dunk, I have news for you. Enjoy the dunk. But brace for the conversati­on.

In the year since Kaepernick started his protest, the problems have intensifie­d.

For sports stars and others with voices, there is a moral obligation to react appropriat­ely.

From Philadelph­ia, left, to Seattle, top, white NFL players have supported their black teammates’ protests. Left: Mitchell Leff / Getty Images Top: Scott Eklund / Associated Press

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