The Mercury News

Peterson: Kaepernick was right.

Did former 49ers quarterbac­k Kaepernick see this day coming from four years away?

- Aary CeterMon COLuMNISt

Brandon Marshall was afraid this would happen.

Marshall is a former NFL linebacker and a longtime friend of Colin Kaepernick, whom you know as a 49ers quarterbac­k-turned-activist.

In 2016 Kaepernick, Marshal, and dozens of other NFL players had an agenda. They took a knee before their respective games. It was a plea. A call to a cause. A warning.

And did they and the others ever take a white-hot ration of outrage for their trouble.

“Back then, we were called rogues, people said that we didn’t deserve jobs, but this is what we were talking about then,” Marshall said to ESPN on Monday.

“I think people are looking at (Kaepernick) now like, ‘OK, maybe he knew.’ People didn’t want to hear the message after, ‘Oh, they were kneeling.’ They didn’t want that message, weren’t ready for it, didn’t listen.”

Thus was a cultural movement born, with Kaepernick explaining that he was protesting racial injustice, oppression and police brutality. And he did so peacefully, eventually joined by dozens of fellow

NFL players.

“I’m not anti-American. I love America. I love people,” Kaepernick said at the outset of his protest. “That’s why I’m doing this. I want to help make America better.”

Now look around. Kaepernick was doused with vitriol and shouted down. He was invited by the president of the United States to go live somewhere else.

“There’s been a lot of talk of how horrible the rioting and looting is,” Kareem Abdul-Jabbar said in a recent interview with ESPN’s Scott Van Pelt.

“That is no way to demonstrat­e, but people should think about the fact that Colin Kaepernick tried to demonstrat­e peacefully. What did he get? He got ostracized and lost his job. He was blackballe­d. That was a peaceful protest about an issue that is very real, and no one could acknowledg­e that.”

Kaepernick’s message four years ago wasn’t just ignored. It was scorned, because people cling dearly to their politics, their religion and their sensibilit­ies however well considered. And because no one back then could

imagine the hellscape confrontin­g us right now.

“We have to get to the point where we take these people seriously and acknowledg­e the wrongs that they are trying to identify and right them,” Abdul-Jabbar said. “That’s the way that we make progress.”

That is tough sledding. Los Angeles Clippers coach Doc Rivers isn’t wrong when he says that the looting, the violence, the anger, “was decades in the making.”

And Marshall is spot-on when he says, “it’s a people thing, not just a black and brown thing. You see people

taking to the streets, it’s a mixed crowd. It’s not just black people. It’s everybody. That is what it takes for change. Everybody has to care about it.

“Back then, not everybody cared about it.”

Kaepernick cared about it. The NFL, not so much. It has spent ridiculous amounts of time and money trying to marginaliz­e and discredit Kaepernick’s message and defend itself from his collusion grievance. Saturday the league published a message of its own on Twitter. It reads in part:

“The NFL family is

greatly saddened by the tragic events across our country. The protesters’ reactions to these incidents reflects the pain, anger and frustratio­n that so many of us feel.

“As current events dramatical­ly underscore, there remains much more to do as a country and a league. There remains an urgency for action.”

Too bad the NFL spent much of the fall of 2016 losing its mind over the kneeling protesters. Colin Kaepernick could have hooked the league up with all the urgency for action it could’ve handled.

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 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — 2016 ?? 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick kneels during the national anthem before a game in 2016 to protest racial injustice and police brutality.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — 2016 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick kneels during the national anthem before a game in 2016 to protest racial injustice and police brutality.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES — 2017 ?? The Broncos’ Brandon Marshall, with a fist in air in 2017, supported Colin Kaepernick when few in the NFL would.
GETTY IMAGES — 2017 The Broncos’ Brandon Marshall, with a fist in air in 2017, supported Colin Kaepernick when few in the NFL would.
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