The Union Democrat

‘A post-kaep world’

How Colin Kaepernick changed hearts and minds, 5 years after he refused to stand

- Marcus Hayes The Philadelph­ia Inquirer

When quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick gently knelt during the national anthem in 2016, he set off an earthquake. We feel those aftershock­s today. Thursday, Aug. 26, marks the anniversar­y of our notice of Kaepernick's refusal to stand during the playing of the national anthem. Five years later, those elegant acts of silent, submissive protest affect how we view our neighbors; how we feel about police and the courts; what we think of our elected officials; when and where we think dissent should be allowed; and even how we teach our children about our collective past, warts and all.

If you paid attention these five years, then you now have a clearer understand­ing of labor law and free speech, about which Kaepernick and his allies were 100% correct. If you paid attention, you now have a clearer understand­ing how the institutio­nal racism of the American criminal justice system is skewed to intimidate and incarcerat­e people of color.

You now have a clearer understand­ing because of an enigmatic San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k whose piercing gaze, measured tones, and glorious Afro became a beacon of truth and hope for an AfricanAme­rican population that has been suffocated by a system for more than 400 years. You have learned this through a pandemic, and a summer of deadly demonstrat­ions, and two presidenti­al election cycles, and through dozens of other protests sympatheti­c to Kaepernick's refusal to remain silent about racial discrimina­tion and police brutality. We live in a post-kaep world, both inside and outside of our comfortabl­e sports bubble. Why?

“Because he burst that bubble,” said Dave Zirin, author of “The Kaepernick Effect: Taking a Knee, Changing the World.” The book focuses on how Kaepernick empowered athletes to protest when they are most visible — in their arenas and on their fields — and to not, as Lebron James was once told, “shut up and dribble.”

Kaepernick left no room for indifferen­ce.

“Colin Kaepernick became, in 2016, not a quarterbac­k you liked or disliked,” Zirin said. “He became a human being you were either for or you were against.”

The NFL was against. The commission­er, Roger Goodell, said in 2016, “We believe very strongly in patriotism in the NFL. I personally believe very strongly in that.”

Five years later, the NFL has capitulate­d. By December

of 2017, Malcolm Jenkins, then an Eagles safety, and the Players Coalition had secured an $89 million commitment from the NFL to address injustices. In 2019, it settled a collusion lawsuit filed by Kaepernick (and former teammate Eric Reid). Kaepernick has not played in the NFL since 2016. In 2020, after dozens of other atrocities led to some of the largest protests in U.S. history, Goodell admitted on a podcast, “I wish we had listened earlier.”

Goodell had “It Takes All of Us” and “End Racism” emblazoned on the league's end zones, and played “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” often referred to as the Black national an

them, played during opening weekend. “Black Lives Matter,” the name of the organizati­on most closely associated with Kaepernick's cause and a phrase that was once anathema to the NFL, became a helmet slogan and punctuated a Goodell tweet.

How much did it matter? Did Kaep change the vote? Did Kaepernick's protest, and the movement his protests birthed, convince otherwise uninterest­ed citizens to vote for upset winner Donald Trump in 2016 ... or, at least, to vote against Kaepernick supporter Hillary Clinton?

No, Kaepernick probably

didn't move the needle that much.

“If anything, I think it's the opposite,” said Lonna Rae Atkeson, a political science professor at the University of New Mexico and an expert on voting who contribute­s to the MIT Election Data Science Lab. “It might have impacted how people felt about football more than how they felt about voting.”

No doubt, politicizi­ng the playing field annoyed millions, and the causes seemed tangential compared with more tangible problems.

“This was such a small issue compared with policy that affects people directly,” Atkeson explained. “'If they raise taxes, that affects me directly. If they give me $300 a month because I have kids, that affects me directly. Football players kneel at a football game — that has no effect on me.' It's symbolic. That symbolism, per se, would not have any causal impact on voter decision-making.”

That might be true, but it sure felt like Kaepernick's shadow colored everything last year. In the wake of more deaths of Black people at the hands of police, culminatin­g with the videotaped murder of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, the echo of Kaepernick's concerns resonated through the streets of U.S. cities from Philadelph­ia to Portland, Ore. Taking it to the streets On May 26, 2020, Floyd, a Black man arrested on suspicion of passing a counterfei­t $20 bill, was murdered by Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin, who knelt on Floyd's neck for 9 minutes, 29 seconds. Floyd lay in the street, handcuffed and helpless, while three other officers prevented passersby from intervenin­g. The horror was videotaped by a 17-year-old girl. The killing sparked the largest protests in U.S. history; as many as 26 million people spent the summer voicing their exhaustion with the epidemic of racist violence in America and the impunity with which police can operate.

From the NBA and WNBA, from soccer to softball, from youth sports through high schools through college, some emboldened by Kaepernick's sacrifice, athletes took the lead.

Zirin began researchin­g his book in early 2020, examining how Kaepernick's stance influenced their own decisions to protest, often in small towns, where community sports rule all, and where anonymity is impossible. After Floyd's murder, Zirin re-interviewe­d several of the subjects in his book.

“They were all in the streets,” he said. “For these people — especially the highschool level people — taking a knee while they were playing football, soccer, volleyball, cheerleade­r, whatever, that was the first political act they'd ever taken in their lives. And now, here they are, leading serious street demonstrat­ions.”

From the little guy to superstars, everyone got in on the act — even cowards from yesteryear.

In the 1990s, Michael Jordan refused to engage politicall­y so he could sell more shoes. Charles Barkley was a Republican. Jordan has since called his procommerc­e stance “selfish,” and he issued a rare statement after Floyd's murder. Barkley, no longer a member of the GOP, last year campaigned for Doug Jones, who upset Roy Moore in a Senate race in Barkley's deep-red home state of Alabama. Barkley has been all over the map regarding protests during the anthem, but in June 2020 he finally called Kaepernick “courageous” and “honorable.”

If you can get Sir Charles to change his mind, you've done something. Kaepernick has changed millions of minds, and he has enlightene­d millions more.

“He created a bridge from what was happening on the athletic field to real antipathy for racism and police violence,” Zirin said. “Of the many bridges that led us to the summer of 2020, one significan­t one was paved by athletes, and, most centrally, by Colin Kaepernick.”

 ??  ??
 ?? TNS
(above);
Thearon W. Henderson
/ Getty Images /TNS (left) ?? A billboard illustrati­on promoting Colin Kaepernick's Change the Whirled ice cream flavor by Ben and Jerry's is seen intampa on Feb. 4 (above). The San Francisco 49ers' Colin Kaepernick (7) and Eric Reid (35) kneel in protest during the national anthem prior to playing the Los Angeles Rams at Levi's Stadium on Sept. 12, 2016, in Santa Clara.
TNS (above); Thearon W. Henderson / Getty Images /TNS (left) A billboard illustrati­on promoting Colin Kaepernick's Change the Whirled ice cream flavor by Ben and Jerry's is seen intampa on Feb. 4 (above). The San Francisco 49ers' Colin Kaepernick (7) and Eric Reid (35) kneel in protest during the national anthem prior to playing the Los Angeles Rams at Levi's Stadium on Sept. 12, 2016, in Santa Clara.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States