Did The New York Times Criticize 'Epic Fury' Using the Man Investigated for...
Gavin Newsom Is Many Things. 'Pro-Family' Is Not One of Them.
Rep. Tom Tiffany Introduces Legislation to End Birthright Citizenship Loophole Being Explo...
Oregon Senate Committee Guts Gun Control Bill
President Trump Blasts Tucker Carlson: 'He’s Not MAGA'
GOP Rep Defends American Foreign Policy, Explains Why Operation Epic Fury Was Inevitable
Senator Tim Sheehy Helps to Forcibly Remove Crazed Protester During Senate Hearing
Tony Gonzales Suspends Campaign After Finally Admitting to the Affair He Denied for...
State Department Says That U.S., Venezuela Have Re-Established Diplomatic Relations
Federal Court Sentences Illegal Alien to Prison for $343K SNAP Benefits Fraud
CENTCOM: U.S. Has Destroyed More Than 30 Iranian Ships
NY AG Letitia James Sues Video Game Maker Over Loot Boxes
New Jersey Man Pleads Guilty in $600M Nationwide Catalytic Converter Theft Ring
U.S. House Rejects Resolution to Stop Strikes on Iran
Juror Bribery Plot in Feeding Our Future Fraud Trial Leads to 57-Month Sentence
Tipsheet

Editorial Board Accuses NFL of 'Plantation Mentality'

Editorial Board Accuses NFL of 'Plantation Mentality'

The NFL finally updated its policy on player demonstrations during the playing of the national anthem. In its decision Wednesday, Commissioner Roger Goodell said players are welcome to remain in the locker room if they don't want to stand with hand over heart, but they will fine teams who kneel on the field. 

Advertisement

"We believe today’s decision will keep our focus on the game and the extraordinary athletes who play it—and on our fans who enjoy it," Goodell said.

The conflict over the anthem began when San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick started kneeling in protest against what he called racial injustice. President Trump, having none of it, called Kaepernick and other kneeling players "SOBs" for disrespecting the flag. Although he wished the NFL owners would've been a little stricter, he was pleased with the league's new policy.

"You have to stand proudly for the national anthem or you shouldn't be playing, you shouldn't be there, maybe you shouldn't be in the country," Trump told "Fox & Friends" on Thursday. "I don’t think people should be staying in the locker rooms, but still I think it’s good. You have to stand proudly for the national anthem. You shouldn’t be playing, you shouldn’t be there. Maybe they shouldn’t be in the country."

There are those, however, who think the NFL's announcement is unfair and, in some cases, racist. The Sacramento Bee editorial board falls in the latter category. In a piece reacting to the NFL's decision, the editors  likened the football league to a plantation.

Advertisement

Related:

NFL RACE

"But that 30 team owners — all of them wealthy and privileged, most of them white and Republican — approved this policy limiting the free expression of a mostly black male work force is proof of just how tone deaf and prone to plantation mentality the NFL is," the editors write.

Demanding that players remain in the locker room if they don't want to stand is an "insult to dozens of young black men who feel compelled to use their hard-earned fame to push back against institutional racism," they elaborate. The editors asked the NFL to take a page out of the NBA's playbook.

"The NFL should take a lesson from the NBA, another professional sports league dominated by black players. Rather than remain blind to the racial and power dynamics, the NBA has encouraged players to speak up in their own way to address causes they care about."

Instead of punishing kneeling athletes, the NFL should focus their efforts on combatting CTE and investigating domestic violence allegations in the league, the editors suggest.

ESPN commentator Michael Wilbon also used the word "plantation" to describe the NFL's response to the player protests last year. He had particular ire for Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, who told his players he would not tolerate any kneeling.

Advertisement

“The word that comes to my mind, and I don’t care who doesn’t like me using it, is ‘plantation,’ ” Wilbon said at the time. “The players are here to serve me; they will do what I want no matter how much I pay them. They are not equal to me. That’s what this says to me and to mine.”

"We all deserve better," the Sacramento Bee concluded in its op-ed.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement