Maybe standing in locked arms is an option for the Hawkeyes.
I would really like to see this at Iowa but I really hope individuals are allowed to do as they see fit.
Maybe standing in locked arms is an option for the Hawkeyes.
Agree that it would be a powerful statement, and that it would lead to some response. But when you say "change would happen very fast", what exactly do you mean? Because it certainly is not going to fix the problem of systemic racism. Like all other complex problems, the solution is not simple and obvious, if it was, it would be fixed by now.
The country and white people (most of them) have not been actively trying to suppress black people. There has not been someone with his finger on the "racism" button, and all of a sudden we ask him to take it off. Rather, systems created over the course of the last several hundred years have created this imbalance. And white people either did not care enough about the pight of black people to try to upend these systems and create disorder in their lives, or they did not believe the plight of black people, or they did not want to lose the privileges they had been affored, or what have you. But how do you rework systems built up over centuries in short order?
I think the George Floyd incident, and the civil unrest across the country, will create an unprecedented urge to work toward a solution, but I think many people will be very frustrated when 5 years from now, progress has remained slow.
And I have no idea what the initial steps would even be. If anyone has information to share on a potential roadmap toward a better place, I would be interested in reading what people are proposing.
This is a horrible idea.If these players truly want to make a statement, Protest the season and dont play. That would be a shot heard around the world. Kneeling just clouds the message, see Drew Brees. People are going to fall into the message again, you are disrespecting the flag and the military.
It is obvious change will take a long time, too long. Or things wont change at all. But if these athletes, whose voices are heard throughout every facet of society, want to speed up change, do not play.
That would be the greatest statement ever made and would make change happen very fast.
I am not the smartest guy in the room. But I have waded through this thread for several days, And I think that with about 90% accuracy, I could identify posters who are overtly racist or at least complicit. I just don’t know which is worse.
Just because you were disadvantaged in many ways, that does not eliminate the fact that you were advantaged by the color of your skin.
There can be a black man who grows up with many advantages across many different dimensions, but he still deals with the disadvantage of his skin color.
White privilege does not negate all you have accomplished, nor does it condemn your character. But it is a fact of life in this country (and many others). Try to take a step back from your own emotional reaction to the term (I tend to have the same reaction), and just listen to what black people are saying about their lives. And whenever you find yourself saying, "It can't be that bad, this guy has to be embellishing to gain sympathy or prove a point," notice it, and then think about how you would interpret the same story if it was being told to you by your best, white friend.
Here is part of my own story: I haven't been on my own facebook page for months, but I spent a little time scrolling through stuff this morning. There is this guy (black) I played football with in college, one of the best dudes I know. We are "invite each other to our weddings" close, but not "have each other in our wedding-parties" close. But he is the kind of guy that is so caring, thoughtful, talented, etc. that I feel a bit inferior at times when I compare myself to him. Again, just a good dude.
So this guys writes out a thoughtful, carefully crafted piece on how this latest incident has affected him more than any of the previous, and how it has really made him reflect on being black in America. And he was talking about all of the things he worries about, from picking his jogging routes to making sure he has a plan in case he is pulled over to how he is perceived when he coaches his mostly white athletes at an Iowa high school.
My first thought when reading this: "Come on, it can't be that bad, this is Iowa for Pete's sake, we're friendly to everyone!" I had to catch myself. Why would I distrust what this guy is saying? Of all the good people I know, he is right up there. But my natural tendency was to disbelieve. Because if there are a lot of crappy aspects to being black, that is an indictment on my country, on my race, and on me...and that doesn't feel good.
I think we need to face the pain that comes with the realization that we have failed in some ways as humans. For most it was not malicious, and human failure does not make any of us unique (rather it bonds us with another 8 billion or so on this planet). But that realization is going to help us to start listening without judging, and to treat others as we want to be treated.
Radical change demands radical action.
Kneeling is a message that gets lost or changed. Imagine what would happen if athletes stopped playing?
There are bigger things to tackle than a game.
Shoot throw in actors. Quit making movies.
These people are employees of some of the richest people in the country. Pinch those wallets and I bet you see something happen.
But we would rather see this
I've got over 9,000 post on this thread and Fry has never attacked me.Yeah, you told me not to hold back. I’m not. You are a racist. It would be best that you not be able to comment anywhere, but I don’t make the rules. You did upset me, cause all you do is attack me, so F your self pussy, let’s go macho man. Biggest racist on HN, the reason people don’t come here cause you attack everyone. Loser
Just out of curiosity, do you think CP87 is racist?
I think that’s kind of the point, though. It’s one sure fire way to get everyone’s attention. One of MLK’s quotes that’s being referenced a lot these days is, “Riots are the language of the unheard.” I’m not going to get in a debate about whether rioting is justified or not, but I think you can get the point regardless. That’s a statement that says—extreme measures might sometimes be the only way to be heard after civil disobedience hasn’t worked.I have mixed feelings about kneeling.
While I'm perfectly comfortable with peaceful protests and even a certain degree of civil disobedience, I just think there's something innately special about sports that makes it kind of sacrosanct.
Just out of curiosity, do you think CP87 is racist?
I’m not mad and I don’t feel any animosity. @InGoodCo was (or is) mad and let it rip. Hot button topic for both of us and shit happens. I’ve never said I haven’t started shit before, so there’s no way I’ll hold it against someone else.I've got over 9,000 post on this thread and Fry has never attacked me.
Disagreed? yes.
Made shit of my meager "catch of the day" avatar? Check (And I just laughed it off and put something a hell of a lot more attractive for eighteen months than a kettle of fish; my daughter!)
Any opinion at any time, including mine, is fair game to get blasted. And many of mine have. But I like to think I've proven I can take it as well as I dish it out.
If not I'll be happy to discuss when and where I did not.