Almost a year after then-49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick took a knee to protest police brutality, similar protests swept the National Football League (NFL) and are set to continue, with experts describing the past week as one of the most significant displays of athlete activism in decades, but doubts about the long-term impact remain.
More than 150 NFL players - mostly African-American - chose to kneel or sit during
the playing of The Star-Spangled Banner on Sunday in an unprecedented protest
following a tirade by President Donald Trump.
Trump created an uproar in America's most popular sport by attacking players
who symbolically refused to stand during the national anthem in an effort to
draw attention to racial injustice.
Members of the Detroit Lions take a knee during the playing of the national anthem on September 24, 2017 in Detroit, Michigan. /AFP Photo
Members of the Detroit Lions take a knee during the playing of the national anthem on September 24, 2017 in Detroit, Michigan. /AFP Photo
The US leader's remarks were widely condemned by NFL chiefs and billionaire team
owners — several of whom had donated to Trump's election campaign — before the
players staged their day of action.
Yet as a fresh round of NFL games kick off this week, it remains unclear whether
last Sunday's protests will gather momentum or slowly fizzle out. Some players
who knelt last weekend have already said they do not plan to repeat the
protest. Oakland Raiders tackle Donald Penn said his protest was intended as a
riposte to Trump's remarks.
"I'm not going to do it again next week," he told reporters. "I didn't want to
do it this week. This all had to do with President Trump's comments."
Tennessee Titans wide receiver Rishard Matthews meanwhile said he would continue
to kneel "until the president apologizes." The Green Bay Packers have urged fans
to link arms in solidarity when they face the Chicago Bears in what is intended
to be a "display of unity."
US President Donald Trump reacts at the White
House in Washington DC, US September 27, 2017. /Reuters
US President Donald Trump reacts at the White
House in Washington DC, US September 27, 2017. /Reuters
The mixed messages have created debate about the long-term effectiveness of the
protests.
Losing the meaning?
For some analysts the meaning of the demonstrations has been lost.
Trump has reframed the debate as a question of patriotism, accusing those
players who choose to kneel or sit as being disrespectful of the military and
the United States.
Orin Starn, a professor of cultural anthropology at Duke University who has
written about sports and society, sees the protests as continuing a tradition of
activism started by black athletes in the 1960s.
"There's a thread connecting Tommy Smith and John Carlos in 1968 to what we saw
on Sunday — black athletes using sport to protest racial injustice, to say to
America that it doesn't have its racial house in order," Starn told AFP.
Eric Reid and Colin Kaepernick (R) of the San Francisco 49ers kneel in protest during the national anthem in 2016. /AFP Photo
Eric Reid and Colin Kaepernick (R) of the San Francisco 49ers kneel in protest during the national anthem in 2016. /AFP Photo
Starn is uncertain though how effective the NFL protests will be in the
long-term, suggesting that the opposing viewpoints in the latest round of
America's culture wars remain too deeply entrenched.
"About such a pivotal matter for American culture like racism and police
brutality, people already have their opinions," Starn said. "I doubt many minds
have been changed one way or the other by this weekend or by Kaepernick's
initial, courageous protest."
"This is a divided country. One part of it thinks that African-Americans have
been given too many breaks; the other, a big segment of America, thinks we have
real problems with racism and police brutality and wants to do something about
it. But it is not clear to me that the status quo is changing."
Going to 'next step'
Members of Arizona Cardinals link arms during the National Anthem before the start of the NFL game on September 25, 2017 in Glendale, Arizona. /AFP Photo
Members of Arizona Cardinals link arms during the National Anthem before the start of the NFL game on September 25, 2017 in Glendale, Arizona. /AFP Photo
Mary-Frances Winters, who heads The Winters Group, a consulting firm which
specializes in diversity and inclusion programs, praised the protests as
"symbolic."
"But now it needs to go the next step," she told AFP. "People need to sit down
and have a proper dialogue. When you look at history, people who are protesting
are often persecuted. It's not until 50 years later that they are viewed
differently."
Winters agreed that the point of Kaepernick's original protest — launched in
response to several killings of unarmed black men by law enforcement who
subsequently received little or no punishment — has been forgotten.
"There is a misunderstanding what this is about," she said. "It's not about the
flag, it's not about the anthem — it's about racial inequities.
Indianapolis Colts players kneel during the playing of the National Anthem
before the game against the Cleveland Browns at Lucas Oil Stadium. /Reuters Photo
Indianapolis Colts players kneel during the playing of the National Anthem
before the game against the Cleveland Browns at Lucas Oil Stadium. /Reuters Photo
"If you look at the history of our country, we've always had protesters who love
their country but who also see the flaws in their country and simply want the
country to be better."
Starn, meanwhile, was uncertain about the significance of the number of team
owners who joined players linking arms, noting that there appeared to be a
division on racial lines between players kneeling and those who chose to stand.
"They (the owners) were linking arms with the players — but they were linking
arms with the players who were not kneeling," Starn said. "There seemed to be a
pretty clear racial divide. I didn't see many white players kneeling."