U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Credit: Wake Forest University.

"His comments were so insightful that a reporter asked him if he’d consider running for president after he spoke on the social injustices occurring in the United States."

San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, one of the best NBA coaches of all time, offered a characteristically cerebral response supporting the strategic value of player protests while also calling for broader movements. After several WNBA teams joined protests, the NBA seemingly began efforts to tamp down public relations risks associated with protests during the upcoming season.

Pop is famous for his singleminded focus on winning championships, but police violence has affected that, too. His former assistant Mike Budenholzer, now coach of the Hawks, lost his best defensive player for the 2015 playoffs after an incident escalated by police who seemed more intent on goading him into a fight than keeping order.

Sep 29, 2016

Seattle Athletes Pipe Up

Diverging statements arrive from Seattle athletes: Mariners catcher Steve Clevenger tweets that protesters need to be treated like animals while Seahawks receiver Doug Baldwin calls for attorneys general across the country to investigate police training.

Seattle, known for Sub Pop and Microsoft, is a predominantly white city, but it's also home to one of nation's most diverse ZIP codes, Rainier Valley. What diversity remains, though, is increasingly threatened by gentrification, with tensions flaring recently over a white-owned dispensary moving into a previously black neighborhood.

Notably, Clevenger is having a terrible season.

Sep 23, 2016

“National unity is the basis of national security,” Frankfurter wrote. “Conscientious scruples have not, in the course of the long struggle for religious toleration, relieved the individual from obedience to a general law not aimed at the promotion or restriction of religious beliefs.”

The logic behind a 1940 Supreme Court decision barring religious objection to the pledge is the same behind the "team-first" criticism now leveled at Kaepernick for his anthem protest. But the Supremes changed their minds three years later.
↩︎ The New Yorker
Sep 15, 2016

Has Kaepernick Won?

"Kaepernick alone could have been cut and blackballed, but with a dozen or so players, many of them stars, behind him, the league has been forced to bend in his direction," Deadspin writes, and Dave Zirin agrees

That's a remarkable achievement in a league hostile to individuality, much less the kind of outspoken social activism the 49ers quarterback embraced: "When a player takes a stand the way Kaepernick did, the tangible impact around the league isn’t just that he pissed off a former Texans backup or some Twitter eggs. It’s that he chipped away at something larger and much more frustrating: football’s brassbound culture about players speaking their minds." League owners are so fragile when it comes to team image that one exec said front offices haven't despised a player so much since Rae Carruth. Rather out of proportion, considering Kaepernick hasn't hired a hit man to kill his partner and their unborn child like Carruth did.

Sep 13, 2016

Society doesn’t mind us helping out the hood and the inner cities, but they have a problem when we speak about the hood and the inner cities. I don’t understand that part.

Decades after African-American representation in the Major Leagues peaked, Baltimore's Adam Jones is among the game's very few African-Americans.
↩︎ FanGraphs
Sep 13, 2016

Because It Literally Celebrates the Murder of African-Americans

Kaepernick's gesture—kneeling, rather than standing at attention, during the national anthem—communicates in symbol, but it can also be understood literally.

The anthem's third and fourth verses, rarely sung, are widely held to indicate Francis Scott Key's delight in the prospect that winning the War of 1812 would keep the institution of American slavery alive. As Jon Schwarz writes at The Intercept: "The reality is that there were human beings fighting for freedom with incredible bravery during the War of 1812. However, 'The Star-Spangled Banner' glorifies America’s 'triumph' over them—and then turns that reality completely upside down, transforming their killers into the courageous freedom fighters." 

It's an argument so convincing that even Dilbert creator and alleged idiot Scott Adams agreed (kind of)

Sep 11, 2016
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