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babylonsister

(171,905 posts)
Sat Feb 8, 2025, 12:05 PM Feb 8

Trump's Presence at the Super Bowl Is an Affront to Every NFL Player [View all]

https://www.thenation.com/article/society/trumps-presence-at-the-super-bowl-is-affront-to-every-nfl-player/

Society / February 7, 2025
Trump’s Presence at the Super Bowl Is an Affront to Every NFL Player
From his position on Colin Kaepernick, to his slanders about those concerned about brain injury, the sitting president has demonstrated just how much he disrespects the NFL.
Dave Zirin

snip//

There are those who will say that the NFL, which has had a long history of racial inequity, was just engaging in the performative spewing of hot air by having “end racism” stenciled on the field in the first place. But as irksome as performative anti-racism is, what we have now is far worse: the performative silencing of the aspiration so as not to offend a racist. I’ve heard from Capitol Hill folk here in DC that Trump’s minions are bragging that they have brought the mighty NFL to heel, and created what Musk gleefully calls “a vibe change.” They believe that the all-powerful league is engaging in a voluntary surrender. Others angry at the decision, like late Hall of Famer Reggie White’s son, Jeremy White, who took to social media to call it “cowardly,” believe it to be intentional. The NFL and Roger Goodell can say this has nothing to do with Trump, but if people on both sides feel that way and the league sticks with the switch, that speaks for itself. The Super Bowl will start—and I gave Goodell credit earlier this week for this in the current climate—with Grammy award winner Ledesi singing “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” otherwise known as “The Black National Anthem.” There is a less than zero chance (it would be a million to one on FanDuel) that Trump will stand when Ledesi performs this civil rights anthem, insulting his hosts and daring them to do something about it, knowing they’ll do nothing.

The fact that this song is played at all is a product of the anti-racist struggles of NFL players from 2016–20. Here we get to an even more fundamental reason why Trump’s Super Bowl appearance is so rancid: It was Trump during the 2016 campaign, in an on-the-nose preview of what was to come, who said he wanted 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick to be kicked out of the country for taking a knee during the national anthem to protest police violence. In 2017, Trump infamously called all protesting players “sons of bitches,” and whined that they should be fired. In response to his abusive rant, the entire league stood together the following Sunday and knelt in protest. There was so much boiling rage among players that even franchise owners—many of whom are major bankrollers of Trump—joined the protest. Hell, even Dallas Cowboys franchise owner Jerry Jones took a knee. This fight continued as Trump attacked Black NFL players relentlessly at rallies and many players, including Tom Brady, refused to show up at the White House after winning a Super Bowl, so toxic was Trump’s name in the football world.

Trump has also routinely slandered players as “soft” for being more conscientious about concussions and tackling rules after a mass class-action lawsuit by players. He would mince around on stage, with blaring homophobia, mocking players as “unmanly” due to their concern about traumatic brain injuries. Trump never played football. But he loves the sport as long as Black athletes are seen and not heard and they do as much physical damage to each other as possible. This is what sports were like in the 19th century, a place Trump seems determined to drag us to.

Trump has never apologized for any of this, of course. That’s why his presence Sunday is not an act of reconciliation by the NFL but a surrender. We have seen players in the lead-up to the game tread extremely carefully when asked about Trump’s presence. If football players stand up to Trump in front of the world on Sunday, that’s great, but waiting for them to step out alone in the absence of a movement is a fool’s errand. It’s our job to build that movement, just as Colin Kaepernick would never have taken that knee without the context of Black Lives Matter. As for Trump, his presence Sunday is an affront. It’s an affront to anti-racist athletes. It’s an affront to any player that has suffered from the violence of the sport. And it’s an affront to every fan who doesn’t think someone currently acting outside the law should be on a pedestal at the most widely viewed event of the year. I’ll say it again to Roger Goodell and the NFL: Performative anti-racism isn’t worth much. But performative erasure is far, far worse.
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