I did not say 'be silent', I said 'keep it off the field'. Those are two incredibly different things. I think that if they feel strongly enough about the issues to take an action on the field then they should certainly feel strongly enough to take action outside of it. They have leverage to impact people with their status just as effectively, if not more so, when on their own time.
I really just think that the entire method of this particular 'protest' is poorly conceived and is doing less to draw attention to the issue and far more to stir up meaningless controversy.
Say that one is an NFL player, and even say that one is one of THE NFL players. You've got the sponsored clothing line. People who don't know anything about football and live in other countries keep vaguely remembering you from somewhere. If you obliterated your ACL tomorrow and retired you'd
still be getting cred and approached on the streets to be told how you inspired someone to start playing 20 years hence.
How much do people care or know about your actions outside of NFL events? Now certainly, if you are an activist purely off the field, some people are going to take notice. Your hardcore fans are going to know and probably even going to care. But the general NFL-watching public? The millions of people who tune in for your team every game? The millions more who will watch the Superbowl just because that's what one does? They do not know or care about your actions outside of getting that pigskin where it needs to go.
Your only leverage of your status that gives you a chance, even a small chance, of putting a dent in public consciousness is to act where people can see. And that means protesting at the game. Controversy follows all successful protests. That this is so controversial is a sign that it is working,
because it is upsetting the people who benefit from police brutality and racial discrimination. Their upset isn't just from thoughts that they disagree with. It's because protesting in this way threatens the power the established order provides them.
That is the real reason right media are trying to make it about "disrespecting the flag" and why far-right media are assassin-baiting the players involved.
Consider, as an alternative, the actions of Tim Tebow in writing various bible verses into his eye black. The NCAA were not particularly upset by this even though it is certainly a "political message on the field" and Tebow did it with intent, frequently. And so "politics" in reality has little to do with it. It's threatening the establishment that upsets people so deeply. John 3:16 is an establishment message and so is accepted. Kneeling for police brutality is an anti-establishment message and so is a threat that must be eliminated, be that by threatening the lives of the players, bans and fines, or trying to convince them to protest in some other way.