Unfortunately the US has a principle of freedom of expression, and to suggest that a billion dollar company’s bottom line takes precedence over that is cuntishness of the highest order.
Freedom of expression is strictly a principle though, not a policy. If you go to school and call your teacher a whore, you'll get expelled. If you go to work and tell your customers that your company's product is a piece of crap, you'll be fired. Even in cases where the constitutional right actually applies, it's more of a guideline. If you go out to a public park and pass out fliers with bomb-making instructions and encourage people to use them on soft targets, the government will swoop in and shut that shit right down. You never really have absolute freedom of expression, you just have more leeway than many other governments allow.
Schools, among other things, teach kids how to act in society at large. Punishment in that situation is corrective behaviour. What behaviour needs to be corrected by NFL players kneeling during the anthem?
Being fired for not doing your job is sensible, since you’d presumably be getting paid to sell the products you’re lambasting. Are NFL players kneeling during the anthem failing to do their job?
Passing out bomb-making instructions and inciting violence are criminal activities. You get the picture by now I imagine.
I mean we could argue semantics all day, but at what point do we consider businesses right to make money is more important than a person’s right to say that things could probably be better is the point I’d like you to address.
That you agree with message behind the protest isn't relevant. What if players were raising a fist... or perhaps, an open hand, at a 45 degree angle, in defense of "border security"?
I agree that the Right plays dirty, but the question is whether athletes should be allowed to perform low-key political messages before their games.
I think the answer is yes, it ought to be allowed. However, will their *employer* threaten to terminate their contract over it? That's fair game, as far as I see it. The protest has no impact if there are no stakes. People losing their (obscenely lucrative) careers over this issue only strengthens their message.
Trying to prevent them from being fired... deflates the whole protest.
Which is still a misguided protest in my *very* humble opinion, but I have a lot of respect for the participants.
You gotta take the bad with the good. If one of the NFL players wanted to publicly support Trump, that’s their deal. If a group did, same thing. I’d wholly disagree with what the said, but not their right to say it. Maybe draw the line at widely regarded symbols of hate, though.
I’m not sure I see how them losing their job, regardless of how lucrative, makes the protest any more or less potent. Aside from that, the NFL find themselves in the unenviable position of trying to please a generally conservative fan base with trying to keep a mostly black player base onside.