Packers QB Aaron Rodgers tried to say that he respects the national anthem and he won’t be kneeling, BUT he also respects those who feel the need to protest and kneel during the national anthem.
Rodgers tells me that while he doesn’t plan on sitting out the anthem, he believes the protests — which he describes as peaceful and respectful — are positive, mentioning that he’s had conversations with a new teammate, tight end Martellus Bennett, about the issues they represent. “I’m gonna stand because that’s the way I feel about the flag — but I’m also 100 percent supportive of my teammates or any fellow players who are choosing not to,” he says. “They have a battle for racial equality. That’s what they’re trying to get a conversation started around.”
I ask him what he thinks about that battle — the actual subject of Kaepernick’s protest. As always, he pauses to collect his thoughts. “I think the best way I can say this is: I don’t understand what it’s like to be in that situation. What it is to be pulled over, or profiled, or any number of issues that have happened, that Colin was referencing — or any of my teammates have talked to me about.” He adds that he believes it’s an area the country needs to “remedy and improve” and one he’s striving to better understand. “But I know it’s a real thing my black teammates have to deal with.”
When Rodgers explains how his worldview has evolved over the past six years, he says he has grown better at seeking out people with backgrounds different from his. He doesn’t offer many examples, but Packers receiver Randall Cobb, one of Rodgers’ best friends in Green Bay (he was recently a groomsman in Cobb’s wedding), describes the quarterback as a “sponge” in all matters, including social issues. “As we’ve grown closer, I’ve been able to give him the perspective of a black man who grew up in the South and opened his eyes to the challenges in my life,” Cobb says. He adds: “Football is one of the things we rarely talk about when we’re outside the building.”
I know some might freak out at this because he’s not opposed enough to the disrespect that some are showing the national anthem, but I don’t mind his position. I personally think the protest is dumb and counter-productive, but it’s a free country – you’re allowed to be dumb….