Finally, more and more Athletes are speaking out on the unfair treatment of the NFL and the owners for the way they’ve made Colin Kaepernick and example.
What makes no sense is that Colin Kaepernick is doing something positive to help people, but the NFL would rather give a wife beater, a rapist and or criminal a chance. Kaepernick did nothing wrong. He spoke for the people who are NEVER heard, so the NFL is punishing him. Who knew the NFL is as bad as Trump as President. Now Malcolm Jenkins is speaking out, defending Kaep. Read on…
CelebNSports247.com has this report on Philadelphia Eagles safety Malcolm Jenkins, the latest NFL player to weigh in on why the former San Francisco 49ers QB can’t secure a job in a league.
The sad part of all of this is that trash QB’s run rampant in the NFL, but a great one is being black balled because white NFL owners are against his movement. We thought there was equality in the US, we didn’t think oppression is still as bad as it was during the Detroit riots!
Malcolm Jenkins Weighs In on the NFL:
During a recent interview with Jenkins, he called NFL owners ‘cowards’:
“This is just some other teams being, quite honestly, cowards, to say that they’re afraid of backlash to sign someone to make their team better when fans’ input has never been in the equation when it comes to signing people in the past,” Jenkins told delawareonline.com Thursday. It’s certain owners’ way of making an example out of [Kaepernick] to discourage anybody else from doing what he did.”
Jenkins was one of a handful of NFL players to stage some sort of anthem protest during the 2016/17 season. Kaep is being made an example because he was the first.
[rpi]
Kaep is the NFL’s Martin Luther King Jr. and history is repeating itself as the white man is trying to hold down the black community. When will this shhh stop?
“Four months ago, there was a debate as to whether [Kaepernick] is talented enough or whatever.”
Malcolm Jenkins continued:
“Four months ago, there was a debate as to whether [Kaepernick] is talented enough or whatever. I think at this point in time when you look at the quarterbacks who have jobs around the league, and the amount of owners and GMs who have only spoken of what fans would think about his stance. I think it’s safe to throw out that talent argument, and basically focus on the fact that he doesn’t have a job solely because he didn’t stand for the anthem last year, even though he already expressed that he planned on standing this year.
“That message, to me, is loud and clear from owners as to where their priorities stand and how they go about picking and choosing who they want on their teams. It’s definitely unfortunate, but it’s shining a light on just how the NFL operates and what we deem as acceptable. It really has nothing to do with what’s right or wrong, but what affects dollars. That’s business as usual, but I think it’s an unfortunate precedent to set.”