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Aaron Rodgers Drags MLK Into His Vaccine Mess

The ranting Green Bay QB badly cribs from one of Kingโ€™s most famous speeches

Hereโ€™s the latest reminder that if youโ€™re ever tempted to quote Martin Luther King Jr. to defend your own behavior, donโ€™t. Aaron Rodgers, the currently-embattled Green Bay Packers franchise quarterback, is exhibit A. Rodgers, youโ€™ll remember, will miss the Packersโ€™ Nov. 7 game against the Kansas City Chiefs because he tested positive for Covid-19. The positive Covid test itself is NBD; the NFL is a contact sport and has put protocols in place because it expects some players to come in contact with the virus. The issue is that Rodgers either lied or wasnโ€™t exactly forthcoming about his vaccination status, which has been the talk of the league all week.

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From the Minneapolis Star Tribune:

โ€œAaron Rodgers was asked in late August by a member of the Packers media whether he was vaccinated. In that moment, there were three truthful ways to answer: Yes, Iโ€™m vaccinated (and, if he wanted to, hereโ€™s why). No, Iโ€™m not vaccinated (and, if he wanted to, hereโ€™s why).

I believe thatโ€™s a personal/medical decision, and Iโ€™m not going to answer...Rodgers answered the question as if he was saying yes, when really the answer is no.โ€

After his deception was uncovered by the NFL and the media earlier this week, Rodgers stayed as quiet as a church mouse lost in an empty Lambeau Field. In hindsight, that was the best thing he couldโ€™ve done, but instead he gave an interview to The Pat McAfee Show and immediately chose violence. He blamed the โ€œwoke mobโ€ for the controversy and said media reporting on his vaccination status was a witch hunt, according to this SB Nation story on the interview (which also gives an amazing breakdown of Rodgersโ€™ various attempts to explain that heโ€™s not an anti-vaxxer while also explaining that thatโ€™s exactly what he is.)

But the interviewโ€™s low point is when Rodgers goes full-on Civil Rights martyr, something thatโ€™s becoming increasingly, oddly common among people who refuse to be vaccinated for a virus thatโ€™s disproportionately killing nonwhite and lower-income people.

From the Daily Beast:

โ€œYou have a moral obligation to object to unjust rules and rules that make no sense,โ€ Rogers said, in the process misquoting MLK, who wrote in a 1963 letter from the Birmingham, Alabama jail, โ€œOne has not only a legal, but a moral responsibility to obey just laws. Conversely, one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws.โ€ There is no โ€œlawโ€ requiring NFL players to get vaccinated, nor is there a league-wide vaccine mandate. There are, however, COVID protocols that all unvaccinated players must follow.โ€

Itโ€™s worth noting that King wrote his Letter from a Birmingham Jail in 1963, while he was essentially a political prisoner, jailed for leading a nonviolent protest of American Apartheid. He was not, in fact, choosing to not play professional football because he refused to get a shot.

Straight From The Root

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