Baltimore Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti said Sunday that the team is still weighing its options at quarterback; he mentioned winning, and then he mentioned Colin Kaepernick.
βWe do want to win games, and Iβm not sure he is going to help us do that,β Bisciotti said of Kaepernick, ESPN reports. βWeβre monitoring Joe [Flacco and his back injury]. Weβve talked to Joe about it. Weβre monitoring [backup Ryan] Mallett and keeping our door open. Weβve talked about RG3 [Robert Griffin III] and bringing him in for a workout.β
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Never mention RG3 and winning in the same sentence. Ever. RG3 is as frail as a playing-card castle in a wind storm. He hasnβt had a good season since he led Washingtonβs team to a playoff appearance, and since then heβs been a shell of his Baylor self. Even he would tell you this.
The idea that RG3 would even be considered before Colin Kaepernick would be laughable if it werenβt true, but that is where we are, folks. When a man protests the killings of unarmed black men, women and children, NFL owners will treat him as badly as someone who actually committed the act. Thatβs how much part of America hates black people, and it does it all under the guise of patriotism.
Those who have threatened to protest the Ravensβand there have been manyβif the team signs Kaepernick believe that his kneeling during the national anthem to protest police killings is a sign of disrespect to America. It isnβt, and it never has been, but this is what America does: It just keeps moving the goal post of faux hatred.
Donβt hate the fact that unarmed people lost their lives, hate the man who is silently protesting their killings. And get this: Bisciotti consulted Ray Lewisβa man who not only was accused of double murder but also swore his friends to silence after the killings and then lied to police about itβconcerning whether the team should sign Kaepernick.
Letβs be clear: Since coming into the NFL, Kaepernickβs biggest NFL issue has been protesting the deaths of unarmed black men, women and children. Thatβs it. Thatβs what his kneeling has been about, and itβs sad to see that his football legacy may end because of it.
Of course, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell will swear that Kaepernick isnβt being blackballed. But those of us whoβve seen this before know the drill. According to Goodell, this is just about football.
βThose are football decisions that each team has to make. What they think are the right ways to make their football teams better,β said Goodell, ESPN reports. βThose are decisions I donβt get involved with, decisions that rightfully belong with the club.β
Too bad no club is willing to stand beside a man whoβs protesting the deaths of unarmed black men, women and children (I canβt say this enough), yet they will openly stand behind men whoβve been accused and convicted of domestic violence; men whoβve been charged with murder; men whoβve committed assaults. Hell, if I didnβt know any better, I would say the NFL is fine with people killing people, just not with people protesting the deaths.
Read more at ESPN.
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