Oh my gosh! Something we agree on. Great post.fubar said:
In all seriousness, this took more courage than anything Kaepernick did.
This.Canada2017 said:
Now if you are truly a ' rebel '....you stand for our National
Anthem.
Who would have ever believed propaganda could be so successful ?
What a brave young man. I am now definitely a fan. Sounds to me like at least he has figured out BLM is not about black lives. He is one of the few public figures these days that gives me hope. Thanks for sharing.Jack and DP said:
Impressive man.
These jacklegs have made it very clear that all of this is about protesting and the Black Lives Matter movement,- not pride or loyalty to their country. I will take them for their word.br53 said:
Kneeling And bowing your head before the flag makes you look more like a servant to it than standing. It's like kneeing and bowing to a Queen or King in my opinion. But most of these people don't get that perspective.
br53 said:
Do y'all remember when the first Iraqi War, Desert Storm started? One of the sports cards companies made cards of all the leaders of the war. Could you imagine if that happened today or if they made cards for the BLM or Antifa members?
Exactly!br53 said:
Kneeling And bowing your head before the flag makes you look more like a servant to it than standing. It's like kneeing and bowing to a Queen or King in my opinion. But most of these people don't get that perspective.
fubar said:
In all seriousness, this took more courage than anything Kaepernick did.
Liberal whites are privileged. They get away w/ everything including racism, race baiting, division, corruption, lies deceit etc etc.Doc Holliday said:This.Canada2017 said:
Now if you are truly a ' rebel '....you stand for our National
Anthem.
Who would have ever believed propaganda could be so successful ?
Check out this propaganda:
It's shaming disguised as compassion. Most who submit to it engage in further shaming which makes it easy to promote.
The number one fear is public speaking. More fearful than death. Humanity is afraid of judgment, so it's no wonder these nefarious campaigns grow exponentially. A complex version of "agree with me or you're racist".
I still have that set. But you are right, the media & liberals would go insane.br53 said:
Do y'all remember when the first Iraqi War, Desert Storm started? One of the sports cards companies made cards of all the leaders of the war. Could you imagine if that happened today or if they made cards for the BLM or Antifa members?
This will change, but not w/o sacrifice...riflebear said:I still have that set. But you are right, the media & liberals would go insane.br53 said:
Do y'all remember when the first Iraqi War, Desert Storm started? One of the sports cards companies made cards of all the leaders of the war. Could you imagine if that happened today or if they made cards for the BLM or Antifa members?
I remember those. As I kid: "Sweet I go the A 10 Warthog and the M1 Abrams!" Next cards, "Tent City? and Dick Chaney? , awww man these stink."br53 said:
Do y'all remember when the first Iraqi War, Desert Storm started? One of the sports cards companies made cards of all the leaders of the war. Could you imagine if that happened today or if they made cards for the BLM or Antifa members?
Cinque, Username, and Truett are the first 3 that come to mind...Canada2017 said:
Now if you are truly a ' rebel '....you stand for our National
Anthem.
Who would have ever believed propaganda could be so successful ?
Because Jonathan Isaac had to go against what (almost) literally all of his friends, colleagues and peers wanted him to do, and he was doing it knowing that many weren't going to be interested in his reason for his choice and subsequent action. Unlike Colin Kaepernick, Isaac wasn't looking for the attention he was about to get.cinque said:fubar said:
In all seriousness, this took more courage than anything Kaepernick did.
How so?
What did Kaepernick sacrifice?fubar said:Because Jonathan Isaac had to go against what (almost) literally all of his friends, colleagues and peers wanted him to do, and he was doing it knowing that many weren't going to be interested in his reason for his choice and subsequent action. Unlike Colin Kaepernick, Isaac wasn't looking for the attention he was about to get.cinque said:fubar said:
In all seriousness, this took more courage than anything Kaepernick did.
How so?
I have no problem looking The Man in the eye and saying "you're full of it."
I'd hesitate before telling my friends "I agree with what you want, but I can't do what you want me to do." I'm not sure I could do that.
Jonathan Isaac did.
I fully support non-violent protest, and that includes Kaepernick's.
I hope Isaac gets the same consideration from others.
He may have sacrificed a career that was definitely on the downswing. I kind of doubt that he knew what was coming from people like Trump. Like I said, that wouldn't deter ME from doing what I thought was right, which was my point. What Kaep did took courage, to be sure.cinque said:What did Kaepernick sacrifice?fubar said:Because Jonathan Isaac had to go against what (almost) literally all of his friends, colleagues and peers wanted him to do, and he was doing it knowing that many weren't going to be interested in his reason for his choice and subsequent action. Unlike Colin Kaepernick, Isaac wasn't looking for the attention he was about to get.cinque said:fubar said:
In all seriousness, this took more courage than anything Kaepernick did.
How so?
I have no problem looking The Man in the eye and saying "you're full of it."
I'd hesitate before telling my friends "I agree with what you want, but I can't do what you want me to do." I'm not sure I could do that.
Jonathan Isaac did.
I fully support non-violent protest, and that includes Kaepernick's.
I hope Isaac gets the same consideration from others.
Yes. Washed up with an ACL injury at 22_years o!d is not how all of this ends. The rumors of the death of his career has been greatly exaggerraged.fubar said:He may have sacrificed a career that was definitely on the downswing. I kind of doubt that he knew what was coming from people like Trump. Like I said, that wouldn't deter ME from doing what I thought was right, which was my point. What Kaep did took courage, to be sure.cinque said:What did Kaepernick sacrifice?fubar said:Because Jonathan Isaac had to go against what (almost) literally all of his friends, colleagues and peers wanted him to do, and he was doing it knowing that many weren't going to be interested in his reason for his choice and subsequent action. Unlike Colin Kaepernick, Isaac wasn't looking for the attention he was about to get.cinque said:fubar said:
In all seriousness, this took more courage than anything Kaepernick did.
How so?
I have no problem looking The Man in the eye and saying "you're full of it."
I'd hesitate before telling my friends "I agree with what you want, but I can't do what you want me to do." I'm not sure I could do that.
Jonathan Isaac did.
I fully support non-violent protest, and that includes Kaepernick's.
I hope Isaac gets the same consideration from others.
But Isaac's actions ... I'm not sure I could've done that. Could you?
Sure. He had role model. Colin Kaepernick.fubar said:He may have sacrificed a career that was definitely on the downswing. I kind of doubt that he knew what was coming from people like Trump. Like I said, that wouldn't deter ME from doing what I thought was right, which was my point. What Kaep did took courage, to be sure.cinque said:What did Kaepernick sacrifice?fubar said:Because Jonathan Isaac had to go against what (almost) literally all of his friends, colleagues and peers wanted him to do, and he was doing it knowing that many weren't going to be interested in his reason for his choice and subsequent action. Unlike Colin Kaepernick, Isaac wasn't looking for the attention he was about to get.cinque said:fubar said:
In all seriousness, this took more courage than anything Kaepernick did.
How so?
I have no problem looking The Man in the eye and saying "you're full of it."
I'd hesitate before telling my friends "I agree with what you want, but I can't do what you want me to do." I'm not sure I could do that.
Jonathan Isaac did.
I fully support non-violent protest, and that includes Kaepernick's.
I hope Isaac gets the same consideration from others.
But Isaac's actions ... I'm not sure I could've done that. Could you?