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How NFL Players’ #TakeAKnee Protest Ultimately Helps Trump (Boo-hoo)
The Jewish Daily Forward ^ | October 1, 2017 | J.J. Goldberg

Posted on 10/01/2017 2:49:04 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

Those athletes you’ve watched kneeling during the national anthem have lit a political fire of a sort not seen in professional sports in years. By bending a knee to protest racial injustice, they’ve electrified liberals and progressives, forged new bonds between team owners and players, elevated the sport beyond a mere game and exposed yet another ugly side of Donald Trump.

They’ve also helped, inadvertently, to lay the groundwork for continued Republican control of Congress in 2018 and beyond.

This should worry conservatives as well as liberals. The Republican Party is no longer the party of John McCain, Susan Collins and John Kasich, nor even of the flawed George W. Bush. It’s now the party of Donald Trump and Mitch McConnell, a toxic stew of incompetence, unscrupulousness and ideological rigidity. If this party continues its current hold over every branch of the federal government and two-thirds of state governments into the next decade, you can forget about real progress on the ideals those athletes are touting, and a lot of other urgent causes besides. Including voting rights and fair redistricting.

This is said with hesitation and regret. It’s stirring to see popular heroes kneeling in a row, as if in supplication, asking their country to live up to its promises. Unfortunately, that message isn’t necessarily getting across. In polls Americans disapprove of athletes kneeling during the anthem by margins as high as 2-to-1. Among whites, disapproval runs as high as 3-to-1. Blacks are 4-to-1 in favor. Democrats and Republicans are similarly polarized. Overall, strong majorities oppose firing the protesters, but most don’t sympathize with them.

The protest comes at a critical moment for Democrats. Their party is weaker than it’s been since the Civil War, and it’s caught in bitter tug of war over its future, even its soul. One faction favors doubling down on the current strategy, which relies on an electoral coalition of minority voters, white liberals, racial and gender rights activists and fluctuating majorities among Hispanics and women. The other faction wants the party to front-load economic justice, inequality and labor rights. They want to win back a share of working-class whites who were once within the Democrats’ old New Deal coalition but have been drifting away since Ronald Reagan’s 1980 election and finally bolted en masse this year.

If the public debate seems hard to follow, that’s partly because both sides call themselves the party’s “progressive” wing. More useful labels might be identity politics versus economic populism, though neither side likes those names. Personally, I prefer identity progressives and social democrats.

Further confusing the discussion, both sides claim there’s no real disagreement because each endorses the other side’s core value — minority rights, economic justice. The fight is over who gets top billing.

But it’s not just batting order. There’s a question of moral justice and moral tone. Fighting for rights that others want to withhold seems to entail pointing fingers and naming opponents as racists, homophobes or the like. Identitarians (is that a word?) say it’s important to speak truth, that you have to name the enemy to defeat him. For social democrats, mistrust of white America is understandable, especially this year, but it’s tactically disastrous. They want to bring working-class whites home to the old coalition. Alas, you can’t win folks’ votes by telling them they’re a bunch of idiots and they should vote for you so you can fix their brains.

The athletes’ anthem protest reinforces the identity position, but may prove the social democrats’ point. Many Americans, perhaps most, see the flag and anthem as symbols of the very ideals of freedom and fair play that the protesters are trying to invoke. As such, protesting the flag amounts, in the critics’ eyes, to attacking the ideals themselves. Whatever else the protests might do, they’re not drawing whites away from the GOP.

The modern theory of non-violent protest, as developed by Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., aims to put the protester’s body on the line in a disruptive way in order to draw the public’s attention and arouse its conscience. It only works if the public understands the injustice you’re trying to spotlight. If they think you’re attacking them or their values, the likely response is hostility. In the end you’ve accomplished nothing — or worse, lost ground.

The athletes’ critics may well be mistaken about the protesters’ intentions. But they’re not delusional. The protest does contain a measure of hostility toward the society it seeks to perfect. When San Francisco quarterback Colin Kaepernick first took a knee in August 2016, he explained to an interviewer that he was “not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color.”

Kaepernick isn’t alone in his anger. It’s evident on campuses, in politics, in the Black Lives Matter movement. There’s a spirit of frustrated revolt in considerable sectors of the black community and beyond, among gay and transgender activists, among battlers for the rights of women, immigrants, Muslims and other marginalized communities. These groups, the leading edge of liberal and progressive activism, are widely seen as the core of the Democratic base. Their actions, rightly or wrongly, help shape the public image of Democrats.

The anger has been growing for a while, but it’s vastly intensified since the last election. Nobody’s articulated it better than the celebrated author and journalist Ta-Nehisi Coates in his much-discussed essay in the current issue of The Atlantic, “The First White President.” His thesis: Whiteness and white supremacy have been central forces in American society since the founding, but Trump is the first president elected precisely because he is white. Trump is white America’s reply to the Obama presidency. “Trump,” Coates writes, “truly is something new — the first president whose entire political existence hinges on the fact of a black president.” And all attempts to find alternate reasons for Trump’s election — Coates is particularly harsh on the thesis of white working-class economic distress — are simply ways of avoiding the central truth of racism.

Coates is very right, but also very wrong. Racism and slavery are indeed America’s original sin, full stop. Discrimination remains pervasive. America is still haunted by wide racial gaps in income and wealth, in sentencing and imprisonment, even in life expectancy.

On the other hand, things do change. Blacks have found their voice. Black elected officials, just a handful nationwide in 1960, now number in the thousands. There’s been progress in open employment, in executive suites, in health, in college admissions. Prejudice and segregation, once badges of honor, have been discredited sufficiently that even rank racists feel compelled to pretend they’re not.

A snapshot of black America today shows grave problems on nearly every front. But a timeline of the past half-century shows that, as King said, the arc of the moral universe really does bend toward justice, if painfully slowly. It’s essential to recognize the work accomplished along with what’s still undone.

Coates’s bigger error is his central thesis, namely that Trump is president because of white backlash against the presidency of a black man. That’s surely a factor in Trump’s victory, but it’s one of many. There’s the Comey letter, Russian interference and undeniable sexism. And, of course, the absurdity of the Electoral College, which gave Trump the White House despite his losing the popular vote by millions. Trump is the second Republican in a row to lose the popular vote but win the Electoral College.

If Trump’s victory was simply a product of white backlash to Obama, he should have received a higher proportion of the white vote than previous Republican candidates got. He didn’t. The fact is, Republicans nearly always win a majority of the white vote. Trump’s share wasn’t unusually high. Of the 18 presidential elections since World War II, Republicans won a majority or plurality of white votes in 17. Of those 17 GOP campaigns, six topped Trump’s 57% share of white voters. He’s in the middle third.

The Democrats won a majority of white votes only once, in 1964, a year after Kennedy’s assassination and King’s “Dream” speech, with Barry Goldwater leading the GOP ticket.

One thing that changed last year was a population exchange: working-class whites fleeing to Trump and white college graduates to Clinton. What besides racism could cause that particular Trump bump? Start with the conventional wisdom: economics. Most Americans haven’t had a real raise in nearly four decades, under Democratic and Republican presidents alike. Factory jobs and pensions have disappeared, replaced by burger-flipping and permanent insecurity. Children face a worse future than their parents for the first time ever. Both parties make promises, raise and lower taxes, fiddle with trade, and nothing changes. Then there’s the disappointment and resentment that the left masses in the streets over police killings, gay marriage and immigrant rights but not union-busting, pension theft or opioid deaths. Finally, when everything blows up and 8 million homes are foreclosed, a Democrat bails out the banks and leaves you naked. Why not try something different? Why not blow things up for a change?

Working-class whites are the nation’s largest single demographic at 44% of the population. Without them, Democrats have at best an even shot at occasionally winning the White House, but they can’t break the GOP lock on Congress. Republicans’ congressional control is a product of gerrymandering and what’s called demographic sorting, meaning the dense clustering of Democratic voters in big cities and on the coasts. By some estimates, Democrats would need a 55% margin to retake the House. That would require a coalition realignment.

And without Congress, Democrats can only play defense. They can’t advance a progressive agenda — neither on race and gender nor on economic justice. Nor on crises like health care and climate change that should be common sense, not ideology.

All this presents the identity school with a painful dilemma. To tackle the problems they care about most, they must give those problems second billing behind non-racial bread-and-butter issues that win elections. And social democrats need to come up, finally, with a coherent economic vision and a plan that works.

Coates himself seemed to acknowledge the dilemma recently. It came at the tail end of a 20-minute MSNBC conversation about his essay and larger issues of race in America. At one point he was discussing the failure of “moral courage” that led Congress in 1876 to abandon the post-Civil War reconstruction and let white supremacy return. Host Chris Hayes asked Coates what lesson he sees for this moment in history. Coates began to answer, but suddenly stopped and said this:

“You know, as much as I write about race, I think about climate as the urgent thing right now, right now. Right now. You know what I mean? It’s, like, in our face that we’re seeing it. And if ever there was a time for that kind of urgency and that kind of action, it really is now.”

It’s a remarkable moment. Watch it here beginning at minute 10:10. Look for the epiphany on Coates’s face at 10:38.

The current Democratic strategy is essentially to keep scratching out narrow presidential victories by pushing minority turnout and trying to woo some liberal-leaning white college graduates. Fortunes will slowly improve as the white proportion of the population declines. It’s dropped from 80% in 1980 to 63% today. The Census Bureau says it will fall below 50% around 2044.

But during those same 36 years that whites’ share of the population dropped from 80% to 63%, their share of the voting electorate went from 88% to 70%. Absent a dramatic change in voting behavior, whites won’t drop below 50% of voters until at least 2080. By that time Miami and Houston, along with half the Democrats’ coastal bastions, will be underwater. Something to think about the next time you watch a football game.


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Government; Politics; Sports
KEYWORDS: football; patriotism; sports; trump
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1 posted on 10/01/2017 2:49:05 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

One hundred eighty years ago, in this nation, black men took a knee to show subserviance to their masters, Wondering how many NFL players today know this.


2 posted on 10/01/2017 2:56:29 AM PDT by exnavy (long live the .45 colt, the original handgun cartridge.)
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To: exnavy

If this country is so terrible I propose giving each of them a million dollars, tax-free, a one way ticket to any other country in the world that will accept them and they give up their US citizenship the minute that they get there. I think that would actually save us money in the long run.


3 posted on 10/01/2017 2:59:58 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (You cannot invade the mainland US. There'd be a rifle behind every blade of grass.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Great plan, let us start today.


4 posted on 10/01/2017 3:05:02 AM PDT by exnavy (long live the .45 colt, the original handgun cartridge.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
"By bending a knee to protest racial injustice, they’ve electrified liberals and progressives, forged new bonds between team owners and players, elevated the sport beyond a mere game and exposed yet another ugly side of Donald Trump."

Epic cognitive dissonance.

5 posted on 10/01/2017 3:07:38 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (Je Suis Pepe)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

“The Republican Party is no longer the party of John McCain, Susan Collins and John Kasich, nor even of the flawed George W. Bush”

When was this?


6 posted on 10/01/2017 3:07:44 AM PDT by dila813 (Voting for Trump to Punish Trumpets!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I have been advocating this plan since day one. Get them on the boat, send them to liberia and revoke their USA citizenship! We do not need their form of protest or their tiny minds.


7 posted on 10/01/2017 3:10:25 AM PDT by Bodega (we are developing less and less common sense...world wide)
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To: dila813

They forgot Egg McMuffin, Arnold Schwarzenneger and David Rockefeller.


8 posted on 10/01/2017 3:10:37 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (You cannot invade the mainland US. There'd be a rifle behind every blade of grass.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

How about the left actually teach it’s own the importance of manners? Maybe they might be respected by more people.


9 posted on 10/01/2017 3:21:06 AM PDT by Morpheus2009
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To: exnavy
The top people in the NFL have royally screwed the pooch and I don't mean the fans. They've upset the whole odds making apple cart by bringing into question whether teams will work as one or have internal divisions.

The real money tied to the NFL isn't the fans in the stands, team memorabilia, or even the ad revenue, it's the money bet on the games. All the wrong people are pissed off which doesn't bode well for a group of mostly thugs with habits and secrets they can go to prison for.

One money trail to the people in charge showing they paid a team to shade the score or manipulate a ref even one time in the past twenty years (you know someone has that kind of proof for leverage, too) and the whole mess will change hands nearly overnight for a dime on the dollar right along with the college football it depends on collapsing.

It's the old, "If we can't control it, it doesn't need to exist" attitude in spades.

JMHo

10 posted on 10/01/2017 3:40:07 AM PDT by Rashputin (Jesus Christ doesn't evacuate His troops, He leads them to victory !!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
The Republican Party is no longer the party of John McCain, Susan Collins and John Kasich, nor even of the flawed George W. Bush.

And that line is exactly why we elected President Trump - to keep folks who think that line is a bad thing from further ruining this Nation.....

11 posted on 10/01/2017 4:03:22 AM PDT by trebb (Where in the the hell has my country gone?)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Let them keep the Millions they make and kick them out of the USA. I'm sick of their crimes and prima dona pranks. Time to tell DC not to provide any more Military to be abuse by these cretins.


12 posted on 10/01/2017 4:19:23 AM PDT by GailA (Ret. SCPO wife: suck it up buttercups it's President Donald Trump!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Blacks are slaughtering blacks at a rate orders of magnitude greater than any lynch parties ever even dreamed of but the evil stupid honky is the evil stupid honky and he should pay us millions of dollars to listen to us call him the evil stupid honky. Yeah, good luck with that.


13 posted on 10/01/2017 4:26:07 AM PDT by TalBlack (It's hard to shoot people when they are shooting back at you...)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

How about “taking a knee” for getting a job, supporting your kids, staying crime and drug free, becoming and staying a productive member of society?

Whining bunch of ungrateful pansies. “Better to light one candle that curse the dark.”

Think about it...if you have the ability.


14 posted on 10/01/2017 4:27:39 AM PDT by GoldenPup
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
h/t Sarah Palin


15 posted on 10/01/2017 4:32:42 AM PDT by newfreep ("INSIDE EVERY PROGRESSIVE IS A TOTALITARIAN SCREAMING TO GET OUT" @HOROWITZ39, DAVID HOROWITZ)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The writer states “Racism and slavery are indeed America’s original sin, full stop. Discrimination remains pervasive. America is still haunted by wide racial gaps in income and wealth, in sentencing and imprisonment, even in life expectancy.”

Fundamentally, the left incorrectly identifies the cause of the problem.


16 posted on 10/01/2017 4:41:53 AM PDT by BlueStateRightist (Government is best which governs least.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

“asking their country to live up to its promises”

That’s not what they’re doing, but never mind.

Don’t they owe us examples of what ‘promises’ this country hasn’t lived up to? Instead, we get more of the same elusive demands of ‘change.’

If they want to peaceably protest, they can do as the rest of us do and get a permit. None of us have the privilege of protesting on the job and getting away with it.

Maybe they could protest by purchasing ads during their games and see how that goes.


17 posted on 10/01/2017 4:50:41 AM PDT by Heart of Georgia (#DrainTheSwamp #HeFights)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Coates is a racist blinded by the light; Hillary would too have been white, no? Really the DNC and their radicals have overstepped their mandate from heaven to give the devil his due; the devil is calling in the Obama marker and all the racist BS from the left cannot hide the corruption of the first black president,,, which is going to come out and tarnish the Marxists reputation along the reputations of all Marxtists.


18 posted on 10/01/2017 5:18:52 AM PDT by Jumper
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I agree 100%. Repatriate them to mother Africa.


19 posted on 10/01/2017 5:20:53 AM PDT by Josa
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To: Rashputin

I believe you are correct, character, the folks involved lack character. NFL, National Felon League.


20 posted on 10/01/2017 5:22:46 AM PDT by exnavy (long live the .45 colt, the original handgun cartridge.)
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