I was
surprised at the furor created by Colin Kaepernick, the quarterback of the San
Francisco 49ers, when he exercised his right to protest the singing of the
National Anthem at a pre-season game.
Before commenting on the issue (I am generally supportive of
Kaepernick’s protest) I need to say that I have not been a fan of Kaepernick’s
and admit to some prejudice against him because I was put off by his arrogance
about his status as a high profile college quarterback as well as his excessive
body tattoos that seemed out of place on a college quarterback. So when Kaepernick first protested by sitting
during the playing of the National Anthem, my first instinct was to dismiss him
as just another high profile sports figure having a public tantrum about
something.
Two events
transpired that caused me to rethink the seriousness of Kaepernick’s protest. First, I heard him speak to the press about
the reason he refused to stand for the National Anthem and the lengths to which
he was willing to go to continue his right of protest. Earlier this week I had attended a luncheon
and was seated next to the institution’s chaplain who just before he said the
traditional prayer of blessing of the food invited the guests to stand and say
the “Pledge of Allegiance” because, as he put it, given the event of the past
week in which the National Anthem was the subject of disrespect (most everyone
understood what he referred to), it was our duty as Americans to stand in
support of our flag. At that moment I
wanted to protest his statement by refusing to stand, but I went along with it
(although I did not recite the Pledge) because it was neither the time nor the
place to make a statement when I would have no opportunity to explain my reason
for the silent protest.
Second, I
was shocked and dismayed to learn some things relevant to the history of the
National Anthem that I had not known until I read an article by Jon Schwarz[1]
in which he discusses in some detail
some facts about the War of 1812, the role of the British in supporting the
rights of Free Blacks and encouraging both slave and free to join the forces
fighting against the Americans (who had started the conflict by trying to seize
Canada from the British), and Francis Scott Key’s celebration of the deserved deaths of the Free Blacks supporting the British (as clearly stated in the third stanza[2]
of the National Anthem, a stanza we don’t hear sung).
Francis Scott Key, as I learned in that same
article, is not a man deserving of a positive memory in the history of our
nation—he was a slave owner and an advocate of treating Blacks as “property” to
be owned and sold and with respect to the British, insisting that Blacks who
were freed by the British were still “property” and must be returned to their rightful
legal owners.
All that
aside we get back to the issue: the right and duty of citizens in our democracy
to publicly protest the acts of our government when those actions raise
questions of morality or violation of the rights of our citizens, a right that
is constitutionally protected. We should
celebrate the exercise of that right even if we do not always agree with the
issue being raised by the protestor because supporting their right is also
supporting our right when we have an issue that needs to be raised.
While there
are many voices clamoring that he be kicked out of football or worse, we have
also seen other brave voices reminding us all that Colin Kaepernick’s protest
is not only legitimate and commendable, but that by supporting his right to
protest we are protecting our own civil rights in a democratic society.
[1] “Colin Kaepernick Is Righter Than You Know: The
National Anthem Is a Celebration of Slavery,” The Intercept, August 28, 2016.
[2]
No refuge could save the
hireling and slave
From the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave,
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave.
From the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave,
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave
O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave.