OT: Gabe Kapler

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Knightmoves

Heisman
Jul 31, 2001
30,464
16,376
113
Does anyone here take him seriously? He will let us know when the US is living up to his standards?

“Kapler said Friday he will no longer stand with his team for the national anthem until he "feels better about the direction of our country" in the wake of the Texas school shooting on Tuesday that left 19 students and two teachers dead.

"I don’t plan on coming out for the anthem going forward until I feel better about the direction of our country," he told reporters before Friday’s game. "That’ll be the step. I don’t expect it to move the needle necessarily. It’s just something I feel strongly enough about to take that step."

“Every time I place my hand over my heart and remove my hat, I'm participating in a self congratulatory glorification of the ONLY country where these mass shootings take place," Kapler wrote on his blog.
 
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WhiteBus

Heisman
Oct 4, 2011
39,516
21,918
113
I’m a no. If he wins, no one cares. If he loses, no one cares and they run him out of town just like Philly did.
They ran him out of town in Philly but his weird personality fits him in SF. They love him. He will love Judge on his team next year.
 

RUPete

Heisman
Feb 5, 2003
26,841
16,113
0
They ran him out of town in Philly but his weird personality fits him in SF. They love him. He will love Judge on his team next year.
Going bold with that prediction! I agree that his act plays better in SF, but so does 107 wins or whatever it was.
 

Doctorzit

Sophomore
May 26, 2013
151
174
0
Why do people get so worked up about what others do. If he doesn't want to come out of the dugout. Who cares.
isn't there more important things in everyone's life then if a random guy comes out of the dugout or not.
Who cares.
Why is it that most of you don't understand the position he is taking? To me he is asking the politicians to do something about the wonton killing in our schools. I would guess most of you agree with that point; however, don't agree with how he is demonstrating his displeasure with their lack of action.
 

NewJerseyGuy

Heisman
Jun 26, 2005
22,989
27,654
88
To me he is asking the politicians to do something about the wonton killing in our schools. I would guess most of you agree with that point; however, don't agree with how he is demonstrating his displeasure with their lack of action.
*wanton

Not this …


 

RUPete

Heisman
Feb 5, 2003
26,841
16,113
0
Why is it that most of you don't understand the position he is taking? To me he is asking the politicians to do something about the wonton killing in our schools. I would guess most of you agree with that point; however, don't agree with how he is demonstrating his displeasure with their lack of action.
I feel that Steve Kerr expressed that more directly, eloquently and effectively. Sadly, he has more credibility on the matter too. Kapler’s mild statement and ambiguous action isn’t going to inspire too many people.
 

T2Kplus20

Heisman
May 1, 2007
31,822
19,804
113
Does anyone here take him seriously? He will let us know when the US is living up to his standards?

“Kapler said Friday he will no longer stand with his team for the national anthem until he "feels better about the direction of our country" in the wake of the Texas school shooting on Tuesday that left 19 students and two teachers dead.

"I don’t plan on coming out for the anthem going forward until I feel better about the direction of our country," he told reporters before Friday’s game. "That’ll be the step. I don’t expect it to move the needle necessarily. It’s just something I feel strongly enough about to take that step."

“Every time I place my hand over my heart and remove my hat, I'm participating in a self congratulatory glorification of the ONLY country where these mass shootings take place," Kapler wrote on his blog.
Just like Kap 1.0, what Kap 2.0 doing is stupid. Many people believe the anthem and flag represent our military and all those that sacrificed to keep the nation free. Right or wrong, this muddles any other message someone cites for protesting it. So, from a purely marketing POV, this is a stupid way to protest.

On top of this, it seems like Kap 2.0 is trying to draw a lot of attention to himself. Whether intentional or not, it is coming across as selfish and self-motivating. If he truly wants to do something about gun control, run for office or support people that share your beliefs. Put your money where your mouth is.
 

mikebal9

All-Conference
Oct 15, 2005
5,737
4,974
113
Another person who enjoys the benefit of Western/American culture, but hates it.

He's an uneducated moron. Keep jacking it with coconut oil gabe.
So you're saying if some aspects of the country work in his favor, he should shut up and be happy and not want to see the less desirable parts improve? Interesting take.
Like if a restaurant gave you a perfectly cooked steak for dinner. A $500 cut of meat. The perfect steak. And on the side, they gave you a steaming pile of ****. You just eat the **** because the restaurant gave you steak, and you should now trust them blindly. Definitely don't question why they're serving **** as a side.
 
May 11, 2010
72,487
56,950
0
So you're saying if some aspects of the country work in his favor, he should shut up and be happy and not want to see the less desirable parts improve? Interesting take.
Like if a restaurant gave you a perfectly cooked steak for dinner. A $500 cut of meat. The perfect steak. And on the side, they gave you a steaming pile of ****. You just eat the **** because the restaurant gave you steak, and you should now trust them blindly. Definitely don't question why they're serving **** as a side.
Take a nap G
 

batts

All-Conference
Jun 6, 2001
6,926
1,325
113
Eugene Sledge’s WW2 Diary, With The Old Breed”, depicting the horrors he and his fellow marines endured during the brutal battles of Pelelieu and Okinawa should be mandatory reading. I can’t understand how anyone can disrespect our flag and National Anthem after the sacrifices our veterans made for our freedom. Call me old fashioned but that’s what I believe in.
 

MADHAT1

Heisman
Apr 1, 2003
31,445
16,281
113
National Anthem protests have happened many many times in our country’s history
this is what I found
( storming the capital is only allowed by the British and traitors so that’s not considered protesting)

Refusal to stand during the national anthem became a widespread form of protest during World War I.

In 1943.there was an incident where college students in Philadelphia refused to stand because he custom was leading to "rabid nationalism".

In the 1960s, refusal to stand during the anthem took place for a number of reasons. In the late 1960s, the protest became increasingly common among athletes and at schools, both as an opposition to the Vietnam War and as a protest of nationalism.

One of John Wooden’s UCLA teams (1969) didn’t come out of the locker room during part of that season until after the National Anthem was over , Wooden denied that was because some of his players would refuse to stand during the playing of the National Anthem, bit it was reported the reason was because of a protest started over how some black University of Wyoming athletes were treated that was spreading across the country

That same year other college players protesting the same issue made their schools stay in the locker-room until the playing of the anthem was over because they were going to refuse to stand while it was being played

In 1996 a Denver Nugget player refused to stand during the playing of the Anthem because he felt America was treating his religion wrongly.


We all know of the kneeling and staying in the locker room by some NFL teams recently, so getting upset at Kapler is kind of ridiculous and just a way of saying if you want to protest >you can only protest the way I like it to be and not the way it usually has been over the years..
 

Retired711

Heisman
Nov 20, 2001
19,971
10,150
58
I'm not a big fan of gestures like Kapler's. All four of my grandparents emigrated from Eastern Europe to America, and I would never have been born if they hadn't. America is worth honoring even when it does the wrong thing. And, perhaps more importantly, I don't see how boycotting the anthem helps persuade anybody to support the gun control measures that Kapler wants.
 

bac2therac

Hall of Famer
Jul 30, 2001
247,624
177,337
113
I feel that Steve Kerr expressed that more directly, eloquently and effectively. Sadly, he has more credibility on the matter too. Kapler’s mild statement and ambiguous action isn’t going to inspire too many people.

Wasnt Kerr the same guy on vid from 2 years ago wanting to remove police protection from schools
 

MADHAT1

Heisman
Apr 1, 2003
31,445
16,281
113
I'm not a big fan of gestures like Kapler's. All four of my grandparents emigrated from Eastern Europe to America, and I would never have been born if they hadn't. America is worth honoring even when it does the wrong thing. And, perhaps more importantly, I don't see how boycotting the anthem helps persuade anybody to support the gun control measures that Kapler wants.
it really don't and seems like a useless gesture.
But for some its their way to put the issue they are raising in the lime light and not pushed to irreverence
Those protesting during the playing of National Anthem probably are frustrated that the issue they are trying to get solved seems to be something that is only talked about for a short time then forgotten about until the next time it happens , so they feel National Anthem protests will keep that problem in the public's eye and help get a solution before the next incident happens.

As for me protesting like Kapler is doing won't do a thing but put the protest more in the public's eye than the issue he's protesting.
Giving cover for those against doing what it takes to fix the problem the protest is about and turning it to be a National Anthem problem
 

Retired711

Heisman
Nov 20, 2001
19,971
10,150
58
it really don't and seems like a useless gesture.
But for some its their way to put the issue they are raising in the lime light and not pushed to irreverence
Those protesting during the playing of National Anthem probably are frustrated that the issue they are trying to get solved seems to be something that is only talked about for a short time then forgotten about until the next time it happens , so they feel National Anthem protests will keep that problem in the public's eye and help get a solution before the next incident happens.

As for me protesting like Kapler is doing won't do a thing but put the protest more in the public's eye than the issue he's protesting.
Giving cover for those against doing what it takes to fix the problem the protest is about and turning it to be a National Anthem problem
His protest may put the issue more in the public eye (although it's pretty clearly in the public eye already!) -- but is it in a way that helps advance the cause he supports, or that hurts it? I think the latter more than the former. But your mileage may differ.
 

T2Kplus20

Heisman
May 1, 2007
31,822
19,804
113
it really don't and seems like a useless gesture.
Completely useless gesture. Most will complain about the flag issue and besides, nobody really cares what he thinks anyway. If he really wanted to make a difference, run for office or support a candidate that supports your beliefs. Put your money where you mouth is.
 

tom1944

All-American
Feb 22, 2008
6,596
6,972
0
I read that some of the parents may have open caskets and allow pictures of the childrens body to be released.

Maybe Kapler can stand for the anthem and hold the picture so the public can see what the real life impact is.
 

bac2therac

Hall of Famer
Jul 30, 2001
247,624
177,337
113
[/QUOTE]
I read that some of the parents may have open caskets and allow pictures of the childrens body to be released.

Maybe Kapler can stand for the anthem and hold the picture so the public can see what the real life impact is.

Maybe someone could do the same at Wrigley
 

Knight Shift

Heisman
May 19, 2011
88,641
86,640
113
Why do people get so worked up about what others do. If he doesn't want to come out of the dugout. Who cares.
isn't there more important things in everyone's life then if a random guy comes out of the dugout or not.
Who cares.
Colin Kaepernick might care.
 
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