The controversy
swirling around the bended knees by NFL players raises issues about our
national identity and our commitment to it.
On
Thursday, the Supreme Court Justice picked by Donald Trump spoke to a select
audience about defending the First Amendment. Here is what Neil Gorsuch said:
To be worthy of the First Amendment freedoms, we have
to all adopt certain civil habits that enable others to enjoy them as well. When
it comes to the First Amendment, that means tolerating those who don’t agree with
us or those whose ideas upset us, giving others the benefit of the doubt about
their motives.
Also
Thursday, Tennessee Titans tight end Delanie walker revealed that he and his
family had been receiving death threats.
These were apparently how fans responded after he suggested that fans
should not come to NFL games if they felt disrespected by player protests.
These two
events reveal the opposite extremes the controversy has surfaced.
It’s
tempting to think that the upset over the NFL protests is a mere distraction
from the more serious problems facing America.
Certainly, for Trump himself, it is convenient if the public and media
fight among themselves over the NFL players rather than focusing their
attention on his handling of affairs with North Korea, or his slow response to
the crisis in Puerto Rico, or his tax plans.
But in 21st
century America, matters of race are never a “mere distraction.” And this case
is above all about race. But the real
and unfortunate distraction has been to pretend that is about something else. So
perhaps it is helpful to reflect and clarify on how the controversy about the
NFL is a test of loyalty both for Americans and for Christians.
The
clarification requires stating some basic facts to clear the air:
First: the NFL players did not introduce politics onto
the playing field. This was done in 2009 when the U.S. government began
paying the NFL millions to stage “patriotic” events before each game: color
guards, gun salutes, fly-overs—all designed to boost recruiting efforts by
whipping up patriotic fervor. In short,
this is government-paid advertizing for the military, and it had the effect of
bringing politics onto the NFL’s playing fields.
It’s just
silly to complain if the players, understanding that politics is already at
work here, decide to take advantage of the situation someone else has created.
Second: the players are not protesting the flag or the
anthem. Colin Kaepernick explicitly said that he
meant no disrespect to either, but was in fact protesting the bad treatment of African
Americans by police. One may agree or
disagree about the issue of police brutality, but it has nothing to do with
either our flag or national anthem.
Third, this is not a protest about soldiers or
veterans. The original protest about police brutality
has been transformed, in response to Trump’s “Sons of bitches” attack, into a
protest about the First Amendment itself.
In neither instance are the players attacking, objecting to, or showing
any disrespect for members of the military.
In fact many protesters are themselves veterans, and many other veterans
support them.
The players
did not make the decision to have soldiers on the field, and they should not
have to take any responsibility for it.
The players need to be on the field to play the game, but football could
continue even if no soldier ever set foot on the gridiron.
Fourth: player salaries have nothing to do with the
protests. Yes, these players are millionaires - -but
they are responding in protest to the attacks of someone who is even richer
than they are. To allow a billionaire president to make such attacks, and then
to claim that his target audience cannot protest because they are rich, is
completely inconsistent.
Some fans
are even arguing that the players are “ungrateful” because they want to protest
despite being well paid. But First Amendment
rights cannot be bought off; players do not lose those rights when they accept
a paycheck, no matter how large. And since
most of them are African-Americans, calling them ungrateful sounds like a new
way of calling Black Americans “uppity.”
Bill Russell takes a knee with his Medal of Freedom |
Fifth: Kneeling
is not disrespectful. The simple fact is, kneeling has been a
gesture of respect, loyalty, even fealty, for centuries. Many of us kneel when we pray, as a sign of
respect. And many players kept their hands
over their hearts to reinforce that sign of respect. This protest does not use kneeling as a sign
of disrespect, but simply as a sign of protest--first, a protest against racialized
police brutality, and second as a protest in favor of First Amendment rights.
Sixth: Thus the
real issues are (1) racialized police violence and (2) the right to protest
itself--that is, free speech.
Once we
accept the facts of the case, we can look at the underlying question of
loyalty.
Loyalty
here can mean many things. It can mean
loyalty to a flag, or to a song, or to a team, or to the Constitution, or even to
a higher law.
Many
Americans of course have strong emotional feelings about the flag, and we’re
even in the habit of pledging our allegiance to it. But while the actions that surround the flag
often suggest that people regard it as something sacred, this cannot really be
true.
First, the
U.S. Supreme Court has long determined that in the name of protest people may
even burn the flag. It also ruled that
people have the right not to salute the
flag. What this demonstrates, no matter how you feel about it, is that the right to protest is more important than
this piece of cloth. We cannot
defend the flag by preventing protest.
Instead, we must protect protest even if it harms the flag.
Many
Americans also have strong emotional attachment to the national anthem. And the singing of the anthem at sports
events became popular and routine during the 20th century, and especially
during and after World War II. But most
people only know the first verse, and except for the final line “The land of
the free and the home of the brave,” the rest of the song is simply a
celebration, not of American values or institutions, but of a battle victory
over the British in 1812.
The song
has been linked to sports, but we do not sing it in a theater before a movie,
or a play, or in church before each ceremony.
We are perfectly capable of being Americans and celebrating American
values and institutions whether we sing this song or not.
These
things symbolize our nation and our people, but they are only that: symbols. If
we treat them as though we must love them to love the country, we make them
fetishes, as if they are the whole of us. It’s like loving someone’s big toe, instead
of the whole person. This is not patriotism, it’s pathology.
And worse,
to turn this song or this flag into something sacred—something, for example,
higher than protest itself--is to fail the loyalty test that Americans, and
especially American Christians, should be passing.
For
Americans, the values enshrined in our Constitution are the highest standards
we possess as a people. The right to
protest is the First Right among these, and nothing else in our social life is
higher or more important. Any attempt to
prevent rightful protest as “disrespectful” to the flag or the anthem--or even
to the military--is actually an act of profound disrespect for the Constitution
itself, the very foundation of our nation, which those other things represent..
And for
Christians, the lesson should be even more obvious. Treating any object--a song, a flag, even a
veteran or soldier--as something sacred fails the test of loyalty to the First Commandment:
“Thou shall not have false gods.”
Christians believe that only God is sacred, and that God’s will creates a
higher law than any other law.
That law
includes, especially for Catholics, the idea that we are one human family, all
children of God, all brothers and sisters in Jesus Christ, and that therefore
any division among us is a scandal to our faith.
The very notion that Blacks in our country
have been mistreated for centuries must be a source of shame to all of us. That shame reflects the fact that America has
failed to do God’s will for centuries, that slavery really is our original sin,
and that we have not finished our penance and amendment for that sin. Using the
flag and the anthem as camouflage to hide that makes the sin worse. Using our soldiers
as human shields to hide our sin is worst of all.
So while
loyalty to team, to flag, to a song, to the military may all be good things,
the real test of our loyalties this: is our first loyalty as
Americans to the Constitution? Is our first
loyalty as people of faith to the will of God and God’s higher law?
Viewed this
way, the controversy is hardly a “mere distraction.” As serious as the other
problems facing us are, this challenge of loyalty to God and Constitution
cannot be ignored, cannot be forgotten, cannot be avoided. It is a test of loyalty that, sooner or
later, this nation must pass—or the nation will fail.
© Bernard F. Swain PhD 2017