View Full Version : Football season begins
EE_
9th September 2016, 04:37 AM
Millions of middle-class white people will pay to watch rich black people make political statements. Gotta love it!
Broncos' Brandon Marshall Kneels During National Anthem, Joining Colin Kaepernick
http://www.gannett-cdn.com/-mm-/d3e94c060e0f24f47551882f91c198234c72c0d2/c=0-505-3273-4869&r=537&c=0-0-534-712/local/-/media/2016/09/08/USATODAY/USATODAY/636089666560453241-2016-09-08-Brandon-Marshall2.jpg
hoarder
9th September 2016, 04:42 AM
Bread and circuses before the fall of Rome.
Joshua01
9th September 2016, 06:27 AM
Blacks have invalidated themselves a long time ago. More people resent them than placate them
EE_
9th September 2016, 10:05 AM
I'm expecting more negro protests on Sunday.
If the stupid white fans had any brains, they'd send the negros a message and not buy tickets to the negro games.
If it weren't for stupid white people, these negros wouldn't be over-paid like they are now.
Stupid white people!
EE_
9th September 2016, 07:34 PM
If only all white people would realize the power of the purse/wallet they have...these problems would be taken care of quickly.
BREAKING: 75% of Fans Just Hit Kaepernick, 49ers With MASSIVE Bad News
Many are familiar with the social media outcry following San Francisco 49ers’ quarterback Colin Kaepernick’s decision to sit down during the national anthem in protest of racial inequality. Virtually everyone who is familiar with his actions and explanation for them has strong opinions, one way or another, about what he’s chosen to do.
According to NFL.com, Kaepernick has been claiming to take a stand on behalf of racial injustice.
“I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color,” he said. “To me, this is bigger than football and it would be selfish on my part to look the other way. There are bodies in the street and people getting paid leave and getting away with murder.”
Well, now the people have spoken. According to Breitbart, a whopping 75 percent of football fans were not on Kaepernick’s side — to the point of feeling that a boycott of his team was not out of order.
Data firm Zip told Breitbart: “Out of a sample of 4,487 users, the Zip team found that over 75 percent of football fans feel justified in boycotting the 49ers because of Kaepernick’s actions.”
“Users weighed in from across all 50 states and Washington, D.C., with approximately an equal number of men and women also saying they would support the 49ers if they choose to fire Kaepernick,” the report added.
Now, that’s a pretty condemnatory piece of evidence about how people really feel about Kaepernick’s actions. The 49ers and the National Football League might want to take note.
I’m pretty sure this is not what the 49ers organization wants people to be thinking about when the subject of their team comes up.
He does have the right to sit the national anthem out — and we have the right to boycott his games if he does. Please share this on Facebook and Twitter if you agree!
http://conservativetribune.com/75-of-fans-just-hit-kaepernick/?utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=PostTopSharingButtons&utm_content=2016-09-09&utm_campaign=websitesharingbuttons
cheka.
9th September 2016, 07:47 PM
corporations buy the tickets. dad and the kidz dont matter in 21st century. sf games will see little to no drop in gate/concessions
nyc.nfl is likely part of this....just like their gun control operation....and their promote homosexuality operation.....their satanic superbowl shows, etc...
nfl is just another injection point for nyc.dual hate + morality destruction agenda
cheka.
10th September 2016, 09:39 PM
copy paste no work
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ravi-k-perry/nigger-football-and-white_b_9366554.html
nigger, football, and white guilt in virginia
EE_
11th September 2016, 03:32 AM
It's becoming a movement. Football negros around the country are making a political statement now too.
Will their dream of one day getting huge salaries by playing/making political statements in front of millions of paying white people be hurt by this?
I doubt it. White people are too stupid and they love their football negros.
Who's your favorite football negro? Tell us why you love him so much.
High school players taking knee for national anthem across country
By USA TODAY High School Sports September 10, 2016
http://media.philly.com/images/20160910-jkneel16.jpg
http://blacksportsonline.com/home/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/woodrow-wilson-knee.jpg
Colin Kaepernick’s gesture to kneel for the national anthem was repeated by high school players in a number of places before games Friday night.
Kaepernick retweeted a number of posts on Twitter with photos or news stories.
Here is a sampling:
At Lincoln Southeast in Nebraska, two players — one white, one African-American took a knee as a silent protest. (see the video above).
At Waggener High in Louisville, a player took a knee as his teammates stood alongside him. A number of players had taken a knee as the team line up but eventually rose as the music starting playing. Coach Jordan Johnson said the team will take steps before next week’s game to “to ensure our young men can make a stand for social injustice, while at the same time not showing, what is perceived as, disrespect.” (Click here for more of Waggener’s response.)
Many players at Maury High in Norfolk, Va., took a knee behind the end zone when the anthem was played. Others stood at attention as did the coaches. “Our school system has said, we’re of the belief, we let our guys do what they believe in,” Coach Chris Fraser told the Virginian Pilot. “And so we didn’t make an issue of it, and if they believe in a cause, that’s fine. I stand behind what they believe in, but I’m going to do what I believe in.”
At Auburn High in Rockford, Ill., a number of players took a knee during the anthem while their teammates stood with their hands over their hearts.
Here is another photo at school in Minneapolis.
Players at Watkins Hills High in Montgomery, Md., also took a knee during the anthem, according to a photo provided to USA TODAY High School Sports. The team captains decided to kneel and one of them asked coach Mike Brown for permission. “I said, ‘Think about what you’re doing. Understand why you’re doing it,’” Brown, who stood with the coaching staff as the players kneeled, told The Washington Post. The captains intend to take a knee next week as well.
http://usatodayhss.com/2016/colin-kaepernick-high-school-player-takes-knee-for-national-anthem
Look how much they love their negros!
http://i.huffpost.com/gen/1500031/thumbs/o-49ERS-FANS-facebook.jpg
It's not just white guys that love them, white girls are swooning over and fucking them in droves.
There's never been a better time in history to be a negro!
http://i.imgism.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/USA-Female-Football-Fans.jpg
http://naijan.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/white-woman-black-baby.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v669/cobalt545/future_single_mom_white_girl_with_three_black_guys .jpg
Alex Drone
11th September 2016, 07:52 AM
I think the NFL is just another propaganda arm of the military and the NWO. I like watching the games sometimes , but just can't stand to see the pregame just before kickoff.
EE_
11th September 2016, 06:53 PM
Dolphins players kneel during National Anthem, Seahawks lock arms
Published September 11, 2016 Associated Press
Jelani Jenkins, left, Arian Foster, Michael Thomas and Kenny Stills kneel during the National Anthem. (AP)
Opening day in the NFL saw Kansas City cornerback Marcus Peters raise a black-gloved fist during the national anthem, a protest amplified later Sunday when four Miami Dolphins kneeled on the sideline with hands on their hearts as "The Star Spangled Banner" played in Seattle.
Seattle Seahawks players and coaches stand and link arms during the playing of the National Anthem. (AP)
The protests were inspired by San Francisco backup quarterback Colin Kaepernick , the first NFL player who chose to sit and take a knee during the anthem in preseason games to call attention to what he termed the oppression of blacks and other minorities.
"I chose to get involved to see if I could create change, raise awareness. And I want to make it clear that there is no disrespect to the military or to police officers —I'm not about that. I love everyone," said Miami's Jelani Jenkins, one of the Dolphins to kneel. "I would like to keep moving forward in the right direction with everybody: equal rights, equal opportunity. From my position, it doesn't seem that it's happening. That's why I took a stand."
Peters' gesture was the only one visible throughout the early games Sunday, as the anthems took on more significance because of the 15th anniversary of Sept. 11 attacks.
"I come from a majority black community from Oakland, California ... so the struggle, I seen it," Peters said after the Chiefs beat San Diego 33-27 in overtime. "I still have some family in the struggle. All I'm saying is we want to educate those, the youth that's coming up."
The four Miami players — Arian Foster, Michael Thomas, Jenkins and Kenny Stills — registered their protest shortly before kickoff. The four players stood while President Obama's message played regarding the 15th anniversary of 9/11 before taking a knee. All four stood at the conclusion of the anthem.
"If it's about the knee that people are upset about, every Sunday people of faith take a knee to give thanks to their lord and savior, whatever faith or religion that they are," Foster said. "It's not about a knee, it's not about the (symbolism), it's about the message. They say it's not the time to do this, but when is the time?"
Several teams, including the Chiefs and Seahawks, saw their players link arms during the anthem. Peters, the 2015 defensive rookie of the year, was the last person in the Chiefs line and had his arm free to raise it.
"He spoke up about something he felt he needed to speak up about," Peters said last week. "I salute him for that."
Broncos linebacker Brandon Marshall , a teammate of Kaepernick's in college at Nevada, took a knee during the anthem on Thursday night.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell weighed in on Kaepernick's protest last week as well, saying, "I don't necessarily agree with what he's doing."
Seattle's locker room was engaged in a lengthy discussion over the past few weeks about what type of message to send. The players enlisted coach Pete Carroll in the discussions almost from the start, and brought Dr. Harry Edwards to help direct the conversations.
"Gestures mean nothing without follow through. That's what Harry Edwards said and that's what I agree with," Seattle cornerback Richard Sherman said. "People get confused that you have to go out there and put on a show and make this gesture and make people aware of it, and we're more about action."
Wide receiver Doug Baldwin, who became a default spokesman for Seattle's actions, said the players are working to schedule a meeting with the mayor of Seattle and local law enforcement.
"We know that there has to be change and progress," Baldwin said. "Change is inevitable. Change will always happen. But you got to apply direction to change, and that's when it's progress. And so right now what we're doing as a team, we have a follow through."
Taped messages from Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush were played at each stadium. Bush attended the Giants-Cowboys match in Arlington, Texas, while Vice President Joe Biden was in Philadelphia for Browns-Eagles.
Peters' gesture was also a tribute of sorts to U.S. sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos, who won the gold and bronze medals, respectively, in the 200-meter race at the 1968 Olympics. Both then appeared on the medal stands with raised, black-gloved fists throughout the U.S. national anthem in what they called a "human rights salute."
And in the night game, New England's Martellus Bennett and Devin McCourty both held up their right arms. Teammate Danny Amendola was seen clutching the American flag unfurled on the field in Arizona.
The International Olympic Committee ordered Smith and Carlos expelled from the games because of the protest.
http://www.foxnews.com/sports/2016/09/11/dolphins-players-kneel-during-national-anthem-seahawks-lock-arms.html
Dolphins, Chiefs, Titans players kneel, raise fists during national anthem
Jay Busbee Sep 11, 2016, 4:33 PM
The protest reverberations from Colin Kaepernick’s preseason decision to sit during the National Anthem continue to echo through the NFL. Several players chose to take stands in defense of social change during Week 1, and many of those stands were even more defiant than Kaepernick’s. Here’s a rundown of the major protests so far this week:
• Denver’s Brandon Marshall began the season with an act of protest, kneeling during the anthem prior to the Broncos’ opening game against Carolina. Marshall lost an endorsement because of his protest.
• The Chiefs’ Marcus Peters raised his right fist during the anthem, an apparent echo of the Black Power protests during the 1968 Olympics. The Chiefs as a team had joined arms on the sideline.
• Several Titans players also raised their fists during the anthem prior to Tennessee’s game against Minnesota.
• Multiple Dolphins players, including Arian Foster, knelt on the sideline before Miami’s game against Seattle. During the same game, the Seahawks locked arms in a unified protest.
• New England’s Martellus Bennett and Devin McCourty raised fists at the end of the anthem prior to Sunday night’s game against the Cardinals.
Kaepernick’s 49ers aren’t scheduled to play until Monday night. Clearly, though, the movement he’s begun, with actions, words, and his own paycheck, is starting to flower across the entire NFL. Roger Goodell has expressed discontent with this form of protest; how the NFL and owners deal with this form of quiet insurrection will be a fascinating story over the next few weeks.
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/dolphins-chiefs-titans-players-kneel-raise-fists-during-national-anthem-203303047.html
Rubicon
11th September 2016, 07:59 PM
I have negro fatigue.
https://i0.wp.com/www.ambrosekane.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/Fatigue-1.jpg
https://media.8ch.net/awyattmann/src/1469743837393-0.jpghttps://media.8ch.net/awyattmann/src/1468518662443-0.jpg
https://media.8ch.net/awyattmann/src/1468127258734-3.jpg
https://media.8ch.net/awyattmann/src/1468783725270-0.jpg
https://media.8ch.net/awyattmann/src/1469476491435-4.jpg
EE_
12th September 2016, 03:39 AM
Who are the bigger dumb asses?
The hundreds in black power movement taking the knee and raising their fists to the white man at football games national anthems, or the millions of white people that pay their huge salaries through ticket/merchandise sales?
If white people stopped going to the black games, this shit would end stat.
Joshua01
12th September 2016, 05:48 AM
Dolphins players kneel during National Anthem, Seahawks lock arms
Published September 11, 2016 Associated Press
Jelani Jenkins, left, Arian Foster, Michael Thomas and Kenny Stills kneel during the National Anthem. (AP)
Opening day in the NFL saw Kansas City cornerback Marcus Peters raise a black-gloved fist during the national anthem, a protest amplified later Sunday when four Miami Dolphins kneeled on the sideline with hands on their hearts as "The Star Spangled Banner" played in Seattle.
Seattle Seahawks players and coaches stand and link arms during the playing of the National Anthem. (AP)
The protests were inspired by San Francisco backup quarterback Colin Kaepernick , the first NFL player who chose to sit and take a knee during the anthem in preseason games to call attention to what he termed the oppression of blacks and other minorities.
"I chose to get involved to see if I could create change, raise awareness. And I want to make it clear that there is no disrespect to the military or to police officers —I'm not about that. I love everyone," said Miami's Jelani Jenkins, one of the Dolphins to kneel. "I would like to keep moving forward in the right direction with everybody: equal rights, equal opportunity. From my position, it doesn't seem that it's happening. That's why I took a stand."
Peters' gesture was the only one visible throughout the early games Sunday, as the anthems took on more significance because of the 15th anniversary of Sept. 11 attacks.
"I come from a majority black community from Oakland, California ... so the struggle, I seen it," Peters said after the Chiefs beat San Diego 33-27 in overtime. "I still have some family in the struggle. All I'm saying is we want to educate those, the youth that's coming up."
The four Miami players — Arian Foster, Michael Thomas, Jenkins and Kenny Stills — registered their protest shortly before kickoff. The four players stood while President Obama's message played regarding the 15th anniversary of 9/11 before taking a knee. All four stood at the conclusion of the anthem.
"If it's about the knee that people are upset about, every Sunday people of faith take a knee to give thanks to their lord and savior, whatever faith or religion that they are," Foster said. "It's not about a knee, it's not about the (symbolism), it's about the message. They say it's not the time to do this, but when is the time?"
Several teams, including the Chiefs and Seahawks, saw their players link arms during the anthem. Peters, the 2015 defensive rookie of the year, was the last person in the Chiefs line and had his arm free to raise it.
"He spoke up about something he felt he needed to speak up about," Peters said last week. "I salute him for that."
Broncos linebacker Brandon Marshall , a teammate of Kaepernick's in college at Nevada, took a knee during the anthem on Thursday night.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell weighed in on Kaepernick's protest last week as well, saying, "I don't necessarily agree with what he's doing."
Seattle's locker room was engaged in a lengthy discussion over the past few weeks about what type of message to send. The players enlisted coach Pete Carroll in the discussions almost from the start, and brought Dr. Harry Edwards to help direct the conversations.
"Gestures mean nothing without follow through. That's what Harry Edwards said and that's what I agree with," Seattle cornerback Richard Sherman said. "People get confused that you have to go out there and put on a show and make this gesture and make people aware of it, and we're more about action."
Wide receiver Doug Baldwin, who became a default spokesman for Seattle's actions, said the players are working to schedule a meeting with the mayor of Seattle and local law enforcement.
"We know that there has to be change and progress," Baldwin said. "Change is inevitable. Change will always happen. But you got to apply direction to change, and that's when it's progress. And so right now what we're doing as a team, we have a follow through."
Taped messages from Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush were played at each stadium. Bush attended the Giants-Cowboys match in Arlington, Texas, while Vice President Joe Biden was in Philadelphia for Browns-Eagles.
Peters' gesture was also a tribute of sorts to U.S. sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos, who won the gold and bronze medals, respectively, in the 200-meter race at the 1968 Olympics. Both then appeared on the medal stands with raised, black-gloved fists throughout the U.S. national anthem in what they called a "human rights salute."
And in the night game, New England's Martellus Bennett and Devin McCourty both held up their right arms. Teammate Danny Amendola was seen clutching the American flag unfurled on the field in Arizona.
The International Olympic Committee ordered Smith and Carlos expelled from the games because of the protest.
http://www.foxnews.com/sports/2016/09/11/dolphins-players-kneel-during-national-anthem-seahawks-lock-arms.html
Dolphins, Chiefs, Titans players kneel, raise fists during national anthem
Jay Busbee Sep 11, 2016, 4:33 PM
The protest reverberations from Colin Kaepernick’s preseason decision to sit during the National Anthem continue to echo through the NFL. Several players chose to take stands in defense of social change during Week 1, and many of those stands were even more defiant than Kaepernick’s. Here’s a rundown of the major protests so far this week:
• Denver’s Brandon Marshall began the season with an act of protest, kneeling during the anthem prior to the Broncos’ opening game against Carolina. Marshall lost an endorsement because of his protest.
• The Chiefs’ Marcus Peters raised his right fist during the anthem, an apparent echo of the Black Power protests during the 1968 Olympics. The Chiefs as a team had joined arms on the sideline.
• Several Titans players also raised their fists during the anthem prior to Tennessee’s game against Minnesota.
• Multiple Dolphins players, including Arian Foster, knelt on the sideline before Miami’s game against Seattle. During the same game, the Seahawks locked arms in a unified protest.
• New England’s Martellus Bennett and Devin McCourty raised fists at the end of the anthem prior to Sunday night’s game against the Cardinals.
Kaepernick’s 49ers aren’t scheduled to play until Monday night. Clearly, though, the movement he’s begun, with actions, words, and his own paycheck, is starting to flower across the entire NFL. Roger Goodell has expressed discontent with this form of protest; how the NFL and owners deal with this form of quiet insurrection will be a fascinating story over the next few weeks.
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/dolphins-chiefs-titans-players-kneel-raise-fists-during-national-anthem-203303047.html
Just more childish 'look at me' bullshit from the chimps.
EE_
12th September 2016, 05:50 AM
Just more childish 'look at me' bullshit from the chimps.
Good thing white people are so ignorant.
Joshua01
12th September 2016, 05:58 AM
Good thing white people are so ignorant.
I'm just watching the pot simmering, waiting for it to explode into a boil. It's about time we deal with this festering boil on the ass of America.
cheka.
12th September 2016, 02:42 PM
RAY-RAY be ballin. this dumbshit has scored ONE career touchdown. he almost had number two...but no
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBqb9oZLE08
cheka.
12th September 2016, 07:19 PM
monday night football -- 2 nigs for s.f. on knee...two nigs on l.a. rams giving black power fists
cheka.
13th September 2016, 02:01 PM
the subject of the thread title...last year he imploded, got benched
http://www.latinpost.com/articles/91395/20151102/nfl-san-francisco-49ers-teammates-want-colin-kaepernick-benched.htm
NFL: San Francisco 49ers Teammates Want Colin Kaepernick Benched
The San Francisco 49ers lost to the St. Louis Rams 27-6, which is their sixth loss in eight games. According to Jason Cole of Bleacher Report, a couple of 49ers players have told him after the game that they want starting quarterback Colin Kaepernick to be benched.
In their loss to the Rams, Kaepernick only completed 20 passes out of the possible 41 attempts for just 162 yards and no touchdowns. In the report by Cole, he said that the players just want the 27-year-old quarterback to clear his mind as they still believe that he is a part of the future of the San Francisco franchise.
This story comes just a week after FOX Sports reported that Kaepernick was on an 'island' in the 49ers' locker room. It came after a terrible performance in a loss against the Seattle Seahawks when he completed just 13 of 24 passes for 124 yards while getting sacked six times.
"His confidence is completely shot. It's not that the players don't like him. But he's just alone, on an island in that locker room. There are not a lot of people he connects with. Confidence-wise he's just buried right now," FOX Sports NFL Insider Jay Glazer said.
The Niners Nation speculates that if Kaepernick is benched, it will be during San Francisco's goodbye week after their game against the Atlanta Falcons. They also noted that if he is indeed benched, that could probably be his last game with the 49ers as they expect the front office to either trade or release the struggling quarterback.
Kaepernick signed a six-year, $126 million contract with the 49ers in 2014, which includes a $12 million signing bonus and $61 million guaranteed money, giving him an average annual salary of $19 million, per Spotrac.
According to an earlier report by ESPN, San Francisco will have a difficult time trading the quarterback because of his large contract. The news outlet also notes that the 49ers can release Kaepernick before April 1, 2016 because the guarantees in his contract do not vest until April 1, which can save the team about $9 million. The only problem is the $61 million guaranteed money for the player's injury protection.
cheka.
20th September 2016, 09:04 PM
what you guys are missing - foolball is the best comedy show on tv. the idiots playing on tv always deliver several good laughs per game. moronic decisions, not knowing the rules, chimpouts, etc..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bOOxSqWe7ro
Joshua01
21st September 2016, 09:00 AM
what you guys are missing - foolball is the best comedy show on tv. the idiots playing on tv always deliver several good laughs per game. moronic decisions, not knowing the rules, chimpouts, etc..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bOOxSqWe7ro
There's nothing more entertaining than an angry nigger on national teevee
cheka.
29th September 2016, 09:33 PM
unarmed black teen with hands up gets testicles stomped
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oizo1karZ7Q
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