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|    Message 709 of 1,639    |
|    Black Lies Matter... to All    |
|    These ignorant black youth football play    |
|    15 Nov 16 12:11:57    |
      XPost: alt.activism, alt.activism.children, alt.activism.student       XPost: alt.galactically.pointless       From: black.lies.matter@abc.com              Reap what you sow.              When the Beaumont Bulls, a youth football team in eastern Texas,       decided to take a knee at a Sept. 10 game, the response was       swift — and vicious.              Hate mail poured in from people who were outraged that the all-       black team and its coaches had refused to rise during the       national anthem. Some people called the 11- and 12-year-old       players racial slurs and even threatened to have them lynched       and burned.              In the face of all that, the Beaumont Bulls executive board       stood behind them. So did the Bay Area Football League, which       the team is part of.              “There are scenarios occurring in society that until this point       in time, we have not had to address,” the president said at the       time. “We support the Beaumont Bulls.”              Within a week, however, on the eve of the next game, things       began to unravel. Tensions erupted between coaches, parents and       league officials. Shortly after, players began to drop out.              Now, a little more than a month after the team’s protest, the       league has canceled the team’s remaining games, as KBMT reported       Tuesday. The reasons behind the decision are in dispute. The       league’s athletic director said the season was cut short because       too many players left. The head coach, however, has suggested       that it all stemmed from the protest.              It’s the latest controversy to rattle an athletic club in the       weeks since San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick       took a knee during a preseason game in protest of racial       injustice and fatal police shootings in the U.S. Athletes from       professional teams all the way down to the junior level have       joined him, igniting provincial battles over whether it’s       offensive or improper for players to mimic his display.              The Beaumont Bulls’ decision to kneel during the anthem was not       the work of just a couple wayward players. After mulling       Kaepernick’s protest in September, the team’s players and       coaches agreed that they would all take a knee at the Sept. 10       game, according to Bleacher Report, which spoke to the team.              But before they did, they asked for permission from the league       and the Beaumont Bulls executive board.              They got it.              When the hateful messages and death threats came in, team and       league leaders backed them.              [Crowd hurls slurs at all-black youth football team as some       players kneel during anthem, coach says]              “It is our hope and desire to cultivate young men that will be       leaders in our communities that will make a difference in this       world,” the Beaumont Bulls executive board said in a statement a       couple of days after the game. “And though their stance was not       seen by all as a sign of progress, we believe that it was and we       will continue to support them.”              As the following game approached, the team discussed whether       they would continue. Most of them took a knee, while five others       stood by with locked arms, according to Bleacher Report.              It was around that time that things spiraled out of control.       Parents, coaches and officials clashed at meetings where they       discussed how to deal with the threatening messages. Details are       murky and conflicting, but head coach Rah-Rah Barber told       Bleacher Report that he was suspended because he had allowed       parents to speak to the media and players to continue to protest.              Parents followed him out, and took their players with them, he       said. By Oct. 1, the team had just 15 players left, down from       two dozen, KBMT reported. Within days, not enough players       remained to meet the league minimum and the season was nixed,       according to KBMT.              League and team officials, however, said it had nothing to do       with the protest.              “We are an African-American board,” league athletic director       DeCarlos Anderson told KBMT. “Our membership is diverse. It’s       not a race thing.”              Anderson said Barber, the Bulls’ head coach, was suspended       because he pushed two assistant coaches out when they said they       didn’t want to continue with the protest.              “The athletic director is the only one who has the authority to       remove an assistant or head coach,” Anderson said. “He tried to       remove an assistant coach and child from his team because he       didn’t have the same beliefs that he had.”              In a Facebook post on Tuesday, Barber fired back, saying the       board “reprimanded” them for protesting and that many parents       and players on the team quit in solidarity. At least one coach       resigned with them, according to Bleacher Report.              “Until the coach is reinstated they decided not to attend       practice or games in an attempt to make the board pay for their       actions,” Barber said, adding, “I have accepted the outcome and       moved on.”              Barber and league officials didn’t immediately respond to       requests for comment on Tuesday.              https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-       mix/wp/2016/10/19/these-youth-football-players-took-a-knee-but-       is-that-why-their-season-got-       canceled/?tid=hybrid_experimentrandom_3_na                      --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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