Colin Kaepernick is standing up to the National Football League.
The former San Francisco 49ers quarterback, who ignited protests in the NFL, is accusing the league's owners of working together to keep him out of professional football.
SEE ALSO: Once again, people are changing Colin Kaepernick's message without using his own wordsKaepernick has remained unsigned since March 2017 after he played for the 49ers during the 2016 season. That's where he first decided to take a seat during the national anthem. Kaepernick's protest began to gain attention when he started to kneel during the anthem—inspiring some other players as well.
Player prottests started to gain attention at the end of August and still remain a controversial part of each game. Just last week, Vice President Mike Pence left a game early after he witnessed players kneeling.
Kaepernick's lawyer tweeted out confirmation that he officially filed a grievance with the NFL. Kaepernick has hired attorney Mark Geragos, who issued a statement about the grievance Sunday. He said the decision came “only after pursuing every possible avenue with all NFL teams and their executives," according to Fox News.
Tweet may have been deleted
"Athletes should not be denied employment based on partisan political provocation."
By filing this grievance, Kaepernick is hoping to terminate the NFL's collective bargaining agreement, NBC Sports reported Sunday, citing an anonymous source with knowledge of the situation. Changing the collective bargaining agreement would potentially affect all NFL players and allow them to have shorter contracts. That would require team owners to negotiate more frequently with the players.
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell denied any league-wide misdoings against Kaepernick back in June.
“I believe that if a football team feels that Colin Kaepernick, or any other player, is going to improve that team, they’re going to do it,” Goodell said, according to ESPN.
But the movement to kneel has only gained more national attention since Goodell's comments. In September, President Donald Trump suggested NFL owners should fire any the player who chooses to "disrespect the flag" by kneeling.
“You cannot disrespect our country, our flag, our anthem, you cannot do that," Trump told Fox News's Sean Hannity last week.
Current and former football players instantly condemned Trump's comments. Jaguars owner Shad Khan, who donated $1 million to Trump’s inauguration, chose to lock arms with his team:
Tweet may have been deleted
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Colin Kaepernick is standing up to the National Football League-见智见仁网
sitemap
文章
693
浏览
35
获赞
555
That Android version of Clubhouse? It's probably malware.
No, Clubhouse isn’t available for Android yet. But in the meantime, hackers are trying to explTwitter's crackdown on terrorism appears to be working
Twitter has been successfully weeding out terrorism from its network.The company revealed Tuesday itApple pushes out the first bug
iOS 11 has only been out a week but Apple has already released its first update.The company rolled oGoogle is forced to shut down Home Mini feature that quietly records everything
Last week, Google launched Home Mini, a $49 voice-enabled speaker that turned out to have the intereThe iPhone/Android COVID contact tracing app is here for Californians
There's another tool in the toolbox available to fight the spread of COVID-19. Just don't rely on itApple rumored to ditch Touch ID for Face ID in all future iPhones
Apple introduced a new biometric security feature, Face ID, with the iPhone X. The public hasn't hadUber is losing its licence to operate in London, but don't panic just yet
And so it finally happened. SEE ALSO: Uber is in trouble after yet another sexistNow you can buy a car at your local Walmart
Next time you're in the market for a new car, head to Walmart. The retail giant is partnering with dCongressman complains that Google's CEO should fix his dad's Gmail spam filter
Gifted one-on-one time with four of the most powerful tech executives in the world, Republican CongrNow you can buy a car at your local Walmart
Next time you're in the market for a new car, head to Walmart. The retail giant is partnering with dSamsung and ADT partner to launch new smart home security system
Samsung announced a new partnership with ADT today that will make automated smart homes even more seGovernment report finds that employers routinely use illegal, sexist dress codes
LONDON -- Forcing women to wear heels, revealing clothing and makeup in the workplace is evidence thApple faces fine in Brazil for ditching chargers with iPhone 12
A Brazilian consumer group isn't OK with Apple's environmental "progress" to stop including a powerUber is under fire in *five* criminal investigations
Life for Uber hasn't gotten easier. Bloomberg revealed Monday that the U.S. Justice Department is inRussian hackers reportedly used popular antivirus software to steal NSA data
Russian hackers stole "highly classified" NSA files laying out how the agency combats cyberattacks a