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Jason Whitlocks perspective:
#1
I havent always agreed with Jason, but I typically have enjoyed his perspective and why he feels the way he does.

I found these on another site and thought they were good enough to share here.

https://outkick.com/for-the-love-of-god-im-here-for-my-country/
Why isn't Chuck Foreman in the Hall of Fame?
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#2
Here is another that should certainly elicit some thought.

https://outkick.com/liberals-are-right-their-silence-is-violence/
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#3
interesting thoughts on the 4th of July,  more so than on his opinion of Kap as the link would suggest.

https://outkick.com/what-to-the-intelligent-is-colin-kaepernick-a-fraud/
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#4
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#5
I like this recent column comparing Kap views of the NFL with reality.

https://outkick.com/patrick-mahomes-evolution-contrasts-colin-kaepernick-racism/
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#6
Quote: @JimmyinSD said:
I like this recent column comparing Kap views of the NFL with reality.

https://outkick.com/patrick-mahomes-evolution-contrasts-colin-kaepernick-racism/

The term “systemic racism” is derived from former Black Panther Stokely Carmichael’s 1967 book Black Power: The Politics of Liberation. In the book, Carmichael coined the phrase “institutional racism.” 




The phrase is a polite dog whistle used by dignified activists in the
media to justify violent protests/revolution. Their not-so-subtle
insinuation is that you cannot salvage a system that is racist at its
core.
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#7
Quote: @greediron said:
@JimmyinSD said:
I like this recent column comparing Kap views of the NFL with reality.

https://outkick.com/patrick-mahomes-evolution-contrasts-colin-kaepernick-racism/

The term “systemic racism” is derived from former Black Panther Stokely Carmichael’s 1967 book Black Power: The Politics of Liberation. In the book, Carmichael coined the phrase “institutional racism.” 




The phrase is a polite dog whistle used by dignified activists in the
media to justify violent protests/revolution. Their not-so-subtle
insinuation is that you cannot salvage a system that is racist at its
core.
that caught my attention as well.
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#8
I go way back with Jason Whitlock back to the KC Star newspaper and his stint on 810 WHB radio when I lived in Kansas City. He's....ummmm.....'interesting' to say the least. Some of you in this thread I don't think would be agreeing with much he says outside what he's said in this recent Outkick article, lol. Especially awhile back. But he tells his truth how he sees it personally, being shy isn't something anyone would call him. 

https://www.espn.com/espn/story/_/id/119...ks-breathe
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#9
Quote: @StickyBun said:
I go way back with Jason Whitlock back to the KC Star newspaper and his stint on 810 WHB radio when I lived in Kansas City. He's....ummmm.....'interesting' to say the least. Some of you in this thread I don't think would be agreeing with much he says outside what he's said in this recent Outkick article, lol. Especially awhile back. But he tells his truth how he sees it personally, being shy isn't something anyone would call him. 

https://www.espn.com/espn/story/_/id/119...ks-breathe
ive noticed that his tone has changed,  I read a fair amount of his stuff years back as a closet chiefs fan.  he sounds more like a guy that wants to lead change now than a guy that wants to explain why he is a victim,  maybe thats not the right way to word that,  but politics aside he sounds like a black man that wants to motivate other black men and women instead of providing excuses as to why they cant better their situations without politicians promises.
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#10
Quote: @JimmyinSD said:
interesting thoughts on the 4th of July,  more so than on his opinion of Kap as the link would suggest.

https://outkick.com/what-to-the-intelligent-is-colin-kaepernick-a-fraud/

This one was very good.

Quote:At the time of this nation’s founding, slavery was a global sin
committed by black, white, brown and yellow sinners across the planet.
Black people in Africa owned white (and black) slaves. Black people in
America, as early as the 1600s, owned black (and white) slaves. That’s
not a typographical error. Black people in America owned black and white slaves. 




The United States of America, because of the Declaration of
Independence and the U.S. Constitution, was actually a global leader in
abolishing slavery. As writer and historian Thomas Sowell has repeatedly
pointed out, long after the U.S. Emancipation Proclamation, blacks in
Northern Africa still bought, sold and utilized white slaves. 
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