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Vikings, Chris Kluwe come together to create LGBTQ event at team headquarters
#1
A few days before the Twin Cities Pride parade, the Vikings will host a summit and fundraiser June 21 at their new headquarters in Eagan designed to promote LGBTQ inclusion in sports and raise money for LGBTQ groups.
The Vikings, who are believed to be the first NFL team to host an event like this, organized the fundraiser in part to fulfill a pledge they made in a settlement with former punter Chris Kluwe, who threatened to sue the team in 2014 after special teams coordinator Mike Priefer used anti-gay language.
Kluwe will be one of the speakers at the event, which includes, among others, former Olympic diver Greg Louganis and former Vikings defensive end Esera Tuaolo.
“We obviously had our issues a while ago, but this is our way of looking forward and trying to figure out how we make sure that we set the stage for that not to happen again,” Kluwe said. “I think that it’s the ideal outcome in that, at the end of the day, hopefully this will help a lot of people that otherwise might not have gotten that help.”
The Vikings will invite 200 people from within the organization, other NFL teams and from colleges and high schools around the Twin Cities. There will be four panels that will highlight how coaches and players can make sports a more welcome environment for LGBTQ athletes, while the fundraising aspect of the night will include a silent auction for local and national LGBTQ groups.
“2014 was unfortunate on multiple levels, but one thing I can say about this organization and to commend Chris is we were able to look over the horizon,” Vikings Chief Operating Officer Kevin Warren said. “The easy thing to do is to be negative and to judge what could or could not have been done. The more mature thing to do is to say: What can we do to take a situation where we can really grow and make a difference in the lives of people?”
Kluwe said he hopes Priefer will attend and added that back in 2014 he could not have envisioned a day when he and the Vikings would come together to create an event like this. The terms of the Kluwe-Vikings settlement called for the team to host an LGBTQ fundraiser, and they worked together recently to make it happen this June.
“It’s a testament to the way both of us have been able to work past that,” Kluwe said. “It’s a big deal to have an NFL team ... put on a summit for LGBTQ issues.”
Warren said the Vikings will plan on holding a similar summit in years to come and may try to include other local teams. “We definitely want to make sure this is not a one-time event. I can say that with confidence,” Warren said.


http://www.startribune.com/vikings-chris...482761171/
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#2
Interesting that Kluwe held the team's feet to the fire by making this event a condition of the settlement. 
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#3
Good for Chris for getting this thing going. And good for the team to commit to it. There are a lot of young people that feel like they don't have a place to belong and need support. If it makes a difference to even one person, it's totally worth it. I am glad something good can come out of something ugly.
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#4
Quote: @StickyBun said:
Interesting that Kluwe held the team's feet to the fire by making this event a condition of the settlement. 
Kinda takes the shine off of it. 
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#5
Quote: @MaroonBells said:
@StickyBun said:
Interesting that Kluwe held the team's feet to the fire by making this event a condition of the settlement. 
Kinda takes the shine off of it. 
Agreed. 
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#6
Quote: @MaroonBells said:
@StickyBun said:
Interesting that Kluwe held the team's feet to the fire by making this event a condition of the settlement. 
Kinda takes the shine off of it. 
It depends on how you look at it. Sometimes in order to make change, there has to be a driving force behind it. Kevin Warren is saying that it isn't going to be a one time thing. So regardless of how it started, it can still have an impact. Sometimes people need a nudge to do the right thing. Ideally it would be great if they automatically did the right thing initially but now it's time to grow and move forward. 
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#7
Quote: @Vikergirl said:
@MaroonBells said:
@StickyBun said:
Interesting that Kluwe held the team's feet to the fire by making this event a condition of the settlement. 
Kinda takes the shine off of it. 
It depends on how you look at it. Sometimes in order to make change, there has to be a driving force behind it. Kevin Warren is saying that it isn't going to be a one time thing. So regardless of how it started, it can still have an impact. Sometimes people need a nudge to do the right thing. Ideally it would be great if they automatically did the right thing initially but now it's time to grow and move forward. 
Fair enough. My point about the "shine" was only that it would look better if the Vikings had decided to do this on their own rather than doing it as a condition of a settlement. But at the end of the day, if this represents an ongoing thing for the Vikings, and its continuation is not part of the conditions of the settlement, then good for them. And good for Chris Kluwe.
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#8
Quote: @MaroonBells said:
@Vikergirl said:
@MaroonBells said:
@StickyBun said:
Interesting that Kluwe held the team's feet to the fire by making this event a condition of the settlement. 
Kinda takes the shine off of it. 
It depends on how you look at it. Sometimes in order to make change, there has to be a driving force behind it. Kevin Warren is saying that it isn't going to be a one time thing. So regardless of how it started, it can still have an impact. Sometimes people need a nudge to do the right thing. Ideally it would be great if they automatically did the right thing initially but now it's time to grow and move forward. 
Fair enough. My point about the "shine" was only that it would look better if the Vikings had decided to do this on their own rather than doing it as a condition of a settlement. But at the end of the day, if this represents an ongoing thing for the Vikings, and its continuation is not part of the conditions of the settlement, then good for them. And good for Chris Kluwe.
I totally get your point and agree.  I am just glad there can be a positive at the end. And if people can learn and grow from it, that's even better. Kudos to Chris Kluwe no doubt. It just goes to show that it's more than football.
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#9
Yuck.....Kluwe…..the guy who wouldn't do what the coach told him to do punt it out of bounds then yelled at the coach.  Real world you do what your boss tells you to do.
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#10
Quote: @Mighty mouse said:
Yuck.....Kluwe…..the guy who wouldn't do what the coach told him to do punt it out of bounds then yelled at the coach.  Real world you do what your boss tells you to do.
Yeah the NFL is not the real world. Players yell at their "boss" all the time. The flip over company property and have violent outbursts, with cameras rolling. In the real world no matter how good you were at your job you would be fired. In sports you get praise for being competitive and fiery. People need to stop thinking sports are like the real world. The only thing similar is if you can't perform up to industry standard you get fired. Or you call out the parent company for hypocrisy. The NFL cares about that kind of embarrassment.  Whistle blowers are not hero's to the customers in sports like they are in the real world either. We are all guilty. We don't want our sports to be the real world. We want it to be a escape from it. So we play into the parent companies hand.
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