Our love of country and national identity must
extend deeper than the symbols of the flag and anthem, than the
politics of left and right, or "what church do you attend?" or
socio-economic status. Our national heart and soul and all that we
treasure most as Americans must genuinely be about freedom and equality
for all who reside in our borders. We must be truly accepting of our
beautiful diversity of cultures, lifestyles, and
perspectives--especially when we disagree. We must be about caring and
helping our fellow humans, regardless of how they arrived at their
circumstances. Any less renders songs and flags and platitudes rather
hollow.
Here's
the thing: the U.S. Constitution (under the 1st Amendment of the Bill
of Rights) guarantees each of us the right to decide if we stand or
kneel. It does not give us the right to dictate to others whether they
"must" or "should" stand or kneel. If we
don't recognize that, if we don't protect that right for all
perspectives--especially the ones with which we disagree--then our
nation has much bigger problems than how people treat a song or a piece
of fabric. Those items are lovely things, but they are symbols of the
true beauty of America--the freedom and equality that are supposed to be
afforded to everyone, no matter their gender, skin color, religion,
politics, gender-identification, socio-economic status, ethnic origins,
sexual-orientation, or geographic location. And sadly, in 2017, not
everyone has complete freedom and equality--this is what the players are
very successfully bringing attention to; and the fact that they have us
all talking about it proves that their protest is meaningful. It's up
to all of us to carry the ball from there.
The protests have again brought to the forefront
the fact that not everyone here is truly free...not when certain skin
colors are systemically profiled, punished more harshly, and generally
persecuted. Not when some genders, identities, and lifestyles are
treated as second class. This bigotry is ingrained in our society. We
must decide to care more about liberty for all people than what boxes
people fit into. It's a tough, ugly national conversation, but it is one
we must keep having and working through until we are truly the "land of
the free".
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