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Veterans Furious as NFL Censors Patriotic Ad Requesting Players Stand for Anthem

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The most common reason cited in defense of the NFL anthem protests has been the freedom of speech. However, when it comes to protesting the protests, the league has quite the double standard.

According to the Army Times, the congressionally chartered veterans association AMVETS was denied the opportunity to run a $30,000 ad in the official program of Super Bowl LII that would have implored players and others to stand for the anthem.

The full page ad would have featured service members patriotically saluting the flag along with the hashtag “#PleaseStand.”

AMVETS leaders said that the league had rejected the advertisement but had not offered a reason why.

The group is calling the move “corporate censorship.”

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“Freedom of speech works both ways,” AMVETS National Commander Marion Polk told Army Times. “We respect the rights of those who choose to protest, as these rights are precisely what our members have fought — and in many cases died — for.

“But imposing corporate censorship to deny that same right to those veterans who have secured it for us all is reprehensible and totally beyond the pale.”

The NFL gave a reason for the ad’s rejection, although please be aware that if you have food and/or drink in your mouth at the present moment, Conservative Tribune is not responsible for any damage you may do to your computer, phone and/or internet device upon spitting it out.

NFL Vice President of Communications Brian McCarthy told the Army Times in a statement that the game program “is designed for fans to commemorate and celebrate the game, players, teams and the Super Bowl. It’s never been a place for advertising that could be considered by some as a political statement.” (Emphasis ours.)

adzlkhjzxvcmlnatijalvnqw;eortijasvl;nvx Oh really.

So, just so we’re clear here: The NFL has made it plainly manifest that it has no intention of enforcing respect for the national anthem out of purported respect for the freedom to express a political statement, even though it ostensibly means its players are using the corporate entity that is the NFL (and its partners) to express that statement.

However, when a congressionally chartered group expresses its opposition to that statement and is willing to pay the going rate for an advertisement to say so, the NFL says that the game has “never been a place” for that kind of thing.

And if you still want to use the argument that what players do on the field is different from advertising, it turns out the Super Bowl has “been a place” for that kind of thing when it comes to corporate promotion. Just last year, 84 Lumber ran an infamous ad during the Super Bowl that excoriated opponents of illegal immigration, which was one of a slew of Super Bowl ads with (uniformly liberal) political themes that viewers were treated to.

Oddly enough, McCarthy noted that an ad from a different veterans group, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, that reads “We Stand for Veterans” will be in the program. He also said AMVETS was asked to change the text to “Please Stand for Our Veterans” but didn’t respond in time for printing.

That’s a rather dubious claim to this observer; a hashtag is unacceptable but that proposed text wasn’t? And by the way, that defense also completely contradicts what McCarthy said about political statements, which leads one to believe this is being handled in the same quarter-assed reactive way the NFL has handled everything about this controversy: trying to kind-of-sort-of mollify angry veterans, first responders and other patriotic fans without actually having to take any sort of concrete stand against those actively disrespecting them.

If this was ever about freedom of expression — and that’s mostly what the NFL used to justify this mess — that freedom ought to apply to AMVETS as well. Period. What the NFL did proves yet again its executives are far more fearful of their own employees than those who keep them employed.

H/T The Daily Wire

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C. Douglas Golden is a writer who splits his time between the United States and Southeast Asia. Specializing in political commentary and world affairs, he's written for Conservative Tribune and The Western Journal since 2014.
C. Douglas Golden is a writer who splits his time between the United States and Southeast Asia. Specializing in political commentary and world affairs, he's written for Conservative Tribune and The Western Journal since 2014. Aside from politics, he enjoys spending time with his wife, literature (especially British comic novels and modern Japanese lit), indie rock, coffee, Formula One and football (of both American and world varieties).
Birthplace
Morristown, New Jersey
Education
Catholic University of America
Languages Spoken
English, Spanish
Topics of Expertise
American Politics, World Politics, Culture




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