Green Bay Packers supporters are sharply divided over the players’ decision to lock arms in protest during Sunday’s national anthem and the team’s request that fans attending tonight’s game follow suit.
In a statement on Tuesday, the Packers asked fans to stand and lock arms during the anthem before tonight’s game against the rival Chicago Bears, saying that the act represents ‘freedom, equality, tolerance, understanding and justice for those who have been unjustly treated, discriminated against, or otherwise treated unfairly.’
The protests are intended to raise awareness about police violence against minorities, but have drawn the ire of many, including President Donald Trump, who feel that the act is an insult to America and its members in the armed services.
The Green Bay Packers have asked fans at the game to link arms for the national anthem on Thursday night amid ongoing controversy surrounding players protesting the song. The team is pictured on September 24 ahead of their game against the Bengals
‘I am so ashamed of and appalled by the ignorance of any NFL player who would dare disgrace our Stars and Stripes or the memory of hundreds of thousands of fallen U.S. heroes who paid with their lives so that we may live free,’ Packers shareholder and 20-year U.S. Air Force veteran Steven Tiefenthaler told the Green Bay Press-Gazette.
Packers fans are in a unique position to have their voices heard because unlike the privately owned 31 other NFL teams, theirs is divvied up among over 360,000 fans who own over 5 million shares of the franchise.
Trump spent the better part of last weekend attacking protesting NFL players and calling on team owners to suspend anyone who knelt during the national anthem.
The Packers owners – their shareholders – had a mixed reaction after the President called those protesting ‘sons of b******’ during a speech in Alabama on Friday.
One shareholder, Atlanta’s Audrey Birnbaum Young, took offense.
‘It was absolutely ridiculous for him to insult the owners without considering the fact there are shareholders that are also fans,’ the 34-year old told CNN. ‘We don’t have the power to be able to fire those players but even if we could, there is no way that we would listen to that.’
Shareholder Justin Sipla told CNN that he chooses to stand for the anthem, but does not take offense at any player who chooses to protest, ‘especially if the causes they say they’re doing it for are for reasons of social injustice.’
During a speech in Alabama on Friday, President Donald Trump to NFL players who kneel during the anthem as ‘sons of b******’ and repeated his criticisms on Twitter for several days
Most of the Packers’ players, including their captain Aaron Rogers, linked arms during the anthem on Sunday. He told ESPN that the team is asking fans to link their arms to call for equality
Three players – Martellus Bennet, Kevin King and Lance Kendricks – sat on the bench during the anthem
Sipla was also fine with the decision to lock arms and the team’s request that fans do the same.
‘The American flag to me is symbolic of the freedom that is provided to us by the Constitution of the United States of America,’ he said. ‘That means people who want to sit or stand or do something else during any kind of ceremony long, as it’s peaceful, we have that privilege.’
According to Packers director of public affairs Aaron Popkey, only one share has been returned in counter protest and he is not aware of any fans returning their season tickets. (The shares are irrevocable, which means shareholders will not be compensated for returning them to the team).
‘We’ve had a steady stream of feedback beginning Monday morning and it continued into Wednesday. We’ve heard on both sides of the matter,’ Popkey told the Press-Gazette.
Tennessee businessman Allan Jones pulled his company’s advertising from NFL games
Laura Hapke, the daughter of a shareholder, told the Press-Gazette that she did not expect the Packers to make any demonstration on Sunday.
‘If they come out and say they are more into politics than patriotism, I’ll have to rethink it,’ Hapke said of her support for the Packers. ‘It will break my heart, but I’ll have to rethink it.’
And fans aren’t the only ones who have misgivings about the NFL players’ protests.
One Tennessee businessman decided to pull his ads from NFL broadcasts.
Allan Jones, who founded Checks Into Cash, announced on Facebook that he has pulled all commercials for his company from NFL games over the rest of the season.
‘For the 29 States we operate in, this isn’t much to them, but it’s a lot to us,’ Jones wrote on Facebook. ‘Our companies will not condone unpatriotic behavior! TAKING A STAND…NOT A KNEE!’
Rogers talked about the team’s decision to protest with ESPN on Tuesday: ‘This is about equality.’
‘This is about unity and love and growing together as a society and starting a conversation around something that may be a little bit uncomfortable for people.’
He also said that he hopes that by linking arms people will recognize the issues that need to be addressed.
Three players – Martellus Bennet, Kevin King and Lance Kendricks – sat on the bench during the anthem.
Bennett, the team’s tight end, protested in the first two games of the season by raising his fist in the air after his brother, Seahawks player Michael Bennett, seemed to be the victim of racial profiling by police in Las Vegas over the summer.
Trump has called for the league to instate new rules that require players to stand during the anthem – saying anything else is disrespectful to the country and to veterans.
The protests were started before the 2016 season by quarterback Colin Kaepernick – who used his public platform to protest police brutality and racism.
Colin Kaepernick (right), a former San Francisco 49ers quarterback, started the kneeling trend last year and it quickly grew after Trump condemnation of it last week