The meme below savagely rips apart the NFL’s argument that players should have the “freedom of speech” to protest what they see as injustice in the American system.

Exactly!

Why is it OK for players to disrespect the country and fans, but not OK for players to have the “freedom of speech” to honor the people and first responders who gave their lives on 9/11/2001?

Now THAT’s hypocrisy.

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Here’s a brilliant flashback example of what players should be doing:

NFL Star Ben Watson Schools Democrats on Culture And Gun Control

For the record – not all NFL players are nitwits.

Some of them – despite being bashed around quite a bit – have a good head on their shoulders.

Take Baltimore Ravens Tight End Benjamin Watson. In the wake of the Florida school shooting, Watson is proclaiming that it’s the lack of faith in public discourse that causes people to suffer.

After a Facebook post about the shooting, Watson went on Fox News to give his thoughts.

In the post, the NFL star said that Americans need to “take an honest assessment of our culture in its totality and how it relates to this tragedy and others like it.”

Watson gave touching testimony to the power of faith and culture to help prevent the tragedies.

“Every time there’s an instance like this, something really horrific, we talk about respecting life,” Watson told Fox News’ Martha MacCallum. “And while that’s very important, we have to look at our culture as a whole. We incarcerate our young men at alarming rates, vote for things that create the disintegration of the family, murder 60 million of our unborn since Roe v. Wade — we’re really a culture that gravitates toward violence.”

Watson said – of course – that the shooter must be held accountable for his actions, but said that there are questions that need to be asked about what type of culture we have that could breed such hate and violence that causes these kinds of tragedies.

“When you take faith out of the public arena, when you take God out of there, people suffer,” he said. “Whether you are Christian or not, those principles really carry us through.”

“For me, I look at this young man and know there are a lot of people like him suffering. How can I reach out to him and share the love? How can I listen to him? Because of the culture we are in, we are not paying attention to who is around us. I am willing to communicate with others so they feel like they are isolated,” Watson concluded.

Here is Watson’s post. Tell us what you think below:

‪The horrific attack this week that took the lives of seventeen Americans is sickening. Across this land these images grip our hearts as we burn the midnight oil asking “Why” and searching for the correct action to combat such evil.

‪Over this week while we have been driven to our knees as countless voices invoke prayer, I am haunted by the fact that this very exercise is forbidden in this school and thousands of others across our nation. I ask myself, “If He is God in crisis is He not also God in peace?! If he is worthy of our desperate cries in distress is he not worthy for us to seek Him and submit our lives to Him daily?”

‪God is not a cosmic vending machine to be used at our disposal only when the problem or pain is greater than our ability to control it. And while because of His love and mercy He is compelled to hear our pleas and meet us in these times, by forcing him out of the public arena it is only us who will collectively suffer.

‪In times like this, we loudly reiterate the charge to each citizen to RESPECT LIFE yet we sanction the disintegration of our families bonds, the murder of our unborn children and the excessive incarceration of our young men. Even now, the climate in this country is tense and toxic, with accusations and conspiracy reaching the highest levels of our government. Insults without contrition are spewed, creating ripples of animosity vengeance and strife among the populace. Instead of staunch fundamental yet respectful disagreement with the other side, we hate the other side and have no qualms about expressing it in the most descriptive and vile ways in written and spoken word. We are too proud to apologize and too angry too forgive. We lie and omit truth, cleverly selecting words and phrases to fit our narratives and support our agendas. We encourage a lifestyle of relativism, free expression, and a capricious standard of morality that is based on whims rather than wisdom. We condone and sometimes celebrate violence and abuse in various forms.

‪While justice demands this young man in Parkland Florida be held accountable for the heinous plan he carried out by his own volition, we must have the courage to take an honest assessment of our culture in its totality and how it relates to this tragedy and others like it.

‪I pray. For comfort strength healing justice and peace in what has proven to be an increasingly recurring saga. These acts of violence indict the criminal as well as the society he emerged from. While we must address the individual incident, the perpetrator and the circumstances we must have the willingness to unveil the myriad

‪contributing factors to the crisis we are in. Fire arms legislation, security, parenting, family, rights, relativism, morality, media, conflict, violence and the wicked human heart all play a role and all must be boldly addressed.

‪I mourn. For the Parkland community and all those directly impacted by these actions of evil. In truth we are all affected by these events because while one community suffers another is still healing and another waits in fear of what tomorrow could possibly bring. No family should have to face such an unconscionable reality.