2020
June
09
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 09, 2020
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In the past week, I’ve had the privilege of watching the NFL response to the George Floyd protests through the eyes of an 11-year-old friend. He’s a huge football fan and avid student of the game.

He was fascinated by last week’s video of black pro football players demanding the NFL “condemn racism and the systemic oppression of black people.” He’s heard about the NFL commissioner’s response. But he was particularly interested in what Drew Brees of the New Orleans Saints posted on Instagram:

 “Through my ongoing conversations with friends, teammates, and leaders in the black community, I realize this is not an issue about the American flag. It has never been,” Mr. Brees wrote, reversing an earlier position.”We can no longer use the flag to turn people away or distract them from the real issues that face our black communities.”

“Wow,” my friend responded. 

“Why ‘wow’?” I asked.

He was incredulous: “Drew Brees is the second-best quarterback in the NFL today – after Tom Brady, of course.” 

You might say “so what?” if Mr. Brees and a few other white athletes finally understand why San Francisco 49ers QB Colin Kaepernick knelt during the national anthem in 2016. A shift in views by pro athletes won’t end racism. And 32 NFL owners have yet to offer Mr. Kaepernick a job. 

But to many young football fans, what Drew Brees says matters. And my young African American friend heard a change of thought, and a change of heart. Maybe even some humility. And that mattered.


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Henry Gass/The Christian Science Monitor
Cassy St. Louis marches past the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston protesting the death of George Floyd at the hands of police in Minneapolis. The incident has sparked the biggest wave of civil unrest in the U.S. since the 1960s, but protesters and experts say these protests are made bigger, and more complicated, by a broader disillusionment with U.S. institutions.

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The Rev. Jabari Butler leads worship in January 2020 at Ray of Hope Christian Church in Decatur, Georgia, a suburb of Atlanta, where he serves as associate minister.

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Demonstrators in Hong Kong march on the first anniversary of a mass protest against the now-withdrawn extradition bill June 9.

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A mask seller wearing a mask stands in a street market in Bangkok, Thailand, June 9, 2020. Daily life in the capital is returning to normal as the Thai government continues to ease business restrictions put in place to combat the spread of COVID-19.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

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