The New Orleans Saints were among the
teams which protested Trump’s remarks on Sunday ahead of their game against the
Panthers. “I would say, personally, I am disappointed in the comments that were
made,” said Saints coach Sean Payton. “I think we need a little bit more wisdom
in that office. That’s being a little blunt, but that’s how I feel. I want that
guy to be one of the smarter guys in the room, and it seems like every time
he’s opening his mouth, it’s something that is dividing our country and not pulling
us together,” he added.
According to The Advocate, the Saints
and Pelicans organizations released a statement roughly half an hour before the
start of Sunday’s game, saying that Trump’s comments were “disappointing and
inappropriate.” Then, tackle Terron Armstead remained in the locker room while
the National Anthem was being played as a form of protest. Meanwhile, 14 of his
teammates protested on the field.
Rafael Bush, Kenny Vaccaro, Chris
Banjo, Sheldon Rankins, Alex Okafor, Cameron Jordan, Adrian Peterson, Alvin
Kamara, Brandon Coleman, and Mark Ingram all sat on the bench during The
Star-Spangled Banner. Thomas Morstead, Marshon Lattimore, Craig Robinson, and
Coby Fleener stood nearby with their hands on their teammates’ shoulders. “I am
proud of every one of them,” coach Payton said.
Come Monday morning, Louisiana State
Rep. Kenny Havard (R-St. Francisville), pictured above, announced that he wants to cut millions
of state tax dollars, exemptions, and credits allocated to the Saints, the NFL,
and any of those groups’ associated facilities that receive funding. “The very
reason (the Saints) have the privilege and opportunity to play professional
football while being paid millions is because someone in uniform died
protecting their right to do so,” Havard said. “It is a disgrace to the men and
women of this nation and state who have sacrificed so much,” he continued.
“Disrespecting our national anthem and
flag in the name of social injustice is the highest form of hypocrisy,” added
Havard. “Our free society made possible by our fighting men and women has made
available free education, free lunch, housing, and free healthcare and is now
being considered socially unjust,” he said. “It is time the taxpayers quit
subsidizing protest on big boy playgrounds. I believe in the right to protest
but, not at a taxpayer-subsidized sporting event. Do it on your own time. There
are plenty of disabled children, elderly and veterans in this state that would
appreciate the money.”
According to a 2015 Forbes report,
Saints and Pelicans owner Tom Benson, pictured above, was “set to rake in an estimated $392
million from state subsidies through 2025.” The report said that during the
Mercedes-Benz Superdome lease “the state will pay Benson at least $198 million
in increased revenue from the Superdome, $142 million in rental payments on property
Benson owns, $10 million in bonuses for bringing the Super Bowl to New Orleans
and $2.6 million in tax breaks. Benson will get another $40 million from
private rent payments to a tower he bought as part of the deal.”
Rep. Havard is exactly right. The
Saints and their billionaire owner are perhaps the least deserving people of
the millions of tax dollars being thrown at them each year. That money could be
better put towards programs for veterans, the people who risked their lives so
those self-entitled athletes could sit on their behinds instead of honoring the
country which has afforded them such opportunity. If these football players
want to protest, fine. However, they absolutely should not be paid to do so.
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