"On a day dedicated to the working man, Nike damaged its reputation by partnering with the most prominent unemployed man in sports."
"For starters, sacrificing everything for something one believes in is not necessarily wise if your cause is bad. Kamikaze pilots in World War II did this, so do suicide bombers in the 21st century. Kaepernick, of course, is well-intentioned."
"But just because he sacrificed something doesn't mean he was doing it for a good cause. Kaepernick has been seen wearing socks that depict police officers as pigs. He wore a t-shirt featuring Fidel Castro, the late communist dictator of Cuba who was no fan of human rights."
"Kaepernick also donated $25,000 to a group honoring cop-killer Assata Shakur. Nike apparently finds this noble and has been paying money to be associated with Kaepernick."
"He has sacrificed virtually nothing in his political activism. Even if he never started the vapid kneeling during the national anthem gesture, he would have been cut by the San Francisco 49ers following the 2016 NFL season anyways."
"He went 1-10 as a starter in 2016, benched twice in favor of Blaine Gabbert. Kaepernick posted a 49.3 QBR (ranked 23rd of 30 qualified NFL quarterbacks) and fumbled nine times (which means he was on pace to fumble 13 times had he started all 16 games)."
"He was about to enter his fourth season in a seven-year $126 MILLION contract; there was no way San Francisco was going to continue paying him all that money to continue losing football games. Instead, he opted out of his deal."
"Had Kaepernick not kneeled, maybe he could have been a backup someplace else for less money once the 49ers cut him. But why would he need to be? He had already earned $43.5 million as an NFL player, plus however much he earned from endorsements."
"In other words, Kaepernick was set for life financially regardless of whether or not he played another down in the NFL ever again."
"As for Nike, it’s not a great idea for a multibillion corporation, who sells sporting goods, to take a hard line political stance on anything. Splitting the market to support a political cause is not and never really has been a good move, as far as revenue goes."
"As NBA legend Michael Jordan is rumored to have once said, “Republicans buy shoes, too.”
"Remember, Air Jordans are made by @Nike, and Jordan himself didn’t think it was a good idea to go political because he did not want to hurt Nike’s bottom line."
"About 53% of Americans surveyed by WaPo in February said they feel it is never OK for NFL players to kneel during the national anthem, so Nike legitimately is siding against more than half of the country here.
So why is Nike doing it? It's clearly for the attention."
"The news blew up as soon as it was released because Kaepernick is a polarizing figure who gets a lot of press. In all likelihood, it will not be a good move long-term for Nike to pick sides in the culture war, but they're getting quite a bit of free advertising in the short run"
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“In 2010, German scientists found that a Pfizer veterinary vaccine to reduce diarrhea in cows caused a fatal bleeding disease in their calves.
Even after pressure from Germany caused Pfizer to stop selling the vaccine there, the company kept selling it elsewhere.
A top Pfizer official told British farmers it was safe to use and that “other factors” were likely involved.
A month later, Pfizer stopped selling the vaccine. European regulators later found it caused a 1-in-6000 risk of the bleeding disease.
Left-wing tyrants are famous for calling their ramshackle one-party states “democratic.” Joe Biden’s endless blather about democracy while treating his political opponents as “domestic enemies” belongs to this tradition. He equates democracy with unchallenged liberal tyranny.
What he calls “threats” to democracy are nothing more than instances of public resistance to his attempts to build a one-party state in America. He wants docility, not democracy, and seeks to eliminate his political foes as crudely as any tinpot leader of a banana republic.
In Edward Luttwak’s extremely interesting book Coup D’état: A Practical Handbook, he outlines a series of practical necessities a successful overthrow entails.
A neutralized opposition, media control, military support, dedicated and discrete supporters throughout government offices, speed of implementation, a detailed and logistically feasible organizational action plan,
Danchenko, the main source for the discredited anti-Trump dossier, agrees to be defended by law firm representing Clinton cronies under Durham scrutiny washex.am/32MzUuC
Durham’s team asked a judge to “inquire into a potential conflict of interest” related to the lawyers for Igor Danchenko, noting that a colleague at their firm is representing the campaign and several of its employees "in matters before the Special Counsel."
Durham’s team also hinted that former Clinton campaign members will be called to testify, which could be "a potential conflict.” They said it is likely the defense law firm “already has obtained privileged information” from the Clinton campaign about Danchenko and the dossier.
“Taliban militants pulled guns on United Nations aid workers and took off with 3.7 tonnes of Australian flour meant to be delivered to some of Afghanistan's poorest families as the war-torn country faces a catastrophic famine.”
“The Australian Government donated the vital baking staple through the World Food Program as part of a $100 million handout which also includes other UN agencies.”
This year governments across the developed world have issued a flurry of policies designed to ‘nudge’ people to get the vaccine, such as requiring vaccine passports to enter leisure venues.
In some countries, those nudges quickly turned into shoves. In November, Austria pioneered the ‘lockdown for the unvaccinated’, making it illegal for the unvaccinated to leave the house without a state-mandated excuse.