pmillem, it is a small point, but one I would like to make. At the time of the Constitutional Convention, six of the original thirteen colonies were slave-owning colonies: Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia. According to Thomas Ladenburg, author of "Making the Constitution," only 25 of the 55 delegates owned slaves. So a majority of the men who wrote and approved the U.S. Constitution were not slave owners, although I agree that they thought only white men who were property owners/business owners should have a vote. Slavery was and is a grave stain on our history with repercussions down the centuries. But even in our slave holding past, there were Americans who did not believe in the practice and even tried to have it written into the Constitution as an outlawed practice.
And I have no problem with any athlete speaking their mind on a political subject, just as I have always had the right to speak my mind on a political subject -- but not when I was in Court being paid by my client to represent them. That is the distinction I make. Sure, I don't write a player a check, but by watching a game or buying a ticket and going to a game, I am essentially their client and having them share their political beliefs is not what I am paying them for. And yes, a football field might be a big stage. Arguing before a full panel of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals -- one step below the U.S. Supreme Court -- was also the biggest/greatest stage I ever stood upon, but I was still there because my client was paying me to represent them, not to express my personal political opinions.
And perhaps I am way too cynical, but I don't think too many will take huge financial hits -- certainly not on the level I would have taken for doing what they do on the job. We tolerate a lot from the famous and they know it. I don't question their cause, but I think a lot of folks don't watch entertainment or sports to have political causes pushed at them -- I think that is a reason all the Hollywood and Music and Broadway award show programs ratings are down. LeBron James could hire a stadium and tell folks he will pose for pictures and shake hands for free if they listen to him talk on racial justice for a half hour and he would have to turn crowds away -- and it would be covered on every network news that night. They have plenty of opportunities to to have big stages to get their views out without doing it "at work".