Revived wrote:Why question the motives lol. What if a white player had the exact same reasoning as Issac?
I wonder if people realize that it’s possible to not be racist and still not support the BLM organization. It doesn’t go hand in hand.
Just as a clarification, I don't think kneeling during the anthem is supporting the BLM organization. It's supporting the current movement which are not one in the same. I wish the NBA supported this movement without supporting this organization personally, because I find them to be a divisionary organization rather than a uniting organization based on the material of theirs that I've read.
That out of the way, to this specific question, there is a time/place/context to people's actions. It doesn't take a whole lot of self-awareness to know that if you took this action you would stand out. Isaac know this, and discussed with his teammates before hand. You absolutely know a lot of scrutiny over not joining in would come.
Given the context of the situation, a white player doing the same thing and looking to generate that scrutiny, which would obviously be much higher, assumptions would be made, and someone whom is inviting such scrutiny probably should be legitimately questioned as to why they're inviting such scrutiny rather than supporting their teammates around something they care deeply about.
Because Isaac is black, there isn't really much question about whether he really supports increasing African American equity and whether his motives are sincere or not. For a white player, this is pretty different. It's fairly binary, you are either showing support for those around you or you aren't. If you aren't, then it absolutely invites question as to why you aren't. I'm not saying there aren't reasonable answers to those questions, but it would be pretty curious as to why you would value something else over supporting your peers in something that is obviously deeply personal to them.