3 Feb 2021
He’s not playing in the game and hasn’t played in any game for nearly five years. Nonetheless, Colin Kaepernick’s presence will be felt at the Super Bowl this weekend.
Ben & Jerry’s the famed ice cream company that has named a flavor after the country’s original anthem protester, has erected a billboard in the Super Bowl host city of Tampa Bay.
The sign depicts Kaepernick with a raised fist, next to his “Change the Whirled” flavor and signature “I Know My Rights” sign from his “Know Your Rights Camp.”
Our new billboard in Tampa. pic.twitter.com/rCSz4jqp5G
There is no racial or ethnic group in American history that has made significant socio-economic success without first believing in their ability to do so. Most of them faced bias and discrimination at one time or another some more than others but all of them overcame adversity by plugging away, refusing to let the forces of bigotry get the best of them. That is why it is obscene to see the so-called allies of African Americans sell them a narrative that effectively immobilizes them, leaving them wallowing in victimhood.
Ben & Jerry s, Kaepernick Take Wrong Tack to Lift Up African Americans newsmax.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newsmax.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Friday Five With Gil Melott of Studio 6F
01.22.21
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Founder and Principal of Studio 6F, Gil Melott runs a creative design company with a focus on high end residential and boutique hospitality interior design. The business itself runs out of an award-winning design gallery and showroom in Chicago, and represents Melott’s furniture brand Gil Melott BESPOKE. You’ll also find sought after vintage furniture along with American contemporary makers and artists representing a variety of mediums. Studio 6F has been recognized for their unapologetic approach to integrating eras and styles in an eclectic yet harmonious way.
Today Gil Melott joins us for Friday Five!
Most Americans can probably still remember a time when U.S. companies were in business with one goal in mind - providing a product or service for profit. It was a noble idea, the bedrock of capitalism, in which everyone stood to gain in the.