Tamika Mallory
**FILE** Civil rights activist Tamika Mallory speaks during a 2017 protest at NFL headquarters in New York City. (Freddie Allen/AMG/NNPA)

Protesters held a rally in front of the National Football Leagueโ€™s New York City headquarters on May 25 after the league announced new rules that punish players who donโ€™t stand for the national anthem.

Tamika Mallory said that the NFL owners were acting as a โ€œproxy for a fascist presidentโ€ and that the new policy was an attempt to โ€œresurrect slavery in the 21st centuryโ€ and punish Black players. The kneeling protests started when former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick began sitting during the anthem and then kneeling as a protest against police brutality.

โ€œWhat is being said is that the nโ€“gas donโ€™t have basic rights,โ€ Mallory said. โ€œAnd I want to say today that Ida B. Wells, Dr. Martin Luther King, Marcus Garvey, the four little girls in Birmingham are turning over in their graves right now about the disrespect, the disgrace, that is happening in this country.โ€

Mallory continued: โ€œIf we, as Black people, lay down and allow this system to continue to oppress us, we are the ones to be held responsible.โ€

Civil rights activist and author of โ€œThe Revolt of the Black Athleteโ€ Harry Edwards told USA Today that the NFLโ€™s new national anthem policy was โ€œthe dumbest move possible.โ€

โ€œThey put the protest movement on blast,โ€ Edwards said. โ€œThey just created a bigger stage than ever.โ€

In a recent commentary for Vox.com, Harvard Law School labor professor Benjamin wrote: โ€œThis new league policy is meant to enforce a particular vision of patriotism, one that involves compliance rather than freedom of expression.โ€

Sachs wrote that the new anthem policy was illegalโ€”for a host of reasons.

โ€œThe clearest illegality derives from the fact that the league adopted its new policy without bargaining with the players union,โ€ Sachs wrote. โ€œWhen employees, including football players, are represented by a union, the employerโ€”including a football leagueโ€”canโ€™t change the terms of employment without discussing the change with the union. Doing so is a flagrant violation of the employerโ€™s duty to bargain in good faith.โ€

ESPN.com reported that President Donald Trump supported the NFLโ€™s policy that requires players to stand for the national anthem or remain in the locker room, during an interview with Fox News.

โ€œI think thatโ€™s good,โ€ Trump said. โ€œI donโ€™t think people should be staying in locker rooms, but still I think itโ€™s good. You have to stand proudly for the national anthem or you shouldnโ€™t be playing, you shouldnโ€™t be there. Maybe you shouldnโ€™t be in the country.โ€

Many players have already indicated that they are not happy with the new rule.

In a statement released on Twitter, Philadelphia Eagles safety Malcolm Jenkins wrote: โ€œWhile I disagree with this decision, I will not let it silence me or stop me from fighting. The national conversation around race in America that NFL players forced over the past 2 years will persist as we continue to use our voices, our time and our money to create a more fair and just criminal justice system, end police brutality and foster better educational and economic opportunities for communities of color and those struggling in this country.โ€

In an interview with ESPN, Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Doug Baldwin called the president โ€œan idiotโ€ฆplain and simple.โ€

โ€œI respect the man because heโ€™s a human being, first and foremost. But heโ€™s just being more divisive, which is not surprising. It is what it is,โ€ Baldwin said. โ€œFor him to say that anyone who doesnโ€™t follow his viewpoints or his constituentsโ€™ viewpoints should be kicked out of the country, itโ€™s not very empathetic, itโ€™s not very American-like, actually to me. Itโ€™s not very patriotic. Itโ€™s not what this country was founded upon.โ€

Baldwin continued: โ€œItโ€™s kind of ironic to me that the president of the United States is contradicting what our country is really built on.โ€

In his Vox.com commentary about the NFLโ€™s new national anthem policy, Sachs wrote that now that the owners have made it a workplace rule to stand during the anthem or stay in the locker room, any player who takes the field and takes a knee is protesting an employer rule.

That protest, Sachs said, โ€œis unquestionably protected by federal labor law.โ€

The NFL preseason begins in August.

This article was originally published at BlackPressUSA.com.

Freddie Allen contributed additional reporting for this story.

Lauren Victoria Burke is an independent journalist, political analyst and contributor to the NNPA Newswire and BlackPressUSA.com. You can reach Lauren by email at LBurke007@gmail.com and on Twitter @LVBurke.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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