Megyn Kelly: We’re 5 Years Post-George Floydapalooza And We’re Still Dealing With “Bullsh*t” Like “End Racism” In NFL Endzones
MEGYN KELLY SHOW: Megyn Kelly is joined by Link Lauren, host of “Spot On with Link Lauren,” to discuss the NFL’s performative End Racism messaging, the backlash to woke ads and multiple national anthems, an insane moment between NFL players spitting at each other, and more.
MEGYN KELLY: What I saw at the game was once again, now we are five years post George Floydapalooza. We had to begin the game with the Black national anthem. We can’t just have the National Anthem. We have to have the Lift Every Voice and Sing special anthem, just for black people, which is just so… why?!… It’s never stopped because even last night, in the opening game of the season they had these social justice messages in the end zone, End Racism. And they had one last night, which was, I think it takes all of us – they’re saving the end racism ones we just learned for all the international games, I guess to lecture our friends overseas about how they too, need to end racism. And it really is kind of amazing we’re still dealing with this utter bullsh*t five years after George Floyd. What do they think they’re doing? The country has had enough of this. It’s such a pander. And I guess Roger Goodell thinks that, he’s got to, I don’t know, pander to his largely black team? So are they clamoring for this? Did they want to see this stupid It takes all of us meaningless message in the end zones? I’m pretty sure those guys just want to earn money and play football and that with passage of time, almost everyone has seen how stupid that whole thing was. We’re paving over all the BLM messages on the roads like people are past it. We’re over it. We’re over the gender nonsense, the pronoun nonsense. Even AOC took her pronouns out of her Twitter bio. So did Pete Buttigieg and we’re over the stupid end racism, black national anthem nonsense. In the NFL. It’s like you’re hanging by a thread, why make it tougher on yourselves to get that last and very important segment of your audience back in your corner, which is middle America?