Hello Dutch Uncle,
You're always good at making me see the other side of an issue. It's an issue of degree. You know, if somebody simply had a Trump sticker on their car that would be one thing. Flags are a different story. That is far more attention-getting. Yes, certainly an employer is within their rights to expect workers not to make it look like a business supported a political cause, whatever that cause is.
Kaep did step over the line as far as employer/worker relationship is concerned. I think the NFL took a bad position early on. I was not an NFL fan then. But then Trump stuck his nose into it as he always seems to do for a viral story, always tries to make himself part of it (even going back to the Central Park Five.) As soon as Trump said we should boycott the NFL, I became a fan that day. I am still a fan. (I seriously hope Mahomes is going to be OK,) I am very happy with the change of position the NFL took. Those messages on the backs of the helmets, and in the stadiums are awesome. Black Lives Matter, It Takes All Of Us, Emmitt Till, etc. (I had to look that name up to refresh on the case.)
What Kaep did was bold. He must have known the risk he was taking, and he took it anyway. I could not bring myself to kneel for the anthem or fly a flag upside down. I can't disrespect the nation like that, no matter what the cause. But Kaep saw it differently. I'm glad he did that. I still don't support what he did, but I am glad he did it. Yeah, that's a conundrum for me. Look at what came out of it. Wow. I could hardly be more proud of the NFL. I won't be posting much tomorrow afternoon...