Tucker Carlson on Nike, Kaepernick: ‘Real Problem’ That the ‘Most Successful’ in US ‘Hate This Society’
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Tucker Carlson criticized Nike executives for using former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick in the company’s “decadent” ad campaign and said its message is an attack on the country.
Kaepernick was just chosen to represent Nike in its “Just Do It” 30-year anniversary campaign.
Believe in something, even if it means sacrificing everything. #JustDoIt pic.twitter.com/SRWkMIDdaO
— Colin Kaepernick (@Kaepernick7) September 3, 2018
“It’s pretty decadent. It’s factually ludicrous,” Tucker said on “Fox & Friends” Tuesday. “You can’t give up everything and maintain a Nike contract. But the decadent part isn’t even really about Colin Kaepernick. He’s an athlete, a young guy. I would give him a pass actually on a lot of this.”
“It’s the executives profiting from him and his attacks on the United States, while simultaneously denying that they are attacks on the United States. So they’re saying he raised the issue of racial discrimination in this country, as if it’s never been raised before.”
Tucker said the historical problems of race in the U.S. are known to all Americans and accused Kaepernick and his Nike cronies of attacking the country and biting the hand that feeds them.
“This is an attack on the country,” he continued. “It would be very different if he were saying, ‘I’m protesting this politician or this policy or this specific person for doing this specific thing’—but no. Sitting during the national anthem is a way of making a broad-based, generalized, and therefore impossible-to-rebut attack against the country that made him and Nike rich.”
“There’s something decadent about that. When the most successful people in your society hate this society, you have a real problem,” Tucker concluded.
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