Colin Kaepernick apparently begged for a job on the practice team — Warren Sapp explains why the Jets don't want him



Who wouldn’t want Colin Kaepernick on their team?

The New York Jets, that's who.

The former San Francisco 49ers quarterback turned activist famously began taking a knee during "The Star-Spangled Banner" during football games to protest on behalf of BLM, which ignited plenty of conversations as to whether activism should be a part of sports.

Kaepernick then filed a formal complaint alleging that NFL team owners colluded to keep him off the field in the wake of his protests, which concluded with a confidential settlement.

Now, he’s begging the New York Jets to sign him to their practice squad.

“I would be honored and extremely grateful for the opportunity to come in and lead the practice squad,” the letter read. “I would do this with the sole mission of getting your defense ready each week.”

A day later, the Jets signed Trevor Siemian.

Pro Football Hall of Famer Warren Sapp thinks he knows why Kaepernick’s begging isn’t working.

“I know that the people that make the decisions about football don’t want Colin involved in it,” Sapp tells Jason Whitlock. “You made a decision, you got the settlement, now go on. There’s no way you sue your boss and get back and get a job again. That just doesn’t happen.”

“There’s some mistakes you can’t recover from,” Whitlock agrees.

“It’s plain and simple. They bring a lot of people in on Tuesday. If you’re not getting invited on Tuesday around the league, then you are not considered an asset to the National Football League or any football team. So let it go,” Sapp adds.


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Jason Whitlock DESTROYS Colin Kaepernick



If there’s one NFL star you can depend on to lack all self-awareness while peddling the most idiotic, divisive garbage, it’s good ol’ Colin Kaepernick.

Whitlock rips into him, saying he’s “exposing himself as one of the worst human beings in the history of America.”

“He’s not beyond redemption,” he adds, “but this is a tragic, sad, confused, mean-spirited human being. This is no hero. This is no one that’s interested in social justice. This is an idiot who is mean-spirited, ungrateful, and a blight on the sports world.”

Why is Whitlock saying this?

Apparently, during an interview with another African-American reporter, Kaepernick called his parents "problematic," saying they raised him in a racist manner.

Kaepernick said, “I know my parents love me, but there were still very problematic things that I went through. I think it was important to show that no, this can happen in your own home and how we move forward collectively while addressing the racism that is being perpetuated.”

He continued, telling the tragic tale of when he got cornrows and his white mother said, “Oh, you look like a little thug.”

Whitlock fires back, “If you’re so stupid as to think cornrows make you black ... the only thing that can make you black is the color of your skin. That’s the only qualification.”

He continues that if he’d gotten cornrows, his black father “would have smacked me on sight and would have been like ‘what are you doing? You think you went to college to come out and dress like some thug straight out of prison?’ That’s what parents do.”

Kaepernick had two parents who loved him, raised him, and kept a roof over his head. They wanted him to succeed. His lack of gratitude is so overwhelmingly obvious that it’s blinding.

Whitlock hammers this point home, saying that “these young people that have no gratitude for being Americans and for being born here and appreciate the people — white and black — who sacrificed so that we could live in the land of the free, the home of the brave, the land with all this opportunity — there’s no gratitude for it.”

He explains that it’s because they have “no connection to God. Because when you have a connection to God, you’re overwhelmed with gratitude. You know how flawed you are and so you don’t go on TV and take a dump on Mama and Daddy.”

Whitlock finishes by calling Kaepernick “absolutely sick, and all the people gassing [him] up, they’re sick [too].”


Want more from Jason Whitlock?

To enjoy more fearless conversations at the crossroads of culture, faith, sports, and comedy with Jason Whitlock, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.