Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:I dunno. If it was facile then the New York Times is guilty of promulgating it:
"Full blown national debate," seems hyperbolic, but the Times is gonna Times. What the article doesn't refer to is people intensely condemning him in a way that seems to earn the kind of descriptions it gives. For example, thinking of him as a traitor to America who deserves to die while blacklisting him in is profession. The President of the United States didn't mount a smear campaign against Tebow. Criticisms of Tebow were regulated to those who think prayer shouldn't be so publicly ostentatious, people annoyed that he was loved by a certain kind of naïve fan who didn't realize he sucked, and as a platform to criticize those who think God plays a role in the outcomes of sporting events. And a lot of that was in the form of gentle mocking that seems quaint today. Tebow also got flak for using his fame to promote regressive social conservatism, but that's not criticizing him for just sharing is beliefs, but criticizing him for the content of those beliefs. But all of that was minor compared to Kaepernick, not that big of a deal in the big scheme of things, and not necessarily from the exact same people praising Kaepernick. While you might think preachers at traditional black Churches condemned Tebow for praying in the middle of football games and hypocritically praised Kaepernick for protesting abuses in the criminal justice system, I'm not so sure that's actually true.
Tebow remained enormously popular throughout this and I'm not sure there actually was that many people who, in the words of the meme, told Tebow to "stop taking a knee." And of those that did, a certain % of them were quite religious people who have a problem with his in-your-face brand of piety who probably wouldn't be on Kaepernick's side either.
Anyway. I recall 'Tebow'ing' was very controversial and every pundit on the face of the earth had a lot to say about it, and many who criticized Tebow for using his NFL platform to push his faith praise Kap for using his NFL platform to push his political narrative.
- Doc
Many people are saying this post is making up people to criticize because evidence can't back it up.