The ‘woke tailgate’: The brave of Buffalo kneel in solidarity with Colin Kaepernick

by Dave Zirin

Sunday, Oct. 16, was the 48th anniversary of that indelible moment in 1968 when John Carlos and Tommie Smith put their heads down and fists up on the Olympic medal stand as the anthem played, their friend the Australian silver-medalist Peter Norman standing in solidarity with their protest. Forty-eight years later to the day, in Buffalo, New York, Colin Kaepernick made his first start of the 2016 season as his 49ers took on the Bills.

Colin-Kaepernick-arrives-Buffalo-Bills-game-in-Muhammad-Ali-shirt-101616-244x300, The ‘woke tailgate’: The brave of Buffalo kneel in solidarity with Colin Kaepernick, News & Views
Colin Kaepernick arrived at the Bills game in Buffalo, where he was starting quarterback for the 49ers, wearing a Muhammad Ali T-shirt.

He arrived at the game with his Afro picked out, wearing a Muhammad Ali T-shirt. Outside the stadium, in one of the most notorious tailgating spaces in the NFL, people were selling T-shirts showing Kaepernick with a rifle scope trained on his body and the phrase, “WANTED: Notorious Disgrace to America.” White fans were caught on camera “spearing” effigies of Kaepernick, complete with giant fake Afros. On social media there was tape of one fan yelling, before one spear, “Tackle the Muslim!”

Inside the stadium the Bills were not much more welcoming. The team’s coach Rex Ryan is a Trump supporter who has spoken at rallies next to the wannabe despot and supports him because he “has the courage to say what is on his mind.” Buffalo Bills guard Richie Incognito, who was suspended from the league for bullying, a swirl of sexual-assault accusations, and calling teammate Jonathan Martin, all in good fun, “a half n——,” was on the sidelines. He also supports Trump for president. And then there is Bills star running back LeSean McCoy, who mocked Kaepernick by inviting the local police to the game.

One could be tempted to just write off the Buffalo Bills franchise and their fans entirely. But not all fans were playing this game. A group calling itself Just Resisting (JR), a collective of organizers and artists of Black people and other people of color, and Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ) Buffalo, a chapter of the national organization of white people organizing other white people for racial justice – about 100 people in total – took to the stadium to fight back with what they called “a woke tailgate.”

The group wanted to not only show solidarity with Colin Kaepernick but also to raise the issue that was the catalyst for Kaepernick’s protests: police violence and the devaluing of Black Lives. They gathered three hours before kickoff “in lot 4a behind the Louie’s Hot Dog.” At noon, they rallied, drummed and chanted by Gate 5, with signs that read #BillsFansForBlackLives.

Colin-Kaepernick-mural-Hudson-Newhall-BVHP-1016-by-Meaghan-M.-Mitchell-Hoodline-300x225, The ‘woke tailgate’: The brave of Buffalo kneel in solidarity with Colin Kaepernick, News & Views
A mural appeared recently at Hudson and Newhall in Bayview Hunters Point in tribute to Kaepernick and his protest of the national anthem. UPDATE: As of Oct. 22, the mural has been destroyed, literally whitewashed, the entire building covered with a new coat of white paint. – Photo: Meaghan M. Mitchell, Hoodline

“This protest is about the values we have as people,” said JR organizer Shaketa Redden. “The head coach of our NFL team endorses an openly racist candidate. Rex Ryan can go home and rest after the game but, as Blacks in America, we are not afforded that luxury. We can’t be silent in one of the most segregated and poorest cities in the country. That’s why I’ll be taking a knee.”

If you have ever tried to bring a protest to any football tailgate, then you know how brave these people are. The threat of violence was ever-present, but they were ready. Over 75 people took de-escalation training to prevent being brutalized by the aggro drunks of Bills-nation. It is difficult not to think about the early civil rights activists who practiced being on the receiving end of torrents of abuse in church basements before sitting in at whites-only lunch counters. Sure enough the abuse came, but not unlike the Bills coach or Trump himself, it was more tough-guy posturing than any actual heart to challenge the people who had arrived unified and ready to make a stand.

“We can’t be silent in one of the most segregated and poorest cities in the country. That’s why I’ll be taking a knee,” said JR organizer Shaketa Redden. 

At 1 p.m., as the anthem played, Colin Kaepernick took a knee with two teammates, linebacker Eli Harold and safety Eric Reid. Fitting for this anniversary of 1968, cornerbacks Keith Reaser and Rashard Robinson, safeties Jaquiski Tartt and Antoine Bethea, and running back Mike Davis raised their fists. As Kaepernick kneeled, Buffalo fans chanted “USA,” less as a point of pride than a threat. A police officer consciously photobombed Kaepernick’s protest, standing a few feet behind him with a salute. A friend’s parents who were at the game said to me: “It was scary. It was the closest I will ever come to being at a Trump rally.” A beer bottle was thrown at Kaepernick, but it did not connect.

Colin-Kaepernick-mural-15th-Mission-1016-by-Meaghan-M.-Mitchell-Hoodline-300x181, The ‘woke tailgate’: The brave of Buffalo kneel in solidarity with Colin Kaepernick, News & Views
Another recent mural honoring Kaepernick is at 15th and Mission in the Mission District. It was painted by an artist named Dino and reportedly commissioned by the new owner of the building, Amy Kozlowski. – Photo: Meaghan M. Mitchell, Hoodline

Kaepernick and the other 49ers were not alone. As the anthem played, the 100 people with JR and SURJ took a knee.

“Taking a knee in solidarity with Kaepernick during the anthem is one of the most American and patriotic actions that one can take,” said Cai Blue, an organizer with Just Resisting. “We would be doing a great disservice to the people who have suffered unjustly by the hands of others by not calling attention to the issues that continue to persist.”

The fact that so many white anti-racists took a knee in support of black activists also was the perfect way to remember not only John Carlos and Tommie Smith but also Peter Norman and the idea that white people have a responsibility to support anti-racist struggle.

Kaepernick and the other 49ers were not alone. As the anthem played, the 100 people with JR and SURJ took a knee.

As for the game, the slumping 49ers lost to the surging Bills 45-14. But the final score was about as important as John Carlos’s winning bronze instead of silver in 1968. This was bigger than sports. After the game, Kaepernick was asked about the virulent fan reaction and he said, “I don’t understand what’s un-American about fighting for liberty and justice for everybody.” That’s a question a great many people in Buffalo and around the country should have to try to answer.

“I don’t understand what’s un-American about fighting for liberty and justice for everybody.” That’s a question a great many people in Buffalo and around the country should have to try to answer.

Dave Zirin is the author of several books, including “The John Carlos Story“ (Haymarket) and his latest, “Brazil’s Dance with the Devil,” and sports editor for The Nation magazine, where this column first appeared. Receive his column every week by emailing dave@edgeofsports.com. Contact him at edgeofsports@gmail.com.