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Former NFL player says Kaepernick's 'evil, anti-American' doctrine is 'largest threat to black men'
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Former NFL player says Kaepernick's 'evil, anti-American' doctrine is 'largest threat to black men'

Former NFL player Jack Brewer says that former NFL player-turned-activist Colin Kaepernick is sending ominous messages to America's black men about what it means to be black in the United States in 2021.

Brewer, CEO of the Brewer Group, told Fox News' Carley Shimkus that Kaepernick's "doctrine" is far more insidious than what some people might realize.

Kaepernick recently received the ire of the internet after he compared the NFL draft to a slave auction.

What are the details?

On Monday, Brewer said that Kaepernick's message is going to corrupt the "minds and hearts" of young black children on the cusp of manhood.

“This new Colin Kaepernick doctrine that's penetrating the minds and hearts of so many of our underserved black kids across America is the single largest threat to black men in the United States of America," Brewer told Shimkus. “Because right now, folks are thinking that they're victims, and they're living in the most prosperous, the most opportunity, in any country in the world. And so this one hurts me, because every day I get up, and I go out and try to help young African-American boys become men and try to instill those values. And when you have someone like this, who has the audacity to call multimillionaires 'slaves' and compare a process of someone living their dream, going to the National Football League, comparing that to slavery, it's gone overboard."

“And I think Colin Kaepernick needs to do some soul searching, you just watched that video, you see how dark it is, and to take the most fragmented, the most vulnerable population we have in America, where we have kids that 70% of them don't have fathers, most, a lot of them can't, their reading and math proficiency levels rate against third-world countries," he continued.

Brewer pointed out that Kaepernick's "doctrine" is pushing some already unstable young men into dangerous territory.

“You have kids that are already hopeless, and then you go out and push this mentality and you're supposed to be someone that's a leader," he explained. "Think about the movement that this guy started, the opportunity that he has, that he could actually come in and promote positivity to young black and African-American men and tell them how great this country is. He doesn't have that spirit in him. He has an evil, anti-American spirit. It is sick and disgusting to think that."

Brewer added that the only way to fight back against such institutionalized groupthink is to rely on God.

"The only way you can do it is through the word of God, to actually bring in spirituality back to kids and let them know, young black kids, and I'll tell you right now, you are kings in the kingdom of God," he said. "God sees you as a king, you are not a victim. We are not divided by race. We are one human race. And anyone that doesn't believe that, they have evil spirits in them, they're sick, they have a heart issue."

He concluded, "You can't just go around and say that everybody is racist. If it wasn't for some white people fighting against slavery, we'd still be slaves. And so this, that entire mentality has to be changed. And so the way we do it is we go in and we fight back against this nasty education system that spends all this money, $20,000, $25,000 per kid per school year, and doesn't teach them how to read and write and we try to get their reading and math proficiency levels up. We try to buy them shoes and clothes so that they feel like they can be accepted, when they're underserved. And that's working. And those are the type of things we need to be talking about in this country. Not this Colin Kaepernick doctrine."

Colin Kaepernick faces backlash for comparing NFL draft to slaverywww.youtube.com

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Sarah Taylor

Sarah Taylor

Sarah is a former staff writer for TheBlaze, and a former managing editor and producer at TMZ. She resides in Delaware with her family. You can reach her via Twitter at @thesarahdtaylor.