09-07-2016, 12:55 PM
(08-31-2016, 05:14 PM)ShowMeUrTDs Wrote: As an attorney, you should know infringement on First Amendment Constitutional rights is only forbidden against government actors, legislation, or rulings and not private entities.
If you were an attorney (or could even read) you woud see that I never mentioned the First Amendment.
(08-31-2016, 05:14 PM)ShowMeUrTDs Wrote: Second, the players signed a contract in the form of a collective bargaining agreement in which they agreed to let the NFL and their respective teams punish them for "conduct detrimental" which is a subjective standard. So, if they believe Kaepernick violated this agreed upon rule, then yes, they have the absolute power to exercise their contractual right.
Because you have limited understanding of the law, both contracts and Constitutional law!
And you do not understand that the contractual "detrimental conduct" language is not unlimited.
That is why you refused to answer my question about a player that refused to take part in a pre-game prayer. Do you think a team or the league could punish a player for that?