Ray Lewis speaks about Kaepernick, Twitter speaks back

Nov 2, 2015; Charlotte, NC, USA; ESPN analyst Ray Lewis talks on the set prior to the game between the Carolina Panthers and the Indianapolis Colts at Bank of America Stadium. Carolina defeated Indianapolis 29-26 in overtime. Mandatory Credit: Jeremy Brevard-USA TODAY Sports
Nov 2, 2015; Charlotte, NC, USA; ESPN analyst Ray Lewis talks on the set prior to the game between the Carolina Panthers and the Indianapolis Colts at Bank of America Stadium. Carolina defeated Indianapolis 29-26 in overtime. Mandatory Credit: Jeremy Brevard-USA TODAY Sports /
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You’ve probably heard an opinion about Colin Kaepernick from everyone who has ever seen an American flag. You can’t go on Twitter without seeing someone shouting their thoughts from the digital rooftops. The NFL finally has something other than Deflategate to talk about and NFL players and personalities alike are weighing in on the situation. Next in line is former player and current analyst, Ray Lewis.

Ray Lewis has never had a problem speaking his mind. You’d probably expect quite the rant from the future Hall of Famer, but that surprisingly wasn’t the case. His advice to the last quarterback he’d ever beat in a game: keep the flag out of it.

While Lewis understood the point Kaepernick was trying to make, he believed there’s a difference between being a protestor and being an activist. Lewis cited the service of family members as his reason to why he’s such a patriot, stating you have to understand there are military members who might not come back from their service.

Lewis does make a point. It’s one thing to shout about a problem and protest the issue, and there’s another to make a meaningful stand. Lewis believes the flag and those who support it are some things that should be separated from a protest. Kaepernick has already promised to donate one million dollars to organizations that address the issues he is concerned about. He will also donate the money from his jersey sales, but will continue to keep the flag in his protest while he sits during the national anthem this season.

Even though Lewis makes strong, reasonable points, Twitter wasn’t exactly on board. You get accused of one tiny murder, and all your credibility goes out the window.

Every time Lewis decides to speak out about an issue, people love to give him a helpful reminder that he once stood trial for murder.

Poor guy can’t even support the troops without people shoving his own violent past in his face.