Current:Home > StocksJason Kelce provides timely reminder: There's no excuse to greet hate with hate -InvestTomorrow
Jason Kelce provides timely reminder: There's no excuse to greet hate with hate
View
Date:2025-04-17 11:07:00
For those of us who woke up Wednesday feeling sick, devastated and distraught to know that hate is not a disqualifying factor to millions of our fellow Americans, it is easy to feel hopeless. To fear the racism and misogyny and the characterization of so many of us as less than human that is to come.
We cannot change that. But we can make sure we don’t become that.
By now, many have seen or heard that Jason Kelce smashed the cell phone of a man who called his brother a homophobic slur while the former Philadelphia Eagles center was at the Ohio State-Penn State game last Saturday. Kelce also repeated the slur.
Kelce apologized, first on ESPN on Monday night and on his podcast with brother Travis that aired Wednesday. Angry as he was, Kelce said, he went to a place of hate, and that can never be the answer.
“I chose to greet hate with hate, and I just don’t think that that’s a productive thing. I really don’t,” Kelce said before Monday night’s game between the Kansas City Chiefs and Tampa Bay Buccaneers. “I don’t think that it leads to discourse and it’s the right way to go about things.
“In that moment, I fell down to a level that I shouldn’t have.”
Most of us can relate, having lost our cool and said things we shouldn’t have. In fact, most people have come to Kelce’s defense, recognizing both that the heckler crossed a line and that he was looking for Kelce to react as he did so he could get his 15 minutes of fame.
But we have to be better. All of us.
When we sink to the level of someone spewing hate, we don’t change them. We might even be hardening their resolve, given that more than 70 million Americans voted to re-elect Donald Trump despite ample evidence of his racism and misogyny.
We do change ourselves, however. By going into the gutter, we lose a part of our own humanity.
“I try to live my life by the Golden Rule, that’s what I’ve always been taught,” Kelce said. “I try to treat people with common decency and respect, and I’m going to keep doing that moving forward. Even though I fell short this week, I’m going to do that moving forward and continue to do that.”
That doesn’t mean we should excuse the insults and the marginalization of minorities. Nor does it mean we have to accept mean spiritedness. Quite the opposite. We have to fight wrong with everything in us, denounce anyone who demonizes Black and brown people, immigrants, women and the LGBTQ community.
But we can do that without debasing ourselves.
And we’re going to have to, if we’re to have any hope of ever getting this country on the right path. If we want this country to be a place where everyone is treated with dignity and respect, as our ideals promise, we have to start with ourselves.
“The thing that I regret the most is saying that word, to be honest with you,” Kelce said on his podcast, referring to the homophobic slur. “The word he used, it’s just (expletive) ridiculous. It’s just off the wall, (expletive) over the line. It’s dehumanizing and it got under my skin. And it elicited a reaction.
“Now there’s a video out there with me saying that word, him saying that word, and it’s not good for anybody,” Kelce continued. “What I do regret is that now there’s a video that is very hateful that is now online that has been seen by millions of people. And I share fault in perpetuating it and having that out there.”
On a day when so many of us are feeling despair, it’s worth remembering that hate has never solved anything. Be angry, be sad, be confused, be despondent. But do not become what you have fought against; do not embrace what you know to be wrong.
If you do, more than an election has been lost.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
veryGood! (66)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- 3 arrested after welfare call leads to removal of 86 dogs, girl and older woman from California home
- Hot air balloon crashes into powerlines near Minnesota highway, basket and 3 passengers fall
- Drake Bell defends former Nickelodeon co-star Josh Peck following Brian Peck allegations
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- California voters approve Prop. 1, ballot measure aimed at tackling homeless crisis
- Telescope images capture galaxies far far away: See photos
- Albert the alligator was seized and his owner wants him back: What to know about the dispute
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Grid-Enhancing ‘Magic Balls’ to Get a Major Test in Minnesota
Ranking
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- 2 teens arrested after abducted 21-year-old man found dead in remote Utah desert
- One of the last remaining Pearl Harbor attack survivors, Richard Dick Higgins, has died at 102
- Wisconsin GOP leader says Trump backers seeking to recall him don’t have enough signatures
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Stuck at home during COVID-19, Gen Z started charities
- Grid-Enhancing ‘Magic Balls’ to Get a Major Test in Minnesota
- New bipartisan bill would require online identification, labeling of AI-generated videos and audio
Recommendation
US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
Deion Sanders' second spring at Colorado: 'We're gonna win. I know that. You know that.'
The Book Report: Washington Post critic Ron Charles (March 17)
Massachusetts Senate passes bill aimed at outlawing “revenge porn”
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Hyundai recalls more than 98,000 cars due to loss of drive power
Two-time LPGA major champion So Yeon Ryu announces retirement at 33
Human remains found in 1979 in Chicago suburb identified through DNA, forensic genealogy