Colin Kaepernick's New Publishing Deal Has Cemented Him As The Newest Drug Kingpin In America

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Power Book III: Raising Kanan premiered yesterday (Sunday, July 18). In another extension of the popular Power series, executive produced by Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, 15-year-old Kanan Stark wants to join the family's drug-dealing operation. His mother, Raquel Thomas, is reluctant but eventually allows him to prove he has what it takes to make it in the vicious drug game.

Curtis Jackson should consider creating another Power spin-off: Power Book XII: Cultivating Colin.

It would tell the story of civil rights "activist" Colin Kaepernick.

He was born in Milwaukee to a white mother and a black father who quickly gave him up for adoption. Five weeks after his birth, a white couple takes him into their care. At age four, the family moves from politically moderate Wisconsin to politically liberal California. He was a two-sport high school star, excelling in football and basketball until he committed fully to football with the University of Nevada.

After a stellar collegiate career, Kaepernick was a 2nd round draft pick of the San Francisco 49ers. He would quickly become the talk of the NFL. Players, coaches, executives, and prognosticators all believed he would be the future of the QB position. His arm, speed, and running prowess made him almost impossible to defend. 

The pinnacle of his career came on February 3, 2013, when his 49ers reached Super Bowl XLVII (47). San Francisco ultimately fell short to Ray Lewis' Baltimore Ravens despite a valiant comeback (and a power outage caused by a Beyonce halftime performance).

The following season Kap signed a massive six-year, $126 million contract extension with San Francisco. It was all downhill from that point on. Injuries and surgeries ate away at his athleticism. The league also had years of film on him and started to exploit his weaknesses. By 2016, he was battling journeyman Blaine Gabbert for his starting job.

What's a man to do when he has tasted success and fame at the highest level and is seeing it gradually slip away? 

Become a drug dealer. The drug of choice? Racism.

Kap's first transaction was kneeling for the National Anthem before a preseason game in San Diego. This antic brought a younger generation of black Americans a euphoric high that they have been searching for since. His protest lit up social media, supplying unprecedented amounts of dopamine as users shared and retweeted images of Kap. They had their beliefs affirmed of their oppression, despite being some of the most privileged black people to ever grace planet Earth.

Kap would continue delivering his racism dope through various wardrobe choices. He wore socks depicting police officers as pigs. He donned a Fidel Castro shirt (who despised black people) to a press conference in Miami with a large Cuban and Hispanic population and wore a Kunta Knite shirt to practice. These images provided dopamine spikes for his followers on Twitter and Instagram while simultaneously bringing extra attention to a backup QB past his prime.

Drug dealers do not care about the path of destruction created in the wake of their dope-dealing narcissism. In 2017, upon being notified he would be released by the team, he opted out of his contract and became a free agent. Kap was such a divisive figure that NFL executives and GMs did not want to put their jobs (and families) on the line to sign him as a virtue signal to their fan bases. So, Kap, in deluded narcissism, sued the NFL for colluding to blackmail him out of the league. He, former teammate and SJW disciple Eric Reid, and the NFL settled for an undisclosed amount of money.

Kaepernick won the battle and significantly damaged the NFL's image in the process. The NFL is nearly 69% black. It has changed the economic trajectory of millions of black families who would have otherwise not been able to do so. Remember, Kap is now a heartless drug dealer. He doesn't care about the image of the league that helped make him a multimillionaire. His only concern is peddling that dope called "White Supremacy" to his supporters for profit.

The more successful drug dealers don't just sell to adults; they are also willing to sell to kids. Kapernick's latest deal will do just that. He has inked a publishing deal with Scholastic, which delivers books and other educational services to schools across the country. The first book of the deal will be a children's picture titled I Color Myself Different. Considering Colin's history of peddling racism, this book might not be too far off his message.

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The vice president of the Global Licensing, Brands, and Media arm of Scholastic, Debra Dorfman, said in a statement, "Colin's reputation as a thought leader precedes him, but it was also clear when we met that his mission and purpose were very much aligned with Scholastic's."

Thought leader? Who determined a former football player that sent 32 NFL scouts on a wild goose chase during a sham tryout and supported a dictator is a thought leader? 

Kapernick is a self-indulged communist puppet masquerading his racial insecurities through the filter of humanitarianism.

He has learned from the best. One of his most devout supporters on Twitter is Ibram X. Kendi, a self-described "anti-racist activist." For Kendi to continue to prosper as an anti-racist activist, there needs to be racism for him to confront. What is Kendi's definition of racism? "Racism is a powerful collection of racist policies that lead to racial inequity and are substantiated by racist ideas."

Huh? Even a third-grader knows you should never define a word using the same word.

Racism still exists, but it has never been less of a problem than it is today. No one is being held back because of the pigment of their skin, but Kendi does not want black people to realize this. If they did, his career would go the way of the dodo bird. Such "activists" like him must continue to manufacture a problem so he can continue to sell them a drug to "fix it."

Colin Kaepernick is doing the same thing. When he realized his athletic powers were waning, he transitioned to a career that does not have an expiration date. 

A dope-dealing "activist."

Vincent Williams

Founder and Chief Editor of Critic at Extra Large, an American, former radio personality, former Music Director, Hip-Hop enthusiast and lover of all things mint.

https://twitter.com/VinWilliams28
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