Monday, September 5, 2016

OPEN LETTER TO JED YORK SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICE


 
OPEN LETTER TO  JED YORK SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICE


http://www.49ers.com/team/staff/jed-york/5351bb0b-a0c8-46c1-bc2c-a134a1246297

As chief executive officer of the San Francisco 49ers, Jed York oversees all aspects of the organization. Now in his seventh year as CEO, York has been a driving force behind the 49ers recent success on and off the field. York recognizes and shares the ongoing passion of the team’s faithful fans.

During York’s tenure, the team has experienced great success having won two NFC West Division titles, advanced to three consecutive NFC Championship Games and a Super Bowl. His strong leadership was also instrumental in providing the team and its fans a state-of-the-art new home...


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August 3, 2016
FROM: MIRIAM MATA
GUANABACOA@AOL.COM

VIA TWITTER: San Francisco 49ers
@49ers

     MR. YORK

    I'm very upset with the lack of respect from  your player Colin Kaepernick
when the National Anthem is playing. But also I'm upset with you
for not taking any action to try to solve the problem.
    It will be a good idea to keep Kaepernick out of the field when
the Anthem is being played. To do that you should agree not to 
toss a coin and give the other team the privilege to start the first 
quarter, so WE THE PEOPLE do not have to watch on TV his
infamy to many of us, that respect police officers and the job
they do.
     Also if Mr. Kaepernick is so proud of what Fidel Castro
represents, a dictator responsible for the slavery of the cuban
people for more that 57 years, he should play for free and
donate his full salary to the poor people of San Francisco, 
in other words   receive same treatment that baseball
 players enjoy in Cuba from his hero the communist Fidel Castro.
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MUST READ:


While denouncing “injustices against people of color” Kaepernick idolized the jailer and torturer of the longest suffering black political prisoners in the modern history of the Western hemisphere. Many of these black Cubans suffered longer and more horrible incarceration in Castro’s KGB-designed dungeons than Nelson Mandela spent in South Africa’s (relatively) comfortable prisons, which were open to inspection by the Red Cross. Castro has never allowed a Red Cross delegation anywhere near his real prisons.























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