A
football player at Charlotte's Ardrey Kell High School carried a Blue
Lives Matter flag to honor the school's fallen SRO Friday night. (Photo:
WSOC screen shot)
After a Charlotte high school
football player carried a Blue Lives Matter flag onto the field Friday
night to honor a school resource officer who recently died of COVID-19,
the principal of the school apologized to those who were offended.
“In
no way was the carrying of the flag on Friday night intended to be a
political statement or a representation of the greater beliefs of our
community, nor the political beliefs of the player carrying it,” the
message said. “Instead, the intention was from one police officer family
to another honoring Officer Herrera. We are deeply sorry for the
unintended consequence of how it made some of our school family feel.”
The full message to the parents reads:
The
Ardrey Kell administration has been made aware of the Blue Lives Matter
flag being carried onto the field at Friday night’s homecoming
game. While the reason for this was that a player, who was a personal
friend of Julio Herrera, wanted to honor his life and his family at the
game being dedicated to his memory, we also recognize that the meaning
behind this flag goes much deeper for some. In no way was the carrying
of this flag on Friday night intended to be a political statement or a
representation of the greater beliefs of our community, nor any
political beliefs of the player carrying it. Instead, the intention was,
from one police officer family to another, honoring Officer Herrera. We
are deeply sorry for the unintended consequence of how it made some of
our school family feel and recognize that we must consider all
perspectives when making decisions that impact our families. We will use
this situation to further educate our staff and students on how our
actions send multiple messages and that at AK, we intend for all of our
actions to represent an inclusive environment where respect is given to
each and every student. We will also work to further educate our
students on the impact of using social media to address our feelings
instead of communicating and learning from one another’s perspectives.
Social media hate is never the way to move social equity work forward.
Instead, talking about issues and listening to one another is how we can
begin to make true strides towards an inclusive and respectful
environment. In the words of Officer Herrera, his favorite quote, you
can always do better. At Ardrey Kell, we will continue to honor Julio
Herrera by focusing on always doing better.”
Comments:
But it’s ok to carry BLM flag or wear shirts. But it’s not on for blue lives matter. Wow ok I’d rather support blue lives than a community that does not give one ounce of support to their community and only makes waves when POLITICIANS need help being elected. Let’s go Brandon!
Posted by Bella at 10/23/2021 9:33:56 AM
Very sad to see what we have become as a nation. We value thugs like George Floyd, and not those who put their lives on the line for us
Posted by LE at 10/24/2021 9:51:47 AM
I did not see any where in this article that anyone carried any flag other than a blm on to a football field that is financed by all citizens, some who may not feel that it's a good use of funds or that a police show of power might discourage some from coming to the games. WOW...your made up what ifs' are a joke. No one said the entire community was anti police in any way...