Controversy continues to surround the national anthem as this tumultuous NFL season culminates with Sunday's Super Bowl.
The league banned an advertisement from a veterans organization calling for players to stand and is reportedly looking to keep players in the locker rooms next year to avoid further conflict.
Some of the fallout surrounding the protests arises from reflexive acceptance of the notion that "The Star-Spangled Banner" celebrates the death of African-American slaves, which prompted the California chapter of the NAACP to call for the song's ouster as the national anthem. They called it "one of the most racist, pro-slavery, anti-black songs in the American lexicon."
Melvin Carter III, the new mayor of St. Paul, echoed these sentiments during his inauguration last month.
At issue is the troublesome third verse: "no refuge shall save, the hireling and slave, from the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave."
Though tempting, a literal reading of this long-ignored line is facile and erroneous.
No evidence supports the contention that the reference to "slave" means African-Americans in bondage.
Francis Scott Key, author of the lyrics, never wrote about the song and commented on his creation only once, to praise the brave men who defended Fort McHenry in Baltimore harbor from a British naval bombardment.