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Colin Kaepernick compared NFL to slavery, now he wants to play for the Jets. Is he nuts?

‘NFL on FOX’ sideline reporter Jen Hale joined ‘Fox & Friends Weekend’ to preview week three’s top matchups as fans gear up for an exciting slate.

It’s been seven years and former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick is still begging the league to pass. And that’s exactly what they are going to do … pass on his return.

Even Google admits he’s just an "American civil rights activist," not a quarterback. Not anymore. The perennial whiner had a subpar season in 2015 and ended it injured. He made his mark in the 2016 preseason refusing to stand for the national anthem during the game against Green Bay. 

That’s when he proceeded to slam the nation that also made him a millionaire. "I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses Black people and people of color," he said after the game. He went from sitting to kneeling and created a fracture between the league and its fans as other players joined in.

COLIN KAEPERNICK WRITES TO JETS ASKING TO JOIN TEAM IN 'RISK-FREE CONTINGENCY PLAN,' CALLS HIMSELF 'ELITE QB'

That was the first of many stupid plays he made – bashing America and the NFL. He depicted police as pigs and even slammed his adoptive parents. Nope, not joking. The quarterback, who went from Super Bowl to super woke, claimed his parents had been perpetuating "racism." He was upset that they didn’t like his cornrow hairstyle. 

FILE – San Francisco 49ers' Eric Reid (35), starting quarterback Colin Kaepernick (7), and Eli Harold (58) kneel during the national anthem before their game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers for their NFL game at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Oct. 23, 2016. (Nhat V. Meyer/MediaNews Group/The Mercury News via Getty Images)

Yep, his parents didn’t

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