Jason Whitlock: “Caleb Williams and the ‘Lambeau Weep’ perfectly illustrate the emasculation of football and American culture. Over the weekend after a disappointing loss to Washington, the Heisman Trophy-winning USC quarterback climbed into the stands in the arms of his mother to convulse and cry. Fellow Heisman winner-turned ESPN broadcaster Robert Griffin III celebrated Williams' public show of emotion tweeting out: 'THIS YOUNG MAN POURS HIS HEART OUT FOR HIS TEAM EVERY TIME HE PLAYS. ANY NFL TEAM WOULD BE LUCKY TO HAVE HIM AS THEIR QB, AND HIS EMOTION SHOWS HOW MUCH THIS GAME MEANS TO HIM.’ Damien Woody, a two-time Super Bowl champion-turned ESPN broadcaster also endorsed the ‘Lambeau Weep’, tweeting a rebuke of former Colts linebacker Robert Mathis, who criticized Caleb Williams. Damien Woody said: ‘I’M SORRY, BUT SHOWING EMOTION BECAUSE IT MEANS THAT MUCH TO YOU ISN’T SOFT. SOME MEN NEED TO BECOME MORE EMOTIONALLY MATURE AND NOT SHAME SOMEONE WHO SHARED A MOMENT WITH A LOVED ONE.’ Look, I get it, there's no shame in disappointment reducing a man to tears. I've been there, we've all been there, but there are appropriate expectations we place on men and leaders on how they deal with their emotions and how they conduct themselves in public. America did not become the leader of the free world, and football did not become America's national pastime because men exhibited the emotional control of 12-year-old girls. Caleb Williams is soft, he's not a leader. He's another victim of the matriarchal culture embraced throughout modern society. He's been programmed to allow his emotions to dictate his behavior. That programming is at the foundation of the quick trigger, resort to violence mentality pervasive throughout communities devoid of fathers. Caleb Williams has a dad and a supportive family. That does not make him immune to getting swept up in the matriarchal culture promoted in academia, corporate media, and popular culture. The spirit of the age forces everyone to conform to the lowered expectations of men. Thirty-seven years ago the emasculation movement had not invaded football to the degree it has today. In 1986, the number one football recruit in the nation, Jeff George, suffered a concussion in the first quarter of a game against the University of Minnesota. His mother, Judy, came out of the stands to tend to her son. She rode the golf cart with her son to the locker room. Sports Illustrated ran a story and picture about it. The media lampooned Jeff George over the incident for the next decade. His mother's actions violated the ‘Man Code.’ Here we are nearly four decades later and there's seemingly no such thing as a ‘Man Code.’ That's not good, that's not progress. Men have abandoned ‘code.’ We value surrendering to emotion over exercising self-control. When things don't go our way we think it authorizes us to give into emotion. Feelings have become our God. Caleb Williams, Robert Griffin, and Damien Woody have bought the lie that we must radically redefine the concept of ‘manhood.’ Williams paints his fingernails, Griffin spends every waking moment working with a stylist on his latest look, Woody says whatever is necessary to stay in the good graces of his Disney overlords. All three advocate the same message-- healthy men share the emotions the same as women. It's not true. It's not what we're called to do. It's not our role in a proper functioning society. As the so-called ‘leader’ of the USC football team, Caleb Williams should share his game day in-stadium emotions with the young men engaged in the battle with him. He can be a mama's boy in the privacy of his home. Proponents of the matriarchy are using football and Black men to reshape masculinity. It's a clever tactic. It lulls White men into the false belief that it's not their concern. The fear of being labeled ‘racist’ or a ‘sellout’ quiet criticism of the ploy. Feminists want us to abandon football and let them use the strongest force in popular culture to promote their Marxist agenda. The ‘Lambeau Weep’ is more important than you realize.” (Full Segment Above)
Watch Jason Whitlock of Fearless call out ‘soft’ Caleb Williams for not being a stoic leader after television cameras showed the USC quarterback climbing into the stands after the Trojans’ 52-42 loss to Washington on Saturday night to cry in his mother’s lap.
Check out the segment above as Whitlock wonders if the event was staged in an attempt to show NFL teams how much Williams ‘cares’, saying it was that odd that Williams’ mom thought to quickly block the view of her son’s face with a large sheet of paper that she conveniently was holding the moment Williams went into the seats.
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