ronburgundy
Contributor
According to his ad campaign, that's still his twitter background, yes.
https://mobile.twitter.com/Kaepernick7
His settlement has no relevance to that. Although you likely want to forget, his cause that he believes in and that the Ad refers to is not about the NFL or this collusion case. It is about the violent racist criminals who pollute US police departments and the corrupt justice system that goes to lengths to protect them from recourse. Going to trial or settling the NFL collusion case has no direct bearing on that cause. The enormous risk he took by making his protest for his actual cause is unchanged by the current settlement, which he had no way of expecting he would get. The fact that the NFL wanted to pay him to prevent the evidence of their wrongdoings being made public isn't his fault and doesn't undermine the level of sacrifice he made when he made it, nor does his acceptance of the settlement undermine his sincerity in his actual beliefs and cause the started the whole thing and has nothing to do with the NFL actions.
Don't get me wrong, I think Kaep is an idiot who (along with other BLM activists) helped get Trump elected by encouraging blacks and BLM supporters not to vote in 2016. I also think the nature of his protest was poorly thought out and the predictable backlash ultimately harmed his own cause or at least negated much of the attention he brought to the issue.
But he still showed more ethics, selflessness, and principles than the NFL, it's owners, or their racist fans who the NFL was trying to appease by keeping him out of the league, which they obviously did, regardless of whether the court standards for proving an explicit collusion could be met.