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  • The wife of New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees said on Sunday they received death threats over his comments about athletes protesting during the American national anthem. "Until we experienced the death threats, we experienced the hate, did I realize that these words were speaking directly to us. How could anyone who knows us or has had interactions with us think that Drew or I have a racist bone in our body?" Brittany Brees wrote in a social media post. Brees received plenty of backlash over his comments earlier in the week that he doesn't agree with players kneeling during the US anthem to protest the mis-treatment of blacks in America. "I will never agree with anybody disrespecting the flag of the United States of America or our country," Brees said. Criticism came from all over including fellow American sports celebrities such as LeBron James. Brees quickly issued a public apology and in a separate statement stood by it in response to comments from US President Donald Trump who said the quarterback should not have changed his stance. "I realize this is not an issue about the American flag. It has never been," Brees wrote on social media after Trump's tweet. "We can no longer use the flag to turn people away or distract them from the real issues that face our black communities." Brittany Brees pledged that the family will now work to be an ally for the black community and help fight police brutality and racial prejudice against minorities. "That's the problem - we are not listening, white America is not hearing. We're not actively LOOKING for racial prejudice," she said. "We have heard stories from men and women we have known and loved for years about the racism that occurred in their lives ... stories that were never shared or talked about because somehow they were considered normal. "To all of our friends and anyone we hurt, we will do better. We want to do better, we want to HEAR you, and we will fight for you because thinking we are not part of the problem is checking the box it means we are not doing enough. It's our job to educate ourselves. We are sorry." A wave of protests against police brutality and racism has swept across the US in the past week with many athletes voicing support for NFL player Colin Kaepernick, who ignited controversy in 2016 by kneeling during the US national anthem. The former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Kaepernick, who said he was refusing to stand in order to draw attention to racial injustice, was later frozen out of the league and has been unemployed for the past four years. Brees has been active in community projects since joining the Saints in 2006. Earlier this year he pledged $5 million to the state of Louisiana to help fight the coronavirus pandemic. gph/dj
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  • Brees 'received death threats' over flag comments
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