OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) David West is disgusted with the choice of Donald Trump for president.
”The guy who got elected, it’s not just the fact he got elected but people voted for him,” West said after shootaround Wednesday. ”That’s the disheartening thing. I just think a lot of the things he was saying publicly, the majority of this country feels privately. They proved that through their vote. … He got the platform.”
As the Golden State Warriors returned to work Wednesday after MVP Stephen Curry’s record-setting 3-point performance Monday in preparation for a game against Dallas at night, players like West were still in shock over Trump’s win over Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.
”The message was loud and clear last night,” said West, who is African-American. ”I don’t think there’s any room to sort of not face the obvious truth. He speaks for the majority of the people in this nation, his attitudes about black people, about Muslim people, about women, about just about every sort of political group you can name. Folks agree with his positions, and you can’t deny that because folks voted for him. So, I think, throw that on the table. So this whole fairy-tale about some post-racial, this utopia that Obama supposedly created, it’s all bull. That’s the bottom line when you look at what the results say from last night. This nation has not moved a thread in terms of its ideals.”
The Warriors, whose brass have said how seriously the franchise takes its role as a positive influence in the community, are going ahead with their plan discussed in the preseason to bring in civic leaders to meet with players and staff in an effort to build trust and improve communication . The meeting is scheduled for Nov. 29.
West called it ”a shame” voters hid behind their ballots to show who they really are. He said the choice of Trump is ”unnerving and unsettling when you think about some of the things he’s said, hasn’t apologized for. The man’s 70 years old, so he is who he is.”
Golden State has discussed 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick’s national anthem protest . Kaepernick said Tuesday he didn’t vote for president after he criticized both candidates in late August and called Trump “openly racist.”
”I really didn’t play too close of attention because I have been very disconnected from the systematic oppression as a whole, so for me it’s another face that’s going to be the face of that system of oppression,” Kaepernick said on a conference call with reporters covering the upcoming opponent Arizona Cardinals. ”To me it really didn’t matter who went in there, the system’s still intact that oppresses people of color.”
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AP Sports Writer Bob Baum in Phoenix contributed to this report.
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