Novak Djokovic, Aaron Rodgers, Kyrie Irving, and the Fight for Medical Freedom
Novak Djokovic might have lost his Wimbledon final, but he remains a leading voice on medical freedom.
With the most Grand Slams, Masters titles, weeks at number one, and year-end number-one rankings, Novak Djokovic is arguably the greatest tennis player who has ever lived.
He has also been a staunch advocate of medical freedom—a stance that came to the fore during the COVID years and has made headlines again last week.
During his post-match press conference following a Round 16 win at Wimbledon, Djokovic confronted members of the crowd who had apparently booed him during the game—a practice that has sadly become commonplace since he declined the coronavirus injection.
“To all the fans that have respect and that stayed here tonight: Thank you very much from the bottom of my heart. I appreciate it,” he began.
“And to all those people that have chosen to disrespect the player—in this case, me—have a gooood night,” he said, lengthening the “O’s” in mockery of the crowd’s earlier boos.
When the host suggested that Djokovic had mistaken cheers of his opponent’s surname (Holger Rune) for the word “boo,” the tennis star remained unpersuaded.
“I don’t accept it. No, no, no, I know they were chanting for Rune. But that’s an excuse to also boo,” he explained.
“Listen, I’ve been on the tour for more than 20 years. So trust me, I know all the tricks. I know how it works. It’s fine, it’s fine. It’s OK. I focus on the respectful people, that have respect, that paid [for] a ticket to watch tonight and love tennis.”
“I’ve played in much more hostile environments. Trust me, you guys can’t touch me.”
During a subsequent BBC sit-down interview, when the reporter failed to ask Djokovic any questions about tennis and instead repeatedly interrogated the booing incident, Djokovic walked out.
Novak Djokovic ‘rightfully’ shows reporter his place #Wimbledon pic.twitter.com/D0QnzBpP2J
— Novak India Fans (@NovakIndiaFans) July 9, 2024
All power to him, I say.
As an Australian, I watched many in my nation treat Djokovic with contempt, despite his rather discreet public remarks on COVID overreach at the time.
The man has been mocked, vilified, detained, and deported—all for simply defending “the freedom to choose what you put into your body” and declining a medical treatment now widely acknowledged to have caused serious injuries and deaths.
While Novak Djokovic has been a brave outlier, fortunately he has not been alone.
NBA veteran Kyrie Irving, now a shooting guard for the Dallas Mavericks, infamously turned down a $100 million-dollar four-year extension with the Brooklyn Nets over his decision not to be injected.
Initially suspended from Nets games, Irving was allowed back on the court once New York State mandates eased. He used those events to advocate not for himself but others, tweeting at the time:
If I can work and be unvaccinated, then all of my brothers and sisters who are also unvaccinated should be able to do the same, without being discriminated against, vilified, or fired.
This enforced Vaccine/Pandemic is one the biggest violations of HUMAN RIGHTS in history.
Swiss Olympic snowboarder and gold-medalist Patrizia Kummer also made headlines when her decision not to be injected resulted in a three-week quarantine in the lead-up to the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
Kummer was initially reluctant to discuss her refusal of the treatment, though she did ultimately provide some commentary during a video call from her hotel room in Beijing.
“I had a bunch of reasons for the vaccine and a bunch of reasons against the vaccine,” she explained. “And in the end, it was like, ‘No, I can’t do it.’”
Among her reasons was that she was “not in a risk group.”
Another athlete to take a strong stance against mandated injections was NFL quarterback Aaron Rodgers, then of the Green Bay Packers.
Rodgers initially confused media pundits by explaining he was “immunized” against COVID-19, by which he meant he’d taken preventative treatments, not the vaccine. He and a teammate also attended a team-sanctioned Halloween party in violation of stringent NFL protocols, resulting in personal and team fines of more than $300,000.
That incident notwithstanding, Rodgers advocated extensively for medical freedom in numerous interviews, the most high-profile of them being his various appearances on the Joe Rogan Experience. (Excuse the language in the clip below).
Elite athletes spend their every waking moment guarding their health and keeping their bodies in top condition for events.
Of all people, surely they deserve the freedom to evaluate their own health decisions, with the personally-tailored input of professionals.
Punishing them during the COVID era was a mistake. Booing them still in 2024 is mindless.
Given their advocacy, not just for their own medical autonomy but that of the general public, athletes like Novak Djokovic, Kyrie Irving, Patrizia Kummer, and Aaron Rodgers deserve our thanks and admiration.
And to those still unable to see it, listen to the stories of people since harmed by the vaccine and reevaluate the last few years events in that light.
Who knows, you might even change your mind.
___
Republished with thanks to Intellectual Takeout.
3 Comments
Leave A Comment
Recent Articles:
10 December 2024
2.7 MINS
The Australian economy is tanking. A large part of the cause is government spending, and yet Labor treasurer Jim Chalmers believes all is well. Rather than motivate businesses to build growth, Labor has chosen to further bloat the bureaucracy instead.
10 December 2024
12.6 MINS
We need to go back almost 20 years to the time when the inaugural Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued the first dramatic arrest warrant for a sitting head of state. Will it prove a case of three strikes and you are out with respect to global governance?
10 December 2024
5.8 MINS
How much worse things get in Australia, in large measure, depends on the Labor leaders running the nation and most states. Ugly antisemitism seems doomed to simply worsen if they remain in power.
10 December 2024
3.8 MINS
Regrettably and importantly, the assisted dying bill gives no direction as to what the doctor should do if the “lethal” dose does not, in fact, kill the patient. This will certainly happen and it needs to be specified if the bill is to become law.
9 December 2024
4.3 MINS
My stand is against the treatment of Israel by the Australian government and the United Nations. The Australian government would rather reward the terrorism of October 7 and has continually pushed for a two-state solution, when all the terrorists want is a one-state solution.
9 December 2024
6.7 MINS
What is the difference between 9 November 1938 in Germany and 6 December 2024 in Melbourne? Nothing, except some 86 years. In both cases, Jewish synagogues were set alight. The truth is, Jewish people no longer feel safe in this country.
6 December 2024
6 MINS
Australians are already feeling the cost of the 'renewable' transition, but there are far higher costs to come, according to Chris Uhlmann's new documentary 'The Real Cost of Net Zero'.
Thanks Kurt thanks for continuing to report on aspects of Covid 19 .Novak is respected by myself especially during past 4 years . He is an example to what Christians need to do when challenged in areas of our convictions….to stay true to them regardless of the opposition and personal cost
The Govt continues to make employment difficult for the unjabbed. Try getting work as a volunteer within any aspect of Govt run places!
Another brilliant article!!!!!