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http://www.app.com/story/news/local/how-we-live/race/2016/10/19/middletown-nj-police-rally/91939756/
Local and state police agencies, rankled by professional athletes refusing to stand during the national anthem as a form of protest, are preparing a large-scale rally before the biggest high school football game on the Shore this Friday.
The showdown between No. 1 Middletown South and No. 2 Toms River North is the first matchup between the Asbury Park Press's two top-ranked teams since 2014 so it not's lacking for attention -- but this pregame spectacle is bound to bring some more.
Middletown's "Salute to the USA" will include more than 100 uniformed personnel, including two officers who were shot during the arrest of New York and New Jersey bombing suspect Ahmad Khan Rahimi last month.
With color guards, pipe and drum bands from across the state and a flyover by the New Jersey State Police Aviation Unit, this will not be an understated affair.
It was organized by Middletown Police Deputy Chief Stephen Dollinger, who said the game was chosen for a couple of reasons: It's the highest profile game of the year and the right venue to respond to what he says are the disrespectful actions of San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick and other professional athletes.
In response to what he sees as systemic oppression of people of color, Kaepernick has refused to stand during pregame performances of "The Star Spangled Banner." Other players have followed suit.
“It's OK to stand up for social justice, inequality and reform," Dollinger said. "It's another thing to not stand up for the national anthem."
Dollinger said players from both teams will be incorporated into the festivities that will celebrate the service of not just police, but all first-responders and military personnel as well.
"I wanted to show that pro athletes are supposed to be role models, but in this case the athletes — the high school athletes — are going to be setting the example. It's going to be kind of a role reversal."
The national discussion around racial tensions and police-community relations has been reignited in recent years by instances of police killing unarmed black men. Five police officers were killed in Dallas this summer, apparently as retribution for those shootings.