Several Members of East Carolina Marching Band Kneel As They Perform the National Anthem

East Carolina joins UNC-Chapel Hill and UNC-Charlotte protesting the National Anthem in the wake of Keith Scott's death.

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The list of detractors refusing to stand for the National Anthem continues to grow. It's not just amateur and professional football players and college students since Colin Kaepernick took a stance in August. Now the sentiment has segued into college marching bands.

Before the kickoff of the Central Florida-East Carolina football team on Saturday at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium, the Eastern Carolina marching band had five members kneel during their performance of "The Star Spangled Banner." Despite the five who knelt with their instruments in hand, the band played on, as the old saying goes.

This photo below shows that two out of the three tubists who knelt continued to perform, while the two remaining protesters stopped playing their clarinets.

Here's another angle from the front of the band's formation that shows the band members kneeling.

When the band returned for halftime, they were met with resounding boos from the crowd. You can hear the anger loudly from the game's attendants in the clip above.

Shortly thereafter the protests from the band members, ECU president Dr. Cecil Stanton released a statement about the situation on the field:

For a full transcription of the statement, you can read it below:

East Carolina joins UNC-Chapel Hill and UNC-Charlotte as another North Carolina college or university with students who have protested the National Anthem. The protests come in the wake of the police shooting of Keith Scott in Charlotte last month, which has brought much political unrest within the state since his death.

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