Harrison Butker stands by his comments.
The Chiefs kicker spoke publicly on Friday for the first time since his controversial commencement speech Benedictine College.
“It’s a decision I’ve consciously made and one I do not regret at all,” Butker said at the Regina Caeli Academy’s Courage Under Fire gala in Nashville.
While speaking to Benedictine College graduates, Butker suggested that the women receiving degrees had been told a “diabolical lie” about entering the workforce and were actually more excited about having a role as a wife and mother than starting a career, referenced Pride Month by arguing against a “deadly sin sort of pride that has a month dedicated to it,” railed against Joe Biden and his policies as president, condemned abortion and touched on various other cultural and societal topics.
The NFL quickly released a statement after Butker’s initial comments, saying the “views are not those of the NFL as an organization,” and Butker received harsh blowback.
“Over the past few days, my beliefs or what people think I believe have been the focus of countless discussions around the globe,” Butker said on Friday. “At the outset, many people expressed a shocking level of hate. But as the days went on, even those who disagreed with my viewpoints shared their support for my freedom of religion.”

