Thursday, August 7, 2014

The Sterling Difference

Recently, a NBA team owner was caught, as in secretly taped, spewing feelings and opinions about “black people” that most reasonable and modern people would disagree with, to say the least.

But, say the least, the people did not. Everyone from Magic Johnson (whom this 80-year-old curmudgeon was referring to in this rant to his twenty-something assistant/girlfriend/defendant-in-an-embezzlement-suit brought by he and his co-owner wife) to National Basketball Players Association president Chris Paul and NBA All-star and special adviser to the NBPA, Kevin Johnson took to their personal press agents (Twitter) denouncing the comments as “a black eye for the NBA”, “reprehensible” and “unacceptable” and that was just the beginning. Soon NBA stars past and present, politicians, religious leaders, celebrities and of course NBA fans were voicing their disdain for the owner and his repulsive words––effectively calling for his head. Fan boycotts. Player boycotts. The outrage was palpable, it was everywhere and it was growing. Rightly so, for no player (especially an African-American player) wants to play for a racist owner. Nor do they want to be associated with an organization like the LA Clippers or the NBA if they are in any way complicit in blatantly racist bigotry. Right? Neither do a majority of dedicated fans. I assume. Curmudgeon’s face had become the face of these organizations and that image came to represent the worst the NBA had to offer, inciting ill in all who laid eyes upon it. This was bad for everybody, especially the Clipper and NBA organizations and their largest revenue streams of licensing, merchandise and ticket sales.

With the NBA Finals tournament in full swing and the Clippers a serious contender for the championship, the timing couldn’t have been worse. All eyes were on the NBA and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, was under pressure to take punishing action fast. Swiftly and decisively came the huge fine and the vote by the other NBA owners to force the sale of the team––all sealed with a lifetime ban from NBA ownership. The outrage subsided as if the beloved team and sports were no longer tainted with racist bigotry.

That couldn’t be farther from the truth, leaving one to wonder where has the public outrage over racism in other pro sports organizations been? Only in the last 12-18 months has the issue of the Washington Redskins name made it to a broader public discourse with a handful of public figures speaking out against the name. For the first time, The Federal Trademark Board ruled this year that the Redskins name is “disparaging to Native Americans” and its trademark should no longer be protected. This is the result of a case that has been winding its way through the court system for over 20 years.  Although it applies additional financial and political pressure on current team owner Dan Snyder, the Redskins organization announced it would appeal. The trademark cancellation will be on hold while the appeals case makes its way through the court system, which could take years.

Where is the outrage? Where are the boycotts? NFL? Player’s Union? NFL team owners? Washington Redskins players? FANS?! Is the R-word not racist or hurtful enough to you? Sociologist, Irving Lewis Allen stated that “slang identifiers for ethnic groups based upon physical characteristics are by nature derogatory.” The fact that the overwhelming majority of the public doesn’t think this particular one is derogatory is the mark of a successful genocide. Decades of being bombarded with only these types of images and references to native people has successfully reduced indigenous nations and their descendants to a lower class of existence in the minds of the general public––lower than the animals and fictitious characters native people are depicted along side with as sports mascots. What if the name used a different color and accompanying imagery? Yellow? Black? What might those logos and mascot characterizations look like? Would that be hateful enough to incite your outrage and mobilize the masses? What about the usage of feathers, face paint and other native artifacts? If a team mascot wore priest collars, shook a crucifix and threw Holy water toward the opposing team would the usage of those sacred items be offensive enough to demand a change? Still not moved?

Perhaps you just need to know more about the history of the term “Redskin”. Maybe then you will be repulsed and moved to action. Let’s try.

Historically and generally speaking, a “redskin” is a dead Indian, more specifically the bloody scalp of a dead Indian. Hunting and killing Indians was a lucrative venture in colonial times. Fur traders started using the term “redskin” to refer to the Indian scalps they were selling when the Puritan women who worked in the trading communities complained that “scalp” was offensive. The colonial government paid 20 pounds for scalps of boys and girls under 12 years old, 25 pounds for scalps of women over 12, and a hefty 50 pounds for scalps of males over 12 years – equivalent to $9000 today. Scalps replaced the previous proof of kill - the entire head – because as the heads piled up, the stench of the rotting flesh became too offensive. Now the name was less offensive too. Still not feeling it?

Maybe you will be outraged on behalf of children?

Contrary to popular argument that American Indian mascots honor native people these and other prevalent representations of American Indians actually have a negative affect on native people. A 2008 research paper, “Of Warrior Chiefs and Indian Princesses: The Psychological Consequences of American Indian Mascots,” found that native mascots inflate the self-esteem of non-Natives, while having the opposite effect on Native people. The 2008 research combined the results of 4 studies, from 3 universities and states that, “American Indian mascots are harmful because they remind American Indians of the limited ways others see them and, in this way, constrain how they can see themselves” and further concluded that “exposure to mascot images like Chief Wahoo decreased native youth self-esteem even more than that of stereotypically negative images (such as those depicting alcoholism and homelessness).”

Maybe ire toward the team owner is the deciding difference here. Maybe you just need to despise him (or her––see former Cincinnati Reds owner, Marge Schott). Fine.

The current owner is simply continuing and fighting to preserve the tragic tradition established by the team’s original owner and founder, George Preston Marshall. Marshall was arguably one of the most outwardly racist owners in professional sports, having been identified as the leading racist in the NFL for his uncompromising opposition to having African-Americans on his roster. Not until 1962, sixteen years after the league began signing African-American players and only under an ultimatum issued by Attorney General, Robert Kennedy to either sign an African-American player or loose the 30 year lease on the D.C. stadium, did Marshall sign all-American running back, Ernie Davis. Davis refused to play for “that S.O.B.” and was subsequently sent to Cleveland. Marshall’s legacy also includes the George Preston Marshall Foundation, which serves children in the Washington, DC area. The $6 million he left to fund the foundation had one stipulation: that none of the funding could be used “for any purpose which supports or employs the principle of racial integration.”

That’s quite a long legacy of racial prejudice and yet no outrage. No boycotts. No lifetime bans. No coaches, nor players threatening to quit. Some will argue that a lot of Native Americans don’t find native mascots offensive and will point to a school or university using a native mascot with the blessing of a local tribe or faction. If this is all it takes to dismantle a long tradition of racial injustice, than I’ll show you a NAACP Lifetime Achievement Award with old Curmudgeon’s name on it that he received in 2009 just weeks after being accused of racism and “embracing a vision of a Southern plantation-type structure” in a lawsuit filed by Clipper star, Elgin Baylor.

Where is your outrage? What is the difference that separates these two stories into opposite columns on the “acts of racial injustice to protest” chart? It’s there, shining and sparkling from decades of dedicated polishing like a world champion trophy, the sterling difference - convenience. Apparently, in some cases, it’s just too inconvenient to stop supporting your favorite team, or coaching them, or playing for them or playing against them in protest. Allowing convenience to determine which group of people affected by racism you defend and fight for, only serves to excuse and sustain racism towards another group, a group that one day you may find yourself inconveniently part of.