When
North Carolina passed laws eliminating anti-discrimination
protections for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, along
with passed its “bathroom
bill”, mandating that transgender people use the bathroom of
their birth gender, they experienced almost immediate backlash.
Several artists canceled concerts, and at least two corporations that
had planned to locate corporate headquarters in North Carolina
decided to move them elsewhere. Now, the National Basketball
Association says it will not play the NBA All Star’s game in
Charlotte, as planned. They threw the Queen City a bone by saying
they “hope” they will play the games there in 2019,
implying that they will play in Charlotte if the state changes their
discriminatory laws by then. Moving the All Stars game.
Moving
the All Stars game away from Charlotte is an economic blow to that
city,
and to the entire state. The three day activity-filled and
star-studded event, draws
tens of thousands of visitors and millions of dollars to the city.
NBA Commissioner
Adam silver says the NBA has a long record of speaking out against
discrimination, and North Carolina governor has in an angry statement
saying the sports and entertainment industries have “maligned”
the people of North Carolina and “misrepresented its laws.”
He said “American families should be on notice that the
selective corporate elite are imposing their political will on the
communities in which they do business, thus bypassing the democratic
and legal process.”
I
say that the NBA has offered corporate leadership on discrimination
against GBLTQ people, and I applaud it. I am wondering, though, what it
would take to get NBA and corporate leadership involved in the
unnecessary shootings of African Americans by “law enforcement”
officials. Instead of support here, the WNBA has fined players from
wearing logo-less black shirts as a “deviation from uniform”.
(Yes,
I know that the NBA and the WNBA are different organizations).
What
if a few leaders in Fortune 50 companies took a position on the number
of unarmed African Americans by “law enforcement” officers. What if
they said that in response to the killing of Philando Castille in
Falcoln Heights, Minnesota, they would reconsider their monetary
commitment to this city or that? To be sure, police organizations would
push back, and hard, just as they have every time President Obama says
something about the ways people have been slaughtered at the hands of
police officers. Still, if corporate leadership even lifted up these
shootings as a matter of concern it might make a difference.
Or,
perhaps corporate leadership could use a carrot instead of a stick,
making contributions
to police training and arbitration in the name of corporate social responsibility.
What if corporate leaders offered to support a few diversity leaders in
developing training for police officers? What if corporate leaders
convened some kind of gathering that talked about the correlation
between police community relations and corporate profits?
Unfortunately,
corporate leadership has been mostly missing in action on racial
justice matters because some corporations profit from racial and
economic injustice.
Those who manufacture the tanks that bulldoze through our city
streets are
making money from police aggression. Those who own the private
prisons that profit from mass incarceration have no interest in
minimizing arrests. And those who shilly-shally around economic
justice find there is no down side to taking no position, a tepid
one, or an ambivalent one.
The
NBA felt there was a downside in condoning North Carolina’s
discrimination against GBLTQ people, such a downside that they would
offer a crushing economic blow to that state. They don’t seem
to care about the “collateral damage”,
those folks who don’t discriminate but will still suffer
because the All Stars game is going elsewhere. Few feel strongly
enough about racial and economic justice to strike a similar blow
against it. Instead, there is head-shaking and hand-wringing but no
action.
What
would be the outcome if even one corporate leader said, “We
don’t like doing
business in this environment”. What if just one corporate
surveyed their African
American employees about their police interactions, including
unjustified stops,
“misidentification”, and the burden of WWB and BWB
(walking while black and
breathing while black)? What if just one corporation said “enough”
about this nonsense?
I think corporate leadership on racial economic justice could make a difference.
Where is the corporate leader bold enough to try?
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