So,
you want to ignore me? My feelings aren’t hurt. You
want to ignore my claims? Well, that’s something altogether
different. I told you and effectively demonstrated,
through anecdotal and empirical evidence, that racism
in America
is not only alive and will but perpetually growing
in our culture’s periphery and by means of institutionalized
socialization.
As
we continue to bear witness to post-Tea Party euphoria,
instances like Trayvon Martin’s shooting in February
and the subsequent preferential treatment of his killer,
we see the unfolding of a racial divide that subsequently
re-exposed the obvious scab on this country’s pride
and prejudice. The fact is, the “take our country
back” mantra embedded in the Tea Party political fracas
of 2010 is a virus that, according to plan, is spreading
further and further in the country’s psych and younger
and younger Americans are becoming infected.
Though
I’m no avid sports fan (though I was in my youth),
I still love professional sports. So, on the very
night when my hometown Washington, DC team announced Heismann trophy-winning
quarterback, Robert Griffin III (aka RG3) as a National
Football League draft pick, my city’s Washington Capitols
hockey team was in the midst of celebrating a climactic
game seven: Joel Ward scored the winning goal. Incidentally,
I, like millions of other across the nation, noticed
that Ward is a Black man.
In
a sport traditionally void of Black faces, the National
Hockey League has attempted to racially integrate
the league. The hockey cartel, not unlike Major League
Baseball some 60-plus years ago, realizes that capitalism
is best realized when you grow constituencies. Hence,
in a country in which the percentage of whites - the
racial majority population - is decreasing, whites
must (again) open their doors to Blacks, Hispanics,
Asians and other minorities. Unfortunately for all
America,
significant pockets of the American populace vehemently
oppose such integration and are vociferous about -
if not turning back the clock - making sure time stands
still.
Twitter
feeds blew up with comments after the Caps stunning
victory. The sports news media networks ran some of
the comments: “We lost to a hockey playing n****er”
and “The n***er scores again, we riot.” Many, many
more feeds expressing a similar sentiment were posted.
Of course, there were and will be more to come.
Whenever minorities “over-step” their boundaries--
into “whites-only” areas of society, the likelihood
of vehement opposition is great. The question should
be: Why are there still “white only” sports enclaves
and who believes there should be?
During
my youth, playing professional sports like tennis,
golf, swimming and hockey were dreams for me and my
peers. I used to collect football cards as a hobby.
My friends and I idolized many of the superstars of
our day: Lynn Swann, Larry Bird, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,
and Reggie Jackson, among others, who played the type
of professional sports that “allowed” us in. For us,
that was it. Though we dreamed further, American society
limited and relegated our dreams to “the box” (of
cards).
So
here we stand today. From the honest response of some
Americans to the usual outcomes of team sports, my
claims of overt and covert racism are confirmed. From
overt legislation that allows white males to fatally
shoot unarmed Black males and go unmolested by the
law (until authorities yield to vociferous protests
of injustice) to the covert racism that remains undercover
when your team is winning, you cannot ignore racism.
It is the game-changer. Racism is the primary and
most relevant reason for wealth, educational, political
and overall quality-of-life disparities. You may be
able to explain away sexism, homophobia, and age-ism,
but racism’s roots run deep. You can’t ice out racism.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, Perry
Redd, is the former Executive Director of
the workers rights advocacy, Sincere Seven, and author
of the on-line commentary, “The
Other Side of the Tracks.” He is the host of the
internet-based talk radio show, Socially Speaking in
Washington,
DC.
Click
here to contact Mr.
Redd.
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