Regarding football, anthems, and
racism:
Trump called NFL players who kneeled
in protest “SOB's.” His intent was racist. The players are
largely black, the kneelers were almost wholly black,
and Trump was speaking to a mostly-white Alabama crowd deciding
between the right-wing senator Trump supports and the
even more right-wing and racist challenger. The subtext was, “My
guy's as tough on n****rs as your guy.”
Meanwhile, his preemptive strike
against basketball's championship team, canceling the traditional
White House visit because they were likely not to accept, was just
Trump being thin-skinned; but he singled out Steph Curry, not coach
Steve Kerr, who's white. Steph is a truly All-American good kid,
except that he's what US folks call “black.” (When will skin
color truly cease to matter in our assessment of fellow humans?)
Trump
insults insults peaceful black protesters, but won't unambiguously
criticize pro-violence anti-Semitic white supremacists., even when
they inspire a killing.
If you were a football player, and
Trump was calling your teammates names in a racist context, I think
comradeship and self-respect alone would tempt you to join in a
statement of opposition, even one involving the flag – unless
you're Villanueva, who served three tours of duty in Afghanistan. He
has deeper ties to other comrades, or their memories, and should not
apologize for saluting the flag while his teammates stayed inside to
avoid the issue.
One thing I learned from all this was
that Francis Scott Key was a racist, and the third stanza of his poem
“Defending Fort McHenry,” which became “The Star-Spangled
Banner”, attacked a group called Colonial Marines, escaped black
slaves who fought with the British as a route toward freedom. Can't
blame 'em. Key could, though:
And where is that band who so
vauntingly swore,
That the havoc of war and the battle's confusion
A home and a Country should leave us no more?
Their blood has wash'd out their foul footstep's pollution.
No refuge could save the hireling and slave
From the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave...
That the havoc of war and the battle's confusion
A home and a Country should leave us no more?
Their blood has wash'd out their foul footstep's pollution.
No refuge could save the hireling and slave
From the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave...
They could
fight, though, and just weeks earlier had kicked the butts of
Americans under Key's command.
What's harder
to define is Key's racism. He certainly didn't believe in whites and
blacks hanging out together, and he owned slaves, though he opposed
violent treatment of slaves and later freed some. He did so many
appalling things to defend slavery and so many humanitarian things to
free slaves it's hard to keep track. He was vilified as both an
abolitionist and a virulent anti-abolitionist. (I discuss that
further on my blog today.)
He was, like
most of us, a person in a specific time and with a specific
background, who did the best he could by his lights, and grew
somewhat wiser with time. He was neither as wonderful as he likely
thought he was, nor as terrible as later generations might infer,
once white society learned certain
things.
Players have no
First Amendment right as against private employers; and some of these
players make phenomenal salaries to be modern-day gladiators, before
most end up with knees too infirm to descend stairs, shoulders too
painful to lift their children, or permanent confusion, But so what?
Trump, a
powerful public official, is exacerbating our divisions for selfish
political reasons. Bringing out the worst in us. Whether someone
stands during the national anthem, kneels, puts a hand on his heart,
or whatever, is irrelevant to either their athletic prowess or the
cogency of their political arguments. We're all in this together.
In a country built on freedom to protest, patriots can protest
Trump's conduct.
-30-
[The above column appeared this morning, Sunday, 1October2017, in the Las Cruces Sun-News, as well as on the newspaper's website and on KRWG's website.]
[I'd intended to add more historical information on Key, but with the confluence of a lot of other things going on, just haven't time.]
Trump is not a President. Trump is a bloated, repulsive Thing. https://medium.com/geezer-speaks/stomach-pump-trump-and-the-hill-of-beans-407758ffe099
ReplyDelete