New York Daily News

Prez, thanks for the wake-up call

- LEN ELMORE

THANK YOU, Donald Trump. Thank you for awakening the giant I call the “athlete collective,” which most prominentl­y includes the black athlete. By “playing the dozens” and calling the mothers of athletes who demonstrat­e their dissatisfa­ction with the treatment of people of color by police and other government and social entities “b----s,” you have opened their eyes.

Trump’s insults have incurred the wrath of young black men and women who might have otherwise sat silent in the face of constant disparagem­ent by the President and many in his base of support.

Alabama may have been the perfect setting for dog-whistling and tossing thinly veiled racist red meat. Trump supporters there responded predictabl­y. However, out of that nonsense comes the hope that young athletes, even from their foot- ball power, the University of Alabama, and across the nation begin to survey the spoken, inflicted and endorsed injustices by this President.

Maybe, just maybe, young male and female athletes will understand the presence and the power of the “athlete collective.”

Those same Alabama Trump supporters may cheer black athletes on the field in Tuscaloosa only because they wear crimson and white. Yet most of them probably hold those athletes in disdain any other time and anywhere else. This condition is not unique to Tuscaloosa. It could be any stadium or arena in America.

The attitude is even more prevalent on the profession­al level. Simply ask Colin Kaepernick. The Huntsville, Alabama, rally is merely a microcosm of Trump-world across the nation.

As long as black athletes stay in their “lane” and focus on their sport, all is well. Begin to exercise their right as citizens and somehow they are a “son (or daughter) of a b----.”

Ironically, the reason given why Kaepernick cannot play on an NFL team, that he would be a “distractio­n,” has been repeatedly unmasked as the canard it always was. Laughably, the NFL owners’ patriotic hypocrisy subjects the NFL to more Kaepernick protestbas­ed scrutiny than interest in its weekly scores.

Both the NFL and the NBA are leagues populated by a black majority of players. Until Kaepernick, NFL players were, with a few exceptions, viewed as the “go along, get along” league, submitting to the alleged immense power of its conservati­ve owners.

His comments also apparently crossed the line with NFL owners who surprising­ly, with some exceptions, registered their repudiatio­n.

By the way, through his tweet, Trump “disinvitin­g” Steph Curry from a White House visit before his team made a decision, was moot. The Warriors were not going to show up. Trump’s severe, un-presidenti­al narcissism helps depict the Warriors’ hesitancy to honor the invite in childish terms of a jilted suitor who rejects before rejection.

Normally, I decline participat­ing in “whatabouti­sm” because it often yields too many false equivalenc­ies. Yet this comparison screams for it. In January 2012, when goalie Tim Thomas of the then NHL champion Boston Bruins refused to attend their White House reception due to his right-wing allegiance­s, President Barack Obama handled it with the grace and confidence of the most powerful man in the world.

President Trump’s willingnes­s to demonize U.S. citizens for exercising rights guaranteed by a Constituti­on that applies to all, as opposed to immediatel­y rejecting white supremacy or even criticizin­g Russia and Putin for objectivel­y attempting to hijack our democracy, should serve as a clarion wake-up call to every athlete, in fact, every American, influentia­l or not.

In response to Trump’s insults, athletes and fair-minded fans, together, ought to stand for social justice and affirmatio­n of one’s right to peaceably dissent, even if the dissenters sit for our national anthem.

To paraphrase a statement attributed to Voltaire, the French philosophe­r, we can disagree with what is peacefully said but we must defend the right to express it.

That concept is a precious pillar of our democracy and the basis for dialogue. Rather than continue the divisivene­ss, it is time to unify the American people by supporting legitimate freedom of speech and peaceful dissent.

In these days and times, initiating earnest dialogue as Kaepernick and others have, may be a most significan­t way that those blessed with the skill to play the games in college or the pros, can meaningful­ly contribute to society.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States