A “HISTORICAL” PERSPECTIVE ON MANY CURRENT ISSUES
Author Howard Bryant wrote in the Prologue of this 2018 book, “This is a book about collusion… in sports… sports is just entertainment, offering the illusion of being important… But sports was always more for the black athlete. Despite its obvious legal and extralegal barriers to equality, in sports, the scoreboard served as a metaphor for meritocracy America always considered itself, and sports was the barometer for where African Americans stood in the larger culture, how American they would be allowed to be. Of all black employees in the history of the United States, it was the ballplayers who were the most influential and most important, the ones who made the money. The black thinkers… were roadblocked by segregation. Entertainers were a close second, but the athletes were different. Being a ballplayer was the first black occupation allowed in the mainstream… Ballplayers were the Ones Who Made It. And being the Ones Who Made It soon came with the responsibility to speak for the people who had not made it, for whom the road was still blocked… The tradition was so strong that it even had an informal nickname, ‘the Heritage,’ exemplified that day in June of 1956, when Paul Robeson… who was once the most famous black man in America walked straight into ... where the House Un-American Activities Committee held hearings … Robeson appeared before the committee requesting a reissue of the passport the government had taken from him six years earlier.” (Pg. ix-x)
He continues, “by advocating that dissent is cause for losing one’s career, the sports industry and the president of the United States have returned America to [Paul] Robeson’s dark time. And the questions of dissent and patriotism, of race and speech, he faced then are the same the black athlete is fighting now. We have been here before. In a time of flag and flyovers, camouflage jerseys and a president calling his citizens un-American, authoritarianism as patriotism has become the new normal.” (Pg. xiii-xiv)
He went on, “By risking his enormous fame and wealth to advocate for improving the black condition, Robeson lost his money but gained his people. When it comes to the Heritage, Robeson was its charter member and first casualty… This pattern continues to repeat itself, emblematic today with Colin Kaepernick, who has discovered in a new century the suffocating weight of the power of absorbing the phenomenon of white revenge and emerging more relevant, more important, more influential… Through the great unifier of sports, with the black players kneeling, the white players standing, the police heroes to one, center of protest to others, America would discover explosively and definitely just how severe its fracture truly were.” (Pg. xiv-xv)
In the first chapter, he states, “Kaepernick was not vague or reckless in his indictments. He said he had no conflict with veterans or the military… While cultivating a response to the police, he spoke with Nate Boyer, the former long-snapper for the Seattle Seahawks who was also a Green Beret. Kaepernick told Boyer that he wanted to make a public stand against police killings but also wanted to be respectful of the military. Boyer suggested quietly taking a knee during the national anthem… It was the gesture that directed the country’s attention toward the police and a justice system completely unwilling to convict officers whose use of deadly force seemed to be the first and only option in confrontations with African American citizens.” (Pg. 5-6)
He observes, “America’s racial framework was being exposed through sports, the one place that was supposed to be a meritocracy. The players were expected to perform… [but] they weren’t supposed to challenge or dispute the world in which they lived either. The white majority… would decide what could be discussed and how… What Kaepernick revealed was that sports was no less divided along racial lines than the rest of the country, even if its workforce comprised a black majority. The only difference was, the players were black millionaires.” (Pg. 13)
He argues, “After the [2016] election, Kaepernick dropped an atom bomb on reporters… it turned out that Kaepernick … had NEVER been registered to vote. Ever… And this is where the high-minded, frothy outrage, the talk of hypocrites and voting supposedly being the most important act a citizen owns sounds great in theory but, in the real world, was just another lazy talking point to discredit dissent the punditry could not handle.” (Pg. 28-29)
He elaborates, “the Heritage began from the responsibility of being the Good American. White America asked black athletes to defend its ideals and [Jesse] Owens and [Joe] Louis obliged. This defense continued into the postwar era, as tensions rose with the Soviet Union. The black athlete wanted to stick to sports. It was white America that wouldn’t let him.” (Pg. 33-34) Later, he adds, “The Heritage was also born of something else: money and opportunity.” (Pg. 40) “If the best prospect for black America was not going to be education but the lottery ticket of sports… then the most physically gifted African Americans were bound to interrupt America’s fun and games when the times demanded their political participation… the Heritage… belonged to them now, even if it was a burden the next several generations of athletes did not always seem to want.” (Pg. 50)
He comments on many black athletes: “O.J. Simpson had created a new template: the colorless black athlete. He opened the doors to the white world and other black players followed. Jim Brown preceded him… but Brown never possessed Simpson’s marketing muscle. No one did---until Michael Jordan arrived… Simpson was the pioneer for money and mainstream social acceptance black players never envisioned---if they were willing to lay off the politics and the anger… the Heritage never stood a chance.” (Pg. 76-77) The “end result” of Tiger Woods’ attitude [e.g., calling himself ‘Cablinasian’] was, “there was no advantage to identifying with being black.” (Pg. 94)
He asserts, “The Heritage was dead. The paying customer never wanted it, and now the players believed that being a political athlete was either no longer their responsibility or too costly for the wallet. In a sense, the players had won. The black body remained a multimillion-dollar commodity to America, but this time they got to keep the money… And then the Twin Towers fell.” (Pg. 97) He adds, “Of all American social institutions, 9/11 most radically altered sports… September 11 both killed ‘stick to sports’ and became a patriotic war cry… What was thought to be a period of grieving and a temporary display of militarism became a permanent, cultural transformation, now going on nearly twenty years.” (Pg. 101-102)
After the deaths of Sean Bell and Oscar Grant at the hands of police, he points out, “the black players played. No one spoke out… the great black players---Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, Dwayne Wade, Barry Bonds, Shaquille O’Neal, and Randy Moss, not to speak of Tiger Woods---said nothing.” (Pg. 151)
He explains, “the Department of Justice report concluded that Michael Brown had reached into the police car during his struggle with Darren Wilson. The investigation said Brown’s hands were not in the air when Wilson him and that he had not been running away… To black America… the conclusion of the Justice Department … did not square with … the number of times members of the black community were in a position of compliance or surrender and were harassed and humiliated by police anyway.” (Pg. 170) Later, he adds, “in a time of Ferguson, Michael Jordan, with his apolitical message… was not the perfect model for this new group of players… It was [Allen] Iverson who first began pulling the athlete from the boardroom back to the streets, back to the people.” (Pg. 189)
He asks, “So how authentic was the awakening?... the players… were not yesterday’s Heritage. They were of a different social class but by race and lineage to the struggle were expected to be present. Even Colin Kaepernick, for all her endured and risked, did so with millions already earned. He was not John Carlos, who had to take odd jobs below minimum wage just to pay his rent… To join the Heritage, you had to pay the cost…” (Pg. 216) Later, he adds, “[LeBron] James was a revelation, but when Tamir Rice was killed, [James] did not return to Cleveland and walk arm in arm with the people as [Carmelo] Anthony did in Baltimore. Instead, he was curiously distant… It is for this reason that Colin Kaepernick engenders so much anger: he is not a peacemaker. He did not seek the approval of the white public for his beliefs… The blueprint of dealing with the Heritage had not changed. Activist players before him had all paid the price, and now it was his turn.” (Pg. 226)
He concludes, “It is unlikely that sports will return to its pre-9/11 dynamics… because no one, not fans, not leagues, and not players, is asking it to… Much of the reason is that authoritarianism has already become normalized, embedded. For all the player protest, no one has indicted the militarized spectacle their day jobs have become.” (Pg. 232) He adds, “This is the inheritance of the black athlete… and no contract or endorsement deal has yet ever been big enough to make that obligation go away. It is a responsibility the black player will carry until America values the black brain over the black body, and the black people, like all the others, rise through education and not touchdowns.” (Pg. 238)
This is a stimulating, provocative, and often enlightening perspective on these issues, that should be “must reading” for those on ALL sides of these controversies.