By Lisa Fabrizio on 5.9.07 @ 12:07AM
Why are most people not rooting for Barry Bonds?
What a weekend in sports. At the Kentucky Derby, Street Sense
blazed through the field to become the first two-year old champion
in nearly thirty years to capture the roses. Floyd Mayweather
prevailed over Golden Boy Oscar De La Hoya in a split decision to
retain his reputation as the "best pound for pound" fighter in the
world. There was near perfection for seven innings at Yankee
Stadium, while the NHL and NBA playoffs crackled with
excitement.
Yet on Sunday night over at ESPN, the news was: White folks
don't like Barry Bonds because...he is black. Yes, racism once
again rears its ugly head in the sports world. Why this constant
drumbeat of race in a realm where integration was achieved long
before it was in America in general?
Because, although not too many years ago, sports-writing was
considered the "toy department" of journalism, the boys and girls
in the press box have been eager to catch up to their counterparts
in the "real" world. And so, they are also no longer content with
merely reporting the scores, trades and what have you; they must
now generate the news. And, similar to the mainstream media, they
need divisive issues in order to push the agenda of all J-school
graduates: to change the world.
Class envy, which is the one of the main devices used by
liberals and their media wing to influence the masses, is not
available in the sports journalists' playbook for obvious reasons.
But racism; there's the true straw that stirs the drink of
controversy, even when that cup may be empty.
Last week it was the Old Gray Lady who once again fanned the
perceived flames between white and black Americans. The
Times cried foul against NBA referees, citing a study
that "suggests that a racial bias found in other parts of American
society has existed on the basketball court as well." Notice the
accusation in the opening sentence of the piece; the racist NBA
refs are no worse than the rest of America's bigots.
You would think that the NBA -- where there is absolutely no hue
and cry to balance the squads "fairly" along racial lines, nor any
hand-wringing studies to determine why whites aren't proportionally
represented on team rosters -- would be the last place where
charges of white racism would be pursued, but you'd be
wrong.
Forget for a moment that the study employs the usual kind of
junk-science that liberals love; the real news here is that racism
itself appears to be evolving. It seems we white Americans are
racists even when we don't intend to be. Listen to Justin Wolfers, one of the study's
authors, whose findings will no doubt spur the "hate crimes" crowd
in Congress on to greater heights:
Theories of discrimination used to be pretty simple. It
used to be one group hated the other group. There was malice.
Thankfully, those types of bias have receded. (But) there's an
emerging consensus in psychology and law that there may be
unconscious forms of bias.
Such conclusions make one long for the days of simple, malicious
bigotry, before unconscious behavior had to be ferreted out by the
likes of Mr. Wolfers. Epitomizing the idiocy of all this is a
telling quote from Minnesota Timberwolves guard Mike James, who
said, "If that's going on, then it's something that needs to be
dealt with. But I've never seen it."
Equally idiotic yet instructive was the ESPN/ABC poll so widely quoted during Sunday night's
ESPN baseball game which featured the Phillies and Mr. Bonds's
Giants. The poll, typical of those conducted by liberals -- its
total of 800 people polled included an oversampling of 200 blacks
-- still came to the conclusion that over half the country is
rooting against Bonds's pursuit of Henry Aaron's homerun record.
The results would seem pretty clear cut to all but those who
conducted the poll:
However, race plays a unique role. Black fans in the
survey are more than twice as likely to want Bonds to break Aaron's
record (74 percent to 28 percent), and 37 percent of black fans
think Bonds used steroids, compared to 76 percent of white
fans.
The interpretation goes on to further dredge the racial waters
without ever pointing out that the presumed white racists don't
wish to see Bonds break the record of
another black
player. Also missing is the inference that, despite the fact
that Bonds has become gargantuan in a few short years, it may be
blacks who are biased in their belief that no steroids were
involved. It seems the specter of racism, actual or subconscious,
isn't a switch-hitter.
If there is white racism among fans in the sports world -- where
the percentage of minority players far exceeds their representation
in the general population -- they have a funny way of showing it;
eagerly parting with billions of their hard-earned dollars year
after year. If there is any animosity on their part, it is most
likely a result of efforts to prove that they are what they
demonstrate they are not. At least not consciously.
topics:
Trade, Mainstream Media, Sports, Law