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(AP)
But here's what really settles matters for me: The Redskins are historically the most racist franchise in professional football. Indeed, the club integrated only under the direct pressure of the Kennedy administration. The tale goes something like this: The federal government (the Department of the Interior, I believe) built the stadium we now call RFK. Federal law prohibited segregation at such facilities. So if the Redskins wanted to play in the spanking new park, they had to start having black players.
The White Curtain finally fell in 1962, long after most professional football teams. In fact, the NFL integrated in 1946, one year before Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color line (baseball was far more popular in those days, so Robinson was much the bigger deal). Most franchises had several black players on their rosters a decade before Washington did. Again, dwell on this for a moment — nearly every team, for 10 full years; at least a couple thousand games in which the franchise whose name denigrated one race made itself the outlier of its profession by pursuing a policy that denigrated another.
What's this have to do with the name? One might think that possession of the most disgraceful racial record in pro sports history would still weigh, just a bit, on the conscience of the most valuable sports team in North America (yes, more than the New York Yankees, $1.3 billion to $1.03 billion, according to Forbes' 2005 rankings). In a city whose media did a better job of reminding both George W. Bush and Redskins principal owner Daniel Snyder about the burdens of history, this would matter more than it does.
I don't think all Indian names have to go. "Braves" and "Chiefs" are scarcely pejorative terms. Specific tribe names, like the Seminoles used by Florida State, are case by case, and indeed the paladins of FSU have taken care to sit down and talk with present-day Seminoles and work out a rationale for continued use of the name. That's fine. Many colleges, Marquette most especially, have jumped the P.C. shark to extents that can't even be mocked in trying to ditch their anti-indigenous heritages.
But "Redskins" is a very different story. I pray that Suzan Shown Harjo and her comrades who are suing the organization in order to force a name change find justice. Better yet, I pray that Snyder sees reason of his own volition. This is the sort of problem that savvy public relations can easily turn into a virtue. The fans would resist at first, but they could play a role in the renaming, and, as in most things, time would sort the disgruntlement out.
Finally, I pray — and this most fervently — that the team repeats Sunday night's lackluster performance, in which it lost to the Bengals (what Asian cats have to do with Cincinnati I don't know, but at least the only offensive thing about them is their helmets) 19-3, every week until January, or until the franchise wakes up and joins the mid-to-late 20th Century.
Until then, Fail to the Redskins.
Michael Tomasky is the Prospect's editor.
By Michael Tomasky
Reprinted with permission from The American Prospect, 5 Broad Street, Boston, MA 02109. All rights reserved.
| The American Prospect is America's leading liberal magazine of politics, a blend of essay, criticism, investigation,commentary, and in-depth analysis. |

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See all 24 CommentsWhy are they offended? It's what they did, it's part of their culture and heritage. I've always had respect for Native American culture, frowing up thats why i liked the Skins. I own several pieces of Native American artifacts and weaponry, if i was truly racist why would i support thier culture with my capital? I suggest this: if someone made a team, for example: Arkansas Whiteskins, i for one would support it. It would be fine with me. Now, why dont we take it a step further and get rid of Affirmative Action so we're all on a level playing field? People complain about being treated differently, but when it comes to getting a leg up in life, you complain your not getting special treatment (ie-getting treated differently). Make up your mind. Do you want "equality" or a crutch so that there can be a percieved equality. So, it's only equal if the minorities get a boost? How so? I for one wouldnt want a free pass, it diminishes my accomplishments to know that the only reason i got there in the first place was because someone made an exception for me. I'm of Viking decent, i see no problem with the Vikings, even though romanticism has made it synonymous with raping, pillaging, and overall horror, not to mention barbarianism and a heathen lifestyle rejecting the Christian "God". Do i find it offensive? Not in one bit. It's what my ancestors did. It's how they lived, how they supported and fended for their land and family. Times truly were simpler back then. Everyone saw everything for what it was at face value. No one whined. And if you had a problem with it you did something about it. Now, in present times, everyone wants to complain about everything and subsequently get handouts. Racism truly disappears when both sides get it right. When the racists see past the flesh AND when the offended stop wanting preferential treatment because of the same flesh they say they get offended about.
Take into account too: black people use the word n__er more now, than most white people in the same urban areas. Why? Why do they insist on calling each other something that they deem so offensive? If they truly wanted it to go away and the handouts to go away, they wouldnt be making the word more prevalent within their own society themselves! It has to work both ways. Stop picking stupid things to fight over, imagine if everyone who complained about this tried to fight world hunger instead?!
Have any of you ever felt belittled? Have any of you ever been objectified just for being you, a native? Do you see a false stereotype of you and your people displayed around the country as %u2018REDSKINS%u2019? It's easy to make a comment on the outside looking in, but when you see injustice it is imperative you look closely at both sides. To some on lookers it may seem a cry for some silly name to be changed, to others it may be seen as fight for the rights insured to every American citizen. It%u2019s a fight to make things right and until you know the full story of why Native Americans like Suzan Harjo and company are specking out, Please refrain from commenting. Ignorance can only take you so far.
Have any of you ever felt belittled? Have any of you ever been objectified just for being you, a native? Do you see a false stereotype of you and your people displayed around the country as %u2018REDSKINS%u2019? It's easy to make a comment on the outside looking in, but when you see injustice it is imperative you look closely at both sides. To some on lookers it may seem a cry for some silly name to be changed, to others it may be seen as fight for the rights insured to every American citizen. It%u2019s a fight to make things right and until you know the full story of why Native Americans like Suzan Harjo and company are specking out, Please refrain from commenting. Ignorance can only take you so far.
Have any of you ever felt belittled? Have any of you ever been objectified just for being you, a native? Do you see a false stereotype of you and your people displayed around the country as %u2018REDSKINS%u2019? It's easy to make a comment on the outside looking in, but when you see injustice it is imperative you look closely at both sides. To some on lookers it may seem a cry for some silly name to be changed, to others it may be seen as fight for the rights insured to every American citizen. It%u2019s a fight to make things right and until you know the full story of why Native Americans like Suzan Harjo and company are specking out, Please refrain from commenting. Ignorance can only take you so far.
Have any of you ever felt belittled? Have any of you ever been objectified just for being you, a native? Do you see a false stereotype of you and your people displayed around the country as %u2018REDSKINS%u2019? It's easy to make a comment on the outside looking in, but when you see injustice it is imperative you look closely at both sides. To some on lookers it may seem a cry for some silly name to be changed, to others it may be seen as fight for the rights insured to every American citizen. It%u2019s a fight to make things right and until you know the full story of why Native Americans like Suzan Harjo and company are specking out, Please refrain from commenting. Ignorance can only take you so far.
No! I really do understand what you are saying, but those who spend time in the mire in order to find what is wrong there also find it hard to define enjoyment in life which has no mire.
I know where you are coming from however, I would probably find you to be a dull conversationallist when discussing the things that I enjoy. I like the Redskins name and there was a time when all teams were racist but there are none now and the coach certainly isn't.
I vote to keep the name "Washington Redskins". Those who live and think in the mire, please go crawl back in your hole.
There are SO many more important things that a name. So change it. If you feel it's not important change it.
Because while you feel it's not important, there are others who feel it is.
So be the bigger person.
FYI, The Washington Bullets was changed to the Wizards because it was "promoting violence".
In all actuality, I have been pretty neutral on this. I hadn't thought of Redskins as being pejorative. Even now, I'm not 100% sure I believe it is. What I can't do is say that what they feel is silly or foolish. I wouldn't expect anyone to tell me that my feelings aren't valid when I feel racially insulted. What I do believe is if we take the opportunity to talk about our cultural identities and other issues we have interacting with each other, we increase the chances of us having the %u201CPEACEFUL CO-EXISTENCE%u201D written about above.
Casting aside the thoughts, feelings and values of others as whining or inconsequential will only create and/or widen rifts between us.
Just a few of my pearls... I welcome all swine :)
The problem is that as long as people feel slighted, de-valued or disenfranchised you seriously compromise your chances of having %u201CPEACEFUL CO-EXISTENCE%u201D. What you may see as hyper-sensitivity on the part of someone taking umbrage with the portrayal of their identity may be for that group a serious slight. The fact that other peoples, cultures, groups, etc. have also been slighted, believe it or not, doesn't help to soothe the sting nor does it excuse or justify knowingly insulting and slurring.
And while I appreciate that one particular Cherokee may not find Redskins offensive or that one particular Italian may not find Wap offensive, I shudder to think of the number of times I hear the word n----r casually tossed around in my own community as though it is acceptable. By the way it's used (and over used) it would be easy to conclude that it is no longer a particularly offensive term, and I would vehemently disagree with that conclusion.
I agree that in the times that we live in where terrorists are threatening to bomb American planes while in flight and we sit on the verge of an energy crisis, maybe this isn't the most important topic. Agreed. So change the name and let's move on. This is such a minor point. Here's a group of people that say they feel the historic and current use of this name is a slur against them. Change the name. It becomes a non-issue.
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