Tag: lebron james
sports protest, NBA protest

As Sports Protests Spread, Who Will Take The Knee Next?

Reprinted with permission from TomDispatch

Last year, when LeBron James described some of President Trump's public statements as "laughable and scary," Fox News commentator Laura Ingraham ordered the basketball superstar to "shut up and dribble."

LeBron responded thoughtfully by saying that her comment "resonated with me, but I think it resonated with a lot of people to be able to feel like they can be more."

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#EndorseThis: Colin Cowherd Rips Trump On LeBron In Rare Political Remarks

#EndorseThis: Colin Cowherd Rips Trump On LeBron In Rare Political Remarks

President Trump’s method of dealing with famous detractors is crude and obvious. He attacks loudly, controversially, telling the dissenter in effect, “this is how a fight with me will go.” Liberals find it obscene and dangerous, conservatives think it’s devilishly clever. But one thing all sane people should agree on is that it is not a President’s job to get involved with sports.

In today’s clip, stubbornly apolitical Fox Sports host Colin Cowherd is compelled to break down and address Trump over his trash-talking put-downs of NBA superstar and philanthropist LeBron James. In a striking moment, an emotional Cowherd appears to be ranting at his bosses and Donald Trump at the same time.

Trump is repeating Richard Nixon’s mistake of getting involved in sports and finding ways to screw it all up. The well-spoken host takes down 45’s stupid fight-picking with athletes and right-wing “stay in your lane” hypocrisy alike in less than 3:00.

Is another member of the Fox media cabal going rogue?

Stop Trying To Understand Trump Supporters

Stop Trying To Understand Trump Supporters

Twenty-year-old Hana Barkowitz had never before had this reaction to a stranger’s T-shirt.

“I really wanted to say something,” she told me Wednesday. “This has become so personal for me.”

Since the Trump video, she means.

Last Friday, The Washington Post released a 2005 video capturing Donald Trump admitting on a live microphone that he is a sexual predator.

He was talking to Billy Bush, who was then working for “Access Hollywood” and has just been fired from NBC’s “Today” show. In the video, they were chuckling it up before Trump’s cameo appearance on the soap opera “Days of Our Lives.”

“You know, I’m automatically attracted to beautiful. I just start kissing them,” Trump said. “It’s like a magnet. Just kiss. I don’t even wait. And when you’re a star, they let you do it. You can do anything — grab them by the pussy. You can do anything.”

The video went viral in the time it took us to draw our collective breath.

When Hana Barkowitz — her first name is pronounced HAHN’-uh — first heard about it, she resisted watching.

“I thought, ‘2005? That’s a long time ago.’ But so many were talking about it that I finally decided to watch it.”

She was stunned.

“My mouth dropped open. He kisses women without asking. He is promoting rape culture and sexual advances without consent.”

Barkowitz is no political neophyte. A native of Pittsburgh, she grew up talking politics and is currently president of Kent State’s College Democrats. I first met her during a panel discussion on campus, after I started teaching journalism there as a professional in residence. She was standing with her Republican counterpart at the time, and they readily admitted to being friends.

She is a cup-runneth-over kind of activist. Her enthusiasm for politics — and life in general — leaves you feeling more optimistic than before you met her. She is, by her own admission, sometimes confrontational about issues that concern her. That’s a long list.

Last weekend, though, was different. Barkowitz and a friend had decided to drive to a popular flea market in Cleveland. For the first half-hour or so, she enjoyed the respite from a long week.

Then she saw the white man in his 50s wearing the Trump shirt.

“I really wanted to say something,” she said. “I wanted to say to him, ‘How dare you? How dare you wear that shirt? You’re a white man. What Trump says doesn’t affect you at all. You will never know what this feels like. You’re so lucky.'”

Instead, she said nothing, after her friend pleaded with her to resist.

“She said, ‘Please don’t. What could he possibly say to make you feel better?’ And she was right.”

Still, it weighs on her, which I found out Wednesday after running into her on campus. She sounded like so many young women I’ve talked to this week, many of whom have never before cared much about politics. They can’t believe this guy is running for president or that anyone would openly admit to supporting him.

“I wouldn’t want to vote for someone with whom I wouldn’t feel safe in a room,” Barkowitz said.

Trump has dismissed his comments as “locker room talk.” On Wednesday, Cleveland Cavaliers star LeBron James shut that down in an interview after practice:

“What is locker room talk to me? It’s not what that guy said. We don’t disrespect women in no shape or fashion in our locker rooms. That never comes up. … I got a mother-in-law, a wife, a mom and a daughter, and those conversations just don’t go on in our locker room. … What that guy was saying, that’s not — I don’t know what that is. That’s trash talk.”

For months now, I’ve been trying to understand some of our fellow Americans who support Trump, the champion of racism, xenophobia and misogyny. We should not judge them, the pollsters and pundits lecture. We should get to the heart of what is really bothering them. They have their reasons for being so angry.

Well, you know what? Hana Barkowitz and so many young women like her are angry, too, and they have their reasons. They are coming of age as a major presidential candidate ramps up misogyny, aided and abetted by the cowardice of Republican politicians who continue to support an admitted sexual predator in his quest to be the leader of our country.

I’m done trying to understand these Trump supporters. Hana Barkowitz is right. They’ll never know how this feels. And they don’t care.

Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and professional in residence at Kent State University’s school of journalism. She is the author of two books, including “…and His Lovely Wife,” which chronicled the successful race of her husband, Sherrod Brown, for the U.S. Senate. To find out more about Connie Schultz (con.schultz@yahoo.com) and read her past columns, please visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com.

Photo: Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump signs autographs for supporters after speaking at a rally at the Nugget Casino Resort in Sparks, Nevada February 23, 2016. REUTERS/James Glover II

LeBron Goes From Playmaker to Peacemaker

LeBron Goes From Playmaker to Peacemaker

By David Whitley, Orlando Sentinel (TNS)

LeBron James is being likened to Superman. A better comparison would be Spider-Man.

Superman can get triple-doubles at will in the NBA playoffs. Spider-Man could probably score 37 points against the Hawks, too. But it’s the words he lives by that matter these days.

“With great power comes great responsibility,” his surrogate father, Uncle Ben, counseled young Spider-Man.

We’re seeing that in the way James is handling the crisis in Cleveland. The city has been on edge since Saturday when a judge acquitted a policeman in the shooting deaths of two unarmed African-Americans. It’s a drama that’s become painfully familiar.

Protesters gather. Justice is demanded. TV crews swoop in to see if the city explodes.

“Violence is not the answer,” James said almost as soon as the acquittal was read.

You’d hope and expect influential local athletes to say something like that. Some do in times of crisis, but others have jumped to conclusions and at least tacitly inflamed high-profile situations.

Look no further than the five St. Louis Rams who came out of the tunnel in pregame introductions last year sporting the “Hands Up, Don’t Shoot” pose. It was to protest the shooting of Michael Brown in nearby Ferguson, Missouri A show of solidarity was fine, but the manner the Rams chose further divided a racially-torn city.

There was plenty of reason to suspect Brown did not have his hands raised or said, “Don’t shoot.” A Department of Justice investigation eventually concluded Brown attacked the policeman, who acted in self-defense.

The Rams were initially hailed as a latter-day Muhammad Ali, bravely speaking truth. But did their actions lessen any tensions, much less promote a just result?

Or look no further than James himself. He tweeted a famous picture of his entire Miami Heat team wearing hoodies in 2012 as the Trayvon Martin controversy was starting to explode.

Again, a show of concern for Martin’s family and the handling of the case in Sanford was entirely appropriate. But James’ accompanying hashtag — #WeWantJustice — revealed his mind already was made up.

Spurred by players like James, the NBA players union called Martin’s death a murder and demanded the arrest of George Zimmerman.

Maybe Zimmerman was a racist killer, maybe he wasn’t. That argument will live on forever.

But players were convicting him of murder, and it was still a year before his trial. Nobody knew the actual evidence or was in a position to accurately judge the case.

That’s why I wondered how James would react this time. The initial police incident sounded inexcusable. Cops cornered fleeing suspects and fired 137 bullets into their car.

The shooting victims were suspected of trying to buy drugs. They fled when police tried to pull them over. About 100 officers pursued the car for 20 miles with speeds reaching 100 mph.

Police thought the pair had fired at them. They were wrong. But as with all these cases, the facts were complicated and demanded a detached study if you truly want justice.

That’s what LeBron said he’d do. In the meantime, he pleaded for peace and said he’d do all he could to keep Cleveland from turning into another Ferguson or Baltimore.

“Sports just does something to people,” James said. “You just feel a certain way about rooting for a team that you love, get your mind off some of the hardships that may be going on throughout your life or maybe that particular time or period. It just does that.”

By extension, players have an inordinate influence on people’s lives.

Superman has pretty much become the most powerful person in Ohio. It’s good to see he’s up to that responsibility.

Photo: Craig Hatfield via Flickr