Posted on 06/19/2014 8:16:53 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Anyone deemed politically incorrect is now outside the protection of the law.
Like most people, I havent been all that interested in the controversy over whether the name of the Washington Redskins is offensive. Personally, Im more offended that Washington, DC, has become the kind of megalopolis that can support an NFL team. If I had my way, it would go back to being a humid, swampy backwater with impassable mud roads. Pierre LEnfant has much to answer for.
But I think everyone should be terrified by the new ruling by the US Patent Office cancelling the teams trademark.
The ruling was based on a dubious argument that redskins is a slur against Native Americans. Well, then maybe wed better rename the state of Oklahoma, which drew its name from Choctaw words that mean red people. Or maybe we should petition the US Army to decommission the attack helicopter it named after a people it defeated in 1886. Then again, forget I mentioned it. I dont want to give anyone ideas.
This name-bullying has become a kind of sport for self-aggrandizing political activists, because if you can force everyone to change the name of somethinga sports team, a city, an entire race of peopleit demonstrates your power. This is true even if it makes no sense and especially if it makes no sense. How much more powerful are you if you can force people to change a name for no reason other than because theyre afraid you will vilify them?
Given the equivocal history of the term redskins and the differing opinionsamong Native Americans as well as everyone elseover whether it is offensive, this was a subjective judgment. (One observer suggests a list of other sports names that could just as plausibly be considered offensive.) When an issue is subjective, it would be wise for the government not to take a stand and let private persuasion and market pressure sort it out.
Ah, but theres the rub, isnt it? This ruling happened precisely because the campaign against the Redskins has failed in the court of public opinion. The issue has become the hobby horse of a small group of lefty commentators and politicians in DC, while regular Washingtonians, the people who make up the teams base of fans and customers, are largely indifferent. So the left resorted to one of its favorite fallbacks. If the people cant be persuaded, use the bureaucracyin this case, two political appointees on the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board.
Thats what is disturbing about this ruling. Our system of government depends on the impartial administration of the laws by the executive. In this case, executive officials declared that a private company doesnt deserve the protection of the law: if the ruling survives an appeal in the courts, the federal government will stop prosecuting violations of the teams intellectual property rights, potentially costing it millions of dollars.
This ruling isnt a slippery slope. Its a slope weve already slid down: bureaucrats in Washington are now empowered to make subjective decrees about what is offensive and what will be tolerated, based on pressure from a small clique of Washington insiders. Anyone who runs afoul of these decrees, anyone branded as regressive and politically incorrect, is declared outside the protection of the federal government.
That this is happening, and that we have no idea where it will stop, is what should terrify useven if, like me, you dont particularly care one way or the other about the Washington Redskins.
How about “The Washington DC BlowHards”? (Don’t want to offend those rained-on people in the Pacific Northwest, now do we?)
The NFL now is the proud owner of outlaw potatoes
Well I’m not a Redskins fan. I don’t care if the Redskins win, lose, keep their name, change their name, move to another city, switch to a different sport, or star in a reality show.
I dont particularly care one way or the other about the Washington Redskins, but I do care about good old American liberty. That’s really not a paradox.
For some of us, the big issue has nothing whatsoever to do with team spirit, if you can imagine. I don’t even have any team spirit. None! Can you imagine that?! And yet, somehow I manage to care that the Washington Redskins have been stripped of their legal protections surrounding their name, on the political whims of an out of control administration.
Sometimes, it really is the principle of the thing. That might sound vague and high-minded to you, but it makes perfect sense to me.
For some of us, the big issue has nothing whatsoever to do with team spirit, if you can imagine. I dont even have any team spirit. None! Can you imagine that?! And yet, somehow I manage to care that the Washington Redskins have been stripped of their legal protections surrounding their name, on the political whims of an out of control administration.
Sometimes, it really is the principle of the thing. That might sound vague and high-minded to you, but it makes perfect sense to me.
___________________
You and me both. Out of control fascist leftist totalitarians, coming to your town soon!
I think people should read George Orwell's essay Politics and the English Language and then read Friedrich von Hayek's book The Road to Serfdom. After reading these two works, you know why many people oppose the very idea of forcing a change in the name of the Washington Redskins by government pressure.
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