Posted on 06/25/2020 12:14:08 AM PDT by MarvinStinson
Before NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace appeared on CNN with Don Lémon to discuss his now disproven racial noose targeting, he had a decision to make. Wallace could accept the FBI/NASCAR finding and admit an honest mistake was made by an overly sensitive Richard Petty racing team; or he could make racism his new identity in NASCAR as Colin Kaepernick did with football in the NFL. Bubba Wallace chose the latter.
As a result of Wallaces new identity, and his announced career goals, NASCAR will now fragment in the same way as the National Football League. Social justice will now define Mr. Wallaces professional effort; driving with NASCAR becomes a method to achieve his new career aspirations. That inflection point, his identity choice, is clear in his interview.
However, before getting to the interview it is worth looking at how this entire fiasco was created, starting with the carefully obtuse explanation from Richard Petty Motorsports:
Obviously Richard Pettys team are socially woke and enlightened to their obligations in a new era of racial sensitivity. Notice the careful wording: discovered a rope tied in the fashion of a noose, key word fashion. The wording allows the statement to skirt on the fringes of common sense truth because they dont technically say its a noose; quite simply, because it isnt. If it were a noose it would be useless as a garage door pull.
That brings up the second obtuse aspect of the sentence: discovered a rope, notice they dont say it was attached to the garage door pull (which it was) because that would make their misinterpretation seem even more ridiculous. Saying we discovered a garage door pull-down rope that appeared to be fashioned as a noose, would illicit eye-rolls. So they carefully avoid noting their stupidity by ignoring common sense.
According to established protocols our team notified the crew chief, so they have protocols for nooses at Richard Petty Motorsports? Of course they dont. They have protocols for making stupid stuff bigger by notifying ever increasing pearl-clutchers. If youve ever worked in a corporate setting, you know the nonsense that can flow from a particular squeeky noisemaker who enjoys attention. Same/Same.
From that moment forward NASCAR, the corporate side; the public relations, brand image and risk management side; took over. Thus the culturally sensitive and politically correct NASCAR President, Steve Phelps, soon found himself in the motor-home of Bubba Wallace crying and explaining that a hate crime has been committed against him.
From the moment the garage door pull was defined as a noose, common sense was displaced by an overwhelming urge to be appropriately sensitive to the slightest possibility that something terribly untoward may be afoot. The 800lb gorilla in the corner of the decision-making space is NASCARs intention to find a new culturally diverse audience. A corporation's cultural direction once again drowned common sense.
In the interview Bubba Wallace waxes poetically about how much he appreciated Steve Phelps sensitivities; and how President Phelps is just the right kind of woke-minded leader to carry NASCAR into the social justice era against the hordes of deplorable redneck rubes they are now trying to outrun. CNN host Don Lemon is giddy with praise for such an enlightened relationship and praises young Wallace for his millionaire fortitude to be able to withstand emotional pain; and yet overcome the adversity of being a victim.
The choice of CNNs Don Lemon as a brother in the movement, facilitating Wallaces inflection point, professional identity and first public comments since the FBI debunked the hate crime in question, should not be overlooked.
Within the interview Bubba Wallace accepts the FBI finding that he was not a target. However, in keeping with his new identity, Wallace doubles down on the false narrative that a noose was indeed created by racist entities in NASCAR.
Wallaces overt inference is that racist teams are running amok in the sport, tying random nooses on garage doors, and Bubba welcomes the challenge of overcoming their racial adversity. In short, Bubba Wallace calls some of those who just joined him in a unity parade, racist NASCAR participants who tie nooses.
That victim outlook permits Wallace to further proclaim his mission to bring NASCAR to an entirely new audience of followers who have -in his words- demanded that he place himself on a pedestal to do battle with the racist NASCAR elements that surround him.
Bubba Wallace is to NASCAR as Colin Kaepernick was/is to the NFL. If he loses a sponsor, its racism. If hes bumped in a race, its racism. If he doesnt win, and/or as a result of poor performance questions arise about losing his ride, yep, racism.
By doubling, tripling and quadrupling down; with anger and disdain toward any who would counter him with common sense; on the completely false assertion that a garage door with a loop knot is a noose, Wallace attempts to shield himself by weaponizing his race. Any challenge to his defined noose narrative is racism.
And you know what, it will work.
How can I be so certain that his approach will work? The answer is really quite simple.
Think about how weak an organization needs to be in order to permit a ridiculous garage door rope with a loop on the end; becoming such a overblown issue that the corporation would organize an full-throated PR campaign around a hoax; while the leader of the organization sobs in the trailer of a falsely identified hate-crime victim.
In essence, weak organizations are a breeding ground for communal stupid; and every one of them ends the same way. Both the NFL and NASCAR are following the same woke business plan.
.
Black NASCAR will feature stolen cars racing each other chased by police.
Black Bubba what could go wrong?
“Black NASCAR will feature stolen cars racing each other chased by police.”
LOL! That is so stolen for the Bubba Wallace collection.
NASCAR may have created their next star in the sense that Wallace may become a regular winner. As the author notes anything that would be considered ‘rough racing’ will not be deemed ‘racist’, so Wallace, like Michael Jordan in his heyday, cannot be touched or a flag will be thrown. This will ensure that Wallace reaches the end of more races and therefore be in a position to win. It’s taken the ‘hard part’ — preserving & managing your car over the early part of a race — and greatly simplified the problem for Petty Motorsports and its driver.
The NFL must be drooling about the optics of this. The NFL is something north of 70% Black. If they brought Colin K back, most likely he would fail anyway. And even in today’s NFL with its simulated violence, Colin K would most likely be injured attempting a pass, and its tough to make it controversial when the hitter has and 8/10 chance of being another black player.
I remember being a concession hawker (selling sandwiches, popcorn and soft drinks in the stands) at the old Hickory Speedway (NC). This was one of my part time jobs from 1958 to 1967. Back then the track was dirt and everyone there from drivers to pit crews to fans to me were rednecks.
I though that NASCAR started its decline when the Hickory Speedway was paved and the sport started trying to appeal to non-rednecks. Now even the rednecks in the sport have to pretend to be super woke. It is quite sad. It seems that everything good gets ruined in this world.
NASCAR will be seeing empty seats like the NFL. People are tired of the BLM and continual racist nonsense.
NASCAR’s latest clumsy effort to court Black fans. They’ve been looking for their “Tiger Woods” for 30 years. The problem isn’t that so much that NASCAR is racist. The problem is that NASCAR has always been full of nepotism. How many 2nd and 3rd generation drivers are there? Probably 1/3rd of the field. It was so bad that NASCAR had to raise the minimum driver age after the tragic death of Adam Petty (4th Generation). I watched Adam race at the old Nazareth Speedway and listening to the race radio it was apparent that his spotters had him on a tight leash — only allowing him to pass at one particular turn on a very tight track. Petty was literally doing OJT with a bunch of very hungry non-name drivers in that Busch-series race. He probably had the 3rd best car on the track, but he couldn’t get the most out of it. A few weeks later, he was dead. It was tragic.
Bubba Who? Colin whaternik? NAS what? NFingL? Get the idea? They don’t exist to me.
NOOSECAR has been seeing empty seats for years now. They've been dismantling sections of the grandstands to make it less obvious on television cameras.
Just call me Jussie!
No kidding. I suspect that literally millions of NASCAR fans have simply left the plantation.
The END of a career. Wait... did he even have a career? I don’t want to be called a racist, but can you say “token”?
Affirmative
Bubba Wallace should watch his ass while driving at 150 on a dangerous race track
Nascar is not the NFL, the Negro Football League
So I'm not the only one who noticed that.
Didn’t even knew there was such a bureau, but the Bureau of Justice Statistics tracks hate crimes, and guess what? Most hate crimes are committed by blacks against other races, most often whites.
There’s your white privilege, folks. Enjoy the beat down.
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