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Why Aren't Sports Teams Ever Named After Blacks?
RichardPoe.com ^ | April 19, 2002 | Richard Poe

Posted on 04/18/2002 6:58:16 PM PDT by Richard Poe

"IF COLORADO had a high school team named the Niwot N-ggers, with a big-lipped spear-chucker as a mascot, we all know that African-American groups would demand that the school change the name," writes Denver Post columnist Reggie Rivers.

It is therefore astonishing, concludes Rivers, that some people still defend team names such as "Braves," "Warriors" " and "Renegades" – names that are just as insulting to American Indians as Niwot N-ggers would be to blacks.

With these words, Rivers accidentally stumbled upon the unspoken question looming behind the great team mascot debate: Why don’t we have any sports teams named after black people?

If it is really true, as Rivers contends, that naming a sports team after a race of people is, by definition, insulting to that people, then why have generations of allegedly "racist" white Americans failed to offer this insult to blacks?

Why do we not have multitudes of baseball and football teams named the Slaves? Or – to borrow Mr. Rivers’ phrase – the Spearchuckers?

The answer is obvious. White Americans have not named their sports teams after blacks because white Americans have not viewed blacks as exemplars of the warrior spirit. Indians, on the other hand, are remembered in popular legend as brave and worthy foes on the battlefield. White Americans honored the courage of their former adversaries by naming sports teams after them.

"The white man has great respect for the Indian," writes Comanche pundit David Yeagley in a March 7, 2001 column for FrontPageMagazine.com. "I’m not saying he always treats us the way we want to be treated. But he respects us for putting up a good fight. … Why does the U.S. military have helicopters named "Apache" and "Comanche" – but none that are named "Arikara" or "Ojibwa?" They name their weapons systems after the fiercest tribes, because they want some of that fierceness to rub off."

But that’s just the problem, say liberal commentators such as Rivers. The image of a fierce Indian warrior is itself a degrading stereotype. It is precisely because such names as "Braves" and "Renegades" promote an "aggressive" image, Rivers implies, that they are insulting.

American Indian activist Russell Means agrees.

At a January 2002 conference on Indian-white relations, held in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, Means scolded David Yeagley for his pro-mascot writings. "Your whole image of the Indian as a warrior comes from the white man!" said Means.

According to Yeagley, Means continued:

"Indians were not war-like until the white man made them so, [Means] lectured. Rather, they were matriarchal, humanitarian, tolerant and multiculturalist. I could hardly believe my ears. Was Russell Means denying the warrior tradition of his own people?"

So it appears.

Both Means and Rivers seem to have swallowed the line that aggression is evil. While popular among Ivy League feminists, this idea is foreign to ordinary folks, who admire a fierce and warlike spirit, whether on the battlefield or the football field.

White Americans have not named their sports teams after blacks because Americans, in general, do not envision blacks as fighters. Too often, they imagine blacks in pathetic roles, as slaves and descendants of slaves.

The British acquired a different view of Africans, based on a different set of experiences.

When the British invaded Zululand in 1879, spoiling for a fight, many feared that the Zulus would run like cowards. Their fears proved groundless. On January 22, the Zulus descended on an isolated British column at a place called Isandlwana.

Other African peoples had fled in panic in the face of British gunfire. But the Zulus were different. Braving rockets, artillery and concentrated rifle fire, they hurled themselves at the British lines, climbing over the bodies of their own dead.

In the end, the entire British force was annihilated, including over 800 British soldiers, 52 officers and some 500 of their African allies.

News of the massacre shocked and horrified Britons. But it also aroused their admiration. "We now have ample proof," the Times admitted, "not only of [the Zulus’] valour but also of their skill in strategy."

The British never forgot their war with the Zulus. Its memory has been enshrined in major films such as Zulu, Zulu Dawn and the TV miniseries Shaka Zulu – all notable for their respectful portrayal of African warriors.

Reggie Rivers is right about one thing. If any American sports team tried to name itself the "Fighting Zulus," it would probably be sued by the U.S. Justice Department.

But who would benefit from such a lawsuit? Certainly not black people.

____________________________________

Richard Poe is a New-York-Times-bestselling author and cyberjournalist. His latest book is The Seven Myths of Gun Control.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: blacks; davidyeagley; indianmascots; russellmeans; zulus
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To: Godel
My wife told me some horse crap that goes like this: (She's a Mets fan if that means anything.)

White settlers, at some point in American history, started calling the Indians 'braves' not as a way of implying their bravery in battle, but as a way of mocking them for a perceived lack of courage.

Is there any reputable scholarship that supports this allegation? It smells like a big pile of Orwellian p.c. bullshit to me.

41 posted on 04/18/2002 8:26:23 PM PDT by TN Republican
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To: gov_bean_ counter
Why not name a team the "Liberals". That would conjure up images of a cheating, foul mouthed, change the scoreboard while you're not looking, change the rules while you're playing bunch of idiots. Or name a team the "Moderate Republicans". Of course if that team were to live up to its name, they would have to lie down in the first half then change jerseys at half-time and play for the other team.

Or how about an NFL team called the 3rd partiers. They'd end the season 0-16 with 200 interceptions because they threw a hail mary every play.

42 posted on 04/18/2002 8:37:11 PM PDT by #3Fan
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Comment #43 Removed by Moderator

To: Godel
"Brave"

Yes, wasn't there a line in a John Wayne movie:
"All the men were brave, and all the women were beautiful."

44 posted on 04/18/2002 8:40:35 PM PDT by APBaer
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Comment #45 Removed by Moderator

To: Squawk 8888
"IMHO there's no comparison. Brave, Indian and warrior may be offesive to some natives today but they used to connote honour, unlike the N-word which was always derogatory."

Forget your opinion being humble. . .it is simpy 'right on the mark'.

Hard to believe the differences in definition escape Mr. Poe; I mean this man writes for a living. . .and words mean things.

. . .except to Liberals who get lost in their own context; and that must stand, for Mr. Poe, as the excuse for his ignorance.

46 posted on 04/18/2002 9:11:12 PM PDT by cricket
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To: Richard Poe
I just finished reading the book My Life As An Indian by J.W. Schultz. About his life with the Piegan Blackfeet in the late 1800s. Most illuminating and recommended.
47 posted on 04/19/2002 7:08:36 AM PDT by jordan8
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To: Godel
Great idea! We can have the New York Victims play the Minneapolis Oppressed Peoples. The winner (if there still is such a thing) will go on to play the Atlanta Imprisoned Minorities.
48 posted on 04/19/2002 8:59:15 AM PDT by delphine
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To: delphine
Do they have a team in Coon Rapids, Minn.?
49 posted on 04/19/2002 9:14:07 AM PDT by Illwind
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To: Richard Poe
This is goofy. I could argue that the Utah Jazz and St. Louis Blues are named after blacks, since blacks have been the biggest influence on these forms of music.

Any teams named after asians? The Fighting Samuri would be a great name. But you don't hear asians whining about it.

50 posted on 04/19/2002 9:48:58 AM PDT by kidd
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To: Snuffington; rllngrk33
Stanley Baker
51 posted on 04/19/2002 10:04:02 AM PDT by Gael
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To: Snuffington
Different battle. At Roark's Drift, a short time after Insandlwana, a tiny force of mostly Welshmen, enormously outnumbered, held off thousands of Zulus.
52 posted on 04/19/2002 11:12:32 AM PDT by Rifleman
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To: reg45
Wasn't that Bugs Bunny's line?
53 posted on 04/19/2002 4:37:36 PM PDT by Chi-townChief
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To: Richard Poe
The old Negro League Baseball clubs had names like 'The Black Yankees' and so forth. Those were great days for baseball, too.
54 posted on 04/19/2002 4:40:12 PM PDT by The KG9 Kid
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To: Chi-townChief
I associate it with Larry, Moe and Curly!
55 posted on 04/20/2002 8:14:52 AM PDT by reg45
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To: TN Republican
Is there any reputable scholarship that supports this allegation? It smells like a big pile of Orwellian p.c. bullshit to me.

Well, I found the following mentions in the OED:

    1. a. A brave man, a warrior, soldier: since 1800 applied chiefly to warriors among the North American Indians [after the French in N. America].  

  1601 CHESTER Love's Mart. (1878) 55 We haue no cause to feare their forreine braues. a1611 CHAPMAN Iliad III. 463 Advance Thy braues against his single power. 1763 CHURCHILL Proph. Fam. Poems I. 118 The race of Roman braves Thought it not worth their while to make us slaves. 1823 BYRON Island III. ii, The wave Is hurl'd down headlong, like the foremost brave. 1837 W. IRVING Capt. Bonneville (1849) 96 The chiefs leading the van, the braves following in a long line, painted and decorated. 1841 CATLIN N. Amer. Ind. (1844) I. vi. 35 A Blackfoot brave whose portrait I have painted. I have no idea who the "forreine braues" are in the first cite, nor what the date 1878 has to do with it. I find it interesting that the next two cites deal with Greek and Roman soldiers.
56 posted on 04/24/2002 10:01:50 PM PDT by NovemberCharlie
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To: NovemberCharlie
Thanks for the info. It looks like brave was in use, and not as a pejorative term either, long before it was applied to American Indians.
57 posted on 04/25/2002 10:42:39 AM PDT by TN Republican
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