I am not that much of a sports fan, in fact I rarely watch TV at all, but the Sterling/Clippers story has exited the sports arena and some people have entered it into the political sphere. The remarks made by a man speaking to his significant other in his own home have somehow made front page and back page news all over the world. It is no wonder to me on why this has taken place and why it has spread like the proverbial wildfire. The Thought Police of America have taken hold of the racial divide and the opinions and preferences of people; they have raised them up into a cloud of emotional conversation and illogical conclusions, all of this swept into their own idea of justice in the name of equality.
What Sterling did is no different than what has happened
since the dawn of man and what is done by almost everyone in their daily lives,
preferences and choices made by experiences both positive and negative. These
experiences give us the ability to choose association with some and choose not
to associate with others. Are we to say
that a mother choose to not send her children to a child care facility that employs
someone with a criminal past, is somehow wrong in that decision? Are we to say that any business that refuses
to hire a convicted felon is somehow wrong in their choice? Are we to say that
a family choosing where to live in a city should not have the ability to discern
where they want to raise their young based on prior experiences or information
available? Those examples are ridiculous in the eyes of most, but in relation
to what Sterling has said it wouldn’t be far from an appropriate response from
the public. These cases are not the same thing some will say. But are they not?
Is the choice and right of association not the same in these cases as with Mr.
Sterling’s comment?
Is racism real?
Yes, not doubt about that, it is a completely real issue.
But to say that men not have the reason to decide on whom they wish to
associate with is to say that the thoughts and choices of men are best left to
public emotion and the will of the majority. Had Sterling said he didn’t want
Asians or Mexicans to attend exhibitions held by the basketball team he owns
would this had taken off as it has? We don’t know for sure and nothing is left
but to speculate, I will leave that with the reader. The fear of being labeled
a racist in 2014 is almost as bad as being labeled a Communist in the 1960’s.
It has to do with social engineering I believe and to a certain extent social
derision caused by the exploitation by the media of cases such as this one.
Recently, as an example of this, the story of Cliven Bundy and the fight for
the use of land against the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) took a serious turn
when Mr. Bundy’s comments on the struggles and situations of African Americans
and people from Mexico were construed by media outlets to taint him with a
racial inferiority ideology. Though many of the volunteers who came to the aid
of Mr. Bundy were of the mindset of personal liberty, these innocuous comments
were skewed to turn supporters into deserters and to turn the tide on the
situation.
Free Speech and Property Rights
In defense of all issues you will hear me say that the
individual has the right to do as they wish so long as those wishes do not
interfere with the rights of others. This case is no different. This as well as
most issues really can be reduced to property rights and free speech. Let’s
take Property Rights first. Sterling owns a basketball team; he does not own
the stadium they play in at home games nor any of the stadiums they play on the
road. He does not own any of the players, they are contracted employees. Mr.
Sterling’s comment was to say that he did not want certain people to attend
games at a home stadium but since he does not own said stadium he has no way to
enforce this preference. He has no way to limit the audience to a specific
race, gender, faith or any other collective of choice. Thus this issue is dead
at the point of the Property Rights of the owner of the stadium. Likewise if
those stadium owners see fit to exclude Sterling from entering their premises
it would stand as the right of the owners to do so at their discretion. Second
point, Sterling owns the team, not the players. They have the choice and right of
association just as he does. If they see fit to leave the employment of
Sterling on the basis of disagreement and have satisfied the employment
contract or both parties mutually agree on the termination of the contract for
difference of opinions or hostility in the workplace they may choose to do so.
Third point, as Sterling owns the team; it is entered into a league by mutual beneficial
gain; the league may revoke access or contract with the team at any time for
any reason {if} there is no contract that must be satisfied or enforced.
In this case the lifetime ban of Sterling is a consequence of his words and is
in line with contractual precedence and private property rights and the right
of association on behalf of the NBA.
On a side note, The National Basketball Association (NBA)
has ordered Mr. Sterling to pay a fine of $2.5 million, the maximum amount
allowed under the NBA Constitution. If this Constitution (contract) was
personally signed by Sterling on the admittance of his team into the league or
his place being recognized as the team owner by the Board of Directors of the
NBA, Sterling would have no recourse but to pay the fine and accept the
punishment of the league. Another part of the plan for punishment is the NBA
Commissioner Adam Silver’s request to urge the Board of Governors to exercise
its authority to force a sale of the team. The sale of private property should
never be left to the will of any majority over the rightful owner; this is clearly
a case of over stepping boundaries on the part of the Board of Governors, with
exceptions to if this clause was drafted into the NBA constitution and
personally signed and recognized by Sterling.
“The family had become in effect an extension of the Thought Police. It was a device by means of which everyone could be surrounded night and day by informers who knew him intimately.” ― George Orwell, 1984
Now after stating my view on that, let’s get back to the
Thought Police.
The first thing that comes to mind in this case is the lack
of privacy and the ability and acceptance by the public of a leak of secretly
recorded information. This is a violation of the right to privacy of Sterling
and leaves me to wonder the ultimate goal of such a leak. Was it a vendetta or
was it to be used as a bargaining chip or blackmail of some sort? Was it purely
out of distaste of his words and the only recourse the leaker thought of was to
make this private conversation public information?
The emotional responses to this story give the impression
that most followers of it have a long held disapproval of racial bigotry or
intolerance, but is that the truth? It may well be established that a certain
amount of this racial intolerance is accepted by a majority of the public
through the guise of government laws, regulations and of course American
history. It is no small thing to forget that for well over 100 years this
country was segregated by this same ideology and it was widely accepted as a
matter of fact of life for colonial and pre civil war America. It is also stated that this same type of
collective separation happens every day in the War on Drugs with a high
majority of those incarcerated are done so under laws that predominantly target
certain demographics and their habits and traits, their choices and
preferences. Is this to say that what they do is wrong? Not necessarily. It is
through the propagation of morals and values of the majority through government
that the choices and inclinations of the single man are reduced to illegal acts
punishable by detention, monetary theft, or the ultimate end of death by
government forces.
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