
Racist NBA owner has fouled out
By George E. Curry NNPA Columnist
New NBA Commissioner Adam Silver wants to spend several days âinvestigatingâ the clearly racist remarks of LA Clippers owner Donald Sterling. Thereâs no need to waste a scintilla of another second on this foul-mouth bigot. Escort him to the closest exit and say good bye â for good.
Record fines or a long suspension wonât do in this case if â and thatâs a big if â the NBA is serious about addressing raw racism in a sport dominated by African Americans. Sterling, 81, has fouled out with his own words and the decision to permanently throw him out of the game doesnât require a huddle around the scorerâs table to review his odious behavior.
Unless youâve been under a rock or just landed from Mars, you should know by now that Sterling, who has a long and acrimonious history with people of color, exposed his true feelings about African Americans in a conversation with his mistress, Vanessa Stiviano, who is almost 50 years his junior. The conversation was apparently taped surreptitiously in Sterlingâs home by Stiviano, who describes herself as part Mexican and part Black. A 9-mintute segment of the conversation was posted Saturday to celebrity web-site TMZ. A 15-minute excerpt was later posted by Deadspin.
There was this exchange in one segment:
V: I donât understand, I donât see your views. I wasnât raised the way you were raised.
DS: Well then, if you donât feelâdonât come to my games. Donât bring Black people, and donât come.
V: Do you know that you have a whole team thatâs Black; that plays for you?
DS: You just, do I know? I support them and give them food, and clothes, and cars, and houses. Who gives it to them? Does someone else give it to them? Do I know that I haveâWho makes the game? Do I make the game, or do they make the game? Is there 30 owners, that created the league?
At one point, Sterling said:
âIt bothers me a lot that you want to broadcast that youâre associating with Black people. Do you have to?âŚâ
âYou can sleep with [Black people]. You can bring them in, you can do whatever you want. The little I ask you is not to promote it on that ⌠and not to bring them to my gamesâŚâ
âIâm just saying, in your lousy f******* Instagrams, you donât have to have yourself with, walking with Black people.â
âDonât put him (Magic Johnson) on an Instagram for the world to have to see so they have to call me. And donât bring him to my games.â
Finally, there was the following exchange:
DS: You think Iâm a racist, and wouldnâtâ
V: I donât think youâre a racist.
DS: Yes you do. Yes you do.
V: I think you, youâ
DS: Evil heart.
DS: Itâs the world! You go to Israel, the Blacks are just treated like dogs.
V: So do you have to treat them like that, too?
DS: The white Jews, thereâs white Jews and Black Jews, do you understand?
V: And are the Black Jews less than the white Jews?
DS: A hundred percent, fifty, a hundred percent.
V: And is that right?
DS: It isnât a questionâwe donât evaluate whatâs right and wrong, we live in a society. We live in a culture. We have to live within that culture.
V: But shouldnât we take a stand for whatâs wrong? And be the change and the difference?
0DS: I donât want to change the culture, because I canât. Itâs too big and too [unknown].
V: But you can change yourself.
DS: I donât want to change. If my girl canât do what I want, I donât want the girl. Iâll find a girl that will do what I want! Believe me. I thought you were that girlâbecause I tried to do what you want. But youâre not that girl.
Sterling, 81, has a long history of antagonizing Blacks.
In 2009, he paid $2.7 million to settle a suit accusing him of discriminating against Blacks, Latinos and families with children at an apartment building he owned in Los Angeles.
In addition, NBA Hall of Famer Elgin Baylor, who spent 22 years with the Clippers, filed a suit against Sterling in 2009 for wrongful termination. According to the Los Angeles Times, âIn his deposition, Baylor spoke about what he called Sterlingâs âplantation mentality,â alleging the owner in the late 1990s rejected a coaching candidate, Jim Brewer, because of race. Baylor quoted Sterling as saying: âPersonally, I would like to have a white Southern coach coaching poor Black players.â Baylor said he was shocked. âAnd he [Sterling] looked at me and said, âDo you think thatâs a racist statement?â I said, âAbsolutely. Thatâs plantation mentality.â â
Donald Sterling is the Paula Deen of professional basketball. Accordingly, the NBA should stick a fork in him and tell him heâs done.
