Saturday, December 15, 2012

ESPN's Parker Digs a Deep Racist Pit for Himself


ESPN’s Rob Parker’s rant about the “blackness” of Washington quarterback Robert Griffin III was a disgusting, racist rant about something that may be a seldom outwardly spoken issue, but, frankly, one that I find appalling.

By questioning the rookie quarterback’s “blackness” Parker threw himself into the pit of racist rants everywhere . . . white or black. Can you imagine some white guy saying a bunch of other white guys aren’t “white” enough? Holy crap. The guy would be shredded in the press. He’d be encouraging white people to ignore everything else around them and act “whiter,” I suppose by throwing aside other cultural influences and only embracing that white is “white.” Maybe unbleached flour, segregation, white-only restaurants, ambrosia?

Who knows? Parker, of course, doesn’t get the fast and furious reaction to his comments, including, one supposes, his suspension by ESPN. He called his critics “uneducated” and “silly.”
"Is he a brother, or is he a cornball brother?" Parker asked.

"He's not real. OK, he's black, he kind of does the thing, but he's not really down with the cause. He's not one of us. He's kind of black, but he's not really, like, the guy you want to hang out with because he's off to something else.

"We all know he has a white fiancée. There was all this talk about how he's a Republican ... Tiger Woods was like, 'I've got black skin, but don't call me black.'"

Wow. Unbelieveable. So now Griffin III isn’t only not black enough but, oh my God, he’s going to marry a white girl. So Parker, digging his racist butt even deeper, is against interracial marriage. Damn. T really can’t get any worse. Again, reverse the people talking, change their races in your head and imagine the same words. (“Sure he’s white, but he’s not white enough. After all, he’s marrying some black girl.”) Just appalling.

Why aren’t we past the point where we are supposed to live up to someone else’s narrow expectations for us? So not black enough . . . what’s next? Not gay enough? Not woman enough? Not man enough? Parker took a tumble down a path that makes my blood boil. I hope he stays in that pit he dug for himself. ESPN needs to cut the cord permanently. 

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