AOL News Post
19 years ago
General
I'm not sure how legal it is for me to be posting this abroad, but I'll risk an angry letter from some journalist or the just wrath of a mod to give you guys a look at it.
I have made bold certain paragraphs that I feel are especially poingant.
I DID NOT WRITE THIS. THIS IS AN AOL NEWS POST THAT I AM POSTING HERE IN THE INTERESTS OF PUBLIC INFORMATION.
Hardaway Displays Honesty and Stupidity
Homophobia Not Shocking, But Hate Hits Low Point
By JASON WHITLOCK
AOL
Sports Commentary
At first, Tim Hardaway's stupidity provoked a chuckle. He couldn't be serious. Not in these politically correct times. His remarks on Dan LeBatard's radio show in Miami had to be some sort of elaborate skit to promote John Amaechi's book.
Asked to comment on the former NBA role player's decision to announce that he's gay, Hardaway decided to be John Rocker honest.
"If he was on my team," Hardaway said, speaking of Amaechi, "I would, you know, really distance myself from him because, uh, I don't think that's right. And you know I don't think he should be in the locker room while we're in the locker room. I wouldn't even be a part of that."
That was just Hardaway's warm-up shot. With LeBatard trying to press the brakes on Hardaway's intolerance, Hardaway executed a backdoor cut and slammed home his ignorance.
"You know, I hate gay people, so I let it be known," added Hardaway, a retired NBA all-star. "I don't like gay people and I don't like to be around gay people. I am homophobic. I don't like it. It shouldn't be in the world or in the United States."
Thirty minutes after the interview, Hardaway began his backpedal, offering an apology on a Miami TV station. Too late. The controversy was already in the process of blowing up nationally. NBA commissioner David Stern promptly removed Hardaway from all NBA All-Star Weekend activity in Las Vegas.
And LeBatard was on the horn with Amaechi getting his reaction to Hardaway's comments for a column in Thursday's Miami Herald.
"Finally, someone who is honest," Amaechi told LeBatard. "It is ridiculous, absurb, petty, bigoted and shows a lack of empathy that is gargantuan and unfathomable. But it is honest. And it illustrates the problem better than any of the fuzzy language other people have used so far."
Yep, Hardaway scored points for honesty and stupidity. While perfectly illustrating the kind of hostility an active, out-of-the-closet athlete would face inside a locker room, Hardaway dealt the league that made him rich a black eye and a controversy that could take some of the shine off the NBA's Vegas holiday.
Rather than spend the weekend talking about gambling, stripclubs, escorts and tattoos, Stern's all-stars will be forced to answer another round of questions about sexuality. Trust me, athletes are far more qualified to pontificate about the former than the latter.
More than anything, that's what Amaechi's book release has made clear. We shouldn't ask pro athletes important questions. They've been raised in locker rooms, laboratories for intolerance and ignorance, and had their beliefs fortified by large sums of money and groupies/posse members.
Athletes are not paid to be thoughtful or articulate. They're paid to follow instructions implicitly. They're paid to adhere to a macho code that certainly views gay men as weak.
Should we be surprised that LeBron James and all the other 20-something millionaires flunked Amaechi's Brokeback test and offered less-than-enlightened opinions about homosexuality?
No. And maybe we should be even less surprised that the 40-year-old Hardaway thought it was appropriate to put his homophobia on record.
Hardaway's implied reluctance to share a locker room and shower with a gay teammate is somewhat understandable. Most heterosexual men feel the same way. Homophobia is a not a crime. Letting it control your behavior is wrong.
It is Hardaway's expression of hate and the implication he would allow his homophobia to prevent a gay man from working in peace that troubles me.
Hardaway is too stupid to realize that racism and hate denied black people inalienable, American rights for hundreds of years. People with Tim Hardaway's mindset tried to keep people who look like Tim Hardaway out of professional sports and every other highly sought profession.
2007 America Online, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
2007-02-15 07:39:53
I have made bold certain paragraphs that I feel are especially poingant.
I DID NOT WRITE THIS. THIS IS AN AOL NEWS POST THAT I AM POSTING HERE IN THE INTERESTS OF PUBLIC INFORMATION.
Hardaway Displays Honesty and Stupidity
Homophobia Not Shocking, But Hate Hits Low Point
By JASON WHITLOCK
AOL
Sports Commentary
At first, Tim Hardaway's stupidity provoked a chuckle. He couldn't be serious. Not in these politically correct times. His remarks on Dan LeBatard's radio show in Miami had to be some sort of elaborate skit to promote John Amaechi's book.
Asked to comment on the former NBA role player's decision to announce that he's gay, Hardaway decided to be John Rocker honest.
"If he was on my team," Hardaway said, speaking of Amaechi, "I would, you know, really distance myself from him because, uh, I don't think that's right. And you know I don't think he should be in the locker room while we're in the locker room. I wouldn't even be a part of that."
That was just Hardaway's warm-up shot. With LeBatard trying to press the brakes on Hardaway's intolerance, Hardaway executed a backdoor cut and slammed home his ignorance.
"You know, I hate gay people, so I let it be known," added Hardaway, a retired NBA all-star. "I don't like gay people and I don't like to be around gay people. I am homophobic. I don't like it. It shouldn't be in the world or in the United States."
Thirty minutes after the interview, Hardaway began his backpedal, offering an apology on a Miami TV station. Too late. The controversy was already in the process of blowing up nationally. NBA commissioner David Stern promptly removed Hardaway from all NBA All-Star Weekend activity in Las Vegas.
And LeBatard was on the horn with Amaechi getting his reaction to Hardaway's comments for a column in Thursday's Miami Herald.
"Finally, someone who is honest," Amaechi told LeBatard. "It is ridiculous, absurb, petty, bigoted and shows a lack of empathy that is gargantuan and unfathomable. But it is honest. And it illustrates the problem better than any of the fuzzy language other people have used so far."
Yep, Hardaway scored points for honesty and stupidity. While perfectly illustrating the kind of hostility an active, out-of-the-closet athlete would face inside a locker room, Hardaway dealt the league that made him rich a black eye and a controversy that could take some of the shine off the NBA's Vegas holiday.
Rather than spend the weekend talking about gambling, stripclubs, escorts and tattoos, Stern's all-stars will be forced to answer another round of questions about sexuality. Trust me, athletes are far more qualified to pontificate about the former than the latter.
More than anything, that's what Amaechi's book release has made clear. We shouldn't ask pro athletes important questions. They've been raised in locker rooms, laboratories for intolerance and ignorance, and had their beliefs fortified by large sums of money and groupies/posse members.
Athletes are not paid to be thoughtful or articulate. They're paid to follow instructions implicitly. They're paid to adhere to a macho code that certainly views gay men as weak.
Should we be surprised that LeBron James and all the other 20-something millionaires flunked Amaechi's Brokeback test and offered less-than-enlightened opinions about homosexuality?
No. And maybe we should be even less surprised that the 40-year-old Hardaway thought it was appropriate to put his homophobia on record.
Hardaway's implied reluctance to share a locker room and shower with a gay teammate is somewhat understandable. Most heterosexual men feel the same way. Homophobia is a not a crime. Letting it control your behavior is wrong.
It is Hardaway's expression of hate and the implication he would allow his homophobia to prevent a gay man from working in peace that troubles me.
Hardaway is too stupid to realize that racism and hate denied black people inalienable, American rights for hundreds of years. People with Tim Hardaway's mindset tried to keep people who look like Tim Hardaway out of professional sports and every other highly sought profession.
2007 America Online, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
2007-02-15 07:39:53
FA+

its sad. :(
D.O.P.R
There are a few good ones, who actually try to use their popularity to be good role models, and donate much of their time and ridiculous salaries to charities, but those seem to be getting rarer...