There were multiple news articles about two weeks ago showing those very photos 
of the alligator chasing the black man up the palm tree and the truly gruesome 
depiction of a black baby in a swamp with an alligator nearby. 
Yes, let’s move on. 
I’ve seen Facebook posts from people who are actually saying they are dropping 
their allegiance to the Gators because of this. 
I say, if anyone is so shallow as to let something like this affect them, let 
them go. I’ve certainly let them go as a Facebook friend. 

Oliver Barry CRS, GRI
Real Estate Broker
PARKS Real Estate Services
305 B Indian Lake Blvd
Suite 220
Hendersonville TN 37075
Office: 615-826-4040
Mobile: 615-972-4239
bar...@realtracs.com

> On Jun 20, 2020, at 12:19 PM, Helen Huntley <hhsga...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> 
> What a thoughtful and well-reasoned piece from a UF student.
> I knew about "alligator bait" or "gator bait" being a racial slur in the 
> early 1900s, but until now, I never thought about the Gator Bait cheer being 
> interpreted that way. 
> I have no idea whether using black children as alligator bait was ever an 
> actual thing. However, I do know that it was considered funny to depict this 
> as well as an alligator chasing a black man up a palm tree and other 
> stereotypical images on Florida postcards and souvenirs. It was part of the 
> Jim Crow era, dehumanizing black people and putting them down.
> Take a look:
> https://www.google.com/search?q=black+americana+alligator+souvenirs&tbm=isch&ved=2ahUKEwj717TE8JDqAhWH0FMKHaFHAXUQ2-cCegQIABAA&oq=black+americana+alligator+souvenirs&gs_lcp=CgNpbWcQA1CilAJYhaMCYKWmAmgAcAB4AIABWIgB_wWSAQIxMJgBAKABAaoBC2d3cy13aXotaW1n&sclient=img&ei=IULuXrvDBIehzwKhj4WoBw&bih=881&biw=1280
> There's a whole Jim Crow Museum dedicated to racist memorabilia,which 
> incidentally is highly collectible and expensive.
> So now that we're aware of this, why not move on? I'm sure many fans will 
> continue to yell it (assuming there are games at which to yell), but no need 
> to have the band and cheerleaders involved.
> Helen
> 
> 
> 
> 
>> On Sat, Jun 20, 2020 at 12:37 PM Shane Ford <goufgator...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> What They Are Saying: It’s clear that getting rid of ‘Gator Bait’ chant was 
>> right call
>> Tyler Nettuno/ Gator WireJune 19, 2020
>> FILE - In this Nov. 7, 2015, file photo, Albert and Alberta, the mascots for 
>> Florida, do the gator chomp before the first half of an NCAA college 
>> football game against Vanderbilt in Gainesville, Fla. The University of 
>> Florida is ending its 'gator bait' cheer at football games and other sports 
>> events because of its racial connotations, the school's president announced 
>> Thursday, June 18, 2020, in a letter making several other similar changes on 
>> campus. (AP Photo/John Raoux, File)
>> COMMENTARY
>> 
>> On Thursday, University of Florida President Kent Fuchs announced that the 
>> band and athletic department would no longer sanction or promote the use of 
>> the traditional “Gator Bait” cheer in response to the phrase’s historic 
>> association with racism.
>> 
>> The decision was controversial. It was also the right one.
>> 
>> Now, before I explain what I am saying, I want to make it abundantly clear 
>> at the outset what I am not saying.
>> 
>> I’m not saying that there is any evidence the chant originates from the 
>> racist term (and Fuchs conceded as much in his statement). I am also not 
>> saying that if you participated in the chant at any point, you are a racist 
>> or acted in a racist manner.
>> 
>> So, what am I saying?
>> 
>> Well, it’s important to first understand the historical context of the 
>> phrase “gator bait” outside its context as a cheer for Florida athletics. It 
>> allegedly derives from a horrifying practice of using Black children as bait 
>> for alligators in the south in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Though the 
>> historicity of this claim is debated and there isn’t substantive evidence 
>> that this actually occurred, the phrase “gator bait,” or “alligator bait,” 
>> is a well-documented racial slur from the time period.
>> 
>> Cartoons and postcards depicting Black children sitting precariously on a 
>> log above a large alligator are captioned “alligator bait,” and there’s even 
>> a song from 1899 titled “Mammy’s Little Alligator Bait,” which features 
>> overtly racist lyrics, demonstrated by the chorus below.
>> 
>> [Chorus]
>> 
>> Hush-aby, don’t yo’ cry,
>> mammy’s little piccaninny’s gwine to get a present mighty soon,
>> When de stars am a-peepin’ and de moon it am a-creepin’
>> den yo’ mammy’s gwine to sing ‘dis tune,
>> Shut yo’ eye bye and bye,
>> mam will whip yo’ if yo’ cry,
>> Someone am a-comin’ thro’ de gate;
>> Go to sleep, don’t yo’ peep,
>> listen to me tell yo’,
>> yo’s mammy little alligator bait.
>> 
>> But, as previously stated, even Fuchs admitted that there isn’t evidence of 
>> a racial association with the chant at UF, and predictably, this angered 
>> many fans. It also angered some former players such as Lawrence Wright, who 
>> popularized the term in 1995 after a win over Florida State, announcing, “If 
>> you ain’t a Gator, you’re Gator Bait.” Wright told the Gainesville Sun’s Pat 
>> Dooley that he wasn’t happy with the decision to change the chant.
>> 
>> “Me and the president need to sit down and talk about this.”
>> 
>> Wright did receive a call from a University Athletic Association official to 
>> inform him of the decision.
>> 
>> “I’m not going for it,” said Wright, who won the Jim Thorpe Award for the 
>> nation’s best defensive back in 1996. “I created something for us. It’s a 
>> college football thing. It’s not a racist thing, It’s about us, the Gator 
>> Nation. And I’m Black.
>> 
>> Believe me, I understand where Wright is coming from. Certainly, he meant 
>> nothing racial in his use of the phrase. It wouldn’t surprise me at all if 
>> yesterday was the first time he’s even heard about its historical usage. And 
>> perhaps he’s right. Maybe Fuchs should have talked to former Black players 
>> before making the decision. But I also doubt it would have made much of a 
>> difference.
>> 
>> Because, while completely valid and worth considering, Wright’s opinion 
>> isn’t the only one that matters here. And the fact is, no matter how many 
>> times defenders of the chant wrongfully claim so, Wright didn’t coin the 
>> phrase. Sure, he popularized it and led to the official embrace of the 
>> chant. But “Gator Bait” was a part of UF canon long before the Gators beat 
>> the Seminoles in 1995.
>> 
>> The publication Gator Bait Magazine was created in 1980 (15 years before 
>> Wright said it), and the chant and usage of the phrase was popular even long 
>> before that, as shown in this picture from 1956, taken from the Smathers 
>> archive.
>> 
>> So, while we should take Wright’s opinion seriously, we also can’t ignore 
>> the thoughts of other Black people in the UF community, a community that 
>> still has a long way to go in terms of diversity and inclusion.
>> 
>> As a white student at Florida, that isn’t always (or even usually) apparent 
>> to me. I was raised in a county that is 91 percent white and attended a high 
>> school where the vast majority of students looked like me.
>> 
>> So to me, UF feels diverse. At least, more diverse than what I was used to. 
>> But my perceptions don’t capture the lived experiences of Black people on 
>> campus. UF received an “F” score in race equity in 2019 by a study from the 
>> University of Southern California’s Race and Equity Center. Black students 
>> account for just 6.1 percent of the student body, the fourth-lowest 
>> percentage among public schools in Florida.
>> 
>> But we aren’t just reckoning with racial inequity in the present. In the 
>> weeks since the killing of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police, 
>> we’ve seen perhaps the greatest coming to terms with institutional racism in 
>> the United States in decades. Protests have spurred new discussions about 
>> the scope of police brutality, but it has also led to a wider condemnation 
>> of historical relics of racism, such as Confederate iconography and 
>> symbolism in public places.
>> 
>> And in the wake of these protests, we must look at the past, examining 
>> traditions and deciding if the spirit of those traditions aligns with the 
>> values that we as a university community purportedly aim to uphold in the 
>> modern-day.
>> 
>> This is especially important at a school like Florida, which didn’t 
>> integrate at all until 1958 (mind you, two years after the phrase was 
>> documented to have been used at Gators football games). In fact, to this day 
>> there are still a number of buildings named after prominent Florida 
>> segregationists, including its student union and basketball arena.
>> 
>> Given this information, how can we continue to use a phrase like “gator 
>> bait,” that, though benign in its origin at UF, is still undoubtedly a 
>> racial slur? And the belief in that fact didn’t start yesterday, either. 
>> Many Black students have been aware of the history of the phrase for years 
>> and have pushed to have it changed. Is making them feel welcome at an 
>> institution specifically designed for the betterment of all of humanity 
>> really less important than preserving a 15-second cheer at football games?
>> 
>> UF has other traditions. And no matter what those who promulgate slippery 
>> slope fallacies say, those traditions will still exist. Even the “gator 
>> bait” chant is unlikely to disappear from the Swamp, though it won’t be 
>> officially encouraged by the school.
>> 
>> But if even now, armed with new information about the historical context of 
>> the phrase as a racial slur, you still feel compelled to defend the chant 
>> and criticize the change, I sincerely implore you to take a step back, look 
>> deep inside and question why that may be.
>> 
>> Check out more Gator coverage at Gators Wire, a part of USA Today Sports and 
>> Gannett, which owns Gatorsports.com. College Wires is a digital sports 
>> initiative that is part of the USA TODAY Sports Network that brings fans 
>> closer to their favorite college sports teams. The websites are full of 
>> aggregated content and original stories that has become a daily destination 
>> for hard core supporters of these successful college sports programs.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Sent from Shane’s iPhone
>> Go Gators! 
>> -- 
>> -- 
>> GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
>> 1996 National Football Champions | 2006 National Basketball Champions 2006 
>> National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions 2008 
>> National Football Champions | 
>> Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996), 
>> Tim Tebow (2007)
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> 
> -- 
> -- 
> GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
> 1996 National Football Champions | 2006 National Basketball Champions 2006 
> National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions 2008 
> National Football Champions | Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier 
> (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996), Tim Tebow (2007)
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-- 
-- 
GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
1996 National Football Champions   |  2006 National Basketball Champions 2006 
National Football Champions   |   2007 National Basketball Champions 2008 
National Football Champions   |   Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier 
(1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996), Tim Tebow (2007)
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