Hi.  This should be of interest to sports and popular culture fans;
also timely, considering the weekend and season.  Believe me,
I wish it were as an essential part of a mass movement, but still
welcome as a glimpse of the possible and necessary - both, that is.
Ed



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Dave Zirin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, November 30, 2006 6:21 PM
Subject: [edgeofsports] Organizing the Jocks for Justice


Folks - in addition to this piece, check out Etan
Thomas's new online column at

http://slamonline.com/online/2006/11/type-casting/

Organizing the Jocks for Justice

By Dave Zirin

It started out like your typical pro football player.
But then, tucked away drowsily in the last paragraph,
Baltimore Ravens defensive lineman Adalius Thomas,
emerged with something to say. As Sports Illustrated's
Peter King wrote,

"[Thomas] is politically alert, and not afraid to
express his views, which makes him a rarity in the
NFL. 'What's the Iraq war all about?' he said, his
voice rising. 'If it's about oil, just say that. Don't
give us this Weapons of Mass Destruction crap when all
you find is three firecrackers.'

'You get a little fired up about that,' he was told.

'We all have brains,' he said. 'We should use them.'"

The message was clear: Whether you're an offensive
tackle, a trash talking quarterback, or Dick Cheney:
don't mess with Big Adalius.

Thomas is only the latest in a stellar cast of pro
players chafing against silence, and sounding off
against the war and occupation of Iraq. Steve Nash,
Etan Thomas, Josh Howard, Adam Morrison, Carlos
Delgado, Martina Navratilova, Adonal Foyle, and even
Ultimate Fighting Champion Jeff Monson, among others,
have all raised their voice. They are also just the
beginning. Stories circulate of teammates and coaches
who share their views but don't want to go public.
Even some referees whisper covert statements of
support.

Three years ago, The Nation Magazine writers Peter
Dreier & Kelly Candaele asked the question "Where are
the Jocks for Justice?" My experience in the
Sportsworld is that the "Jocks for Justice" are both
everywhere and nowhere. Progressive athletes strain to
be heard, but they act as individuals and the media
responds with a smothering silence.  This does not
have to be.

Pro athletes hold claim to a unique and underutilized
bully pulpit. Two middle fingers from Atlanta Falcons
quarterback Michael Vick have sent sports radio and
television into a tizzy. Chicago Bulls center Ben
Wallace wants to wear a red headband in defiance of
team rules and a raucous debate explodes about
something last popularized by Olivia Newton-John. The
furor over Barry Bonds' place in history has led to a
more honest discussion about racism than anything we
get in the mainstream press.

Anti-war athletes could use this platform if they just
stopped operating, in isolation from one another.  If
the people I cited called a joint press conference to
announce a new organization: Athletes United Against
War or - what the hell - Jocks for Justice, it would
electrify the cultural landscape. Think I'm
exaggerating? Consider the case of Toni Smith. In
2003, the Division III Manhattanville women's hoops
captain decided that she was going to turn her back to
the flag during the National Anthem to protest not
only the war abroad but "the injustices and inequities
at home." Yipping Heads lined up to debate whether
Toni had the "right" to express her views. Everyone
from ESPN to 20/20 to 60 Minutes wanted a piece of her
story.

Remember, this is Division III women's basketball.
Crowds usually rival a well-attended K-Fed concert. If
Toni Smith from Manhattanville could, for a brief
moment, polarize the Sportsworld imagine what Steve
Nash, backed by an organization, could do?

And yet it hasn't happened and it's worth asking why.
Of the players I have spoken with, two main reasons
emerge. The first is pessimism. Like most people in
this country, pro athletes don't believe that they
have any power to determine the course of this war.
The thought is that the media might give them some
coverage, but in the end, nothing would change and
they would just earn ESPN radio's  "Just Shut Up
Award" for their trouble. One said to me, "The
quickest way to win that Just Shut Up award is to have
something to say."

The other roadblock is straight-up fear: fear that
taking an unpopular stand would mean a quick ticket
out of the SportsWorld along with its attendant
privileges. All NBA players know the cautionary tales
of Craig Hodges and Mahmoud Abdul Rauf. They took
stands against US foreign policy and found themselves
drummed out of the league like they were the Bush
twins in Buenos Aires. Most athletes came up poor and
it is not a life anyone wants to revisit.

As Jim Brown said in a recent interview with Yahoo
Sports' Charles Robinson, "The Civil Rights movement
is over. Individuals can buy homes wherever they want,
travel first class wherever they want, eat wherever
they want. All of these things now are part of the
everyday lives of players. But the discrimination and
racism in the world now is very subtle. It's poor
people that are really suffering from a lack of
inclusion. Poor people live in a part of town that
most players don't go into, and those people aren't an
issue as far as the league is concerned. Basically,
the players have become part of the elite part of
society. And I mean regardless of their color or
anything like that. They are part of the elite part of
our society because of money and status. So there's
not discrimination based on black and white; it's more
of a discrimination based on the rich and the poor."

The fear is real but can be conquered by letting the
silent players know they are not alone. Even two
anti-war athletes sitting together in a room would be
a start. Imagine the possibilities.  They could issue
a statement about their right to speak out and not
just "shut up and play." They could perform simple
tasks like wearing black ribbons on the court or field
in honor of those on both sides who have died.  They
could host a charity game for peace organizations.

Yes, there would be risk. But returning soldiers have
courted risk by starting Iraqi Veterans Against the
War. Cindy Sheehan courted risk by camping out in
front of Bush's Crawford compound. Muslims in DC
recently courted tremendous risk by organizing a
"pray-in" at Reagan National Airport. It's the risk
that makes the action worth a damn. They might lose an
endorsement or two, but they would gain a chance to
make some history. Consider this a challenge.  It's
time for Athletes Against War to take root. We have
the players. We have the sentiment of the public. All
we need is for our lost tribe of Athletic Rebels to
locate one another. If Big Adalius stands among them,
they shouldn't be too hard to find.

[Dave Zirin is the author of "'What's My Name Fool?':
Sports and Resistance in the United States" (Haymarket
Books)  Contact him at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or at
myspace.com/edgeofsports]








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