I couldn't remember the correct phrasing for the Anti-Trust exception, but that furthers my point.
It's just that today, with the huge entrenchment, that the league is a private club is jarring. The situation seems off balance.
Not sure if this is a good analogy, but if I sought out ownership of a local bank, or golf course, my views seem unlikely to directly interfere with my ownership. In practice, I might have a problem finding employees, or finding customers, but that is an indirect issue. I do suppose the PGA or WPGA could deny my golf course whatever membership or association is meaningful for their organization. But, I would not expect that FDIC or Federal Reserve Board could prevent me from owning a bank.
Exactly.Well, that's the thing - nobody is stopping him from creating his own league (Vince McMahon did). You cannot, however, just declare yourself a team in someone else's league.
I think there are all sorts of examples of people taking offense where it isn't warranted, open discussion being hampered by things like trigger warnings or crusaders who go after anyone who doesn't adopt the approved manner of speaking about these sorts of things...but this wasn't a case of a guy being misunderstood, being crude or just making an attempt at humor, a bit insensitive, he was being pretty blatantly racist. Now i agree that the recording itself may be an issue if it was illegally obtained, becasue the right to privacy is important. But i do not think someone who somes out and says classically racist things can expect no fallout. And it isnt like we are doing anything to the man, the NBA is doing it. It is just the product of belonging to an organization. When you sign up for that kind of entity, you agree to be held liable for certain things, and that can inlcude maintaining the public image of the organization.
I do think there are plenty of instances in comedy, academia, the arts, and even gaming where crusading for political correctness has gone too far and has inhibited discussion. I do not believe this is such a case.
He still has every right to say those things. Look i am with you on the point that people are way too eager to be offended and almost where it like a badge of pride anytime someone makes a minor mistep or doesn't speak in the most current form of politically correct lingo. But the guy said some prett reprehensible things that no amount of context is going to improve. And we do not need to start comparing him to holocaust victims. He is being penalized by a private organization that he belongs to, not imprisoned and killed by a government that dislikes his heritage.
Except you don't know that there is, and you don't know that he was. There is no evidence either way, so far. Instead of taking the neutral position ("We don't know what happened, so I'll reserve judgment on whether harm was dealt to him until we know more.") you are taking the affirmative position ("We don't know what happened, but I'm going to assume that he was dealt harm regardless."). It's worth asking why you've decided to do that.
His words jeopardized more than a dozen corporate sponsorships of the league, causing real harm to the association's finances. It doesn't matter that they were "just words". This is a perfect example of the sort of damage words alone can cause.
Why are you so emphatic that words don't count when everything we're seeing demonstrates that they very clearly do?
Words have consequences. If you believe differently, you are wrong.
And, to the rest of us, it isn't a terribly important distinction. Acting on it would have been worse, but at that point it's just a matter of degrees.
This is a total non-sequitur.
You absolutely will allow it, because you absolutely have no power to do anything about it. Words matter, period. That's how the world you live in works. That's how the world you live in has always worked.
YES. If you're a private organization, you have the freedom to exercise your legal power over those you feel you need to distance yourself from when they do something for which their contract provides consequences.
This is neither religious nor political. This is a private organization taking legal action against a private individual.
Then reserve your outrage for those things.
NO ONE IS CHALLENGING HIS RIGHT TO SAY ANYTHING.
You need to internalize that. No one has stopped him from saying anything. Which is why he has been able to go on talk and news shows and continue to say incredibly racist things in the intervening weeks. He hasn't been arrested. He hasn't been killed. He hasn't had his tongue cut out.
But that doesn't mean that he has the right to avoid all consequences from non-government entities for what he has said. He doesn't get to. We, as private citizens, are free to do whatever we wish (within our legal rights) to demonstrate our disapproval. And that includes the NBA exercising the clause of its contract with him (a contract he willingly signed) to punish him.
No, it isn't. This is you trying to twist a non-issue into a banner for your personal crusade against political correctness. And we all know it.
1) Because most advertisers don't want to be associated with a racist. As such, they threatened or actually did withdraw advertising dollars from the Clippers and the league.
2) Because the players don't want to be associated with a racist- especially minority players in the context of racist "owners". As such, they threatened a league wide work stoppage.
His words are just the latest episode in a known pattern- the hateful cherry on the top of his racist sundae, if you will- including antagonizing his own players.
What injustice?
Sorry, but the NBA is a private organization. He doesn't own the Clippers outright- he's a franchise owner who gets to operate the franchise with the permission of the NBA, subject to their rules, by the force of the contract he signed. If he had acted and spoken analogously as the operator of a MacDonald's franchise, he could have similarly been stripped of his rights to own & operate.
Such contract clauses get upheld in court all day, every day. And as a lawyer & businessman, he knew that.
The only injustice that might have occurred is if the NBA violated its own procedures or state/federal law in disciplining him, which is what he's alleging in his lawsuit...which lawsuit he may have torpedoed by his own actions if the LA times article is correct.
As for words as actions? Again, the law has no problem with that. Familiarize yourself with the restrictions to free speech & association under the Uniform Code of Military Justice sometime. Or what happens to secular employees of religious groups who get fired for things they said on Facebook.
In short, "mere words" have been enough to get you in trouble under the Common Law for several hundred years, now, depending on what those words were, how they were said, and when/where.
If he has the right to say whatever he wants, why don't I have the right to vote with my wallet and refuse to give him money?
Why should I not be allowed to react in whatever manner (short of illegal actions of course) I see fit when learning what this guy says?
Why should he be given safe haven to say whatever he wants to say, free of any repercussions?
+1
And why can't the group that let him join their little club kick him out when he violated the rules he contractually agreed not to violate?

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Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.