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Should the Redskins change their name?

Should the Washington Redskins change their name?

  • Yes

    Votes: 34 29.1%
  • No

    Votes: 83 70.9%

  • Total voters
    117
So the one drop rule only applies to blacks. :stirpot:

I was curious about the 'one drop rule', so I looked it up.

Turns out it originated with white folks during 1960s Jim Crow laws in the south. Go figure.

So, yeah, because of racist whitey, it did only apply to blacks in order for them to be officially discriminated against.
 
I was curious about the 'one drop rule', so I looked it up.

Turns out it originated with white folks during 1960s Jim Crow laws in the south. Go figure.

So, yeah, because of racist whitey, it did only apply to blacks in order for them to be officially discriminated against.

I'm just being facetious about the whole thing because I find the entire affair to be ludicrous on both sides. Hook'Em's comment about being half NA not mattering struck me funny after 6 years of hearing about our "black" President that grew up between Asia and a beach in Hawaii.

So I'm pretty much rolling my eyes at both threads on the topic every other post.
 
I'm just being facetious about the whole thing because I find the entire affair to be ludicrous on both sides. Hook'Em's comment about being half NA not mattering struck me funny after 6 years of hearing about our "black" President that grew up between Asia and a beach in Hawaii.

So I'm pretty much rolling my eyes at both threads on the topic every other post.

yeah, I knew you were being facetious. I was just curious about the one drop rule, because I've heard it my whole life. Thought it was interesting that it came from Jim Crow, as I've read many black folks embracing the concept the past few years, especially as it pertains to some entertainers and President Obama.
 
yeah, I knew you were being facetious. I was just curious about the one drop rule, because I've heard it my whole life. Thought it was interesting that it came from Jim Crow, as I've read many black folks embracing the concept the past few years, especially as it pertains to some entertainers and President Obama.
The tribes tend to be a might pickier to get your CIB. (Except maybe the Cherokee) :fingergun:
 
So I guess the bottom line here is we only have to be super sensitive when it comes to black Americans. If this were about their race the name would have been changed years ago.

BTW, being technically half NA doesn't really put you in their shoes. Now if you were posting from a reservation in North Dakota and dealing with racial tension daily for being Indian that would be another story.

My full blooded grandmother is still alive and she thinks the whole issue is dumb.

And i do consider myself white, they can name the team craker skins for all i really care. The whole point is that everyone gets offended over the littlest things, and people take things way out of context.

Kinda like people who say they dont like the color blue on the wall, well i say dont look at the fing wall then.

Pretty simple IMO, the best way to get rid of rascism is that everyone stop accusing everyone else of it.
 
My full blooded grandmother is still alive and she thinks the whole issue is dumb.

And i do consider myself white, they can name the team craker skins for all i really care. The whole point is that everyone gets offended over the littlest things, and people take things way out of context.

Kinda like people who say they dont like the color blue on the wall, well i say dont look at the fing wall then.

Pretty simple IMO, the best way to get rid of rascism is that everyone stop accusing everyone else of it.

I don't think people supporting the name "Redskins" are racists. Most (including Snyder) are sentimental to the name because they grew up Redskins fans and to them it's just the name of their team. The same way many of us had a connection to the Oilers name.

However that said, there is no denying the name is a slur. It is what many whites called Native Americans back in days of the Indian wars.

The "redskin" to most whites back then was the enemy. A threat. They weren't viewed as honorable people, but redskin savages.

I don't think the name was given to the team to honor Indians either. It was more than likely taking the villain mascot approach. "We're the nasty Redskins coming for your scalp!".

To me the name is comparable to "Japs". "Japs" and "Nips" are what Americans labeled the enemy Japanese during WWII. That generation continued using "Japs" and "Nips" to refer to Japanese people. However you couldn't name a team "Japs" nowadays as it's considered slur.
 
I don't think people supporting the name "Redskins" are racists. Most (including Snyder) are sentimental to the name because they grew up Redskins fans and to them it's just the name of their team. The same way many of us had a connection to the Oilers name.

However that said, there is no denying the name is a slur. It is what many whites called Native Americans back in days of the Indian wars.

The "redskin" to most whites back then was the enemy. A threat. They weren't viewed as honorable people, but redskin savages.

I don't think the name was given to the team to honor Indians either. It was more than likely taking the villain mascot approach. "We're the nasty Redskins coming for your scalp!".

To me the name is comparable to "Japs". "Japs" and "Nips" are what Americans labeled the enemy Japanese during WWII. That generation continued using "Japs" and "Nips" to refer to Japanese people. However you couldn't name a team "Japs" nowadays as it's considered slur.

Great post, man. :thumbup:

My own perspective is not from being offended. I've said it many times before, but words do not offend me. I've got thick reptilian skin about these kinds of things and don't sweat most of it. I get offended by actions (i..e. rape, genocide, child abuse, etc.).

That said, this matter is one of principle for me. The simple fact is that all respected dictionaries reveal that the name is a racial slur. Take that and consider the deplorable treatment by native peoples by our government throughout its history, and it's a no brainer for me.

I've talked with a lot of Native Americans (through BSA's Order of the Arrow) about this subject, and there seems to be a general consensus against the name (and really against the stereotypical image of the war bonnet, which is highly revered in Indian cultures).

However, none of them that I talked with trust the government and do not want government action to force a change. They would rather it change 'organically' as a result of a shift in public attitudes. Seeing the government FORCE someone to do something reminds them of a very ugly history of government coercion by force. It makes sense.

Interesting that some of the most patriotic and fiercely loyal people to this country I have ever met are Native Americans. They might dislike government, but they certainly love this country.
 
As a vet of the 101st airborne division, I've been wondering when PETA is gonna start griping about the unit icon (which is the head of a "screaming eagle"/Bald Eagle) that is the shoulder patch on unit uniforms.
I'm actually 'bout 50 % serious here, so I wouldn't be surprised if at some point we hear that screw-ball group start claiming that it's some how abusive or disrespectful and inappropriate policy for the big predators and start demanding a change in 101st uniform policy.
 
why redskins decision is wrong

by marc randazza
2:36 pm edt, sat june 21, 2014

(cnn) -- the washington redskins find themselves under (deserved) fire for their name, which many native americans and others find to be a racial slur. Previously the target of protests and opprobrium, the redskins have now lost their federal trademark registration for the name, as it was deemed too disparaging to remain protected. There are two issue to consider here: One is technical and the other is one we should all find troubling.

The first: This case was about a trademark, and the primary purpose of trademark law is to protect the public so that the public can accurately know the source or origin of goods and services. But headlines that say the redskins lost their trademark are inaccurate.

All they lost was their trademark registration, not the right to use the racist term to identify their team -- and that is a key point. In the united states, trademark rights flow from an organization using the trademark; technically, you don't need to register a trademark in order to have trademark rights. (in other countries, you need a registration).

With its common law rights intact, the team is free to continue to call itself the "redskins." moreover, it can still sue you for selling counterfeit washington redskins gear, and it can still block someone from starting a washington redskins dodgeball team. The washington redskins still have trademark rights, and strong rights at that.

If the team owners still have rights in the trademark, why is losing the registration a big deal? What does a registration give you? It gives you a few statutory presumptions in the event that you go to court over enforcement of your trademark. It gives a presumption of ownership and validity. In simple terms, the cancellation only means that if there is a trademark infringement lawsuit, the washington redskins team is going to have to pay a bit more in attorneys' fees to win its case.

Opinion: Is end near for redskins? It's about time

but nobody can seriously argue that dan snyder's football team is not the owner of the still-intact trademark rights, nor that the public associates his team with the racist name.

The second issue: There is something even more offensive than the team's name: The fact that this case happened at all. The decision, i believe, has first amendment implications that we shouldn't ignore.
the rest of the story
 
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I don't think people supporting the name "Redskins" are racists. Most (including Snyder) are sentimental to the name because they grew up Redskins fans and to them it's just the name of their team. The same way many of us had a connection to the Oilers name.

However that said, there is no denying the name is a slur. It is what many whites called Native Americans back in days of the Indian wars.

The "redskin" to most whites back then was the enemy. A threat. They weren't viewed as honorable people, but redskin savages.

I don't think the name was given to the team to honor Indians either. It was more than likely taking the villain mascot approach. "We're the nasty Redskins coming for your scalp!".

To me the name is comparable to "Japs". "Japs" and "Nips" are what Americans labeled the enemy Japanese during WWII. That generation continued using "Japs" and "Nips" to refer to Japanese people. However you couldn't name a team "Japs" nowadays as it's considered slur.

I would invite you to read this article and give your thoughts after reading it, as well as all of the others who voted yes, or assert that the term is actually a racial slur.

In 2005, the Indian language scholar Ives Goddard of the Smithsonian Institution published a remarkable and consequential study of redskin's early history. His findings shifted the dates for the word's first appearance in print by more than a century and shed an awkward light on the contemporary debate. Goddard found, in summary, that "the actual origin of the word is entirely benign."

Full Article
 
I would invite you to read this article and give your thoughts after reading it, as well as all of the others who voted yes, or assert that the term is actually a racial slur.

Full Article

Thanks Nitro, that interesting and ironic because it sounds similar to the origin of another word.

The word originated as a neutral term referring to black people, as a variation of the Spanish/Portuguese noun negro, a descendant of the Latin adjective niger ("color black")

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/n*gger (replace the * to see the link)

The history of the word ****** is often traced to the Latin word niger, meaning Black. This word became the noun, Negro (Black person) in English, and simply the color Black in Spanish and Portuguese. In early modern French, niger became negre and, later, negress (Black woman) was unmistakably a part of language history. One can compare to negre the derogatory ****** and earlier English substitutes such as negar, neegar, neger, and niggor that developed into its lexico-semantic true version in English. It is probable that ****** is a phonetic spelling of the White Southern mispronunciation of Negro.

No matter what its origins, by the early 1800s, it was firmly established as a derogative name

http://www.aaregistry.org/historic_events/view/******-word-brief-history

Just like the word above, redskin too became a derogatory word used by whites. Interesting how both started as just referring to someone by their skin color.
 
Thanks Nitro, that interesting and ironic because it sounds similar to the origin of another word.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/n*gger (replace the * to see the link)



http://www.aaregistry.org/historic_events/view/******-word-brief-history

Just like the word above, redskin too became a derogatory word used by whites. Interesting how both started as just referring to someone by their skin color.

Well then I suppose the same could be true for any word and there are those that use the word in a derogatory or demeaning fashion. Being hyper sensitive to every word that may or may not be used by a minority of people to describe certain people even though no malice was intended is the problem of the offended person IMHO. I guess it all comes down to how the word us used, and the tone used. I imagine if I tried hard enough I could be offended when someone describes me as a Caucasian, especially if they emphasized their tone and inflection.

The article points out the term was coined by Native Americans as was entirely benign. That some chose to use it as a derogatory term in certain time periods after it was created does not make the word derogatory. Are you suggesting the word is used in a derogatory manner in modern times when people say "Hail to the Redskins"?

The N word is entirely different. It was not coined by blacks to describe themselves, but rather was a label placed on them by their oppressors solely for the purpose of denigration. Trying to compare Redskins to the N word is absurd IMHO.

If people are that offended (and I suggest it is actually a small minority) then stop going to the games, stop buying the gear, or supporting the team in any manner instead of expecting the majority to accept the minorities view that the term is a slur when they do not see as such.

Surely by now someone could demonstrate that the majority of Native Americans find it offensive if that were actually the case? But after all of these years, they cannot demonstrate that, which should say something about authenticity of the alleged outrage. This is a case of the minority trying to force their will on the majority for reasons other than stated.

The origin of the word is benign, and while it may have been used by a minority as a derogatory term for a shot span of time, it surely is not used in that manner today. But rather as a term of respect for the strength and fighting spirit of Native Americans.

Why would someone name their team after something they saw as weak and inferior to themselves? That makes no sense. Teams are named after fearsome, strong, animals like Lions, Tigers and Bears, not Anteaters, Skunks and Butterflies. I could see the outrage if the teams name was the Washington Savages with the same logo, or the Washington Drunken Indians with a logo of a Native American chugging a bottle of Jack Daniels.

This world has far more challenging problems to solve than worrying about whether a footballs teams name is a slur to a tiny minority or not.
 
Why would someone name their team after something they saw as weak and inferior to themselves? That makes no sense. Teams are named after fearsome, strong, animals like Lions, Tigers and Bears, not Anteaters, Skunks and Butterflies. I could see the outrage if the teams name was the Washington Savages with the same logo, or the Washington Drunken Indians with a logo of a Native American chugging a bottle of Jack Daniels.

Not sure if I posted this in this thread or the other one, however the "redskin" to most whites back then was the enemy. A threat. They weren't viewed as honorable people, but redskin savages.

I don't think the name was given to the team to honor Indians either. It was more than likely taking the villain mascot approach. "We're the nasty Redskins coming for your scalp!".

I don't think white people viewed Indians as weak either however "fearsome" as you mentioned above. Many were intimidated by them. So I can see why a team would create a mascot from them.

Anyway, I stand by my stance here. I don't think people are being "overly sensitive" with this.

No matter how the word began it's not a flattering thing to call or refer to a NA as a "redskin" no matter how it's used. You would not say "I have some redskin friends ... etc".

Honestly, two friends of mine have helped me understand this better. Yvette who is NA has given us reasons on this board why that is offensive to them (a few times over) however I think she is avoiding these threads now because it was upsetting her.

I also have a white friend who lives in South Dakota, who lives in an area with a large population of Native Americans and doesn't particularly care for them in general. He has also told me that "redskin" is not a word you would use around them unless you want to get into a fight.

So I have that coming from a Native American. For those that know Yvette, she is genuine NA.

I also have that coming from a white guy that grew up and still lives around reservations and is admittedly somewhat racist against them.

Who am I to believe, them or side with people that are truly ignorant to this subject as I was because I grew in parts of the country where I hardly ever saw a NA (including Houston) until my grandparents took me to visit the Alabama-Coushatta reservation in Livingston.
 
So who is going to admit to voting "yes" on this?

I'm with the others who've posted so far, this PC crap can kiss my ass.

I voted yes.
Whutsittiya?
:bat:

Sorry if what used to be considered common, everyday courtesy and good manners now upsets folks because the right has decided to left-ti-fy it by calling it "political correctness".
from Wiki...
By the early 1990s, the term was adopted by US conservatives as a pejorative term for all manner of attempts to promote multiculturalism and identity politics, particularly, attempts to introduce new terms that sought to leave behind discriminatory baggage ostensibly attached to older ones, and conversely, to try to make older ones taboo
You folks that get upset by the term and/or idea of political correctness have been (and are being) royally PLAYED by the Right.
 
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Why would someone name their team after something they saw as weak and inferior to themselves? That makes no sense. Teams are named after fearsome, strong, animals like Lions, Tigers and Bears, not Anteaters, Skunks and Butterflies.

Do you really perceive fearsome and strong when you see this logo?

[IMGwidthsize=200]http://prod.static.cardinals.clubs.nfl.com/nfl-assets/img/gbl-ico-team/ARI/logos/home/large.png[/IMG]

It's a freakin' wimpy little bird that my domestic cat kills at least 2-3 a year.

These mascots are just used to market team identity.

And you hit the nail on the head without realizing that you undermined your own points.

Teams usually pick mascots that represent caricatures to stereotype the traits of fearsome and strong.

Redskins was originally chosen for the reasons Hookem mentioned. Native Americans were seen as bloodthirsty savages back then. Uncivilized brutes who had to endure government sanctioned genocide and theft of their lands. American citizens and government looked at most Indian tribes as unworthy to even honor treaties with, much less deserving of equality and respect.

Basically, folks back then saw them as ANIMALS, not people. This is why you see stereotypes of Native Americans.

American Indians were not the only group of people who where stereotyped. The others just fell out of favor. For instance:

1934

The Zulu Cannibal Giants, an all-black baseball team that played in war paint and grass skirts, barnstorms around the country. Six years later, the Ethiopian Clowns continue the tradition of mixing baseball with comedy to appeal to white audiences.

Source

So, tell me why folks would name their team after cannibals?

I could see the outrage if the teams name was the Washington Savages with the same logo, or the Washington Drunken Indians with a logo of a Native American chugging a bottle of Jack Daniels.

Beyond the name, the inherent problem is one of stereotyping thousands of tribal customs into caricatures.

For instance, the war bonnet was a sacred symbol that had to be earned and was a great honor. Now, it's been reduced to a logo.

How do you think modern religious folks would feel if Jesus nailed to a cross was stereotyped to its lowest common denominator into a party favor or team logo? I'd bet it would upset a lot of people. Unfortunately, for Native Americans, they no longer have a lot of people left.

Like I said above, this issue is not one of being offended for me. It is simply a matter of principle and to rectify one small wrong in a long history of truly despicable and dishonorable treatment of indigenous peoples.
 
Anyway, I stand by my stance here. I don't think people are being "overly sensitive" with this.

No matter how the word began it's not a flattering thing to call or refer to a NA as a "redskin" no matter how it's used. You would not say "I have some redskin friends ... etc".

How about a current High School website?

http://rmusdhs.ss4.sharpschool.com/home
Redskins News, Redskins Sports.
Hmm, they're Navajo. How can that be? Are they denigrating their own people? Do they get a "usage exclusion"?
 
Not sure if I posted this in this thread or the other one, however the "redskin" to most whites back then was the enemy. A threat. They weren't viewed as honorable people, but redskin savages.

I don't think the name was given to the team to honor Indians either. It was more than likely taking the villain mascot approach. "We're the nasty Redskins coming for your scalp!".

I don't think white people viewed Indians as weak either however "fearsome" as you mentioned above. Many were intimidated by them. So I can see why a team would create a mascot from them.

Anyway, I stand by my stance here. I don't think people are being "overly sensitive" with this.

No matter how the word began it's not a flattering thing to call or refer to a NA as a "redskin" no matter how it's used. You would not say "I have some redskin friends ... etc".

Honestly, two friends of mine have helped me understand this better. Yvette who is NA has given us reasons on this board why that is offensive to them (a few times over) however I think she is avoiding these threads now because it was upsetting her.

I also have a white friend who lives in South Dakota, who lives in an area with a large population of Native Americans and doesn't particularly care for them in general. He has also told me that "redskin" is not a word you would use around them unless you want to get into a fight.

So I have that coming from a Native American. For those that know Yvette, she is genuine NA.

I also have that coming from a white guy that grew up and still lives around reservations and is admittedly somewhat racist against them.

Who am I to believe, them or side with people that are truly ignorant to this subject as I was because I grew in parts of the country where I hardly ever saw a NA (including Houston) until my grandparents took me to visit the Alabama-Coushatta reservation in Livingston.

While I respect your point of view, I disagree based on several factors. I too have some Native American blood in my ancestry, and I was born and raised in Tucson Arizona and spent a great deal of time with the Pascua Yaqui Tribe on the reservation about 15 miles southwest of downtown Tucson.

While it was some time ago (80's) we did once or twice discuss it directly, and not a single person was at all offended by the team name. And I can attest that it was not on their list of grievances. In fact some of them were actually fans of the team and wore the gear or had it hanging in their rooms.

In regards to starting a fight by calling someone a Redskin, it could happen sure, but the same can hold true with the N word. In their minds it is perfectly fine to call each other the word, but have another ethnic group call them that and it's game on. That is hypocrisy plain and simple. But if you are having an altercation with a Native American for whatever reason, and you use the word Redskin to try to inflame the situation then depending on the maturity of the person it could result in physical violence. But the same could be true if the Native American is having an altercation with a Caucasian for example and he used the word Caucasian in an inflammatory way. The racism or slur is conveyed by the individual and the way the word is delivered, not by the word itself.

So can it be used in a disrespectful or derogatory way? Of course, but you are not likely to convince many people today that the way the word is used when it comes to a professional sports team is meant in a derogatory way, nor should it be taken that way.

Seems to me it's white people who are more offended by the team name than actual Native Americans. Truth be told even referring to a Native American as an NA could be offensive, even though your intent was clearly not to be offensive and rather used NA for brevity.

I'm old enough and wise enough to know when people start calling you names, it's because they are insecure and are using it to mask it and appear strong because they feel challenged. So you can call me anything you like, and I as a grown man can be offended and want to fight, or I can understand the problem lies with the person attempting to use words to hurt me and if I react to them, then he wins, and I am as insecure as he is.

Words only have power if you give them power. And I would suggest anyone who thinks forcing a name change of the Redskins is going to solve racism, or make people who are offended by the use of the word less insecure is being naive, and yes, hyper sensitive.

So if the Native Americans as a whole wish to voice their displeasure with the use of the word Redskins as a teams name, then let's see them get out there in numbers and protest every game, call for boycotts, and ask fans to join them. If they cannot manage such demonstrations, then clearly it is not as important as some are making it out to be.

Here are some interesting recent articles discussing the issue.

http://washington.cbslocal.com/2013/10/08/how-many-native-americans-think-redskins-is-a-slur/

The comments are interesting on this article

http://mmqb.si.com/2014/04/03/washington-nfl-team-name-debate/

This one on Redskins website

http://www.redskins.com/news-and-ev...Redskins/cdb3c94e-f5c6-4d98-9acd-18d7fb768bb7
 
How about a current High School website?

http://rmusdhs.ss4.sharpschool.com/home
Redskins News, Redskins Sports.
Hmm, they're Navajo. How can that be? Are they denigrating their own people? Do they get a "usage exclusion"?

Great post, there are many Native American HS football teams named redskins also. The part the liberals are missing is that Native Americans are proud of their red skin, and it is how they refer to each other in an honorable way.
 
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Great post, there are many Native American HS football teams named redskins also. The part the liberals are missing is that Native Americans are proud of their red skin, and it is how they refer to each other in an honorable way.

So you are lumping me in with "liberals" because of my stance on this issue? Do you guys have to make everything about idiotic politics?

Again, I trust my friends on this issue for the reasons that I have already posted.

If some high school full of NA wants to go with that name then I guess you can ask them what their motive was. Maybe it was an in your face to white people or a way to take power away from a word that was so often used against them.

Honestly, I don't have a dog in this fight. I am just calling it as I personally see it.
 
I read the Goddard piece a while back and I think you're missing some pretty key elements, Nitro.

In Goddard's essay he presents the etymology with some things that are worth noting. First, he says that the racialization of the word is attributable to Europeans. Additionally, he talks about the relative simultaneity of the words as a referent used by natives and by Europeans alike. Finally, he notes - specifically and pointedly - the "obliquial" nature of the word as a more "recent phenomenon" confirming it's status as a derisive slur.

Also, what you linked to in your post wasn't actually Goddard's article. That can actually be found here:

“I AM A RED-SKIN”: The Adoption of a Native American Expression (1769–1826)


So what's being presented here isn't the entire picture or the entire argument Goddard lays out. It's interesting that as often as I've seen this article referenced, few people have actually read it or, if they have, leave out some pretty relevant details.

Also, re: your comparison to the N-word - I don't think it really suits your argument if you want to endorse Goddard.

What you're advocating, through Goddard - the parts of his argument you want to use - is the relatively benign origination of the word. That is, the natives referring to their red skins as a distinguishing factor from the Europeans white skins. Right? That makes Hookem's response totally relevant, imo.

Okay. So now take a look at the etymology of the n-word. Also a descriptor, based on color - relative to the normative white of the Europeans. We know, however, that the origination based on skin color as a distinguishing primary feature has gone far beyond that and it's universally accepted as a slut. Right?

So by bringing in the n-word, you're talking about a color-based descriptor that grew into an objectionable slur.

How is that somehow qualitatively different from redskin? Because you're arguing that it was used as a self-referent? I don't understand how that difference (and using Goddard, that conclusion is more ambiguous than you seem to suggest) validates its current use as accepted.

What's also strange is that you're trying to argue that in present-day the term "Redskin" is typically associated with the NFL team - so you seem to be arguing that chronological context is important. It reads as an attempt to have your cake and eat it, too. Historical context applies when it was originally conceived and was benign (which is, even upon reading Goddard, somewhat selective). Historical context applies to the contemporary use when it's benign (which is also, I think, selective - I would also take issue with your comment above that those taking offense are negligible). But historical context for the vast majority of the word's existence when it was not benign and was used as a slur? No, we can't use that time period.

That strikes me as an argument of convenience.

Of course, even the latter part of my post is only related to the etymology as you flatly present it.

I'd counter with what I think is more important, and what I led with, namely that there are elements of Goddard's work that have some bearing on the discussion but aren't apparent.
 
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In one of these message board forums, I was told that if I didn't like the sight of 2 gay men kissing on tv, I should look the other way or change the channel. I was told that everyone has the right to do what they want, to include being gay or to get married. So why doesn't this theory apply to other areas in life? If you don't like the Redskins name, don't watch them or buy their merchandise. If Daniel Snyder wants to call his team Redskins then he should have that right. The same as 2 homos who want to smooch on my tv screen.

To hell with all this political correct bull****.
 
So you are lumping me in with "liberals" because of my stance on this issue? Do you guys have to make everything about idiotic politics?

Again, I trust my friends on this issue for the reasons that I have already posted.

If some high school full of NA wants to go with that name then I guess you can ask them what their motive was. Maybe it was an in your face to white people or a way to take power away from a word that was so often used against them.

Honestly, I don't have a dog in this fight. I am just calling it as I personally see it.

You are offended, and assume I was calling you a liberal, or lumping you in even though I clearly did not direct that particular comment at you. This is perfect evidence of how someone can be offended even though the language was not directed at them. You left out the part at the beginning where I said I respected your point of view.

The comments regarding liberals was directed at liberals, who in my estimation are behind this movement. And as my proof I cited plenty of Native Americans who have taken the time to voice their opinion, and even Native American schools where the same name is used to represent their sports teams, whereas the opposition seems to be coming more from white liberals with a few Native Americans sprinkled in here and there.

Point being that anyone can be offended for any reason, and while society wastes time talking about a football teams name, people are starving, suffering from mental disorders, are homeless, etc., and it seems a bit selfish to me to be wasting time on this sort of thing.

I find it hard to believe that Native American kids, or adults are having trouble getting out of bed each day, or coping with daily life because an NFL team is named the Redskins.

I read the Goddard piece a while back and I think you're missing some pretty key elements, Nitro.

In Goddard's essay he presents the etymology with some things that are worth noting. First, he says that the racialization of the word is attributable to Europeans. Additionally, he talks about the relative simultaneity of the words as a referent used by natives and by Europeans alike. Finally, he notes - specifically and pointedly - the "obliquial" nature of the word as a more "recent phenomenon" confirming it's status as a derisive slur.

Also, what you linked to in your post wasn't actually Goddard's article. That can actually be found here:

“I AM A RED-SKIN”: The Adoption of a Native American Expression (1769–1826)


So what's being presented here isn't the entire picture or the entire argument Goddard lays out. It's interesting that as often as I've seen this article referenced, few people have actually read it or, if they have, leave out some pretty relevant details.

Also, re: your comparison to the N-word - I don't think it really suits your argument if you want to endorse Goddard.

What you're advocating, through Goddard - the parts of his argument you want to use - is the relatively benign origination of the word. That is, the natives referring to their red skins as a distinguishing factor from the Europeans white skins. Right? That makes Hookem's response totally relevant, imo.

Okay. So now take a look at the etymology of the n-word. Also a descriptor, based on color - relative to the normative white of the Europeans. We know, however, that the origination based on skin color as a distinguishing primary feature has gone far beyond that and it's universally accepted as a slut. Right?

So by bringing in the n-word, you're talking about a color-based descriptor that grew into an objectionable slur.

How is that somehow qualitatively different from redskin? Because you're arguing that it was used as a self-referent? I don't understand how that difference (and using Goddard, that conclusion is more ambiguous than you seem to suggest) validates its current use as accepted.

What's also strange is that you're trying to argue that in present-day the term "Redskin" is typically associated with the NFL team - so you seem to be arguing that chronological context is important. It reads as an attempt to have your cake and eat it, too. Historical context applies when it was originally conceived and was benign (which is, even upon reading Goddard, somewhat selective). Historical context applies to the contemporary use when it's benign (which is also, I think, selective - I would also take issue with your comment above that those taking offense are negligible). But historical context for the vast majority of the word's existence when it was not benign and was used as a slur? No, we can't use that time period.

That strikes me as an argument of convenience.

Of course, even the latter part of my post is only related to the etymology as you flatly present it.

I'd counter with what I think is more important, and what I led with, namely that there are elements of Goddard's work that have some bearing on the discussion but aren't apparent.

I appreciate the extremely detailed reply and I acknowledge your points, and if I were so inclined I could argue them point by point. But as I said in the message above, I feel this is a waste of not only my time, but certainly the time of our nation when it appears that the Native Americans themselves for the the most part are not offended, and indeed use the name themselves in various ways including HS sports teams.

So until there comes a time when the Native Americans can organize a movement that is represented by actual Native Americans and not liberal activists who feel the need to right the wrongs of the world one trivial issue at a time, I am not going to worry about it, or waste the kind of time it would require to debate such an issue.

What Caucasians think is irrelevant, and people like Bob Costas, and Peter King are not in it because they are offended Native Americans, or even because they are outraged in some manner IMO, and I find their expressed offense to be more self serving than genuinely concerned for Native Americans feelings.
 
So until there comes a time when the Native Americans can organize a movement that is represented by actual Native Americans and not liberal activists...

Here are approximately 3 million Natives for you http://www.changethemascot.org/supporters-of-change/

And your assertion that liberals are behind this is bunk. Natives have been against this name since the very beginning. No one listened back then, no one gave a damn.

I've said everything I have to say.
 
Here are approximately 3 million Natives for you http://www.changethemascot.org/supporters-of-change/

And your assertion that liberals are behind this is bunk. Natives have been against this name since the very beginning. No one listened back then, no one gave a damn.

I've said everything I have to say.

Yvette is a very interesting tribal name. What tribe did it originate from?

I do not really have the time right now to browse all the information on the link you provided, but I will spend more time when I can. I did quickly browse through it and I did not see any mention of 3 million Native Americans who support the name change, but what I did notice is a whole bunch of non Native Americans, especially the elected officials that all but one have a D after their name. leading with the countries biggest liberal Barrack Obama, and followed by the likes of Harry Reid, and Nancy Pelosi, and well known race baiters such as Rev. Jesse Jackson, and the always popular Rev. Al Sharpton.

So to say "And your assertion that liberals are behind this is bunk" and then provide a list of people who support your cause, of which most are liberals is actually supporting my assertion, not yours. When you say "Natives have been against this name since the very beginning" that is a half truth whereas SOME Natives are against it, but clearly not a majority or anything even close.

I also notice you did not even acknowledge the fact that multitudes of Native American HS teams use the exact word, and similar logos, yet we are to believe your assertion that ALL Natives, or even something resembling close to half are against it. Then you affirm my assertion by saying "No one listened back then, no one gave a damn." which included most Native Americans most of whom see it as an honor.

But now with the help of liberals, and the liberal media, who never waste a good crusade, it is gaining traction with a few more Native Americans, but mostly liberals looking to out a feather in their caps (No pun intended).

I am sure you and others are passionate about this issue, but you are misguided, and surely could be putting your passion to better use on more pressing matters.
 
Look the name needs to change, I mean Washington has been a total embarrassment for the whole country. Washington is a horrible city to name your team after.
 

Just another professional with a permanent chip on his shoulder. It is only a term of derision when used for that purpose intentionally. ANYTHING can be used in this manner and if things keep going this PC way, we'll all have to be deaf mutes to keep from accidentally hurting someones itty bitty feelings. Freedom of speech infers that someone will not like our speech or there would be no need for protection. Now it was concentrated on political speech, but that was not a qualifier.

We got way off the path when we started imposing mandates in violation of free speech. Ostracism is a social reaction to those exercising their free speech rights, but government impositions should not be permitted because that violates the equal protection clause as well as the first amendment.

But redskins was not a term of derision and this example only shows the residual racism of the first owner, not that he considered redskin a pejorative.
 
I appreciate the extremely detailed reply

no problem

and I acknowledge your points, and if I were so inclined I could argue them point by point.

I'm sure you could. But not all arguments are created equally. I know we'll differ on the legitimation of the self-reference as some sort of justifiable cause - and that's fine. I don't see any substantial explanation for it, but it's your opinion and you're entitled to it.

That's why I foreground my point with the notes about Goddard that didn't make it into your response but are, I feel, pretty relevant to the discussion. And if you're going to cite something as support, then presenting it fairly and more completely - i.e. more than just a secondary source that has its own thesis to pursue - is better.

If you want to cite Goddard, then link to Goddard and include his points. After all, you seemed like you wanted to present it in a sort of "decide for yourself" sort of way. That's hard to do when it's presented pretty one-sidedly. Present it all - it's possible to still fall on your side of the argument, but it should at least be presented more even-handedly, imo.

But as I said in the message above, I feel this is a waste of not only my time,

That's fine. I just understood 7 posts within a day or so, totaling nearly 2000 words and a handful of links (which I'm presuming you took time to read) suggested to me that it was more than just a waste of your time.

but certainly the time of our nation when it appears that the Native Americans themselves for the the most part are not offended,

Are you basing this on the SI study? If so, you should know that there were inherent methodological problems with the quantitative elicitation of that data which compounds the problems of the conclusions drawn.

So until there comes a time when the Native Americans can organize a movement that is represented by actual Native Americans and not liberal activists

but see, this is part of the problem - for years, marginalization of such groups/communities has made it so that autonomic agency is somewhat problematic. Without getting into the liberal/conservative end of things, I'll just say that our national history is full of instances where small, oppressed, marginalized groups have primarily found or effected change through the intercession of a dominant group. I mean, you could look at things as broadly as Civil Rights or suffrage. Or, you could look at things as specific or relatively small as things in my fields. The support and education of students with disabilities or mental health issues that can inhibit learning. Or the plight of incarcerated youth across the country.

If it seemed that Native Americans were wholly and completely disinterested, then you might be approaching a point. I'm still not sure you'd get there because this is about following a reasonable law in a way that's consistent with previous decisions - and it appears to be.
who feel the need to right the wrongs of the world one trivial issue at a time,

This might be trivial to you. But there are lots of people that it is not trivial to. Among the groups I work with up here have included native populations - because the representation of indigenous youth in the penal system up here is far out of line with general population. There are a lot of reasons for this, but I can say that there are natives who do not see this as trivial. They don't like the word. They don't use the word. And they really, really do not think it's a word that should be condoned or used by the outside majority as an acceptable reference.

Now, is this name of an NFL team going to impact all sorts of problems with the treatment of them? Or the problems they wrestle with internally?

Of course not. I haven't seen a single person advocate that. And I think it would be pollyannishly naive to think it would. But I will say that a symbolic gesture of rejection for something like this sends a signal from the eurocentric majority decision makers (in the US and Canada) that these sorts of things are not tolerated and that society rejects language considered derogatory and racial.

What comes from that is increasing trust. There's a lot of mistrust up here of white people in some of the native areas. Some of the law enforcement have a really tough time and it's taken a lot of time and trust and care to find inroads.

You know what makes that tougher? Institutionalized racial slurs that are accepted.

So nobody believes it's the only step, a one-stop panacea for writing all the wrongs. But it is a step.

ANd while I think it's foolish for someone to overstate the impact it would have, I think it's also foolish to understate - dismiss it as "trivial" or act like it would have no meaning whatsoever.

The truth is, its impact would probably fall somewhere between those two poles.

What Caucasians think is irrelevant

I think it's absolutely relevant. Just like what every other person - no matter their ethnicity - think. It's especially important for the normative majority to be conscious of the way they think and talk and what that might signify to minority groups if we truly believe in things like tolerance and acceptance and plurality.

Like I referenced above, there are lots of historical issues - great and small - that were changed for the better because people outside of the most affected group were involved and interested.

I actually think that's a very key ingredient as to why our country works and it's one of the things I am most proud of in being American (risking the cliche, I know)

Through work, I've had the opportunity and privilege to work with and learn from some of very marginalized and vulnerable groups and in order for improvements to be made in these areas, and those experiences have only cemented, for me, the reality that needed change only happens when there is mobilization by groups that have more power and influence than the marginalized groups.

The changes in youth penal institutions aren't carried out by the kids themselves. Rather, it's the staff, administration, local, and state governments that make the change - and these groups aren't made up of lower class kids. Most of them are middle-upper class men.

anyway, I'm sure I've bored everyone enough by now...
 
So, what's happened in the last 10 years? Have the Washington Redskins and RG3 pissed off the populace or what?

Annenberg Survey 2004 - Poll with margin of error +/- 2% points. Only states left out were Alaska and Hawaii where they don't poll. Link

The question?
“The professional football team in Washington calls itself the Washington Redskins. As a Native American, do you find that name offensive or doesn’t it bother you?”

The response? 90% found it acceptable.

Eight percent of men and 9 percent of women said the name was offensive, while 90 percent of each sex said it did not bother them. Ten percent of Indians under 45 found the name offensive, compared to 8 percent of those 45 and older.

The liberal angle?
Thirteen percent of Indians with college degrees or more education said “Redskins” was offensive, compared to 9 percent of those with some college and 6 percent of those with a high school education or less. Fourteen percent of Indians who called themselves politically liberal said the name was offensive, compared to 9 percent of moderates and 6 percent of conservatives.

Draw your own conclusions from the data.
 
So, what's happened in the last 10 years? Have the Washington Redskins and RG3 pissed off the populace or what?

Quantitatively, that's actually not an irrelevant question and it is, in fact, one of the issues with that survey.

Draw your own conclusions from the data.

People have. But it's not without problems. Quantitative data from phone surveys actually need to undergo a pretty rigorous standards review/evaluation before anything can be reasonably asserted or generalized.

We run into that problem at work not infrequently.

I'm not sure that what you posited, dis, was another "angle"

Something like this would probably be better since it invites more discussion on the survey itself:

http://ipclinic.org/2014/02/11/11-r...the-washington-football-teams-offensive-name/

They lead with your comment about "what happens in 10 years" but I actually think their response is pretty weak. They manage to raise more compelling quantitative points to consider in some of the items in the rest of their list, though - things that researchers who use polls and quantitative data in pooling their analyses. It's tedious work and I don't really like doing it as opposed to other things I can do with my research time - but it is valid, necessary work if anyone is going to glean meaning from numbers.

Among the things any researcher would wrestle with, for example, would be the fact that the question was among a whole series of questions issued to 65,000 people. Those people were asked to self-identify as Native American and 768 affirmed. These two considerations need to be acknowledged. And the fact that a decade ago, more than half of Natives on reservations lacked landlines, through which this poll was conducted.

Ultimately, my point is that the data - as with any case - shouldn't be considered the end. Rather, it's a means to it. Like Michael Lewis said - quoting Bill James - in Moneyball:

I wonder if we haven't become so numbed by all these numbers that we are no longer capable of truly assimilating any knowledge which might result from them

His goal was understanding something larger, using statistics to get there. But he became disillusioned when his methods were co-opted and the numbers become the end. That, somehow, those numbers were Truth rather than part of the way to understand Truth.

Of course, I'm biased toward the qualitative over the quantitative so I'm inclined to romanticize the former and be more critical of the latter.
 
Here are approximately 3 million Natives for you http://www.changethemascot.org/supporters-of-change/

And your assertion that liberals are behind this is bunk. Natives have been against this name since the very beginning. No one listened back then, no one gave a damn.

I've said everything I have to say.


Yvette, it's much easier to paint the descendants of this country's indigenous population with a broad brush as caracatures. Once someone's culture has been subjegated and damn near eradicated many see them as fair game. I just learned that my maternal great grandmother belonged to THIS nation: http://www.atakapa-ishak.org/

Strangely enough even if I hadn't known that I would still have found the team name as offensive as New Orleans N:883rs, New Jersey J@ps, Cinicinati China-men. Those are extreme examples but there are people who no matter how much you simplify just won't get it.
 
Yvette, it's much easier to paint the descendants of this country's indigenous population with a broad brush as caracatures. Once someone's culture has been subjegated and damn near eradicated many see them as fair game. I just learned that my maternal great grandmother belonged to THIS nation: http://www.atakapa-ishak.org/

Strangely enough even if I hadn't known that I would still have found the team name as offensive as New Orleans N:883rs, New Jersey J@ps, Cinicinati China-men. Those are extreme examples but there are people who no matter how much you simplify just won't get it.

I think most of us whose ancestors migrated here more than 200 years ago have NA blood in us. My great grandmother was Cherokee. My great grandfather was a cattle rancher in central Texas during the late 1800's. I wonder how much flak he received for marrying a Cherokee back then.

After my dad passed my step mom found a bunch of photos of my ancestors that I never saw before. Here is some of her family. She is sitting on the front row, second from the right.

220829995_L_2.jpg


This was my great aunt, her sister. Both lived to be over 100 ...

Aunt_Pat.jpg
 
As the descendant of African slaves, the French bastards who owned them and the Indians from whom they stole the land in the first place...I don't like ANYBODY! I aint too crazy about my DAMN self!

You need to get over that last part. Dread really ain't a bad guy.
 
I think most of us whose ancestors migrated here more than 200 years ago have NA blood in us. My great grandmother was Cherokee. My great grandfather was a cattle rancher in central Texas during the late 1800's. I wonder how much flak he received for marrying a Cherokee back then.

After my dad passed my step mom found a bunch of photos of my ancestors that I never saw before. Here is some of her family. She is sitting on the front row, second from the right.

220829995_L_2.jpg


This was my great aunt, her sister. Both lived to be over 100 ...

Aunt_Pat.jpg

They're a good looking group. :tiphat:
 
Do you really perceive fearsome and strong when you see this logo?

[IMGwidthsize=200]http://prod.static.cardinals.clubs.nfl.com/nfl-assets/img/gbl-ico-team/ARI/logos/home/large.png[/IMG]

It's a freakin' wimpy little bird that my domestic cat kills at least 2-3 a year.

Their name is the Cardinals because their uniform color they originally wore was "cardinal red". It wasn't because they liked a bird. Just saying
 
So, what's happened in the last 10 years? Have the Washington Redskins and RG3 pissed off the populace or what?

Annenberg Survey 2004 - Poll with margin of error +/- 2% points. Only states left out were Alaska and Hawaii where they don't poll. Link

The question?

The response? 90% found it acceptable.



The liberal angle?

Draw your own conclusions from the data.

Alaska has the highest percentage of Native Americans of any state in the US.
 
...and is 47th in Population among those states.

.... and they are 6th in population of Native Americans -- three times that of Virginia, Maryland, and DC combined.

US Census States Ranked by NA Population With %
1 CALIFORNIA 313,642 0.9%
2 OKLAHOMA 262,581 7.8%
3 ARIZONA 261,168 5.5%
4 NEW MEXICO 165,944 9.5%
5 WASHINGTON 104,819 1.8%
6 ALASKA 101,352 16.4%
.
.
.
.
50 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 1,785 0.3%

http://www.census.gov/population/estimates/state/rank/aiea.txt

That's a higher percentage of Natives than the percentage of Hawaiians with Hawaiian blood. Would you consider it unreasonable to question an Annenburg poll concerning an issue affecting Pacific Islanders if they didn't poll Hawaii?
 
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.... and they are 6th in population of Native Americans -- three times that of Virginia, Maryland, and DC combined.



http://www.census.gov/population/estimates/state/rank/aiea.txt

That's a higher percentage of Natives than the percentage of Hawaiians with Hawaiian blood. Would you consider it unreasonable to question an Annenburg poll concerning an issue affecting Pacific Islanders if they didn't poll Hawaii?
No, as that's nowhere near a valid comparison.

Annenberg didn't change their methodology just for this poll, it was a known limitation of their process. No hidden agenda, nothing nefarious.

The survey completely missed out on 4.5% of the Native American population, almost all of it in Alaska. The Inuit are far more likely to consider the word Eskimo derogatoary than Redksin.
 
Their name is the Cardinals because their uniform color they originally wore was "cardinal red". It wasn't because they liked a bird. Just saying

Evidently, you did not grow up in an area that has red cardinals. Many people are surprised each spring by the sight of a cardinal attacking its reflection in a window, car mirror, or shiny bumper. When a male sees its reflection in glass surfaces, it frequently will spend hours fighting the imaginary intruder. Both males and females do this, and most often in spring and early summer when they are obsessed with defending their territory against any intruders. These birds may spend hours fighting these intruders without giving up. A few weeks later, as levels of aggressive hormones subside, these attacks should end although in some cardinals it doesn't. The male cardinal fiercely defends its breeding territory from other males, many times drawing significant blood.
 
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