ESPN commentator Bomani Jones sparked controversy (depending on who you
ask) recently when he wore a t-shirt on the "Mike and Mike" show mocking
the Cleveland Indians and their mascot, Chief Wahoo. The shirt featured
the word "Caucasians" in the same font and style as the Indians logo,
with Chief Wahoo given white skin, blond hair, and a dollar sign instead
of a feather. He later said he purposely wore the shirt to elicit a
response, and it did.
Jones'
shirt makes a point, but perhaps not the one he wanted to make. It seems
some were offended with the shirt because they thought they were
supposed to be offended, as our current "outrage culture" dictates.
However, most reacting to the shirt on social media weren't that upset
with it at all.
Jones
was hoping to offend white people who don't believe the current Indians
team mascot is offensive. Like the "Redskins" controversy in the NFL,
liberals think the mere use of the word "Indian" and a cartoon depiction
of an Indian warrior is racist and offensive. Jones wanted to show the
hypocrisy among white people when they were confronted by a "white
stereotype." But that didn't happen.
Instead,
the lack of outrage shows that the liberal response to Native American
mascots is much ado about nothing. If the "Caucasians" shirt isn't
offensive, how is the nearly-identical "Indians" mascot offensive? This
is not a case in which a caricature or stereotype is used to deride or
belittle an entire race. There have been plenty of instances of that in
history, but the use of "Indians" or "Redskins" as sports mascots hardly
rises to that level. Yes, "Chief Wahoo's" face is a bit garish, and the
use of bright red skin is obviously stereotypical, but not racist. The
intent was to be cartoonish, not derisive to Native Americans.
The
Indians baseball team is using "Chief Wahoo" less these days, which is a
good thing, but not because it is racist, but because it isn't a
particularly appealing character. Cleveland fans, however, love "Chief
Wahoo," proof that he was never meant to be offensive, but obviously a
better depiction could be found. The Redskins' use of a stern face of a
warrior as a mascot may offend a select few, but most find the depiction
noble.
Ultimately,
Jones' "Caucasians" shirt had the opposite effect. Most white people
weren't offended at all, and it only reinforced the argument that the
use of "Indians" as a mascot isn't offensive either. It showed us all
that we shouldn't be offended at every little thing, and use some common
sense. And that is a very conservative ideal. Thanks, Bomani Jones.
H/T: TheScore.com
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