ickythump1225
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Redskins name change not as easy as it sounds - ESPNI guess this is where I'm supposed to fall in line and do what every other American sports writer is doing. I'm supposed to swear I won't ever write the words "Washington Redskins" anymore because it's racist and offensive and a slap in the face to all Native Americans who ever lived. Maybe it is.
NICKNAME CONTROVERSY
The Washington Redskins are facing more pressure to change the team name, which many consider derogatory to Native Americans.
• OTL: Nickname racist? Video
Also see:
• Vote: Should Redskins change name?
• New York tribe challenges Redskins with radio ad Video
I just don't quite know how to tell my father-in-law, a Blackfeet Indian. He owns a steak restaurant on the reservation near Browning, Mont. He has a hard time seeing the slap-in-the-face part.
"The whole issue is so silly to me," says Bob Burns, my wife's father and a bundle holder in the Blackfeet tribe. "The name just doesn't bother me much. It's an issue that shouldn't be an issue, not with all the problems we've got in this country."
And I definitely don't know how I'll tell the athletes at Wellpinit (Wash.) High School -- where the student body is 91.2 percent Native American -- that the "Redskins" name they wear proudly across their chests is insulting them. Because they have no idea.
"I've talked to our students, our parents and our community about this and nobody finds any offense at all in it," says Tim Ames, the superintendent of Wellpinit schools. "'Redskins' is not an insult to our kids. 'Wagon burners' is an insult. 'Prairie n-----s' is an insult. Those are very upsetting to our kids. But 'Redskins' is an honorable name we wear with pride. … In fact, I'd like to see somebody come up here and try to change it."
Boy, you try to help some people …
And it's not going to be easy telling the Kingston (Okla.) High School (57.7 percent Native American) Redskins that the name they've worn on their uniforms for 104 years has been a joke on them this whole time. Because they wear it with honor.
"We have two great tribes here," says Kingston assistant school superintendent Ron Whipkey, "the Chicasaw and the Choctaw. And not one member of those tribes has ever come to me or our school with a complaint. It is a prideful thing to them."
"It's a name that honors the people," says Kingston English teacher Brett Hayes, who is Choctaw. "The word 'Oklahoma' itself is Choctaw for 'red people.' The students here don't want it changed. To them, it seems like it's just people who have no connection with the Native American culture, people out there trying to draw attention to themselves.
"My kids are really afraid we're going to lose the Redskin name. They say to me, 'They're not going to take it from us, are they, Dad?'"
Too late. White America has spoken. You aren't offended, so we'll be offended for you.
It's not very often I find myself nodding my head vigorously in agreement with Rick Reilly but this article succinctly sums up my feelings on the Redskins name controversy (read: non-issue). To me this issue may be the biggest waste of time I've ever seen and the groupthink in the media to get it changed is disgusting. No one is actually offended by the name Redskins except dumb white liberals in the media.
And even if someone is offended...who cares? I'm so tired of everything being dictated by someone's hurt feelings. It's the biggest crime you can commit these days, to hurt someone's feelings or offend their delicate little sensibilities. So bravo Rick Reilly for writing an article that needed to be written to break up the groupthink.