Imagine the media firestorm if Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning declared he was a slave. Consider the outrage if New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady began using the term “massah” to describe team owner Robert Kraft. Such behavior would be considered outrageous; Rush Limbaugh’s controversial criticism of Donovan McNabb back in 2003 would be little more than friendly banter in comparison. When a black professional athlete says such things, however, I find it even more morally reprehensible, because it dishonestly borrows from a serious social issue from our country’s past and perpetuates, even sanctions, the minority-as-victim stereotype.
Earlier this week, black Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson equated working in the NFL to “modern-day slavery.” To be fair, Peterson has already received a fair share of criticism – and, inexplicably, support – for his comment, which was reported by Doug Farrar on March 15 in his “Shutdown Corner” blog on Yahoo Sports (http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner). And he’s not the first black NFL player to make such an insensitive remark. Warren Sapp, for example, made his own slave reference in a televised interview during his playing days, and it soured me on him as well.
Had Peterson tried to make an argument that he was an indentured servant rather than a slave (indentured servitude was based on legal contracts), he would have still sounded like a buffoon, but at least he would have sounded like a slightly more educated buffoon. Hey, AP, here’s a tip: It’s already a challenge to get middle-class America to sympathize with your cause when you make significantly more in a year than most of us will make in a lifetime. Trying to paint yourself as a modern day Kunta Kinte isn’t going to increase game-day jersey sales.
In the United States, professional athletes are not slaves. In particular, football players who are coveted for their statistical performances in fantasy football leagues across the country are not slaves. And if you happen to be a black football player and think you are being treated unfairly at your place of employment, you are still not a slave. Because you are free to quit. You are free to retire from the evil National Football League – away from the eight-figure salaries and celebrity perks and fan adoration – and find another job, perhaps, in an ironic twist, working in an industrial laboratory developing improvements to the cotton gin.
Please, enough of the slavery references. Find a better argument or just shut up and let the grownups talk.
