A
adawgj
Guest
No. Might as well throw in the Atlanta Braves and Cleveland Indians while were at it.
Purpleskins? Not in my neighbourhood. :dts:As a general rule I don’t think anyone should be referred to as a “-skin”.
Blackskins?
Whiteskins?
Yellowskins?
Brownskins?
Purpleskins?
If you wouldn’t actually refer to a person like that why would you accept it as a logo.
You have posed a very deep and ponderous question.The name has been around for 80 years. Society has been able to function during that time period because of this “offensive” name.
There’s been a recent push to get to get the skins owner to change the name. So far he’s being stubborn. There has also been a recent development at the patents and trademarks office which came out with the decision that the redskins name is disparaging to native Americans. If the decision holds on appeal, this would mean that anyone can sell redskins merchandise.
Yep. That’s his choice. Is holding onto the out-dated 20th century concept of free speech and standing up for ones rights more important than bringing in the revenue? Does he make a stand over changing any and everything in response to someone taking offense, or does he follow the 21st century path of allowing some group to perceive anything as offensive regardless of the intent?If he’s not persuaded now to come into the 21st century, he’ll change the name fast enough when he finds how much his marketing revenue goes down.
That is, I think, the most important piece of the equation, and one that I’m not convinced is being placed at the forefront. I’m not to keen on changing things for those who are offended on another person’s behalf. But if Native Americans are truly offended by it, that’s a different story.What would be interesting to see is actually how many native americans weighed in on this.
I know people make these arguments, but I find it very difficult to believe that the marketing revenue will go down substantially by keeping the name. It is far more likely to go down by changing the name. The people buying the merchandise right now probably aren’t the ones who want to change the name. And the ones who want the name changed are probably not likely to run out and buy a bunch of Washington New-Name merchandise. But those who currently buy stuff and resent the name change might very well refuse to buy the new stuff.If he’s not persuaded now to come into the 21st century, he’ll change the name fast enough when he finds how much his marketing revenue goes down.
So now free speech and standing up for one’s rights are outdated 1900s concepts?Yep. That’s his choice. Is holding onto the out-dated 20th century concept of free speech and standing up for ones rights more important than bringing in the revenue?
Here’s the thing about free speech— it includes things you find offensive, that you don’t agree with, can’t remember the source whether it was a founding father or a court case but:So now free speech and standing up for one’s rights are outdated 1900s concepts?
That bothers me more than anything connected with this non-issue.
If any large numbers think like that, this country is lost, pants-kicking military or not.
ICXC NIKA
How about ‘racist’? I find that incredibly offensive. Especially when its used to avoid discussing serious issues by dismissing someone. We disagree, you must be racist.…
I’m trying to come up with something similar that would apply to me for comparison sake. “Whiteskins”? “Crackers”? Honestly, neither of those would really offend me.But then, my ancestors didn’t go through what the Native Americans went through. So I’m sure it’s much different.
Well, I don’t think the NFL teams could refuse to play them unless there’s something in the NFL contracts which support it. However, there probably is a codicil in the contract covering issues which affect the NFL as a whole. If the other team owners are concerned how this will affect the league- than they could take the appropriate action.“Free speech” is guaranteed by the First amendment. By law, the government cannot prohibit the Washington Redksins from using the name “Redskins” no matter how distasteful or offensive some may consider it to be.
The thing is, the *government *cannot squelch them but private organizations can do whatever they want.
Like what? If you are a business owner who sells NFL memorabilia, you can stop selling Redskins-branded items. If you manufacture those items, you can stop making them.
Other NFL teams could simply refuse to play the Redskins. Charter airline companies can refuse to fly the team to away games.
People can stop buying tickets to the games.
Boycotting anything and everything Redskin would do more that anything the government can do. Hit them where they are most vulnerable (the wallet).
The pressure is coming from a bunch of whiny progressives who get offended at everything except overt displays of sexuality, unless the people involved pray before beginning the sexual acts, in which case saidprogressives get offended.If the pressure for change were coming from Native Americans, they would have a point.
But enough with the sensitivity police already.
IMNAAHO.
ICXC NIKA
This was essentially my point. Where I live the controversy is over high school mascots, and the governor brushes it aside with cries of “free speech.” It may or may not be, but free speech isn’t an excuse to be a jerk.Not that bigotry against majority ethnicities is a good thing either but it’s hard to compare it to the concerns of a historically persecuted minority.
Yeah, but once you start defining what kind of speech makes someone a jerk you’ve opened an ugly path-This was essentially my point. Where I live the controversy is over high school mascots, and the governor brushes it aside with cries of “free speech.” It may or may not be, but free speech isn’t an excuse to be a jerk.
There is a clear and measurable difference between political and hate speech. While I agree that the distinction is often lost on the public, that doesn’t mean the distinction isn’t real.Yeah, but once you start defining what kind of speech makes someone a jerk you’ve opened an ugly path-
Once you start censoring the speech you don’t like, you have established an extremely dangerous precedent.
- Opposition to gay marriage is offensive to some, described as hate speech, I’ve certainly been called worse than a jerk for opposing gay marriage. Lately Pelosi and other politicians were trying to discourage Bishops from attending a march/rally in support of marriage.
- MMGW proponents have also tried to get folks who oppose them to shut up. Calling them much worse than jerks.
- My opposition to abortion makes me a jerk in some folks eyes. To them I’m part of a war on women, a misogynist, a part of the oppressive patriarchy etc. etc.