Finneran: The Racist Fool(S) At Fenway

Friday, May 05, 2017
Tom Finneran, GoLocalWorcester MINDSETTERâ„¢

Fenway Park
He, she, or they are racists. He, she, or they are fools. 

He, she, or they are ignorant. He, she, or they are embarrassments.

I could go on and on but I’m tired of idiots giving our city a bad name.

If Adam Jones, the All-Star center fielder for the Baltimore Orioles is to be believed, and I believe him, there had to be numerous witnesses to the act itself, even if none are able to specifically identify the racist idiot in their midst.

The act was actually a two-part demonstration of cowardice and hate. First, a bag of peanuts gets thrown at Jones as he is standing in the outfield. Then the N----- word gets hurled at him as well.

If Jones, down on the field and well below the Monster seats and the bleachers can hear the slurs, then it’s fairly obvious that fans sitting near the jerk(s) can hear the slurs too.

Where to begin, beyond cringing in embarrassment at such behavior?

Several thoughts:

1) The Red Sox leadership, specifically Sam Kennedy, seems determined to root out this horrid canker. Kudos to Kennedy.

2) Red Sox fans should do what Boston sports fans have done for many years when witnessing great talent on an opponent’s team---that is, they should raise the roof with their applause when Adam Jones comes to the plate. Appreciate the player and his talent. (Note: this comment is being written on Tuesday afternoon, several hours before Adam Jones comes to the plate. Prediction: Sox fans will give him a prolonged and well-deserved standing ovation. He’s that good, the Sox fans are that smart, and the behavior was that despicable).

3) Keep a more vigilant eye on beer sales. Security personnel have to nip the obnoxious behavior in the bud. If I’m a father or grandfather with a few young kids sitting near this jerk then I might hesitate to get involved. I’m not sure that I want to start a fight with a belligerent and drunken jerk in front of those kids. Security personnel must preempt fan idiocy.

4) My wonderment continues at the entire episode. I can think of a number of good reasons to be attending the game, among them that I might be a Sox fan, I might be an Orioles fan, or I just might like to watch baseball played at the highest level. How does it matter, in any way, shape, or form with what skin color those ballplayers were born? And by the way, to the racist coward who shames the city with his malignant act, are Mookie Betts and Jackie Bradley exempted from your horrid bigotry? Was David Ortiz a n---er word too or was he made acceptable by the Red Sox linen he wore? 

5) Does the bigot in question need a pair of glasses? As a presumed “sports fan” he must have by now noticed that most of the Patriots are African American, that most of the Celtics are African American, and that the Sox themselves are well integrated. The dominant presence of that many African Americans on those teams speaks to their merit and talent. There are no set-asides or quotas in professional sports. Every spot is earned and if a black guy is starting over a white guy it’s because the black guy is better. Case closed.

6) This idiot has added to the back story about Boston and race relations. This idiot has just made it more difficult to attract and retain talent, and not just athletic talent. Academic talent, medical talent, scientific talent, entrepreneurial talent---talent always has options and choices. Why would I ever bring my family to a city where this garbage happens? This story has already traveled throughout the country’s African American communities, tarnishing every Bostonian. For shame. For shame.

7) Kudos to Tanisha Sullivan of the NAACP and Darnell Williams of the Urban League. They called this act out immediately for what it was---a vile and racist act, unacceptable to all decent human beings. That’s strong leadership. Kudos as well for Mayor Marty Walsh for his forceful denunciation of this behavior. He has let all Bostonians know that Boston will not go back. 

Call it example or principle or precept or leadership. It’s all of that and more...........a racist and ignorant fool embarrassed himself and his city. That city’s leadership stood up and spoke up and said no more.

Tom Finneran is the former Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, served as the head the Massachusetts Biotechnology Council, and was a longstanding radio voice in Boston radio.
 

  • Tom Yawkey

    The legacy of the former owner of the Boston Red Sox, who passed away in 1976, is currently in the media glare for his views and actions while head of the club. 

    “It’s time to banish the racist legacy of Tom Yawkey,” wrote Adrian Walker for the Boston Globe on Monday, of the former owner of the Sox for 44 years, starting in 1933.  

    Wrote Walker, “All this history raises an uncomfortable, current-day question. Why on earth does Boston have a street called Yawkey Way? Or a Yawkey MBTA station? At a time when activists, especially on college campuses, are clamoring for renaming monuments to racist history, it’s long past time for Boston to think long and hard about the official Yawkey legacy. That the Red Sox are so central to the city’s psyche makes it even more urgent for Boston to act now to banish this legacy of racism.”

    Last year, the Globe’s Robert Burgess posed,"Was Tom Yawkey Boston's Donald Sterling," making a comparison to the now former LA Clippers owner who was banned by the NBA for making racist remarks. 

    “Unfortunately, Boston knows a thing or two about racism in sports," wrote Burgess. "While Sterling’s alleged words are offensive to many, let’s not sit too proud on our high horse.”

     
  • Brown University

    “In 2003, Brown University president Ruth Simmons opened an investigation into the school’s role in the slave trade. The findings exhumed unsettling accounts of the many ways in which important founders of the institution participated in and benefited from slavery, including the use of slave labor to construct the oldest and most iconic building on campus, University Hall,” wrote Northwestern Professor Jennifer Richeson in a piece entitled "What Ivy League Ties to Slavery Teach About Redemption."

    As part of its recognition of its past ties to the slave trade, Brown unveiled its slavery memorial last year, which reads, “Rhode Islanders dominated the North American share of the African slave trade, launching over a thousand slaving voyages in the century before the abolition of the trade in 1808, and scores of illegal voyages thereafter. Brown University was a beneficiary of this trade.”

    A Manhattan Institute Fellow broached the issue of Brown changing its name when it took up renaming Columbus Day to "Fall Weekend", but the idea got little traction. 

    "If you're going to get rid of the day honoring Columbus because he was involved in slavery, I don't see how you can bypass the Brown problem," said John Leo, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. "They have to be consistent with their message on slavery. And if they’re not willing to do that, then there's no reason to take them seriously."

    Now, Brown just announced it is investing $100 million to "promote diversity and inclusion" on the campus, in light of pressures from the students and community to address ongoing racial issues on campus.  

     
  • H.P. Lovecraft

    H.P. Lovecraft, one of Providence’s most famous authors, known for “The Call of Cthulhu” and other works of horror fiction, is also known for a fair degree of controversy about racially-charged aspects of his writing. 

    “It’s OK to admit that H.P. Lovecraft was racist,” wrote Laura Miller for Salon in 2014. Meanwhile, numerous literary analyses and blog posts, including “The ’N’ Word Through the Ages: The ‘Madness’ of HP Lovecraft” and “Lovecraft, Racism, and the ‘Man of his Time’ Defense" give the author much less of pass. 

    Lovecraft and his work where heralded with much fanfare this past summer in Providence for NecronomiCon, “celebrating 125 years of weird in the heart of Lovecraft’s city.”  Meanwhile, much more quietly, the Atlantic Cities reported that starting next year, the World Fantasy Award trophy will no longer be modeled after the massively influential horror-fiction writer H.P. Lovecraft. "Small, corrective steps matter, not for the past, but for the future," wrote Lenika Cruz. 

     
  • John Winthrop

    “John Winthrop, the first governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony, kept American Indians as slaves and helped to write the first law in the US officially sanctioning the practice of keeping African slaves,” wrote C.S. Manegold for the Boston Globe in “New England’s scarlet ‘S’ for slavery” in 2010. 

    In terms of legacy, Winthrop is one of a number of historic figures that is subject to the “latest call by students at Harvard University for the school to purge terms or symbols deemed offensive by a vocal minority raises [in] what could be a confounding issue: How far will the 379-year-old school go to distance itself from historic figures whose actions and social values we would not approve today?” wrote Evan Lips for the NewBostonPost on December 4, as Harvard's Winthrop House” is one of a number at the school named for for a prominent Massachusetts leader who profited from slavery. 

     
  • Ralph Papitto

    In 2007, the then 80-year-old Ralph Papitto — “a big time donor to [Roger Williams University] and a longtime chairman of its board — expressed deep regret for uttering a racist slur about black people at a board meeting,” the Wall Street Journal reported

    “I take full responsibility for this matter and ask for understanding from the community,” Papitto said in the statement. “I do not want this controversy, which at present is running out of control, to further the damage already caused to the university.”

    The law school had opened at the Bristol, Rhode Island institution in 1993 and was named for Papitto in 1996, but just over 10 years later saw his name removed -- at his request -- in light of the scrutiny for the racist remarks.

     
  • Harvard Law School

    “A group of Harvard Law students called Royall Must Fall, is taking issue with the law school’s seal, parts of which come from the Royall family crest. Isaac Royall, Jr. was a slave owner and son of a slavetrader who played a key role in creating Harvard Law School,” wrote WBUR on December 2. 

    Following an outcry from students, officials from the school are "examining the continued use of the seal, in what is the latest controversy over race and historic injustices on US college campuses in recent weeks."

    “Symbols are important,” Martha Minow, dean of the law school, said this week to the Boston Globe. “They become even more important when people care about them and focus on them.”

     

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