By Ben Shapiro
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
In November 2009, Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald
Sterling settled a lawsuit in which the Department of Justice alleged that
Sterling had discriminated against Hispanics, blacks and families without
children in his rental properties. The lawsuit contained testimony that
Sterling had suggested Hispanics were poor tenants because they "smoke,
drink, and just hang around the building," and that "black tenants
smell and attract vermin." The settlement cost him and his insurers $2.73
million.
The NBA and the national media said virtually nothing.
That same year, the NAACP gave him a Lifetime Achievement Award.
In 2005, Sterling signed a check for more than $5 million
to settle a lawsuit alleging that he had attempted to prevent non-Koreans from
renting in his facilities in Koreatown.
The NBA and the national media said virtually nothing.
This week, Sterling's 31-year-old girlfriend, V.
Stiviano, released a tape of the 80-year-old racist being an 80-year-old
racist. Sterling apparently told Stiviano he didn't want her posting pictures
of black men on her Instagram account and didn't want her bringing black men to
Clippers games.
The entire media establishment suddenly went insane.
Colin Cowherd of ESPN idiotically called for the league to void all of Sterling's
contracts with his players and agents -- a violation of basic contract law.
Magic Johnson declared that the NBA should force Sterling to sell his team -- a
violation of basic contract law. President Barack Obama, determined never to
let an opportunity pass to label America racist, took to the microphones to
declare Sterling's racism a symptom of America's "legacy of race and
slavery and segregation."
This is, at the very least, hypocrisy. Last year,
Sterling signed coach Doc Rivers, who is black, to a contract worth $7 million
per year. Chris Paul, who is black, is slated to make nearly $19 million this
season. Blake Griffin, who is black, is slated to make $16 million. DeAndre
Jordan will make $11 million. The coach, these players and their agents surely
knew about Sterling's legacy. So did Cowherd, Johnson and Obama. They all said
nothing.
But the big problem here isn't hypocrisy. The big problem
is that the market is turning on Sterling not over action, but over words.
Sterling's a pig, and that's been no secret for decades. But what triggered
America's response? Sterling's thoughts. American society now considers
expression of thought to be significantly more important than action. Sterling
got away with actual discrimination for years. But now he is caught on tape
telling his gold-digging girlfriend he doesn't like blacks, and that's when the
firestorm erupts?
This is the thought police at work. Feelings matter more
than action. Words matter more than harming others. That sets a radically
dangerous precedent for freedom of thought and speech, particularly for those
whose thought and speech we hate. Freedom of speech and thought matters
especially when it is speech and thought with which we disagree. The moment the
majority decides to destroy people for engaging in thought it dislikes,
thoughtcrime becomes a reality.
Sterling's career should have been ended by public
outrage based on his established patterns of discrimination years ago. To end
it based not on such disreputable action but on private musings caught on tape
demonstrates America's newfound disregard for the rights of those whose thought
we find despicable.
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