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Blaxploitation? Ron Artest on Culture, Stereotypes, and Ethnic Proclivities.

This is an article I wrote for socalsportshub.com 

Ron ArtestAs someone who believes that most people these days are all too willing to accept whatever the mass market labels them as, I tend to be really cynical whenever somebody declares themselves to be of a certain identity. I’ve found in my short time on the planet that most people stress their individuality, then immediately follow their declaration up by doing something that lumps them in with a group of people I like to call the “lowest common denominator”, or people who behave how marketing dollars say they should.

 Ron Artest’s recent assertions that he “represents his culture unlike any other black player” are worth a little investigation. Operating under the assumption that one singlehandedly exemplifies a set of presumed racial identity traits is a bold move, considering that in this day and age, you have as much chance of running into someone who shares your exact beliefs as you do convincing another person that your views are “right”. However, when the person making said assumptions has a history of poor decision making, to say that he is woefully presumptive is likely an understatement

Without leaning too far on the racial spectrometer, I will say that I’ve never understood people feeling the need to represent their race or ethnicity, as it is something that you don’t get to choose when you’re born. Most people fail to realize, or simply ignore, that they could have just as easily been Irish, or Portuguese, or Black, or Rich, or Poor, or what have you. So to me, feeling the need to identify yourself and your assumed prerogatives concerning your racial identity is stupid, and borderline racist in and of itself. At the very least, it does nothing to help cover the blemishes our own behaviors have created throughout history.

While I can understand Ron’s desire to defend his past and future actions, I find the fact that he does it by saying it’s defined by something as arbitrary as his ethnicity to be shortsighted and ridiculous. Ron’s attempt to equate his often ludicrous behavior with his race shortchanges the many black people I know who feel that actions and justifications such as his only perpetuate an assumption held by many racists. He would be doing himself and many others a favor by not blaming his own past stupidity on some phantom ethnic disposition.

Again, I don’t want to make too many assumptions, as I am a white male, but I feel like the blacks’ struggle over the past century and a half to be viewed as equals could be equated to building a house of cards. What has been achieved thus far has taken much due diligence and patience, but a wrong move here or there can set the process back quite a bit. As I mentioned, there are many ignorant people out there, and for Ron to act this way only throws fuel on their fire, and in the big picture does not make the world a better place.

In the past, I have always like Ron as a player, a decision that has caused me to give him the benefit of the doubt, perhaps too many times. I genuinely felt he was unfairly vilified by his role in the Palace Brawl, due to my belief that the fans had crossed the line, and thus lain themselves at the mercy of those whom they had provoked. Still, this latest outburst is disturbing, only because he acknowledges his own past deeds, before simply excusing them as something we should have expected from his desire to “represent his culture”. Once again, to presume you are acting in everyone’s best interest is generally a poor decision, but to make that decision on their behalf and tie it to such a sensitive issue as race is downright ignorant. Hopefully better heads will prevail in this circumstance, because I don’t know many people who would agree with Ron, black or otherwise. 

It is ironic that Ron’s statements stemmed from a concern about team chemistry, because they have the potential to cause a wholly different kind of chemistry problem, one that goes far beyond the basketball court…

(This is a FanPost from a member of the Sactown Royalty community. The views expressed come from the member, and not Sactown Royalty staff.)

3 recs  |  Comment 7 comments |

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Preemptively, I’m an idiot for trying to deduce Ron’s underlying point. But …

I think more than “Yao’s never played with a black player like me” (which would be obviously false—Skip’s from the hood, McGrady didn’t grow up in a McMansion, etc), he means, “Yao’s never played with someone who acts the way I do, in part because no one in basketball acts like I do. I run my mouth constantly, I cannot turn off my intensity, and we will probably have fights. But in the end, we’re brothers and we will tear this league up.”

I think he means a teammate like Ron is a new thing for Yao, but Yao will figure it out and we’ll all be happy. And (again, I’m an idiot for trying to explain Ron) I think he’s right. Ron is different than Battier and Steve Francis and Dikembe Mutombo. But they will figure it out. Even all these Kings, who must be relieved to see Ron go, kept up appearances and occasionally (usually during wins) appeared to enjoy Artest’s company.

by Ziller on Aug 1, 2008 10:09 AM PDT reply actions  

Good Job

I had to rec it. Well written and the fact that this topic is a little heavier than the usual trade topics (which I also love- keep up the good work), offers a nice variety.

I agree with you that Ron’s logic is flawed and he shouldn’t be generalizing his culture to justify the brawl, suspensions, etc., but I also agree with Ziller that what Ron meant to achieve was probably a lot more harmless. Ron’s a crazy cat that spouts off from time to time. Of course that’s his right, but I wouldn’t put a ton of stock into Ron blatantly exploiting his culture. In this case, as Ziller pointed out, it was probably the easiest way, in his point of view, to get his ideas across.

And I'm like one of the most ghetto-ist guys in the NBA. - Ron Artest

by Kingsfan banished to AZ on Aug 1, 2008 10:44 AM PDT reply actions  

Ron who?

Kevin Pritchard has Chuck Norris tied up in the trunk of his car.

by otis29 on Aug 1, 2008 12:16 PM PDT reply actions  

Ghetto, not black

Your article is really well written, and I see the point you’re trying to make. I would make the distinction between “black” and “ghetto” which is actually the word Artest used most often. I grew up in a lower-middle class/ghetto area. The area was multicultural – lots of black, Asian, Latino and white people. I’d classify a lot of the people who grew up there as “ghetto” and that has nothing to do with what color they are. Maybe Artest was using “ghetto” to equal “black,” but there are a lot of black people who aren’t ghetto and a lot of ghetto people who aren’t black. Your article assumes that Artest equates the two and maybe he does, but I this is inaccurate.

It irritates me to no end that people are proud to come from the ghetto. It’s like Chris Rock says – if you go to prison, you get respect. If you go to college, you’re a “bitch” and no longer accepted. I’ve never been to prison.

by Carl on Aug 3, 2008 10:00 AM PDT reply actions  

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