
Trump Has a Terrible Idea for American Sports Teams
'The Washington 'Whatever's' should IMMEDIATELY change their name back to the Washington Redskins Football Team. There is a big clamoring for this. Likewise, the Cleveland Indians, one of the six original baseball teams,' — by the way, it wasn't — 'with a storied past. Our great Indian people, in massive numbers, want this to happen. Their heritage and prestige is systematically being taken away from them.'
With typical subtlety, Trump concluded, 'OWNERS, GET IT DONE!!!'
The controversy dates back more than a half-century. It was formalized in 1968, when the National Congress of American Indians embarked on a campaign to fight negative stereotypes of native people in American culture.
For a while, however, the evidence on the word 'redskin' seemed equivocal. Polls by the Annenberg Public Policy Center, in 2004, and again by The Washington Post, in 2016, reported that a vast majority of actual Native Americans had no problem with the term. Was the whole thing just a politically correct tempest in a teapot, an effort to fix something that wasn't actually a problem?
In 2020, a new poll was conducted. This one asked respondents for more finely grained responses and gave them more opportunity to consider their answers. The outcome was very different: Almost half of 1,000 Native Americans surveyed indeed found the term 'Redskin' to be offensive. Organized college athletics had long since forsworn team mascots that were based on caricatures of Indians. Amid the national climate of racial reckoning that George Floyd's death and the Black Lives Matter movement brought on, the Washington football franchise announced it would be changing its name.
When Trump claims that 'our great Indian people, in massive numbers, want this to happen,' there is no reason to wonder if he commissioned his own secret polling. But you don't need a poll to understand why he's wrong.
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