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PHOENIX
(By John Amato,
Crooks and Liars) May 5, 2010
― I write about sports quite often
on C&L and I haven't targeted a team
quite like this before, but if the
Diamondbacks owners want to engage in
this type of hideous politics then it's
time to call them out on it.
As the official Arizona Diamondbacks
boycott call states, “In 2010, the
National Republican Senatorial
Committee’s third highest Contributor
was the executives of the Arizona
Diamondbacks, who gave $121,600;
furthermore, they also contributed
$129,500, which ranked as the eighteenth
highest contribution to the Republican
Party Committee.” The team’s big boss,
Ken Kendrick, and his family members, E.
G. Kendrick Sr. and Randy Kendrick, made
contributions to the Republicans
totaling a staggering $1,023,527. The Kendricks follow in the footsteps of
team founder and former owner Jerry
Colangelo. Colangelo, along with other
baseball executives and ex-players,
launched a group called Battin’ 1000: a
national campaign that uses baseball
memorabilia to raise funds for a Campus
for Life, the largest anti-choice
student network in the country.
Colangelo was also deputy chair of
Bush/Cheney 2004 in Arizona, and his
deep pockets created what was called the
Presidential Prayer Team—a private
evangelical group that claims to have
signed up more than 1 million people to
drop to their knees and pray daily for
Bush.
Under Colangelo, John McCain also owned
a piece of the team. The former maverick
said before the bill’s passage that he
“understood” why it was being passed
because “the drivers of cars with
illegals in it that are intentionally
causing accidents on the freeway.”
This is who the Arizona Diamondback
executives are. This is the tradition
they stand in.
The Diamondbacks’ owners have every
right to their politics, and if we
policed the political proclivities of
every owner’s box there might not be
anyone left to root for (except for the
Green Bay Packers, who don’t have an
owner’s box). But this is different. The
law is an open invitation to racial
profiling and harassment. The boycott
call is coming from inside the state.
If the owners of the Diamondbacks want
to underwrite an ugly edge of bigotry,
we should raise our collective sporting
fists against them. A boycott is also an
expression of solidarity with
Diamondback players such as Juan
Guitterez, Gerardo Parra, and Rodrigo
Lopez. They shouldn’t be put in a
position where they’re cheered on the
playing field and then asked for their
papers when the uniform comes off.
The Diamondback people aren't just
donating to the Republican Party like
most professional sports team owners
do---they are helping to create this
climate of fear and hate-mongering. It's
obscene.
Rep. Grijalva had to close his office
because of death threats that he
received over this draconian law. How
long will it be until Arizona players
find themselves caught up in the police
state that Colangelo and Kendricks have
helped bring to the state of Arizona?
And I'm only talking baseball players.
What about the rest of their pro teams
and college teams as well as all the
visiting athletes that come in and play
in the state of Arizona? Studies show
that about 27% of all MLB players are
Latino and almost 40% are players of
color.
The total population of Major League
players of color (39.6 percent) was
comprised of Latino (27percent),
African‐American (10.2 percent) or Asian
(2.4 percent). MLB has been remarkably
consistent in terms of the percentage of
white players. Between the 1998 and the
2008 seasons, 59‐61 percent of the
playershave been white in each season
with the exception of 2004 which saw 63
percent of the players being white.
There have been numerous studies done
about the numbers of African Americans
who are playing Major League Baseball,
and included in those studies are
fascinating results regarding the rise
of the Latino player.
Furthermore, a Latino, Arturo Moreno,
owns the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
Two people of color, GM Ken Williams and
manager Ozzie Guillen, guided the White
Sox to a World Series title in 2005.
Omar Minaya, baseball's only Latino GM,
and Willie Randolph, one of two
African-American managers, guided the
Mets to the NL Championship Series last
year. And according to MLB, people of
color constitute 33 percent of the
managerial positions within the minor
leagues.
"Baseball is more diverse than ever,"
said Jimmie Lee Solomon, executive vice
president of baseball operations for MLB.
Being diverse and playing baseball in
Arizona has now become a hazardous
proposition.
Here's more:
We can support the boycott when the
Diamondbacks come to play in our cities
across the country, namely where there
is a heavy concentration of Latinos and
immigrants, namely Los Angeles, Chicago,
Houston, San Francisco, and New York.
For those of you who attend Dodger
games, the audience is always roughly
80% folks of color, and we’re sure it is
the same elsewhere, so this would have
huge ramifications for sales of tickets
and merchandise if supported by our
communities. You can view when they are
coming to a town near you at ... We have
compiled the donations from this family
to the Republican machine in Arizona,
outlined next.
America's Voice has more:
Boycott Arizona. Various media outlets
refer to a planned boycott of Arizona to
protest its passage of the law. La
Opinión (Los Angeles), in an editorial
titled “Say NO to Arizona” (“Diga ‘NO’ a
Arizona”), writes: “We express our
outrage in the face of this abuse of
power. We call for a boycott of all
goods and services from Arizona and
pledge to avoid tourism in the state as
well. Let's send a signal of our disgust
with an arrogant state government that
asserts powers it does not have in order
to persecute a minority population.” .
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