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Golden State Warriors v Oklahoma City Thunder - Game Four

Source: Layne Murdoch / Getty

In “Django Unchained,” Quentin Tarantino introduced many to the idea of Mandingo fighting.
A key scene in the cartoonish super slave narrative shows the graphic image of two buff and bloody slaves fighting to the death for their master’s amusement.

Some historians have dismissed the idea that this was ever a common practice, since only a truly sadistic business owner would risk his most valuable asset for pure entertainment.

But a quick look at America’s modern sports culture shows that remnants of Mandingo fighting are still alive and well in this nation’s DNA.

The plantation-style business models that run professional and college sports may be the most direct parallels to slave culture we have today, with the exception of private prisons. And although Black athletes are told to be happy and humble with their million dollar pay checks and adoring White fan bases, they are also told to ignore the fact that their pain and labor generates billions for owners whose value for their humanity is limited by a salary cap.

As Phil Jackson and George Karl demonstrated with their recent comments about LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony, even non-owners are invested in this dynamic. Most media and fans also buy into the plantation dynamic without ever questioning their complicit place in it.

But while media members do their best to fan the flames of the seemingly estranged relationship between former teammates Kevin Durant and Russell Westbrook, the same journalists rarely play instigator in feuds between players like James and Anthony and their senior White overseers. Many rushed to translate and White-splane Phil’s “posse” comments instead of giving true consideration to why it was inherently offensive.

Despite both players’ steady insistence that they harbor no bad blood for one another, reporters have done their best to cook up a Durant and Westbrook beef this season. Hip-Hop lost two of its greatest stars in the 1990’s after the media succeeded in sparking a similar war between stars from the East and West coast.
Fans, of all races, also play their part. For years, NBA fans have complained that players are too friendly with one another, on and off the court. They long for the days when athletes hated each other with the passion of house and field slaves. But they usually fail to see how they encourage the crabs in the barrel mentality that Willie Lynch famously prescribed to keep slaves in their place.

Competitiveness is a natural part of sports, but we must be aware of the line between good-natured rivalry and plantation politics. Athletes like James, Anthony, Westbrook and Durant all deserve applause for resisting the bait owners, fans and media offer to promote Mandingo wars. Whether these fights were common or exaggerated, their symbolism cannot be overlooked.

 

 

 

Why America Doesn’t Want Kevin Durant And Russell Westbrook To Get Along  was originally published on globalgrind.com