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Trump: NBA Has Become Like ‘a Political Organization’ [VIDEO]

A general view inside The Field House before Game 5 of an NBA basketball first-round playoff series, between the Oklahoma City Thunder and Houston Rockets, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2020, in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. NBA players made their strongest statement yet against racial injustice Wednesday when the Milwaukee Bucks didn’t take the floor for their playoff game against the Orlando Magic. (Kim Klement/Pool Photo via AP)

President Donald Trump said Thursday that the NBA has become like “a political organization,” criticizing the league the day after player protests over police brutality led to the postponement of playoff games.

https://twitter.com/Breaking911/status/1299089021147189248?s=20

Senior White House aides earlier had suggested that the protests were not constructive and were hypocritical considering the league’s relative silence about human rights violations in China, where U.S. pro basketball has a large audience. The president said in a radio interview this month that NBA players were “very nasty” and “very dumb” for kneeling during the national anthem to protest social injustice.

The Milwaukee Bucks kicked off the boycott Wednesday by refusing to leave their locker room for the game against the Orlando Magic. The players are demanding that lawmakers act to address police brutality and racial injustice. The NBA announced Thursday’s scheduled playoffs were postponed, but the league hoped to resume play Friday or Saturday.

“They’ve become like a political organization, and that’s not a good thing,” Trump told reporters Thursday, noting that the league’s ratings are down from previous seasons. “I don’t think that’s a good thing for sports or for the country.”

Trump, who was to deliver his renomination acceptance speech Thursday evening at a scaled-back Republican National Convention, has made restoring “law and order” to cities a centerpiece of his campaign during a summer of sometimes violent protests following the death of George Floyd, a Black man whose killing by Minneapolis police in late May spurred national unrest.

Earlier Thursday, Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff said in a CNN interview that NBA protests spurred by the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin, are “absurd and silly” when compared to their response to ongoing to human rights violations in China.

The NBA last month faced scathing criticism from Republicans after an ESPN report that young participants in a league program in China were physically beaten by Chinese instructors and were not provided proper schooling.

Short also questioned why the league’s players and coaches have largely refrained from criticizing China’s human rights violations and from expressing support for Hong Kong. In a seperate MSNBC interview Thursday, Short said the NBA’s “embraced the Communist Party.”

“There is a contrast to the positions they’ve been taking,” Short said.

The league and its players have been outspoken in calls for reforms in the aftermath of the killing of Floyd. The NBA has even incorporated its support for the Black Lives Matter movement into player uniforms and advertising. Trump has called that movement “a symbol of hate.”

“NBA players are very fortunate that they have the financial position where they’re able to take a night off from work without having to have the consequences to themselves financially,’ White House senior adviser Jared Kushner told CNBC on Thursday.

In a separate appearance before an event hosted by Politico, Kushner said that he planned to reach out to Los Angles Lakers star LeBron James, an outspoken advocate for policing changes.

“Look, I do think that peaceful protest has a place and it has importance,” Kushner said. “But I do think that what we need to do right now is make sure that we take the anger that people have and we have to move from slogans to constructive solutions.”

Sen. Tom Cotton, a Trump ally, told Fox News that the reaction by NBA players to the incident in Kenosha was “premature.”

”We shouldn’t be jumping to conclusions until we have all the facts,” said Cotton, R-Ark.

Not everyone in Trump’s circle was critical of the NBA players move. The Magic, which is owned by family of Trump’s Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, issued a statement saying it stood united with players and the league in “condemning bigotry, racial injustice and the unwarranted use of violence by police against people of color.”

(AP)



3 Responses

  1. Thanks to the stupid Hobby Lobby decision, corporations have the same First Amendment rights as individuals. And Trump supports that decision.

  2. Charlie, it didn’t take Hobby Lobby to say that corporations are protected by the first amendment. Corporations have ALWAYS been protected. The New York Times is a corporation; have you ever imagined that it is not protected?! You have not. You always took for granted that it was.

    The only question resolved in Hobby Lobby was whether corporations can be said to have religious beliefs, and the OBVIOUS answer is that small, tightly held corporations can indeed have them. It may be ridiculous to speak of IBM’s or ExxonMobil’s religious beliefs, but when all of a company’s owners can be identified, and they all hold the same beliefs, and they run their company according to those beliefs, then the company itself has those beliefs. This should be obvious, since a corporation is just a convenient way to refer to all its owners collectively.

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