What a joke, if it weren't for "tinkering" with the US Constitution, slavery would still be legal in the US, and only white men who own properties would be allowed to vote.
Just putting it out there, the people who wrote or participated in the writing of both the Declaration of Independence and Constitution (including the Bill of Rights), most of them owned slaves. This is a fact that many textbooks and classes gloss over if not skip entirely.
Who would have thought that Daryl Morey would become a symbol of freedom? Never say never in this world LMAO
Zach Lowe’s response on his podcast today was somewhat playing the middle. Trying to understand what LeBron probably meant and was talking about but was also disappointed on his statement. And currently on The Jump to no surprise Kendrick Perkins backing LeBron completely and calling Morey the selfish one.
the 34 red and yellow jersey with the word Houston on the front stands for everything that is good in the universe it's pure
The fact that they may have owned slaves does not make the document or its' principles obsolete today. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness doesn't sound like slavery to me. We've had an African American in the highest office in the nation. We have MANY African American millionaires (ahem. .hello Lebron) Look at what our Constitution and newfound freedom did for the world. We took a 5,000 year leap. If not for the freedoms Americans enjoyed, we may still be riding horses and gathering firewood. Freedom, prosperity and innovation have driven technological advances since the Industrial Revolution. America (and our Constitution and freedoms) were the driving force for ALL of the freedoms you see today AROUND THE WORLD. Pretty much ALL countries when America was being formed were run by monarchies and kings/queens. America was a revolutionary idea. So, what countries today have a better model than we have?
Not saying changes weren't necessary. Those changes were needed and were done within the confines of our laws and rules. What I AM saying is wholesale changes aren't necessary. Saying that the principles of our Constitution are unfounded because some of them may have been slave owners is folly. Some of them may have been adulterers too, or alcoholics, or whatever you choose to look for. Sure, they weren't perfect men. But that doesn't make the system they setup illegitimate does it? Slavery has been a practice in Africa for eons and still exists today in some forms. So, let's not just make this about white people. MANY Irish people were sold into slavery. Even some black men in America were slave holders. Unfortunately, that was part of the culture. Takes time for those changes to take effect. So, let's take TODAY's politicians for example. Are they morally better than those framers of the Constitution? I would hope you wouldn't think so. Corruption and special interests are so prevalent from BOTH parties. I wouldn't trust our Congress to come up with rules for a dodge ball game, much less a NEW fair and impartial system of living. 'If it aint' broke, don't fix it'.
Just listen to Lebron talk for 5 minutes. Or read something he has written, like a tweet.... He - more than anyone else - should not be talking about anyone’s education.
- It does make it a rather hypocritical statement however - "Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" while having a system of slavery sure sounds like hypocrisy to me, which is something the US is great at. - So has many other countries long, long before we did - Refer to the previous point - What has the Constitution done for the world? Please do tell! - I suppose the Industrial Revolution didn't happen in Europe then? - The Industrial Revolution started in Britain who by the way abolished slavery before the US did - Democracy and America was not a revolutionary idea. Study Athens when you have a chance - Most of Europe is actually still loosely "constitutional monarchy" Oh, and don't forget about the forced relocation of Native Americans during Manifest Destiny, how we ended up with Cuba at the time, Japanese concentration camps, being the first and only country to use a nuclear warhead against another country due wartime, Communist witch hunt during the Cold War, invasion of Iraq without approval from UN because everyone knew it was for oil, the setup of puppet governments in Latin and South America to reap benefits for private companies, enhanced interrogation of innocents after 9-11 under the ironically named Patriot Act as additions to the list of US atrocities and hypocrisy. Keep in mind that when each of these events happened, we flew them under the guise of "freedom", "defending democracy", "American values", and other national pride inducing rhetoric. Don't confuse this as me thinking the US is this terrible country to live in however. Just recognize that, just like any other country, the US has no shortage of skeletons in its closet. Before any of us gets on whatever self-righteous pedestal we may want to stand on, it's important to look in the mirror first.
I agree Lebron's sentiment that public figures such as Daryl Morey need to understand an issue before chiming in with his take. Current state of HK is that peaceful protests has escalated into riots and random acts violence against people from China or families of police who are themselves HKnese. Mafia and gangs are using this opportunity to create instability and chaos and threaten police officers who has cracked down on them in the past. What information does Morey have that justify him tweeting in support this violence? What does he hope to happen with tweet? That HK hoodlums continue to riot and the city continue to be vandalized and eventually destroyed? If Daryl feels so strongly about freedom where was he during Black lives Matter? Where was he when police were targeting black youth and killing them without justification? Where was his tweet storm? This was happening right in his backyard to his biggest customer base, not 10,000 miles away in a land and culture that he has no knowledge about. To me this is crux of the matter and what Lebron was trying to convey. I support 100%.
As far as I'm concerned, today Lebron James became the most hated athlete in America since O.J. Simpson. Money over Freedom. Profit over People China over United States Disgraceful.
Nope. I have spent certainly spent more time in China than LeBron James has. LeBron James never said he disagreed with Morey's opinion on Hong Kong and never said he supported China on the issue either. He had an issue with Morey saying something that cost him money..... further he said that it put players at potential physical risk. I find the fear of "physical risk" interesting, as he apparently really felt that the Chinese Communist Party government would physically harm NBA players? He is the first person I have seen actually state such an opinion, and by inference it isn't a very glowing opinion of the CCP.