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[WaPo] The Texas Rangers’ team name must go

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by Os Trigonum, Jul 13, 2020.

  1. Os Trigonum

    Os Trigonum Contributing Member
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    "The Texas Rangers’ team name must go":

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/07/13/texas-rangers-team-name-must-go/

    The Texas Rangers’ team name must go
    Opinion by
    Karen Attiah
    Global Opinions editor
    July 13, 2020 at 12:06 p.m. EDT

    As the Washington football team finally gives up its racist slur of a name, there is one major sports team that has avoided the spotlight and resisted meaningful engagement with the violent and racist implications of its name. To know the full history of the Texas Rangers is to understand that the team’s name is not so far off from being called the Texas Klansmen.

    I grew up in Dallas, raised on myths about Texas Rangers as brave and wholesome guardians of the Texas frontier, helping protect innocent settlers from violent Indians. At church, boys could sign up to be Royal Rangers, the Christian equivalent of the Boy Scouts. I still remember the excitement when Chuck Norris himself, star of the television show “Walker, Texas Ranger,” came to visit my elementary school class.

    My dad sometimes took my younger siblings and me to Arlington Stadium to watch the Rangers play. No state mythologizes itself quite like Texas, so of course, it made sense to have a team name that embodied that gauzy, self-regarding history. At the same time, being from a Ghanaian immigrant family, we weren’t that invested in baseball, or the team name. I just liked going because my dad would sometimes let me take sips of his Coca-Cola mixed with beer.

    What we didn’t realize at the time was that the Rangers were a cruel, racist force when it came to the nonwhites who inhabited the beautiful and untamed Texas territory. The first job of the Rangers, formed in 1835 after Texas declared independence from Mexico, was to clear the land of Indian for white settlers.

    That was just the start. The Rangers oppressed black people, helping capture runaway slaves trying to escape to Mexico; in the aftermath of the Civil War, they killed free blacks with impunity. “The negroes here need killing,” a Ranger wrote in a local newspaper in 1877, after Rangers fired on a party of black former Buffalo soldiers, killing four of them and a 4-year old girl. A jury would later find that the black soldiers “came to their death while resisting officers in the discharge of their duty,” an unsettling echo of the justification for modern-day police killings.

    In the early 20th century, Rangers played a key role in some of the worst episodes of racial violence in American history along the Texas-Mexico border. Mexicans were run out of their homes and subject to mass lynchings and shootings. The killings got so out of control that the federal government threatened to intervene.

    In his new book, “Cult of Glory: The Bold and Brutal History of the Texas Rangers,” Doug J. Swanson writes, “In service to Anglo civilization’s slow march, they functioned as executioners. Their job was to seize and hold Texas for the white man.”

    But Ranger racism is not an artifact of the distant past. Rangers would be called on to protect white supremacy into the 1960s, deployed to prevent school integration. In 1956, when black students were attempting to take classes at all-white Texarkana Junior College, Rangers stood by as the mob attacked them — and threatened to arrest the black students. For their efforts, Swanson writes, they were rewarded with a chicken dinner from the White Citizens’ Council in Texarkana.

    In anticipation of controversy from Swanson’s book, Dallas city officials quietly removed a 12-foot-tall statue of Ranger Jay Banks, the commanding officer who oversaw the efforts to prevent school integration, from Love Field airport. Perhaps city officials wanted to avoid the statue becoming a target of protest and heated public dialogue. As it stands now, the fate of the statue, which has been at Love Field since 1963, is uncertain. As a black Texan, I would shed no tears if Banks’s statue stayed locked in a dusty storage unit forever.

    But there is no storage unit for the baseball team, whose owners have expressed no inclination to change the name. “While we may have originally taken our name from the law enforcement agency, since 1971 the Texas Rangers Baseball Club has forged its own, independent identity,” the team said in a statement. “The Texas Rangers Baseball Club stands for equality. We condemn racism, bigotry and discrimination in all forms."

    This is revisionist history — and the team knows it. When the franchise, formerly the Washington Senators, moved to Texas in 1971, the Ranger name was met with protests, which were duly ignored.

    It’s time to pay attention. “It may be argued that the team name honors the current agency, not the worst elements of its history,” Chicago Tribune columnist Steve Chapman, a native Texan, wrote last month, referencing the Rangers’ modern incarnation as an elite force. “But without the history and the legends, the franchise would not have adopted the name. No one would name a major league team ‘The Police’ or ‘The Highway Patrol.' "

    If the team ownership, as it proclaims, condemns “racism, bigotry and discrimination in all forms,” there is an easy way for it to prove that. The Texas Rangers’ team name must go.
     
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  2. RayRay10

    RayRay10 Houstonian

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    It should, I'm offended that they're trying to claim all of Texas.

    Arlington A-Holes would be a good name for them.
     
  3. Nick

    Nick Contributing Member

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    Amazing that Houston decided to get rid of the Colt 45 name way back when. Seeing the current climate, things would be highly debated/contested if they were forced to try and change names now... from the NRA down to local leadership.

    Maybe this is the one unsung benefit that the "Astrodome" (which I believe was named first, and the impetus for the team name change... not some PC movement) created.
     
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  4. J.R.

    J.R. Member

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    Shut up Karen
     
    Cold Hard, dachuda86, tinman and 4 others like this.
  5. Os Trigonum

    Os Trigonum Contributing Member
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    I see what you did there
     
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  6. body slam

    body slam Member

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    and a lot of other bad stuff was done by cowboys. Arlington is going to have to change all their team names.
     
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  7. larsv8

    larsv8 Contributing Member

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    Lets not stop there, the whole team should go.
     
    arkoe, B-Bob, Ziggy and 1 other person like this.
  8. Ottomaton

    Ottomaton Contributing Member
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    Colt Firearms Company threatened to sue them. It wasnt by choice.
     
    pgabriel, tinman, B-Bob and 3 others like this.
  9. Nick

    Nick Contributing Member

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    Did it really escalate to that? I thought they made inquiries to getting a cut of the revenue... but certainly would have still supported the team's choice to use the name as it was basically rent-free advertising.
     
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  10. Ubiquitin

    Ubiquitin Contributing Member
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    And Mavericks are not good people either.
     
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  11. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Contributing Member

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  12. jiggyfly

    jiggyfly Member

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    Cowboys cannot be defined to one specific group while the Texas Rangers where a specific group.

    Nice try as deflection and I am not sure I agree with the name change.
     
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  13. Ziggy

    Ziggy QUEEN ANON

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    Cowboys is not inclusive of women, it needs to be Cowgirls.

    NEXT
     
  14. Os Trigonum

    Os Trigonum Contributing Member
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    silence is violence
     
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  15. jiggyfly

    jiggyfly Member

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    How about Cowpersuaders?
     
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  16. Ottomaton

    Ottomaton Contributing Member
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    Uninclusive of odd-toed ungulates.
     
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  17. jiggyfly

    jiggyfly Member

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    Bovinebeguilers?
     
    jcf, RayRay10, B-Bob and 1 other person like this.
  18. Sweet Lou 4 2

    Sweet Lou 4 2 Contributing Member
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    I didn't know the Texas Rangers had such an awful history. I just thought they were that other team in Texas.
     
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  19. Two Sandwiches

    Two Sandwiches Contributing Member

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    Rockets blew up and killed people. Let's not forget rocket propelled grenades.


    We're going to become the Houston Flying Dildos.
     
    ROXTXIA, RayRay10 and malakas like this.
  20. Os Trigonum

    Os Trigonum Contributing Member
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    Sam Houston was a slave owner
     
    RayRay10 likes this.

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