Sunday, August 23, 2020

J-Speaks: The WNBA's Stand For Social Justice For All, Especially Minority Women

 The 2020 Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) WNBA Season, which is taking place at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, FL because of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic has been about speaking out for social justice, especially against minority women, who have their lives taken by those sworn to protect them. Along with that, the WNBA has also taken this time to show their respect to an NBA great, who we lost late into the first month of this year, who made it his business to show his love and respect to a league that had a real impact on his second oldest daughter.

The WNBA began this season by paying their respects as part of the “Say Her Name” campaign to Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) of Louisville, KY who was killed in her own home by plain closed police officers, who shot into her home while she was sleeping on Mar. 13 in a no knock warrant execution. The officers who took her life are still walking free and have not been arrested for over 150-plus days.

Since the beginning of the WNBA’s 23rd season, the league has kept the name of Ms. Taylor on the minds of the public that has been watching their games by having her name on the back of their jerseys right below their last names.

Two weeks back, the WNBA honored Sandra Bland, a 28-year-old African American woman, whose body was found hung in her jail cell in Waller County, TX on July 13, 2015, three days after she was arrested during a pretextual traffic stop, which allows police to briefly detain a person solely based on the suspicion of that person’s involvement in criminal activity.

Last week, the WNBA honored Michelle Cusseaux, who in 2014 was shot by police in her home in Phoenix, AZ while they attempted to take her to a mental health facility. She died at the age of 54, and if she were still alive, she would have turned 50 years old last Monday.

That exchange Ms. Bland had with Texas State Trooper Brian Encinia resulted in Bland’s arrest and a charge of assaulting an officer of law enforcement. The arrest was recorded by Encinia’s dashcam and the cell phone of a bystander, and Bland’s own cell phone.

After the dashcam video was reviewed by Texas authorities, Encinia was placed on administrative leave for his failure to properly execute a traffic stop. They along with the FBI conducted an investigation into Ms. Bland’s death and came to the conclusion that the Waller County jail as well did not follow required procedures that consisted of checking on inmates in a timely matter, along with ensuring that employees fully completed the required mental health training.

When the case went to the grand jury in December 2015, they declined to indict the county sheriff and jail staff for felony charges related to Bland’s death.

In September of 2016, Bland’s mother did settle a wrongful death lawsuit for $1.9 million and some procedural changes against the county jail and police department in the death of her daughter.

While Encinia did get indicted for lying under oath because of the false statements about the circumstances surrounding the arrest of Bland, the Texas Department of Public Safety did fire him but he was never brought up on charges for her murder. The charge of perjury against Encinia though was dropped because he agreed to conclude his career in law enforcement.

In the case of Ms. Cusseaux, it has been 2,201 days since she was killed and charges have yet to come to those that took her life.

Watching a film about who Ms. Bland was and how her life was taken, and how the people responsible for that was one of the many things that have been going on during the WNBA’s season at aforementioned IMG Academy.

This past week, players like perennial All-Star league MVP and WNBA champion Candace Parker of the Los Angeles Sparks and her teammate in fellow perennial All-Star Nneka Ogwumike; three-time WNBA champion and perennial All-Star Sue Bird and her teammate in 2018 WNBA MVP Breanna Stewart of the Seattle Storm; fellow perennial All-Star and WNBA MVP and her teammates in two-time WNBA champion and 2017 WNBA MVP Sylvia Fowles and reigning WNBA Rookie of the Year Napheesa Collier participated in the “#SayHerName” campaign where they each said Michelle Cusseaux name in a video.

This is something though that the league is not doing. All 12 of its teams have participated in the “Say Here Name” campaign.

Another step the WNBA has taken in the fight for social justice is forming the Social Justice Council, which consists of Layshia Clarendon of the New York Liberty, Sydney Colson of the Chicago Sky, Tierra Ruffin-Pratt of the Los Angeles Sparks, rookie Satou Sabally of the Dallas Wings, perennial All-Star and 2018 WNBA MVP Brenna Stewart of the Seattle Storm, and two-time WNBA All-Star and 2018 WNBA Rookie of the Year A’ja Wilson of the Las Vegas Aces.

In a virtual interview with NBATV’s Chris Miles on the Aug. 9 premiere of “WNBA Weekly with Ruffin-Pratt, she talked about how her being a part of the “Social Justice Council,” which was formed by the WNBA players themselves stems from her cousin Julian Dawkins being killed in 2013 when she made the now defending WNBA champion Washington Mystics as an undrafted player by an off-duty police officer in their hometown of Alexandria, VA.

“So it’s something that me and my family have been big on since then, and trying to get justice for those who can’t speak for themselves,” Ruffin-Pratt, affectionally called TRP since she began her career with the Mystics said about her and her family’s involvement in the fight for social justice.

“I think with the ‘Social Justice Council’ we’ve been able to come up with a few ideas, especially with the names on the back of the jerseys because its bigger than just Breonna Taylor. She’s been the most recent one, but its been a lot of other lives, especially women’s lives that have been lost. This week, we’re speaking for Sandra Bland, but there’s been a lot of people and women that have been killed that we don’t even know about. A lot of people don’t even know their names. So, we’re trying to get that information out there and use our platform right now just for the women and the ‘Say Her Name Movement,’ and just kind of grow that.”

How the WNBA players and coaches have made sure that those that watch the games on ESPN 2, NBATV and CBS Sports Network keep in mind the names of those that lost their lives, especially the women who have been killed by law enforcement is by wearing T-Shirts during warmups that have on the back of them “Say Her Name.”

Ruffin-Pratt said the idea came from that came from a college professor, activist, co-founder and executive director of the African American Policy Forum Kimberle Crenshaw, who started the “#SayHerName” campaign to raise awareness about the number of women and girls that had their lives taken far too soon by those sworn to protect and serve them.

We have heard of all the men that have been killed by law enforcement like Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Tamir Rice, Freddie Gray, George Floyd, and Rayshard Brooks to name a few. Unfortunately, the likes of Natasha McKenna, Tanisha Anderson, Michelle Cusseaux, Aura Rosser, and Maya Hall have slipped through the consciousness of all of us.

To make society more aware of the injustice that minority women face just as much as their male counterparts, Professor Crenshaw created a website https://aapf.org/sayhername that consist of a plethora of names and stories of so many African American women that were killed in some form by law enforcement.

“We just kind of used that and piggybacked off it and tried to make it even greater than what it already is,” Ruffin-Pratt said.

Among those that have joined the WNBA’s “Social Justice Council” in their mission are former candidate for Governor of the state of Georgia Stacey Abrams and former First Lady Michelle Obama on board as well, Ruffin-Pratt has said that the conversations that have taken place so far, via Zoom with Mrs. Obama and Ms. Abrams and what they have been done outside of the WNBA bubble to make the public aware of this injustice has been “great.”

Those conversations have also allowed the WNBA players to learn and formulate more ideas on to use their own individual platforms to make the public aware.

One of the things that the Ruffin-Pratt’s team the Sparks have done is come up with a new team slogan in their contribution to social justice of “Change Has No Offseason.”

There have been movements and times like this where everyone has a level and heightened sense that change needs to happen but get to a point where their focus and energy that it takes to keep it going to really create the type of change that necessary for all of us to thrive as a whole slowly dies down.

Ruffin-Pratt said that the death of George Floyd back in May along with how the COVID-19 Pandemic, which has impacted the world on a global scale, but even more on minority communities that we have to find a way to keep the pressure up on those empower to enact real change that will make the United States of America live up to the ideal of being more inclusive and more equal for all of us and not just a certain few.

“This is something that’s been going on for generations and generations for Black people. So, we can’t let it die, and they came up with the ‘Change Has No Offseason’ slogan and I was like ‘that’s great’ because it’s so true,” Ruffin-Pratt said of the Sparks new slogan. “Basketball and sports, we have time to take off and rest our bodies and our minds but with change and racial injustice, and social injustice, we can’t take days off because this is our life. This is our livelihood. This is how our kids, our grandkids, and people coming up after us will see the world. So, if they see us working really hard to try to make change, then they’ll continue to do the same thing.”

Another WNBA player that has been affected by the impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic and the systemic racism that has been around in our nation for a little over four centuries has been the previously mentioned Sabally.

The No. 2 overall pick in this year’s WNBA draft out of the University of Oregon said in her virtual interview with NBATV analyst, 13-year NBA veteran and Vera Institute of Justice board member Caron Butler that she has always been ambitious about civil rights and the lives of minorities because of her dad being an black and growing up around a black family.

“It just affects you when you see that someone is killing a man who looks like you. Who looks like your father, your brothers,” Sabally, said, adding, “It just goes deep and its traumatizing?”

Sabally, who was born in New York, and raised in Gambia and Germany also said that because of the stigma around black people not being smart that she had to always work even harder in school and justify that she could take care of her business in the classroom, getting snarky comments from her peers about if she scored A for her school work.

When she would visit the zoo with her brothers, someone would always make a comment to her to “go back where you came from” or “go into the monkey cages.”

Growing up in Germany, Sabally said that being African American she would always get asked where she was from, and while she gets asked that same question by some here in the U.S. because of her accent but do not ask why are you black, which she said she gets asked a lot in Germany.

It might be minor but Sabally said it happens all around. Particularly in Gambia, she gets asked the question where she is from because her skin is lighter.

“Without knowing anything about a person, people ask where are you from? And that’s just something minor but it happens all around,” Sabally said.

One particular thing that Sabally said about the kind of racism minorities in America face as well as the like Turkish and Arabic folks overseas.  is getting pulled over because they drive a nice car.

Sabally said that she had Caucasian friends that would talk bad about Turkish and Arabic folks and she would say to them, “you know I’m a minority too, right?”

She added, “One common thing that I have about Americans and Germans is that people always like to point fingers. Countries like to point fingers at each other and distract from their own wrong doings in their own countries.”

No matter whether she was in Germany or here in the United States, Sabally always gets asked if she is safe being an African American?

She is very aware that she has certain privileges over her minority male counterparts but both Germany and the United States each have their form of discrimination and racism but Sabally said it is important to put the focus on what is happening in your own country and deal with that instead of worrying what is going on in another part of the world when it comes to racism.

What gives Sabally hope that we will be on the other side of this struggle for true love and acceptance between minorities, particularly African Americans and Caucasians across the globe is the countless demonstrations and peaceful protests in Germany and in Portland, OR where people are literally taking to the streets in the fight for social justice.  

While she has been treated differently and not always in the best of ways wherever she has been, Sabally has been comes to the perspective that COVID-19 and racism are the same. It just one has been around longer in racism than the Coronavirus.  

When asked by Butler what she would say to those who are done talking about racism, Sabally said she would ask those individuals, how do you think most African Americans and minorities feel about dealing with racism every day?

Caucasians can just turn it off if they see it being discussed on television or unfollow those talking about racism on social media. Minority communities have to live through these experiences and speaking up about them for centuries.

“We’re tired of having to speak up every time, having to say the same things over and over again for one more person listen, but it’s worth it,” Sabally said. “Just learning more would be worth it too.”

That is why Sabally said that she plans on having live conversations on her Instagram page with experts on the topic of racism so she can be a more informed 22-year-old who is trying to figure out the world that is trying to be on the right side of history while hopefully bringing those that fall her and fans of hers and the Wings basketball team.

“So I want to be able to use my platform to share the connections that I have through, you know my sports and I want to share those connections and that knowledge that I would gain from them,” she said. “I want it to be out in the world and I want other people to have access as well.”

Two-time WNBA champion and seven-time All-Star in her 13-year career (2006-2018) with the Phoenix Mercury, Liberty, Sky, Sparks, and Indiana Fever Cappie Pondexter said this time better than ever to have those tough conversations on the issues between minorities and Caucasians because it is necessary for us to allow this country to live up to the ideal in what is said in this country’s national anthem of “indivisible with liberty and justice for all.”

Like Ruffin-Pratt, Pondexter saw up close what social injustice looks like when she lost her cousin at age 16 and going through the process of figuring out who killed her cousin was a difficult on because justice was never served.

The second time it happened, Pondexter and her family were able to put pressure on the Chicago justice system because they were laser focused on bringing to trial those who took another family member of hers from this world, see them found guilty and sentenced to prison.

“From those experiences I’m just, you know, passing it along to everybody else. Just trying to join organizations that are dedicated to doing the right things to make this place better for all of us,” Pondexter said in her virtual interview with Butler.

Pondexter also said that our nation needs to make being a nerd, meaning a lawyer or a judge cool again.

As good as it is being an athlete or an entertainer because of the opportunity to make a lot of money, those that are in power are those that are educated, and the only way our country will be better post Coronavirus is for the country at large to get up to speed on who they elect at the local, state, and federal level from the history of the people elected before that individual and what are their core principles that make them tick.

“There’s so much you have to learn about a person before you elect them,” Pondexter said. “I’m just hoping that we’re all patient through this process because I think that’s the most important thing because if we’re not patient and we’re just saying, ‘Oh well I’m going to vote for this person because this person said that we should vote for them,’ then it’s kind of like, ‘Well nobody’s paying attention,’ you know. And it’s time that we all pay attention.”

One of the most important ways to really create serious social change is to elect officials that want to make our country more equal at the local, state, and federal levels.

Junior Senator Kelly Loeffler (R) from Georgia since 2020, who was appointed to her seat in the upper chamber of Congress, who is also a co-owner of the Atlanta Dream back in early July was very critical of the “Black Lives Matter” movement, despite the WNBA’s dedication of its season in honor of the aforementioned Breonna Taylor.

Senator Loeffler faced major scrutiny because of a letter she wrote that warned the league that “subscribing to a particular political agenda undermines the potential of the sport and sends a message of exclusion.”

She also advocated that all 12 WNBA team’s add American flags on their jerseys saying in a tweet, “@WNBA should stand for and unite around the American Flag—not divisive political movements like BLM that unapologetically seek to defund the police.”  

In a show of solidarity, the WNBA showed their opposition to Senator Loeffler’s comments by wearing shirts with the name of her opponent that is running against her for that Senate seat in the Rev. Dr. Raphael Warnock, the senior pastor of the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, GA, the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s former congregation.

WNBA Commissioner Kathy Engelbert did say that Senator Loeffler despite her comments that caused a firestorm will not be forced to sell her portion of the Dream.

“Saying Black Lives Matter is nothing political. It is a human rights issue,” Sabally said. “So, when people are still up to this day taking to the streets on protests, which is not really covered by the media, I am hopeful because I see that and I’m like, ‘Yeah, man. People are out there. People are fighting. People are speaking up and I just love how this conversation has not died out on us.”

So far in the month of August, we had the 55-year Anniversary when the month of August, we had the 55-year Anniversary of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 back on the 6th; the 100-year Anniversary of Women’s Suffrage and this Friday will be the 57th Anniversary of the March on Washington, which will be commemorated with another major march on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.  

The Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic has brought many issues that have been swept under the rug for far too long. At the forefront of taking on these issues, especially those that come to social injustice against minorities, especially African American women has been the WNBA. They have made it their mission to use this season to put a major spotlight on those issues by honoring those black women whose lives have been taken at the hands of law enforcement. The players have formed the “Social Justice Council” where they can plan formulate ideas on how to get the word out on those that have lost their lives at the hands of law enforcement and what will be required to start to put an end to this unnecessary carnage against minorities, especially women of color.

That is why the Mystics, in conjunction with the Washington Wizards and Monumental Sports and Entertainment have teamed up to send a message on the importance of exercising the right to vote on November 3 with the website WhenWeAllVote.org/Wizards and WhenWeAllVote.org/Mystics.

The WNBA has been at the forefront of confronting these issues since 2016 and have made a full fledge commitment to be in this fight for social justice for all minorities, especially minority women until it becomes a reality.

As NBA on ESPN analyst Kendrick Perkins, who helped the Boston Celtics win a title in 2008 said on the Aug 5 edition of ESPN’ “NBA: The Jump,” “Women, they don’t do a lot of talking, they take action. Men do a lot of talking, and then action comes a little later Because women, they are feisty and they mean business, and I want to applaud all those women in the WNBA. Great job.

“It’s just time that inclusion and diversity happens because it’s important that we all see somebody that looks like us on all fronts,” Pondexter said about how our nation needs to put an end to racism and sexism. “It feels good to know that somebody is doing something successful that you look like.”

Information and quotations are courtesy of 7/7/2020 https://www.wxxines.org story “Say Her Name: How The Fight For Racial Justice Can Be More Inclusive of Black Women,” by Mary Louise Kelly & Heidi Glenn; 7/8/2020 https://www.cnn.com story “WNBA Revolts Over Atlanta Dream Co-Owner Sen. Kelly Loeffler’s Comments About Black Lives Mater, by Allison Gordon; 8/1/2020 6 p.m. “Washington Mystics versus Chicago Sky,” on NBATV;   8/3/2020 8:30 p.m. NBATV’s “1-On-1 with Caron Butler:” with Satou Sabally and Clint Smith; 8/4/2020 7:30 p.m. NBATV’s “1-On-1 With Caron Butler:” Cappie Pondexter and Charles Ramsey 8/5/2020 1 a.m. edition of ESPN’s “Sportscenter,” with Steve Levy and Zubin Mehenti; 8/5/2020 3 p.m. edition of “NBA: The Jump” on ESPN with Rachel Nichols, Zach Lowe, and Kendrick Perkins; 8/9/2020 10:30 a.m. edition of “WNBA Weekly,” on NBATV with Matt Winer and Renee Montgomery; 8/15/2020 11 a.m. edition of “WNBA Weekly,” on NBATV with Kristen Ledlow and Renee Montgomery; https://aapf.org/sayhername; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Sandra_Bland; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cappie_Pondexter; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sylvia_Fowles

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