民主党在选区划分之战中将黑人运动员当作棋子
Democrats Using Black Athletes As Pawns In Redistricting War

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/democrats-using-black-athletes-pawns-redistricting-war

美国全国有色人种协进会(NAACP)和国会黑人核心小组(CBC)发起了名为“越界”(Out of Bounds)的运动,呼吁黑人学生运动员抵制南部各州的东南联盟(SEC)高校。此次抗议旨在向这些机构施压,要求其谴责共和党主导的选区重划图;批评者认为这些重划方案削弱了黑人的政治代表权。包括哈基姆·杰弗里斯(Hakeem Jeffries)和伊薇特·克拉克(Yvette Clarke)在内的国会黑人核心小组领导人主张,这些从黑人人才身上获利的高校有道德义务反对这些“种族压迫性”的投票政策,他们甚至不惜阻挠旨在补偿大学运动员的两党法案《SCORE法案》,以作为施压筹码。 这一运动引发了激烈的辩论。支持者认为,这是对抗系统性剥夺公民权所采取的必要立场,并将机构的沉默视为同谋。相反,批评者认为该策略不公平地要求年轻运动员为了与职业生涯无关的政治事业,牺牲自己的职业前景、财务保障和代际财富。通过将抗议置于《SCORE法案》等立法工作之上,国会黑人核心小组表明,他们将对未能与其政治议程保持一致的机构施加职业影响。他们并将此次抵制活动视为针对企业和学术界在社会正义问题上保持沉默这一更大规模运动的开端。

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原文

The Congressional Black Caucus, aligned with the NAACP, is urging black college athletes to avoid Southeastern Conference schools in Southern states as a form of economic pressure against Republican-drawn redistricting maps that eliminate majority-black congressional districts. The campaign is called "Out of Bounds,” and is essentially asking young black athletes to forfeit their best shot at a professional sports career so Democratic lawmakers can make a political statement about redistricting.

NAACP calls for black athletes to boycott college sports in south

“Across the South, Black athletes have helped build some of the most profitable college athletic programs in America, generating hundreds of millions of dollars in annual revenue,” the NAACP argues on its “Out of Bounds” campaign website. “At the same time, several southern state governments are moving to limit, reduce, weaken, or erase Black voting representation by creating new, unconstitutional voting districts.”

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries framed the redistricting fights as "an unprecedented attack on black political representation,” demanding "an unprecedented response." That response, apparently, involves steering eighteen-year-old football recruits away from Alabama, Georgia, LSU, Florida, Tennessee, Texas, and Texas A&M - programs that collectively represent the most direct pipeline to the NFL in American sports. Jeffries said black lawmakers are "standing in solidarity with NAACP in its call for athletes to boycott institutions within the SEC that belong to states that have unleashed these Jim Crow-like racially oppressive tactics, which is unacceptable, unconscionable and un-American,” he continued. “And we believe that the silence of these institutions is complicity, and we will not stand for it.” 

For a talented black athlete from anywhere in the country, an SEC scholarship is frequently the fastest and most visible route to a professional contract, financial security and generational wealth. Yet, Jeffries and CBC Chair Yvette Clarke are asking those athletes to set that aside. 

"The Congressional Black Caucus cannot support legislation benefiting major athletic institutions that continue to remain silent while black voting rights and black political power are being systematically dismantled across the South,” Clarke said.

The legislation in question is the SCORE Act, a bipartisan proposal backed by the NCAA that would establish national standards for compensating college athletes. The bill had been scheduled for a House floor vote before Republican leaders were forced to postpone it after CBC members signaled opposition. 

In other words, a bill designed to ensure college athletes get paid was delayed, in part, because black Democratic lawmakers blocked it to protest that Southern public universities are not taking a stand against redistricting. 

According to Jeffries, these universities "should feel compelled to speak up. Not because of their athletic programs; because it's the right thing to do." Clarke argued that "institutions that profit from black talent and black communities have a responsibility to stand with those communities when their fundamental rights are under attack," extending that logic beyond athletics to "corporate America or any other institution within American civil society."

Clarke warned that the effort is "just the beginning" and could spread beyond state universities, adding, "Let this serve as an example: Silence from our institutions in moments of injustice carries consequences."

The CBC and NAACP can package this campaign in the language of “justice” and “solidarity,” but strip away the rhetoric, and the message is brutally simple: Democratic politicians want young black athletes to torpedo their own futures to wage a political pressure campaign over congressional maps. Democrats may be angry over Republican redistricting efforts, but they are asking young black athletes to walk away from the fastest route to the NFL, millions of dollars, and generational wealth over a political battle that has nothing to do with them or SEC football programs.

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