Bullfrog said:herman said:... Toronto Sun shills leaping to the defense of Panetta and Quenneville...
I agree except that I'm having trouble with this part. I've learned a lot about myself (including my own biases) and those of others and the importance of intent vs impact (and I've been on the receiving end.) But it also took until my 30s to start to have a real understanding of these things. I used to struggle with the word "privilege" and what it really meant. Same with "racist" and "racism." But I'm learning -- actively (taking courses/workshops/having conversations, etc.)
These issues are obviously of great importance to you and they should be to everyone. But I think there's some nuance that gets ignored. Panetta is a relatively young man playing in a competitive sports league. While it doesn't matter, I found his response to be genuine.....sincere. While you're absolutely correct that the impact is what's important, I find some of the responses to be dismissive of someone like Panetta; demonizing even.
People are calling for his indefinite suspension; some even for a permanent ban from professional hockey. Is this how we want to teach people?
I don't know Panetta; I don't know Subban. Panetta might be a completely racist douchebag, or he might be a sincere young man who truly regrets -- and has learned from -- this event.
Panetta, like me, likely doesn't understand the impact of these gestures (ill-intentioned or not) as he hasn't experienced life as a black person in white-dominated hockey culture.
I'm not being dismissive nor am I defensive; I think Nik's response about culpability and ignorance is well-articulated.
EDIT: Herman in this post I assumed you were white. If you are not, I am sorry for making that assumption. I shouldn't have done that. I did it because I thought the story would be more relatable if I used one of the nicest posters on this board. If it offends you I will modify it.
I think this sums up how I am thinking. I don't demy that Panetta made a mistake but I think it could have been used as a learning experience instead of him never being able to play in the league anymore. The sad thing is that this could have been avoided if someone had said to him after he did the body builder pose to one of his white opponents earlier "Hey, I wouldn't ever do that to an African American because it really looks like you are imitating a monkey" but no one did that.
The scenario I have in my head is something along the lines of this. Let's say Herman runs into a friend in a Starbucks. He chats for a while, and his friend makes an inside joke, so as Herman is leaving he gives his friend a wink and a smile. Now as he is doing that he passes an African American and he sees the wink and a smile routine. Now let's say that in the old days this was a reference to two slave owners making a deal, so the African American rightly so takes offense, records a video of Herman, explains the situation and explains way it is a racist act. The video goes viral and by the time Herman gets to work, his boss has seen it and fires him for showing that side of himself.
Now I have to say, that I think Herman is one of the most conceitous and cordial posters here, so I would have a really hard time agreeing with him being fired on that basis, but I only know his persona from this site.
I was on a leadership course not to long ago, and I learned a lot about myself and how I view other cultures. For the course, we had to take a cultural acceptance assessment. I thought I would do really well in this because I always thought that I was very accepting of other cultures. I always live learning about how people live and grow in different corners of the world and I find Canadian culture to be somewhat lacking.
I did okay on the assessment but not as well as I thought I would. The instructor explained that one of my shortcomings is that when I am dealing with people I wouldn't take culture into account. Now I did this because I believed that by removing cultural background for everyone I was levelling the field and treating everybody equally, but as she explained, you can't do that because culture helps to define who we are, so by dismissing culture you are essentially dismissing a part of that person. So now I approach things differently and try to understand a person and their culture and how that plays into them as a human being. So I'm better today, than I was ten years ago, but it's possible there is a person out there that thinks I hate their culture because I dismissed it in an effort to be fair to everyone.
Like even now I am somewhat scared to post this because I am unsure if I should use the term African American.