NBA releases list of 29 pre-approved social justice messages for players’ shirts, unfazed by hilarious irony

Get the latest BPR news delivered free to your inbox daily. SIGN UP HERE.


The virtual-signaling, very woke National Basketball Association has reportedly settled on a list of social justice messages that can be displayed on the back of player jerseys for the first four days of the restarted season.

The suspended NBA season is scheduled to restart on July 30 at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex in Orlando, Fla., at the Walt Disney World Resort. The NBA has reportedly already agreed to paint the words Black Lives Matter inside the sidelines on all three arenas that will be in use when the games begin.

Given massive guaranteed salaries and other forms of leverage, the players pretty much run the NBA, even though there is no constitutional guarantee of free speech in the private sector workplace. Thus, the league and the players’ union (i.e., billionaires and millionaires) reportedly ironed out, as it were, the following list:

  • Black Lives Matter
  • Say Their Names
  • Vote
  • I Can’t Breathe
  • Justice
  • Peace
  • Equality
  • Freedom
  • Enough
  • Power to the People
  • Justice Now
  • Say Her Name
  • Sí Se Puede (Yes We Can)
  • Liberation
  • See Us
  • Hear Us
  • Respect Us
  • Love Us
  • Listen
  • Listen to Us
  • Stand Up
  • Ally
  • Anti-Racist
  • I Am A Man
  • Speak Up
  • How Many More
  • Group Economics
  • Education Reform
  • Mentor

Players, who generally seek blue-check Twitter applause for their activism/brand above all else, can opt for just a traditional jersey containing their last name, but the peer pressure in the locker room is going to be enormous to go with the customized messaging.

“After the first four nights, a player can simply go back to their last name. If they choose to continue showing a social message, their name would go below the number,” ESPN explained.

“The NBA and NBPA announced an agreement on June 24 to continue to discuss fighting systemic racism and to make it one of the focuses of the restart,” ESPN added.

Over the past few years, NBA TV ratings have trended downward substantially.

The vast majority of NBA fans regardless of background or ideology watch games as an escape from politics and other serious concerns, so it remains to be seen how social justice messaging will affect 2020 viewership. The National Football League may encounter the same dilemma when, as expected, players kneel during the National Anthem.

These will perhaps be more test cases for the get woke, go broke concept.

That aside, many have pointed out that messaging supporting Hong Kong democracy, All Lives Matter, pro-life, or MAGA-related would never have had a chance.

The Hong Kong issue is particularly relevant in that hypocritical NBA luminaries such as LeBron James, Steve Kerr, and Greg Popovich have consistently ripped America generally for its shortcomings and President Trump personally for his, but have clammed up about China’s human rights abuses and the CCP’s crackdown on Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement.

Last year, the Houston Rockets general manager caused an international ruckus with a simple pro-Hong Kong tweet because the cash-hungry NBA, China, and Nike consist of a three-legged stool. China is the NBA’s largest overseas market.

Former Fox Sports host Jason Whitlock maintains that because of the deal cut between owners (now called governors) and players about jersey messaging “NBA games will be 94-feet, divisive political rallies. The players prioritized social media brand building above enticing and pleasing the largest American television audience possible…The NBA no longer even pretends to care about American sports fans. Working at the behest of its de facto parent company and mentor (Nike), the NBA adopts practices and standards that smear America and please China.”

Glossing over the lack of freedom under Beijing’s dictatorship, an authoritarian regime that would never allow social justice messaging on team uniforms, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said recently that he hopes that the U.S. and China “can find mutual respect for each other.”

Now-woke Twitter reacted to the NBA’s corporate-approved social justice slogans:

DONATE TO BIZPAC REVIEW

Please help us! If you are fed up with letting radical big tech execs, phony fact-checkers, tyrannical liberals and a lying mainstream media have unprecedented power over your news please consider making a donation to BPR to help us fight them. Now is the time. Truth has never been more critical!

Success! Thank you for donating. Please share BPR content to help combat the lies.
Robert Jonathan

Comment

We have no tolerance for comments containing violence, racism, profanity, vulgarity, doxing, or discourteous behavior. If a comment is spam, instead of replying to it please click the ∨ icon below and to the right of that comment. Thank you for partnering with us to maintain fruitful conversation.

BPR INSIDER COMMENTS

Scroll down for non-member comments or join our insider conversations by becoming a member. We'd love to have you!

Latest Articles