Tuesday, December 17, 2013

BROWNSVILLE BEANERS? SAN BENITO SPICS? HARLINGEN REDNECKS? NOT COOL? THEN WHY DONNA REDSKINS?

By Juan Montoya
This post came about after overhearing a rather loud complaintant at a local bar during the Monday night football game about Native American protests against the use of the term "Redskins" for sports teams such as Washington (or Donna, Texas)  Redskins, etc.
The loudest complainer was a former football jock who made light of the natives' wounded feelings when sports franchises used the pejorative term "redskins" "braves," "Indians", etc., that whites and others often use to refer to them.
I had seen an interview with a native from back East who said that the term first appeared when local governments in colonial times would place a bounty on killing natives who stood in the way of "progress" and didn't willingly submit to their rule or give up their lands or resources.
There is a movement underway for teams at all levels to stop using the names of natives and their tribes as mascots. Unlike my loud friend, I find myself agreeing with the natives on this issue.
Those of us who are old enough to remember the days of outright prejudice and racism find nothing funny about using a person's ethnicity to refer to them with disdain about their culture.
Funny how only the "redskin" term is used in sports traditionally played mainly by white (and now black and a few browns thrown in for good measure) people. I simply can't remember a team being called the Peoria Palefaces, the Chattanooga Crackers, or the Gruenge Gringos, for example. And there would be a riot if someone suggested that New Orleans name their team with the "N" word.
Hey, we're honoring your culture, dude!
One of the main objections to us changing our ways is the cost associated with changing the logos, memorabilia, stationery, etc. Those names have been used historically, they argue, and no one means anything bad as perhaps did those who coined them originally. Well, we've all used "historically" unique words that were coined to hurt people. We've had to change and it was for the better.
How much trouble could it be?
Did you hear the "redneck" comedian (I forget which one) tell the one about the hillbilly (sorry hillbillies) wife who learned that the priest who had married her was not ordained?
"Poor girl," goes the punch line, "think of all the weight she's going to have to lose."
What have we got to lose except the heavy baggage and vestiges of  a racist past?
Let me give you an example. As kids growing up in the Rio Grande Valley, we, like others all around the world probably, used to make slingshots to hunt for small animals or birds. We were ignorant of the fact that these small animals had no nutritional value, or that they filled a unique place in the food chain or ecosystem. We just wanted to kill something. In those days we used a term for the slingshot that was a combination of Spanish slang and American racism. At the time we never knew that we were using a pejorative word used against black people. In Spanish, it's called an "hulera." But in Brownsville in those days, we used to call it a "negasura." We never associated that word with the real meaning, a southern invention using a combination of the "N" word and "shooter."
Where we picked up that word, we'll  probably never know. But we used it without even thinking about its real meaning. Once we learned the true racism and the spite behind it – the idea that you didn't need a gun to shoot a black person, that he didn't rate a real weapon to put him down – the situation in our heads changed.
I've kept my kids from using slingshots as we did in the past.
Killing small animals simply for fun is no longer acceptable And they'll never use the pejorative term for black people either. As a matter of fact, they have been pretty much told that using any ethnic slur in any sense of the word doesn't fly around these here parts. I don't want to hear why Polish dogs have flat heads, why Mexicans don't have barbecues, why Chinese have slit eyes, or how many gays it takes to put on a light bulb.
To make the point, even the use of the word "indian" is a mistaken one because Columbus never got to India and called the natives he "discovered" in the Americas that mistaken term. Why continue propagating his ignorance?
People are not mascots. They are human beings. If it causes some slight inconvenience for some commercial sports enterprise or high school football team to recognize it, so be it. The costs associated with continuing to hurt people for fun are much higher.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

"Those of us who are old enough to remember the days of outright prejudice and racism find nothing funny about using a person's ethnicity to refer to them with disdain about their culture"..Juan Montoya

You are kidding right Juan? This has got to be some tongue in cheek kind of thing.

Racism is rampant, open and obvious in 2013 here in Brownsville. It happens in store, restaurants, the streets and on this blog. It is the anglo/pinche gringo that is the object of such disdain about their ethnicity and their culture.

When it comes to hyprocisy the folks here take a back seat to none.

Anonymous said...

If Cameron County had a football team, would we be allowed to call them the Limas Loosers? Hey the Jail Bird Bunch. Think of the possibilities.

Anonymous said...

The Browntown Corruptibles has a nice ring to it.

Anonymous said...

Well said, Juan. Thanks for speaking up.

Anonymous said...

I have lived all over the world and the RGV is the most racist of any community I have ever lived in. Hispanics are racists....and they blame all their problems and their ignorance on other ethnic groups, primarily the Anglos.

Anonymous said...

Army 1959. Anglo, African American, and me. I said, "all we had were negasuras." They both looked at and we continued to talk. Three years ago it dawned on me.

Anonymous said...

I have had the opportunity to live in many places....Brownsville is the most racist of all those places. It is a subtle racism.....claiming to be acceptable to all, yet really acceptable to only those "like them" or Hispanic. Being called an Anglo is racist....no different that being call a "Spic" or a "Wop" (if anyone here knows what that is). To put all Europeans into one category "Anglo" is to admit the ignorance that we have here...the racism. Wake up Brownsville to your own racism!

chief cool arrow said...

Los frijoles y huarachudos

Anonymous said...

In the mid-50's, I got off a Brownsville city bus at the wrong stop and decided to continue the journey on foot. I was 12 years old. Three neighborhood kids punched me, kicked me and gave me several cuts that needed stitches. All the time, they were cursing me in Spanish. I am an "anglo". This happened to me again at the old Brownsville High School on Palm Blvd. There has been violent racial animas against the anglos in Brownsville and it persists to this day. I still have people tell me this is their town and I need to leave. This happen to my wife at the local HEB on Paredes. I was born here, this is my town and my country and I will not leave because some racist Mexican thinks I should.

Anonymous said...

Hear why Polish dogs have flat heads?
A: Chasing parked cars

Why Mexicans don't have barbecues?
A: The beans fall through the grill

Why Chinese have slit eyes?
A:Its the rice they eat,it make them constipated and makes there eyes look like that,all the straining they do.

How many gays it takes to put on a light bulb?
A:A. Seven. One to change the bulb and 6 to shriek, "Faaaabulous."

Ok, what do I win?

Anonymous said...

Fuck the anglos.....ejele

Anonymous said...

"Fuck the anglos.....ejele"

You can always depend on the racist Mexicans to show up spewing their hate.

rita