Ice Man wrote:As a side note, Charles Barkley continues to spread the lie that WNBA players have on a widespread basis mistreated Caitlin Clark. It's an absolute disgrace that he is participating in an anti-Black, anti-lesbian conspiracy theory, either because he can't live without the attention, or because he's too damn lazy to look into the matter.
I don't care how smart you are or how funny you are, when you attack and disparage innocent people without cause you are dead to me. Begone, Charles.
Strongly disagree. I think I've posted enough about social issues over the years to illustrate that I'm as far away from the anti-black, anti-LGTBQ, anti-women mouth breathers that are all piling on to cry about white grievance like a bunch of soft cry babies.
But there is no doubt whatsoever that Clark was treated poorly by numerous of women's basketball's very biggest current and former greats and leaders. And if you think it had absolutely nothing to do with jealousy or her being a white, straight, rural-ish midwesterner you're blinding yourself to the truth.
What Barkley is saying happened, happened. Its documented that it happened. I watched it happen and its a stain on the WNBA that hopefully it is now finally recovering from.
That said, and as I said earlier in this thread, ultimately Clark is ironically the victim of white racisms, homophobia and sexism directed towards minorities. After decades (and generations) of being crapped on by mainstream white America (and its government) for being black, female and/or gay, and being told your sport is boring and sucks, along comes a straight white girl and all those same people who disregarded you at best or actively sought to deny you equal rights at worst, are all claiming she's the savior of women's basketball. Which is true, of course, but also understandably would lead to some very complex emotions and thoughts from others.
I think what we've seen unfold, and will still see unfold, is the fallout and then recovery from generational oppression of certain minority groups.
So while its more complex than Barkley is saying in his little interviews, the fundamental thing he says - many prominent figures in women's hoops treated Clark abnormally poorly due to jealousy (and other more important reasons) and it was a really terrible look for the game - is unequivocally true.
Don't confuse him with the MAGA dopes you are talking about. Multiple things can be true at once. This is not a one or the other situation.