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Susan Estrich
10 May 2013
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A Gay Man in the NBA

Comment

It is almost unbelievable that this is a first.

But it is. Jason Collins is the first male athlete playing in a major sport to "come out."

Yes — the first in any of the five major leagues.

The president applauded him for his courage. Chelsea Clinton, his college classmate, and her dad both spoke out in support of him. So did Kobe Bryant, who two years ago was fined $100,000 for making an anti-gay slur to an official. NBA Commissioner David Stern praised Collins for assuming a "leadership mantle on this very important issue."

Collins deserves all of this praise and more.

Of course, Collins is not your ordinary professional athlete. He is far better educated, more articulate and more sophisticated than at least 90-something percent of the men who play professional sports. He attended one of the finest and most elite prep schools in the country, Harvard-Westlake, with the children of some of the wealthiest and best-connected people in the world. He went on to Stanford, where he hung out with the president's daughter. Surely none of this should take away from his courage, but it does make clear just how far professional sports have to go.

It is simply not possible that Collins is the only gay man playing professional sports in America. Not possible. That even Collins, with his education and connections, felt the need to stay in the closet so long speaks volumes about why his announcement matters. It was only last February that Chris Culliver of the San Francisco 49ers said he would not accept a gay teammate. (He was forced to apologize, but frankly, so what?) Grant Hill of the Clippers was quoted, this season, as saying that gays are "still taboo in the locker room."

Still taboo in the locker room.

The last plantation of intolerance?

Not in the military. Not in Congress. Certainly not in Hollywood. Nine states and the District of Columbia allow same-sex couples to wed. Rhode Island is about to be the 10th. If you ask me, the United States Supreme Court will soon hold that the federal government cannot discriminate against same-sex couples and that California cannot revoke their right to marry. If not this year, then soon, I expect the court to hold that the Constitution requires such recognition.

So why can't a gay man play football or basketball or baseball without hiding his sexual orientation? Who cares who he sleeps with if he can catch and throw and make the shot?

That gays should be taboo while brutality, abuse and violence have been accepted is stunning, to say the least.

Collins has made a stand and in public, anyway, is receiving broad and vocal support. What's being whispered in locker rooms is no doubt another story. Ignorance is not eliminated by the courage of one man and the support of two presidents. And Collins, a free agent, is officially unemployed. Whether another team will hire him, who knows?

But for gay kids who are playing sports in playgrounds across the country, there is finally a beacon, a role model, a man to look up to, to realize that you can be a great male athlete, still showering in the locker room (assuming he does for at least another season), and a proud gay man.

It should not have taken until 2013. There should be more than one man standing up. But last week there were none. Progress may be slow, but it is still progress. It is clear which way the wind is blowing. Once, Jackie Robinson stood alone. Someday we will say the same of Jason Collins.

To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

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Comments

8 Comments | Post Comment
I don't understand why the fact of who someone bangs in the bedroom should be praised or rebuked for that fact. Its none of our business. Putting someone on a pedestal for sexual orientation is just the kind of dumb article Susan would put out. I think this kind of behavior hurts gay people in the long run because it makes them out to be so different from the rest of us. Why can't we just treat gay people like regular people?
Comment: #1
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Wed May 1, 2013 7:03 AM
Repeating a previous post on this subject-
"What we are now afraid to say is that homosexuality is a mental disease, no different than other categories of mental illness. It's pretty obvious it's abnormal behavior. We could be looking for treatments/cures but we aren't because of political correctness!"
Comment: #2
Posted by: Oldtimer
Wed May 1, 2013 7:50 AM
Repeating a previous post on this subject-
"What we are now afraid to say is that homosexuality is a mental disease, no different than other categories of mental illness. It's pretty obvious it's abnormal behavior. We could be looking for treatments/cures but we aren't because of political correctness!"
Comment: #3
Posted by: Oldtimer
Wed May 1, 2013 7:51 AM
Ms Estrich wrote: "Still taboo in the locker room. The last plantation of intolerance?"

I think you are a bit confused here. I would agree that an athlete should not be denied employment based on his/her 'preference'. It is not clear to me why this topic should even come up in the normal course of things. I never knew about the preferences (e.g., Blondes or brunettes) of the athletes I followed when I was young. (Of course, back then we all more or less adhered to that horrid policy that would later became known as 'don't ask, don't tell'.)

In any case, a very real problem arises in the locker room. We do not normally use mixed gender locker rooms rooms in this society because of the privacy rights of the individuals using those rooms. It seems probable to me that some individuals will object to mixed 'preference' locker rooms based on these 'rights'. There may be some legal arguments that show that such privacy rights don't exist. However, I don't see why any such argument couldn't be quickly be turned around and used against single sex locker rooms.

Are the ladies ready for this brave new world? I suspect the gentlemen will be all for it.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Old Navy
Wed May 1, 2013 8:23 AM
Interesting theory Old Navy. I'll be on the lookout for such memes in the media.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Wed May 1, 2013 9:09 AM
I have to confess, in bold capital letters, that I am a BIGOT, that is, BIG On Truth. The truth is, God sent His Son Jesus to die on the cross for the sins of gays as much as He did for the sins of Hitler, and everyone in between. The truth is, God would have forgiven Hitler had he come to Christ in repentance and faith. The truth is, God will forgive any gay if he does the same. It's not this or that sin which separates a man from God, but all his sins. The truth is, when a person repents, and turns to Jesus, all his sins are forgiven. The truth is, everyone should be a BIGOT.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Slamdunk
Thu May 2, 2013 9:46 AM
Ok, I don't care a rat's behind who this homosexual "slam dunks" or with whom or with what he "lays up" or from whom he "rebounds" but please enough of the courage garbage.

Anyone thought of the alternate real reason he has just pirouetted out of the locker. Follow the money !

July 31 2012 Collins signed for the Celtics. February 2013 he and Barbosa were traded to the Wizards in exchange for Crawford. His stats for the last two years make interesting reading, Points per game avg 0.8, Rebounds per Game avg 1.45, Field Goal percentage .20 .

He was due to become a free agent July 2013. The likelihood of remaining where he is or getting a new team on a good contract prior to coming out - unknown. I suggest slim

But, because, as was rightly pointed out by RG 111 on another matter, " In the land of freedom we are held hostage by the tyranny of political correctness" the likelihood of his present team keeping him and not getting rid of his a$$ because he sucks are now - high. Or the likelihood that because of PC a team will be forced to now take him- also high. Seems he has saved his professional ass.

But still, never mind, the media is behind him, and the mooching gruesome twosome barry and moochelle can find time for a personal call. Barry seems to be all over some homosexual basket ball player on his way out, but has no knowledge of whistleblowers on Benghazi being threatened by his Admin, or of the train wreck looming re obamacare or even that we are on the brink of bankruptcy.

Makes one feel just great to know the priorities are just right like barry spending twice as much time on playing golf, basketball, vacations and generally just being indolent as has in economic meetings.
Comment: #7
Posted by: joseph wright
Thu May 2, 2013 12:37 PM
Re: Slamdunk
And what's your stance on the destruction of marriage?
Will God forgive them for that?
Comment: #8
Posted by: Oldtimer
Fri May 3, 2013 6:40 AM
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