Saturday, February 19, 2022

In Defense of Michele Tafoya

This article first appeared in New English Review.



 Up to this week, my only exposure to Michele Tafoya had been watching her on the sidelines of NFL games on NBC. To be honest, I've never cared for this aspect of football games on TV because they basically consist of, "I talked to coach so, and so, and he said...." I think they add very little to the game other than giving the viewer updates on injuries. To be fair, interviews with players and coaches are seldom very enlightening under any circumstances.

This week, however, I saw Tafoya's interview with Tucker Carlson on Fox where she discussed why she was stepping away from sports and getting involved in other issues that are more important. She spoke about her children being taught in school that race matters in that "people of color" are automatically victims while white people are automatically oppressors, something she definitely does not consider her children to be. She spoke eloquently of her child's best friend, who was black. They were "inseparable"-until the school separated the children into racial "affinity" groups.

I have to tell you I came away very impressed by Michele Tafoya. She spoke with no hate, only sadness and the belief that whites are not the enemy of non-whites. She did make a comment that whites have worked to bring about equality since the Civil War....(I am paraphrasing). I would have amended that to say since the Civil Rights era of the 1960s, but no matter. I happen to share her belief that most whites are well-intentioned in racial matters.

Now comes this op-ed from Shalise Manza Young of Yahoo Sports, attacking Tafoya for her comments and implying that Tafoya is a racist to some degree. Here is the op-ed, which also includes the video clip of the Fox interview with Tucker Carlson.

As for Yahoo Sports, I periodically get blurbs from them via Facebook, and they are uniformly politically correct. In that vein, sports talk shows are also politically correct, including racial matters. Many of the commentators are African-American, which is entirely proper since African-Americans are so well represented in sports like football and basketball. It wouldn't make a lot of sense for white and black commentators to be arguing about race on sports shows from different points of view since it is such an emotionally charged issue.  Thus, any criticism of Colin Kaepernick (who is mentioned in Young's article) is generally left to non-sports venues. 

I have a sense that the Tafoya story is just beginning. My impression of her is that of a decent, nice lady who is very sad that schools are dividing children by race-not just physically by having separate events for them, but by what they are teaching children of all races about race itself. Tafoya has shown remarkable courage by standing up to her children's school, especially already being a public figure, and by going on Carlson's show. Sure enough, she is now being attacked-viciously, I might add. Hopefully, the black athletes and colleagues she worked with will come to her defense. Surely they know very well that she is no racist.

What Tafoya is arguing for is integration, friendship, and unity while her enemies are arguing for segregation, mistrust, and division. This is at the crux of all the controversy going on today across the nation. You see it in Black Lives Matter. You see it on the far left. You see it in Democrat politics. You see it in academia and all the ethnic studies departments in our universities. They are all about division. 

Ironically, the best rebuttal to Young's op-ed attacking Tafoya is the video of the Carlson interview itself, which Yahoo posted with the op-ed. Just what are Tafoya's "ugly truths"? That she regrets her son lost his best friend? Is it an "ugly truth" that Tafoya is against separating people based on skin color? Is it an "ugly truth" that Tafoya loves her country as she expressed to Carlson? Is it an "ugly truth" that Tafoya identifies with the political middle? Is it an "ugly truth" that Tafoya laments that people are afraid to talk to each other?

Shalise Manza Young and Yahoo Sports should be ashamed of themselves for this vicious and unfair attack on Tafoya just because she doesn't toe the politically-correct line. They say more about themselves than they ever could about Tafoya.

And I hope Fox News hires Michele Tafoya asap.



5 comments:

  1. You are so far off the mark when it comes to assessing the problems of race relations in this country that it's laughable.

    Affinity groups are a problem? Like Black Student Union? Those have been around for decades, and it's not the school that creates them. They just support them. And this whole thing about how non-white people are being taught that they are automatic "victims" is just bunk.

    Here's the bottom line: Tucker Carlson is a white supremacist. He blows every white nationalist dog whistle from "replacement theory" to this current batch of insanity. I'm sure that you'll just roll your eyes and deny it, but the fact is that white supremacists applaud him and see him as one of them.

    What would you do, Mr. Fouse, if you saw that some prominent white supremacist website was applauding you and saying that you were speaking for them? I would imagine that you would have at least a few posts where you would try to separate yourself from them as much as you possibly could. It's what I would do. It's what any decent person would do. But Carlson? That's his bread and butter. And the otherwise-decent white people like yourself are so indoctrinated by right-wing talking points that you can't see what's obvious.

    Why do you think it is that black people in this country overwhelmingly vote for the Democrats? Are they brainwashed? Too stupid to realize that the Dems are bad for them?

    Or is it possible that they understand something that you, a white guy, do not?

    But yeah, you'd probably rather listen to the likes of Candace Owens, who makes you feel better about the racism going on right outside your window.

    Wake up.

    https://www.adl.org/blog/white-supremacists-applaud-tucker-carlsons-promotion-of-replacement-theory

    I suggest you check out the link, which offers direct quotes of various white supremacists who just love Tucker Carlson.

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  2. "A true supremacist doesn't mince words."

    Wow. You really believe this? This has gotta be the most ignorant thing I've ever read. "White replacement theory" isn't merely "politically incorrect". It's a major white supremacist talking point.

    As for CRT, you don't even know what it is. Your description of it so far off the mark. And the reason why parents are complaining about it is because right wing media has them so brainwashed. Just like you, they also don't know what it is.

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  3. As for "not mincing words", perhaps you're not familiar with Lee Atwater, who famously said:

    "You start out in 1954 by saying, "Nigger, nigger, nigger." By 1968 you can't say "nigger"—that hurts you. Backfires. So you say stuff like forced busing, states' rights and all that stuff. You're getting so abstract now [that] you're talking about cutting taxes, and all these things you're talking about are totally economic things and a byproduct of them is [that] blacks get hurt worse than whites. And subconsciously maybe that is part of it. I'm not saying that. But I'm saying that if it is getting that abstract, and that coded, that we are doing away with the racial problem one way or the other. You follow me—because obviously sitting around saying, "We want to cut this," is much more abstract than even the busing thing, and a hell of a lot more abstract than "Nigger, nigger.""

    And complaints about CRT is the latest dogwhistle.

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  4. I am very familiar with Lee Atwater. I was no fan of his, but he did publicly apologize for many of his words and actions as he was dying. So what is your point because you don't express it very well. Complaining about CRT is no dog whistle.
    And where do you see me writing about busing and state's rights? I never defended the South for claiming states rights in the 50s and 60s. You don't know what you are taout. You are just rambling.

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  5. Who is talking about white replacement theory here? Not me. Perhaps you should explain to me what CRT is since I have no idea-according to you. Pls explain CRT to me.

    ReplyDelete