ESPN distributed a memo in January to its employees
that depicted a clear message: abstain from making bold political statements.
Former Major League Baseball All-Star pitcher and three-time
World Series champion, Curt Schilling learned the hard way the consequences of ignoring the network’s demands.
A member of ESPN’s team since 2010 who was featured
as a color commentator/analyst on “Monday Night Baseball,” Schilling got the
boot after sharing a Facebook post on his personal page that retorted to the
controversial House Bill 2 North Carolina Law that prohibits transgender
people from using bathrooms that do not match with their birth-designated
genders.
USA Today's For The Win website took a screenshot of the tone-deaf Facebook post Schilling shared.
Curt Schilling shared this insensitive meme on his Facebook page. (Retrieved by For The Win) |
Clearly mocking the idea that transgender people should
be allowed to enter the bathroom of their choosing, Schilling gave his own
thoughts on the issue, making it known he believes transgender individuals should
be required to use the bathroom that aligns with their birth genders. Schilling said:
“A man is a man no matter what they call themselves. I don’t care what they
are, who they sleep with, men’s room was designed for the penis, women’s not so
much. Now you need laws telling us differently? Pathetic.”
Schilling’s outspoken political stances are well-documented,
and were likely a factor in the network dismissing him of his duties. He was
suspended in August by ESPN—removing him from working the Little League World
Series broadcasts—after tweeting a graphic (now deleted, but can be seen below) that compared radical
Muslims to Nazis.
The tweet Curt Schilling sent, and then deleted, comparing radical Muslims to Nazis. (Retrieved from ShoeBat.com's website) |
Disregarding ESPN’s request to eschew political
remarks subjected Schilling to discipline from the network. But why then has
Jemele’s Hill’s distasteful tweet—regarding the Orlando shootings and why she believes it’s
unfair for Americans to criticize homophobia in Islamic cultures—not rendered her to punishment?
Jemele Hill was not reprimanded for her contentious tweet about the Orlando shooting. (Jarrad Henderson/Detroit Free Press) |
The ill-informed tweet (shown below) by Hill, a co-host of ESPN's show, His & Hers, was a direct response
to the Orlando shooting, in which the shooter vowed homage to ISIS before
killing 49 people and wounding 53 more inside of a gay club on early Sunday
morning.
So in a country where we have done everything possible to undermine the LGBTQ community, we are suddenly lecturing Islam on homophobia. Oh.— Jemele Hill (@jemelehill) June 12, 2016
Hill failed to adhere to ESPN’s rules by posting this
tweet. To compound matters, Hill’s tweet was disgustedly ignorant. Not only
does she assert that the United States “undermines the LGBTQ community”—which could
not be further from the truth as the country’s acceptance of the LGBTQ community is
undoubtedly at an all-time high—she has the audacity to state that the U.S.
should not “lecture Islam on homophobia.”
Oblivious to world issues, Hill must be unaware there
are 10 Muslim nations where homosexuality is punishable by death. These nations
practice some form of Sharia law—an Islamic law that enforces death upon
homosexuals. It’s well known that ISIS stones gays to death and
has been doing so for a long time. So yes, the U.S. indeed has every right to critique Islam on its homophobic practices. Hill ignored these disturbing truths and
spewed out an idiotic tweet that offended many of her followers and other
Twitter users.
And yet, ESPN, a network that leans heavily left on the
political spectrum, chose not to suspend Hill for her ill-advised tweet. By not
suspending Hill, the network’s double standard for conveying political
statements was exposed. It’s apparently acceptable for ESPN employees to make edgy political remarks, so long as these comments are in accordance
to a liberal mindset.
Comment on a political issue with a conservative view
and ESPN believes its employee has overstepped his/her boundaries and deserves
a suspension and/or a job dismissal. This
is, unfortunately, a prime example of modern-day hypocrisy—in this instance coming from the
world’s biggest sports media conglomerate.