Showing posts with label race. Show all posts
Showing posts with label race. Show all posts
August 23, 2012

A succinct definition

From Ta-Nehisi Coates, writing The Irony of a Black President in this month's Atlantic: "Racism is not merely a simplistic hatred. It is, more often, broad sympathy toward some and broader skepticism toward others."


July 16, 2009

Racism at Tour de France Charged by French Cyclists



Tour de FranceEvents. Sometimes events hurt you, sometimes they help you. For instance, last week I had a post in the can, ready to publish the next day about the guy whose guitar was broken by United Airlines. Just before I posted it, United decided to make it right. I posted that one anyway, but my takeaway lesson was that time, tide, events, and the blogosphere wait for no man. Publish it or eat it.


     Lots of White Guys in Paris. Sometimes they wear black leggings and sleeves to fool you.

Yesterday the cycle went the other way - early Wednesday morning I put out a post about racism and the Tour de France. Later Wednesday, after the stage, some anonymous French riders are accusing British rider Mark Cavendish of being a racist and of making racist comments. "Cavendish is racist, he's anti-French", one courageous anonymous cyclist threatened, "He should be careful. We're not going to put up with his attitude much longer."

Anyway, that's what I believe he said, it's hard to listen to a guy whose teeth never completely close all the way when he's speaking. Comments like that are usually seen as the promise of rough treatment in the scrum peleton; maybe somebody drops a mussette bag into your spokes in the feed zone. It could happen. An ugly threat coupled to an ugly accusation of racism.

What is truly remarkable, though, is the nature of the charge of racism.
Q. Who is the offended racial group? A. The French.
Q. Is "French" a race? A. They seem to think so.

Q. What did Cavendish do? A. He won the stage on July 14th.
Q. What's wrong with that? A. July 14th is Bastille Day.
Q. And? A. Sometimes they let the French win on Bastille Day.

So what was said? No specifics. It seems like one of the host riders, as they say in the press meaning one of the French fellows, said to Cavendish - "hey, why don't you back off a bit, and, heh heh, be a sportsman, and let one of us have Bastille Day?"

And I'm guessing Cavendish said something like, "Sod off, you pissant! Do you think I'm going to gift you a stage because it's the Frog's 4th of July? Not bloody likely!" Or words to that effect.

And as Cavendish rode away, leaving them in the dust, he probably said something British like, "And wasn't Bastille Day rather a sort of a prison break? Makes for an odd holiday, eh? Well, God bless the Queen!, got to push off now. Cheerio!

Cavendish's failure to let the French win is then attacked anonymously in the press as "racist". This is what they think is racism. They think they embrace diversity by letting the Italians ride.

A few points:
  • We're selling newspapers with controversy, that's what the Tour is about.
  • This shows how the peloton really doesn't see racism clearly.
  • BTW, Lance announced the winner to a reporter before the day's riding had begun, which probably put the French in a snit.


What probably really happened was: some of the teams had come to an arrangement that Cavendish would get delivered to the front with some help from ostensibly competing teams, and all things being equal he'd probably win. That frosted the French riders who wanted a present on their birthday.

The broker of the deal was probably Lance, who's known as "The Boss" in the peleton because of just this sort of - well, leadership. Sometime later in the tour, Cav's team will owe the broker some accommodation. That's the way the peleton works.

The Tour de France: Racist. Anti-Semitic. Yellow journalism. Sexist.


(Sorry, Sexist is tomorrow's topic.)


                 All Colors, No Brothers

July 15, 2009

Major Taylor, Tour De France Racism, and Black Cyclists



Curiously, yesterday's New York Times (July 14, 2009) carried story by Maureen Dowd titled, "White Man's Last Stand", regarding the Senators from Utah and Kansas facing the prospect of Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. I must correct Ms. Dowd: the white man's last stand is the Tour De France.

In American history, when I think about racism and sports, I think about Jim Thorpe in 1912, Jesse Owens in 1936, Joe Louis in 1936, Jackie Robinson, Cassius Clay (sic) in 1960.

Tour de FranceA great thing about clean sports is that you can either do it or you can't, and when these men got an honest chance to perform they showed their capability. Curiously, the remaining organized sport that is still a white boy's game at the highest levels is: cycling.(edit 7/19)


Even golf, GOLF for goodness' sakes, has Tiger Woods. Cycling has - wait for it, wait for it - Floyd Landis, an Amish guy. (NTTAWWT) Even bobsledding has a Jamaican team. (site)


How can it be that there aren't any professional black-skinned cyclists? (Use of the term black seems more appropriate than African-American in the international context of cycling.) Let's go to the history books.

Before we saw Jim Thorpe in 1912, the world saw black American cyclist Marshall "Major" Taylor in 1906. From the book, Le Tour: A History of the Tour De France, we have this story of the first Tour organizer (Desgrange) and a great black cyclist (Taylor):
The first man to run the Tour de France was Henri Desgrange. He had been an ardent cyclist on both bikes and tricycles, who had ridden races and had broken the one-hour record with 35 kilometres at Neuilly in 1893.

He was not... a very lovable man. Before he ran the Tour de France, he was running the Parc des Princes and one vignette in that event may be illustrative. A track cycling event was organized pitting the French champion Edmond Jacquelin against American Major Taylor, the first notable black cyclist (not that there have been many since).

Major Taylor, American cyclist, in Paris France, 1908

Major Taylor duly won, and Desgrange was so angered by this affront to the white race that he insulted the winner in turn by paying his large prize in 10-centime coins, so that Taylor had to take the money away in a wheelbarrow.

This next statement about Desgrange, written by a fellow Frenchman, speaks volumes about the Gallic spirit: Desgrange was bigoted, he was gifted, imperious and irascible, he was at times an obnoxious or even intolerable personage; all the same, he was one of the great Frenchmen of the twentieth century.
.
It seems no surprise that Major Taylor did not enroll in Henri Degrange's Tour de France.


Major Taylor

Marshall Walter "Major" Taylor (1878–1932) was an American cyclist who won the world one-mile track cycling championship in 1899 — after setting numerous world records and overcoming strong racial discrimination. Read Ken Kifer's tribure to Major Taylor.


Contemporary Black TdF Hopefulls


On July 17, 2008, these two cyclists were enroute from Eldoret, Kenya to Alpe d'Huez to ride the Tour De France course and document their performance against the times recorded for professional cyclists. As you probably know, Eldoret in Kenya is home to fully half of the world's champion marathon runners.

Zakayo won a local race on the same course in 42 minutes 10 seconds. In the Tour De France, Lance Armstrong's record time was 37 minutes 36 seconds. Zakayo's time of 42:10 would have placed him in the top twenty of the professional riders.

Zakayo Nderi and Samwel Mwangi are financed by Nicholas Leong, a (white, portly) Singaporean who is a member of the Major Taylor Association. Click the image below to see the African Cyclist Project's website. I love their African Cyclist Blog; the subtitle is, "because you can't bullshit your way up a mountain". I love that.

The Color Peloton Barrier

Within the TdF, and all the major cycling events, there is a Guild mentality among the riders of the peloton. It's somewhere between a trade union, a cartel and a secret society. Simply put: if the peloton doesn't want you to win, or doesn't want you to finish, they will strive to make sure that you don't.

The Tour is three weeks long. It is impossible to go all out for 200 km a day, every day, through the long flat sprints, up & down the Alps with their obscene inclines, and everywhere in between. Most days and for most of the race, the field travels in a pack in order to save energy for the harder sections. This main section is known as the peloton. Racers will break out of the peloton and try to gain time, but you generally want to save your energy for the sections you're good at (some racers excel at mountain climbing, others are good in the flat, etc.) The peloton can carry a sick or troubled rider, and the peloton can crush an unpopular rider.

An Example of the Pack Mentality

A recent public example was in the 2004 tour, when Lance Armstrong spoke to (and allegedly threatened) a group accompanying Simeoni in a breakaway. There's bad blood between Armstrong and Simeoni. Both are essentially convinced the other is threatening the sport.

Anyway, it's late in the Tour now, and Lance has the overall championship in hand. Simeoni is an also-ran, but he thought he saw a chance to grab a stage win and sprinted ahead to a group of a half-dozen B-listers. Armstrong decided to stick with Simeoni and join the breakaway and prevent him from getting an easy cheap stage win.

The half-dozen guys actually in the breakaway group know that with Lance in the front all the other teams will contest the finish, and when Simeoni & Armstrong catch up to them, they all ask Armstrong to let them go, save the energy, you've got the race won, be a good sport, etc. Armstrong, who generally is gracious about these things (and in these long races, sportsmanship between teams and competitors is crucial), agrees, but he won't retreat to the peloton without Simeoni. The conversations are televised.

The breakaway riders say to Simeoni, hey get away from us, if you stay with us we're ruined. Simeoni reluctantly agrees to retreat with Armstrong back to the peloton. The power of the peloton for self-regulation is not to be misunderestimated.

I think that's why we don't have black cyclists competing at the Tour De France level. In order to have a place on a team, a rider must convince a Sponsor that they can make a positive contribution. The peloton doesn't seem to want any black riders. The races that feed the TdF don't seem to have a lot of black riders. The sponsors don't seem to want any black riders.

The Tour de France: Racist. Anti-Semitic Roots. Yellow journalism.





June 30, 2009

Facebook Username Landrush Debacle

Recently Facebook allowed people to register "vanity plate URLs" as their usernames. If you wanted and nobody else had claimed it, you could be "JennyDeluxe", or whatever struck your fancy.

At midnight Eastern time, Facebook members could pick user names for their profile URL’s that actually make sense, in place of the previous nonsensical numerical ones. (The numerical addresses look like this — http://blog.facebook.com/blog.php?post=90316352130 — which is also the Facebook page explaining the procedure.) To prevent name-squatting, people will not be able to sell or reassign usernames.



To say that it was a circus is to underestimate the land rush. As the registration system slowed down with the onslaught of requests, and as "not available" responses grew after the first easy claims were staked out, wits realized that Facebook Username can be abberviated "FU" and twitters on #FUFacebook become a trend.



As more and more common names were snatched up, frustration grew and blogs about The Facebook Username Debacle multiplied. Anil Dash blogs,
A white guy named David discovers every variation of his name on Facebook is already taken, realizes he will never get a representative username, and finally reconsiders the condescending contempt he's always had for black people who give their kids unique names. This tiny bit of racial reconsideration is the only unequivocally good news to come out of the Facebook Usernames Debacle.
That is one of the funniest things I've read about geeks and race. Admittedly, it's a narrow focus.



Tuesday: Firefox 3.5 available for download. This was originally called 3.1 a long time ago, but so many changes - most notably a much faster Javascript engine - have been packed into this update, they decided to go to 3.5.
October 15, 2001

2009 Tour De France Series

Tour de France