Joe To Bud Selig, Major League Baseball: Steer Clear Of Immigration Politics!
Jesse Jackson
can sniff out a headline story for himself from a million miles
away.
With Arizona's
S.B. 1070
dominating the
print and broadcast news
last week, Jackson seized his opportunity to
get his mug in the newspapers.
Although it is hard to believe that anyone still pays attention
to a
race-baiter
and
anti-Semite
like Jackson, he nevertheless fired off a letter to Major League
Baseball commissioner
Bud Selig
urging him to pull the 2011
All Star Game
out of
Arizona.
And sports talk shows obligingly gave Jackson center stage by
making his letter the focal point of their
arguments for
and against S.B. 1070
Jackson
wrote:
"The
Arizona law will have a devastating impact on the integrity and
public image of
Major League Baseball.
Imagine if players or their families are stopped and
interrogated by law enforcement—not just during all-star week,
but during any games—spring training (where half of the teams
locate in Arizona) and regular season played in Arizona."
You can always count on Jackson for a good laugh.
Baseball's "integrity and
public image" will not suffer if it does not take a position
on S.B. 1070.
Baseball and immigration politics,
as Selig knows but has not yet publicly announced, don't mix.
What Arizona does in its state house doesn't have any effect on
the baseball diamond.
Displaying the depth of his malevolence, Jackson in his
statement chose to ignore S.B. 1070's
"reasonable suspicion"
proviso.
Since it is improbable that any law enforcement officer will
have "reasonable
suspicion" that a major league player is in Arizona
illegally, he's unlikely to ask for identification.
Naturally, Jackson drags
Jackie Robinson's
hallowed name into his muck although for the life of me I can't
see where he fits in.
Robinson
broke into baseball
with the
Brooklyn Dodgers
in 1947—when the only active immigrant player was
Elmer Valo,
a Czechoslovakian playing on the
old Philadelphia A's.
Jackson's call for a boycott of baseball's mid-summer classic,
fourteen months into the future, is another mystery.
Why not call out basketball's
Phoenix Suns,
hockey's Phoenix Coyotes or the Pepsi Co, Inc (owner of Frito
Lay which manufactures Tostitos corn chips) which will host the
January 2011 BCS Fiesta Bowl college
football championship
game that will occur six months before the All Star game.
(No more Pepsi—ever!)
Jackson must have figured that making a stink about baseball
would generate more press coverage for him than a similar
assault on hockey.
Over these past days, I have listened or read hundreds of
individual opinions on S.B. 1070. What I have come up with to
evaluate them is this simple measurement: if you
live
in a
border state,
then I will consider what you have to say. Otherwise, please
shut up.
Jackson, therefore, is eliminated as having a valid opinion.
Using my same residency yardstick, I also dismissed the
perennially angry New York Times African-American sports columnist
William C. Rhoden.
In his rant this week, Rhoden wrote:
"Selig can remind his
fans, those who support the Arizona legislation and those who
oppose it, that close to 30 percent of major league players were
born elsewhere. That these international players help provide
the strength of the game. That it is unthinkable that they
should feel in any way unwelcome."
[Selig
Can Send Message on Arizona Immigration Law,
by William C. Rhoden, New
York Times, May 3, 2010]
Rhoden writes from baseball-crazy
New York
which has more than its share of the 30 percent figure he cites.
The
Mets roster
includes about
50 percent
and
the Yankees
30 percent foreign-born, many of them like Mariano Rivera the
most popular players on the team.
For Rhoden to speculate that baseball players in New York,
Arizona or Pennsylvania for that matter might
"feel in any way
unwelcome" is utter nonsense.
Rhoden's column was one of thousands
written thoughtlessly,
intended to keep the pot stirred without any effort to research
the law or what is more important to understand Arizona's
illegal immigration crisis.
One border state resident's opinion,
Adrian Gonzalez,
does interest me. Gonzalez plays first base for the San Diego
Padres. Born in San Diego but raised in
Tijuana,
Gonzalez has threatened to boycott the All Star game.
Gonzalez, chosen for the 2008 and 2009 All Star game, is one of
baseball's better players. If he wants to make a personal
statement by staying away, that's okay with me.
S.B. 1070 offends Gonzalez.
According to him:
"If they leave it up to
the players and the law is still there, I'll probably not play
in the All Star Game. Because it's a discriminating law."
Putting aside for the moment Gonzalez's presumptuousness in
assuming that he will be chosen, the painful reality (for him)
is that no one but the most rabid Padre fan cares if he goes or
not.
The National League has plenty of excellent first basemen
including baseball's best,
Albert Pujols
(Dominican-born
and wisely silent on S.B. 1070) as well as Americans Prince
Fielder, Todd Helton, Ryan Howard and Lance Berkman.
A more pressing question about Gonzalez's commitment:
Why doesn't he boycott all
Padre regular season games in Arizona against the Diamondbacks
for the balance of 2010 and the first half of 2011?
That one isn't hard to answer. Under the terms of his contract,
Gonzalez could be subject to heavy fines for refusing to play.
Since the All Star game is merely an exhibition, Gonzalez can
skip it, as many players have done in previous years, without
explanation.
Rumor has it that Selig is calling the players' union, owners
and trusted advisors to help him reach a decision.
If you ask me, it's a no-brainer with an easy out.
Selig simply has to say that baseball cannot and will not take a
position on state legislation. Although he may not want to say
this out loud, part of Selig's decision making process has to
weigh how bad it would look if a multi-billion dollar industry
like baseball could be bullied into submission.
Or Selig, notoriously cautious, could say nothing and wait for
it all to die down—as it likely will.
Selig owns an Arizona home. He knows what all the state's other
residents do—that illegal aliens, drugs and violence cross the
border at a furious rate and that Phoenix is the nation's
kidnapping capital. Moving the All Star game will not change
that one iota.
Just as baseball players don't have to swing at every pitch,
neither does Selig. The S.B. 1070 stink is one he can let go by.
Arizonans
have taken the first and long overdue step to end its illegal
alien invasion.
They deserve the applause of all Americans, and legally resident baseball players.
Joe Guzzardi [email him] is a California native who recently fled the state because of over-immigration, over-population and a rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He has moved to Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the growth rate stable. A long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School, Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It currently appears in the Lodi News-Sentinel.