The Unbearable Entitlement of Dabo Swinney

Ron Mexico

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The Unbearable Entitlement of Dabo Swinney
Clemson’s clueless—and filthy rich—champion coach represents everything wrong with college football.
By Dave ZirinTwitter
https://www.thenation.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Swinner_Clemson_ap_img.jpg



Clemson Tiger head coach Dabo Swinner celebrates after his team wins the NCAA college football championship. (AP Photo / David J. Phillip)



Something rotten wafted through the exhilarating, note-perfect college-football championship game between the Clemson Tigers and Alabama Crimson Tide, which ended with Clemson’s last second 35-31 upset victory.

Two schools from the heart of Dixie. Two head coaches in Nick Saban and Dabo Swinney who make staggering sums of money. Two teams that are overwhelmingly African American and—in a move that might make past alumni spin in their graves—led by African-American quarterbacks. Two teams with defenses unafraid to unleash helmet-to-helmet hits against their opponents: hits that sent these “amateur” players into a sideline “tent” where they could be ministered to by school trainers away from prying eyes. Two teams whose rabid student sections were overwhelmingly, if not entirely, white, living vicariously through the violent exploits of their black classmates.

These are also two schools where the history of the South hangs like a nightmare over the 21st-century campus. The University of Alabama’s past is a central chapter of the black freedom struggle in the United States. It’s where segregationist Governor George Wallace tried to physically block the university’s doors. And Clemson is built on the grounds of notorious Vice President John C. Calhoun’s plantation. Calhoun was perhaps this country’s most prominent 19th-century spokesperson for using African bodies as slave labor. There is also a building on campus, Tillman Hall, named after Benjamin Tillman, a proudly violent white supremacist, former senator, and someone who had a black state senator named Simon Coker assassinated in 1876. As Coker dropped to his knees, praying, Tillman stood over his body while two of his goons took Coker’s life. Students over the last several years have organized sit-ins in an effort to rename Tillman Hall. The struggle is ongoing.

made $50,000 that year (adjusted for inflation, that would be $140,000 today). Dabo Swinney takes home a base salary of $4.55 million. He also made $1.4 million in bonuses for a total salary of just under $6 million. As for players, their lot in life is the same as in 1981, except now they receive a $388-a-month stipend.

Swinney was asked about the idea of actually paying players, given the dramatically transformed economic landscape of the game, and he said that if players are ever paid, “I’ll go do something else because there’s enough entitlement in this world as there is.” To call the desire to end this rank exploitation “entitlement” is Orwellian in the extreme. He might as well write “War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.” on the locker-room walls.

If anyone has expressed an obscene amount of entitlement, it’s Swinney. Here is someone working on a refurbished plantation who makes millions of dollars off the sweat and head injuries of overwhelmingly black, unpaid labor, and yet when asked about the Black Lives Matter movement in September, he said, ”Some of these people need to move to another country.”

When asked about players’ protesting during the anthem, he said piously, “It’s so easy to say we have a race problem, but we got a sin problem.” He also stated that his players would be in trouble on his team for exercising this kind of dissent.

Clemson Professor Chenjerai Kumanyika wrote an open letter to the coach and put it perfectly:

I winced when I heard a reporter ask you, a white man who makes somewhere in the area of $5 million a year from the physical labor and bodily risk of unpaid black athletes, if he would ‘discipline’ them for making a political statement. Given that you and I both work on the former plantation of John C. Calhoun, the historical significance of the question is staggering and troubling.

College football is a septic tank of entitlement. It’s a fungal culture created by the head coaches of Big Football. Dabo Swinney is the very embodiment of that culture: adrift, clueless, and filthy rich.

Editor’s note: An earlier version of this post overstated the proportion of black players compared to white on each team. The majority of starting players on both teams are black.


 

Rekkapryde

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Yep. Hit it right on the head. People want to forget that shyt now because he beat the Evil Empire of NCAAF and he likes doing stupid ass dances to hip-hop music to seem hip. Get his ass outta here.

Most of these coaches feel the same way. But until we force them to respect or show empathy towards our plight, they don't have to truly care.

I don't think Dabo is a bad dude but it's easy to dismiss shyt or don't agree with the way we have to display our dissent because you don't have to deal with the shyt we experience
 

Walt

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Already covered this ground a long time ago:

http://www.theroot.com/confounding-fathers-paternalism-and-the-sociopathic-na-1790856762

The day before, I watched footage of Dabo Swinney channeling his inner William DeVaughn as he advised blacks to be thankful for what you got. The Clemson coach lamented protests during the national anthem as “creating more divisions”; he accused those concerned about police brutality of painting “with a broad brush”; he pointed to the existence of interracial marriage and “interracial churches” as proof of the realization of Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream. He waxed pseudo-philosophically, It’s so easy to say we have a race problem, but we got a sin problem.”


But it never has been easy for white Americans to say we have a race problem. A significant portion of white Americans in 2016 are still trying to rationalize the foundational plunder, murder and exploitation that are more American than apple pie, more American even than reflexive fealty to the flag. Contrary to Swinney’s heal-the-world blathering, our churches and communities are still largely segregated, and our black quarterbacks and head coaches are still relatively scarce.

History textbooks—within the past year!—have mislabeled slaves as workers. Armchair social critics are still privileging an ahistorical, racist perspective in which our current societal inequalities in income and crime exist in a context-free vacuum. And dimwitted, paternalistic white patriarchs like Swinney are still leaning on the sanitized symbol of MLK while ignoring the reality of his activism and ideas.


The easy thing, in fact, is to say that we have “a sin problem.” The language of moral relativism is the language of exploitation and racism. It’s the language of a man who opposes paying the black labor on whose backs he has built a fortune “because there’s enough entitlement in this world as there is.” Swinney insists that he “didn’t get into coaching to make money.” This year he will be paid $5 million to coach “amateur” athletes in an “amateur” sport that sees everyone but the (largely black) talent amass troves of money. Call it God’s plan.
 

Remote

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Already covered this ground a long time ago:

http://www.theroot.com/confounding-fathers-paternalism-and-the-sociopathic-na-1790856762

The day before, I watched footage of Dabo Swinney channeling his inner William DeVaughn as he advised blacks to be thankful for what you got. The Clemson coach lamented protests during the national anthem as “creating more divisions”; he accused those concerned about police brutality of painting “with a broad brush”; he pointed to the existence of interracial marriage and “interracial churches” as proof of the realization of Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream. He waxed pseudo-philosophically, It’s so easy to say we have a race problem, but we got a sin problem.”


But it never has been easy for white Americans to say we have a race problem. A significant portion of white Americans in 2016 are still trying to rationalize the foundational plunder, murder and exploitation that are more American than apple pie, more American even than reflexive fealty to the flag. Contrary to Swinney’s heal-the-world blathering, our churches and communities are still largely segregated, and our black quarterbacks and head coaches are still relatively scarce.

History textbooks—within the past year!—have mislabeled slaves as workers. Armchair social critics are still privileging an ahistorical, racist perspective in which our current societal inequalities in income and crime exist in a context-free vacuum. And dimwitted, paternalistic white patriarchs like Swinney are still leaning on the sanitized symbol of MLK while ignoring the reality of his activism and ideas.


The easy thing, in fact, is to say that we have “a sin problem.” The language of moral relativism is the language of exploitation and racism. It’s the language of a man who opposes paying the black labor on whose backs he has built a fortune “because there’s enough entitlement in this world as there is.” Swinney insists that he “didn’t get into coaching to make money.” This year he will be paid $5 million to coach “amateur” athletes in an “amateur” sport that sees everyone but the (largely black) talent amass troves of money. Call it God’s plan.
I love your writing.
You are incredibly skilled/talented.

:salute:
 
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