Here at the sports desk located somewhere below decks of the Good
Pirate Ship RedState, assuming we can get Sammy the Shark to stop doing
backflips after the January 28th victory by Los Tiburones de San Josè over Los Pingüinos de Pittsburgh,
time to look at the newest sports non-controversy. Namely, the New York
Rangers not plastering rainbows on their practice jerseys prior to
their home game against the Vegas Golden Knights on January 27th. From the New York Post:
The Garden and the Rangers hosted their seventh annual
Pride Night on Friday, but contrary to what they initially advertised,
the team did not wear special warm-up jerseys or utilize pride-themed
tape.
One player told The Post that he just saw the regular Lady Liberty
jersey hanging in his locker and he did not know why the Rangers did not
wear the originally planned warm-ups, which they have worn in the past
“in solidarity with those who continue to advocate for inclusivity.”
The seemingly reversed decision came in wake of Philadelphia
defenseman Ivan Provorov’s refusal to wear Pride-themed apparel on the
Flyers’ Pride Night on Jan. 19. The Russian cited his religious beliefs
as his reasoning.
Reuters noted that it wasn’t like the Rangers ignored the entire matter.
A pre-game advertisement showed Rangers made other
gestures in support of Pride Night, including a charitable donation to a
group that supports homeless LGBTQ+ youth, and Madison Square Garden
was illuminated in rainbow lights during the game.
Since Reuters is, well, Reuters, they had to add some “context.”
Asked for comment on Saturday, the NHL referred Reuters to a previous statement made in regard to Provorov.
“Clubs decide whom to celebrate, when and how – with league counsel
and support. Players are free to decide which initiatives to support,
and we continue to encourage their voices and perspectives on social and
cultural issues,” it said.
Translation: call Rangers owner James Dolan; we’re busy.
New York Post columnist Mollie Walker was nonplussed.
By veering from their promoted plan to wear Pride-themed
jerseys for their annual Pride Night on Friday at Madison Square Garden,
the Rangers turned what was otherwise a beautiful celebration of
inclusivity into a story about the organization.
It’s ironic that the reversed decision to forgo the special warm-ups
and tape was presumably made to avoid a public relations mess. Instead,
that’s exactly what has happened. After making a public promise that the
team would don the rainbow colors of the Pride flag “in solidarity”
with the LGBTQ+ community, and then walking back on it, what did the
organization think would happen? There were fans who purchased their
tickets to see themselves represented on the ice, and they were left
disappointed.
However, as noted above, it’s not like the Rangers ignored the night.
Broadway star Michael James Scott, who is gay, sang a
goosebump-inciting rendition of the national anthem. Andre Thomas, the
co-chair of NYC Pride and Heritage of Pride, participated in the
ceremonial puck drop. Fans received a Pride-themed fanny pack, while the
pinwheel ceiling and panels on the outside of the Garden were
illuminated in the rainbow colors.
The Rangers have also promised to make a charitable contribution to
the Ali Forney Center, a New York-based agency dedicated to helping
LGBTQ+ homeless youths. The center assists more than 2,000 youths per
year through a 24-hour Drop-In Center, which provides more than 70,000
meals annually, medical, and mental health services through an on-site
clinic, and a scattered-site housing program.
But … but … YOU DIDN’T WEAR RAINBOWS ON YOUR JERSEYS!
Let’s turn this on its side. If an NHL team held a Faith and Family
Night, as part of the event placing an ichthus on the team’s warm-up
jerseys, and a player said I’m not wearing that, how would the sports
media world respond? The columns would write themselves. “How DARE a
team push religion!” Plus a plethora of laudatory prose on behalf of the
player’s heroic stance, never mind that the brave atheist cliché grew
stale sometime around 1967.
Quoting from our Sister Toldjah from a January 20th post she wrote about Philadelphia Flyers Ivan Provorov refusing to wear a Pride Night warm-up jersey:
The ensuing sports media uproar earned Provorov a surprising defense from TikToker Clarkson Lawson, a gay man who ended up ripping
the “Alphabet Mafia” over their dictatorial-like tactics against those
who don’t wholeheartedly wrap themselves in the rainbow flag in a video that to date has over 2.5 million views.
“The fact that we have this incessant need for validation shows that
we’re not actually secure in who we are,” Lawson stated. “We don’t need a
pride night or a pride month. Just live your life, be happy with who
you are, and stop trying to so hard to garner validation from people who
are not going to give it to you.”
“Our acceptance of ourselves should not be contingent on other people
agreeing with us,” Lawson went on to say. “If you truly want to be
happy with who you are, find validation from within. Your life will be
way better off because of it.”
‘Nuff said.
Seriously, will these people ever learn why we’re tired of their
whining? Grow up. The rest of us are under no obligation to rearrange
our universe based on someone else’s sexual preference. Leave someone
alone and in peace to be themselves? Absolutely. But leave us alone as
well.
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