My          new VDARE.com column is up.
"So try not to laugh when someone says these are the world’s greatest athletes, despite a paucity of blacks that makes the Winter Games look like a GOP convention."–Bryant Gumbel on HBO’s Real Sports
Last fall,  the Air Force Academy's distinguish football coach Fisher  DeBerry was put through the wringer by white  sportswriters for alleged racial insensitivity.
His crime: Mentioning that black  players tend to be faster than white  players.
But newscaster Gumbel's statement, quoted above, has been met with little  outcry, so far.
Why the difference?
Well, unlike DeBerry, Gumbel is black. Everyone already  knows he's less of  a fan of white men than he is of white women, such as the blonde  trophy wife for whom he traded in his  black first wife of 26 years.
And everybody knows these periodic "two  minute hates" directed by white  sportswriters at white sportsmen too  old fashioned to avoid blurting out the truth have very little to do with blacks, per se. This is just a white-on-white war over status. Blacks are free to say whatever they feel like because white journalists seldom consider them rivals.
Predictably, sportswriters  are already playing  up the 1000 meter speedskating gold medal won by the African-American Shani Davis as an epochal social breakthrough, one that will finally unleash the cleansing  power of diversity on the white bread Winter Olympics.
It won’t. The truth is that African-Americans' sporting interests have been  getting less diverse, as they focus  ever more on their strong suits, basketball and football.
For example, when Tiger Woods, who is one-quarter  black, won the Masters nine years ago, it was widely predicted that blacks  would soon flood the ranks of pro golf.
Instead, the opposite  has happened. Between 1964 and 1986, five black pros (Pete Brown, Charlie Sifford, Lee Elder, Calvin Peete and Jim Thorpe) won a total of 23 PGA tournaments. But in the 20 years since, no black other than Woods has won.
Similarly, Arthur  Ashe won the U.S. Open tennis tournament 38 years ago. But no  African-American man has won a major championship since him.
And Wendell Scott,  a black driver, won a NASCAR stock car race back in 1963. But African-American  interest in motor sports is minimal  today.
The African-American share of major league baseball rosters has fallen from 27 percent in 1974 to 9 percent last year. Last fall, home run king Hank  Aaron criticized the Houston Astros for having no African-American players. (But that black lack didn't stop the team from winning the National League pennant).
The unmentionable truth: human beings like to hang out with people like  themselves.
And they will develop institutions to allow them to do so.
For instance, the middle of  February was traditionally the deadest time of the year in sports. But today, Sunday, February 19, was full of events that have turned into de facto  ethnic pride celebrations.
[More]
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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