How The Redskins' Delightfully Vulgar Court Filing Won Me Over
from the team-redskins dept
I’ve never really made it a secret how much I loathe the Washington Redskins organization. I dislike their tasteless, stupid, racist team name. I hate their dumb, overly-litigious owner. And I really have nothing but disdain for the team’s attempt to control public perception by strong-arming the media. And, in past posts, I’ve come down on the side of the government when it cancelled the team’s trademark for its name, declaring that the government shall not be in the business of granting trademarks for terms that are disparaging. I was slightly less comfortable when the DOJ made a weak argument that denying the trademark wasn’t a First Amendment violation, but, still, no Redskins trademark was a good thing in my mind, partially because I hate the Redskins.
But I hate hypocrisy more. And government hypocrisy is the most delicious hate-meal I’ve ever found, which is why I’m jumping ship and declaring myself on team Redskins. What hypocrisy am I talking about? Well, the government’s hypocrisy as delightfully and vulgarly laid out in this filing the team put in its appeals case.
The PTO has registered hundreds if not thousands of marks that the Team believes are racist, or misogynistic, vulgar,
or otherwise offensive. By way of example only, the following marks are registered today: TAKE YO PANTIES OFF clothing; DANGEROUS NEGRO shirts; SLUTSSEEKER dating services; DAGO SWAGG clothing; DUMB BLONDE beer; TWATTY GIRL cartoons; BAKED BY A NEGRO bakery goods; BIG TITTY BLEND coffee; RETARDIPEDIA website; MIDGET-MAN condoms and inflatable sex dolls; and JIZZ underwear. These are not isolated instances. The government routinely registers pornographers’ marks: TEENSDOPORN.COM, MILFSDOPORN.COM, THUG PORN, GHETTO BOOTY, and BOUND GANGBANGS are but a few.
It’s hard to decide exactly which part of this is more fun: the clearly gleeful way the filing lists these apparently valid trademarks or the image in my head of a government mid-level employee stamping “GRANTED” on an application for Big Titty Blend Coffee. Regardless, what’s made clear in this filing is that the government’s unwillingness to grant a trademark on vulgar or disparaging terms is wildly inconsistent. The term Redskins, after all, can’t be said to be any more offensive than “Dago.” What appeared to be a stance by the PTO on grounds of value instead now looks to be wind-socking for the outrage gale. And for the Redskins organization, that sucks and has to be massively frustrating.
And for the argument I had previously made — that government ought not endorse the term “Redskins” through granting it a trademark — to work, the government would need to be consistent on the matter. Otherwise, it is picking and choosing speech as a matter of government acknowledgement. It appears the PTO has proven itself incapable of this consistency, again, per the filing.
No one today thinks registration reflects government approval. But if this Court holds that it does, how will the government explain registrations like MARIJUANA FOR SALE, CAPITALISM SUCKS DONKEY BALLS, LICENSED SERIAL KILLER, YID DISH, DIRTY WHOOORE CLOTHING COMPANY, and MURDER 4 HIRE?
Now, look, is the term Redskins an antiquated, racist term? Absolutely yes. Is it still worth hating Daniel Snyder for making this the hill he wants to die on, rather than simply coming up with another team name? Oh, for sure. But should a government be applying standards of offense to trademark registrations when its shown itself to be incapable of having any consistent standards in doing so? No, I don’t think it should any longer. I did think so, but I was wrong.
So…sigh…go Redskins, I guess.
Filed Under: first amendment, free speech, redskins, trademark, uspto, vulgarity
Companies: washington redskins
Comments on “How The Redskins' Delightfully Vulgar Court Filing Won Me Over”
I think you are mistaken
Those weren’t approved applications, they were mistakenly leaked NSA program codenames.
First one needs to care
I called them the Deadskins for the thirteen or so years I lived in the area, but only to their fans. No one else gave a rat’s patootie.
The Redskins have a valid pointy. Every liberal group out there has been trying to snatch the Redskins name away from the NFL team and to ban the Redskins name. But, if they are so concerned at banning words and terms that are offensive to certain groups then every piece of merchandise out there, from Hooters to Dumb Blonde to Slut Shaming should also be banned. The problem is that liberals are trying to apply some form of morality, or what I refer to as ‘selective morality’. There are too many liberals out there using shock value to get everyone riled up over one morality cause or another.
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If you think about it, maybe this is just the starting point. These groups may feel that if they can get “Redskins” denied, they can use that as a precedent to start denying all the others. This isn’t the “slippery slope,” it’s the downhill slalom and they’re just waiting for the USPTO to fire the starter pistol.
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Yep. Their morality is great. But any morality coming from the right is “repressive censorship”.
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Authoritarians come in two colours, boys: Red or Blue.
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Conservatives and Progressives only look like opponents on that specific axis.
If you add a Libertarian/Authoritarian axis, both the Democrat and Republican parties are obviously fellow travelers who agree wholeheartedly in Authoritarianism and only disagree on which Constitutional/human rights need to go away first.
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I’m not entirely on board with the name being racist. Some Indian groups do support them, and I do not think of it being used in a disparaging way. No other team is named something weak or to be made fun of. Sports teams are often named after mean, aggressive, or powerful animals or other subjects to portray cunning, prowess and intimidation. You name your team after something badass. You ARE that thing.
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First off “redskin” is an insult.
How long would a team named the “mighty niggers” be tolerated?
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Depends on how mighty they are.
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Not everything is a perfect analogy. You have to have an ear for usage.
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First off “redskin” is an insult.
Depends on who you ask.
How long would a team named the “mighty niggers” be tolerated?
Oh? Which team was that?
Yeah, that’s what I thought.
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This is either a case of comically missing the point, or a brilliantly subtle and nuanced bit of bone-dry humor.
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First off, “redskin” is nowhere near as insulting as the N word. It’s the about same as “whitey”, which is used in normal conversation (in places) without causing riots and women to faint.
Second, as pointed out, the context is TOTALLY different. The name is used in a way to suggest power and cunning. A closer term than “whitey” as far as context goes would probably be “The Man”.
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While I think you are missing the point, I’ll play along.
How long do you think a team named “the really smart asian kids” would be tolerated?
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By everyone else? Probably forever.
By their fans? Not one second. Smart asian kids aren’t badass enough.
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Blacks call each other nigger all the time. “Hey nigger!” It’s an inside joke, just like the Pirate Party using the intended insulting “pirate” epithet with pride, throwing it in the face of their accusers.
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You mean like the Fighting Whities? AFAIK nobody is calling them on their racism.
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“Mighty niggers” lacks appeal. Try Niggaz Wit Attitudes instead.
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FYI, the ACLU – a group that is often associated with “liberal” or lefty/prog causes – filed an amicus brief in support of the Redskins. So contrary to “conventional knowledge” they’ll defend people in situations like this.
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Maybe they think “redskins” is more of a descriptive term as opposed to “negro”…
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The ACLU may take the occasional non-progressive case, but for an organization that claims to fight for the Bill of Rights, they sure are choosy about some rights over others.
They’ll go balls to the wall against a city for putting up a Christmas tree in their zeal to protect the 1st Amendment, but when it comes to the 2nd Amendment? Crickets…
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Oh quit lying, if it were just a Christmas tree they wouldn’t be suing since it isn’t a symbol of a particular religion.
They sue if there is a nativity display underneath that tree and the government refuses to allow other religions to put up a display as well. In that the 1st is simple, either you allow all or allow none on government property.
And that is something a whole lot of Christian fanatics don’t understand and don’t want to understand since they absolutely must piss on this territory to mark it as theirs. Making the rest of us Christians look bad and be at the same time the best advertisement against Christianity as a religion.
The 2nd does not have this problem the government willfully ignoring the constitution and not having to fear a public backlash for trying to do so (as compared to NOT ignoring the 1st tends to generate the outrage).
Just remember the outrage the last time Obama suggested (not proposed a law or anything just suggested) that we might want to look at ways to keep guns out of hands of mentally ill people with violent tendencies.
The ACLU didn’t have to do anything.
Further the first place people go if there would be such a violation is the NRA since it has placed itself as a defender of gun rights though the ACLU would file an amicus brief if the NRA would ever have to sue a violator.
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Umm, what did you just say? Are you seriously trying to claim that a Christmas tree is not a symbol of the Christmas holiday? Or do you think that other religions also celebrate Christmas? You sound very confused.
I don’t mind at all if the government allows religious displays (pretty lights!), as long as they allow all religions, but don’t try to claim that symbols of a religious holiday aren’t also symbols of that religion.
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A Christmas tree is only slightly more of a symbol of the birth of Jesus than a rabbit is of nailing a dude to a board.
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I didn’t say a Christmas tree is symbolic of the birth of Jesus. I said a Christmas tree is symbolic of the holiday of Christmas. That was pretty much my exact words, please read more carefully. Did you happen to notice the first word in the name ‘Christmas tree’? To follow your example, are you next going to claim that Easter Eggs (the painted, usually chicken-derived type) are not symbolic of Easter?
Btw, what does the star on top of (most?) Christmas trees mean to you?
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Weird thing is, I actually misread the comment you responded to. I hate the fact that context matters. In fact, I’m going to start demanding that all comments be non sequiturs.
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You need to brush up on your reading comprehension.
I said that the christmas tree is not considered religious not that it is not one of the (secularized) symbols of the christmas holiday.
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Why should the ACLU get interested in the second amendment? They’ve never been close to the issue. You’re trying to argue by parsing their name perhaps.
Much more interesting is a leftward drift of the ACLU. They’ve added a lot of “soft”, “progressive” causes to their menu. I might be in favor of those for their own sake, but by a different organization. The ACLU should stick to traditional civil liberties and retain broad support.
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The ACLU has supported 2nd ammendment cases.
https://reason.com/blog/2007/04/06/the-aclu-defends-gun-rights
http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2014/04/robert-farago/aclu-defends-missouri-gun-rights-guy/
There are more. I just didn’t feel like googling for more than 30 seconds.
Furthermore the NRA has got it covered. They are a one issue group and they’ve got a budget of ~$250M/yr while the ACLU has a budget of ~$135/yr. Faulting them for spending their money on the 2nd amendment is just cherry-picking.
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They’ll go balls to the wall against a city for putting up a Christmas tree in their zeal to protect the 1st Amendment, but when it comes to the 2nd Amendment? Crickets…
Perhaps they have correctly deduced that the gun lobby is handling that just fine, whereas there is no powerful wealthy lobbying organization fighting to protect the 1st amendment. I don’t know if that’s actually their motivation, but it would certainly be sufficient to explain their focus.
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Agreed. I’m a “gun nut”, card carrying member of the NRA, concealed carry holder….etc. I appreciate the ACLU organization, and support them, but I would rather see them focus on the less defended areas. We got the 2nd covered for now 🙂
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There are all sorts of pro-1st Amendment legal defense funds and law school clinics out there.
Yes, but no multi-billion dollar corporate lobbies. That I know of, anyway.
No, the real reason is that the ACLU just doesn’t like the 2nd Amendment, so it doesn’t bother fighting to uphold it.
That is plausible, but I wonder if you have any evidence for it.
Re: Libruls, Repugs, ... Pick a side and fight!
Yeah, and conservative, bible belt, moral majority types never do anything even remotely similar. How do you Red Team vs. Blue Team types manage to continue this silly game still?!?
Re: Re: Libruls, Repugs, ... Pick a side and fight!
Because without D vs. R they’d have to think about every single issue themselves, rather than just waiting for the team leader to tell them how they feel about it.
Re: Re: Libruls, Repugs, ... Pick a side and fight!
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Don’t make the mistake of thinking the word “vulgar” has a simple binary definition. Redskins is vulgar because it is insulting to people who have no say in its use. If the team were all native american players and they chose to call themselves redskins then that would not be vulgar. Shirts that say “dumb blonde” or “dangerous negro” are intended to be purchased by blondes and black people to wear ironically, even defiantly. Context matters even it means you have to think harder to figure it all out.
Some of those trademarks do fall in the same category as redskins but most of them are intended to insult the people who would use those terms derogatively. And stuff like “teensdoporn” jesus, that’s not insulting anyone.
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But the trademark office should not try to adjudicate the subtle distinctions you’re pointing out. Too far from their mission.
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As warned, mistake made.
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Hey, remember, the overwhelming majority of liberals couldn’t give a rip one way or the other on this issues. It is politically correct assholes that care about this. Once upon a time, calling a woman “lady” was the same as calling her a prostitute. Historic slurs taken out of context is no way to run a modern society. Do you know what I associate “redskins” with? Potatos and crappy football.
I am not a Redskins fan, but there is nothing more that I hate to see in sports is a team changing it’s name because of whiny people. I believe in tradition. The Marquette Golden Eagles sound incredibly stupid to me and always will. They will always be the Marquette Warriors to me and “Warriors” could be used in many ways. I’ll also take Washington Bullets over Washington Wizards any day. Soldiers use a lot of bullets, could be a patriotic name from some people’s view. I’m sure it was never intended to glorify gang violence or something similar.
I’m so sick of the politically correct people forcing their opinions down the throats of everyone else. Free speech exists for everyone, not a select few.
And, Tim, If you hate the Redskins so much, why do you always seem to be the one that writes about them? Recuse yourself and let someone less biased write the stories.
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Furthermore I’ve never heard you complain about the Chicago Blackhawks and their very similar logo. Why is that do you suppose?
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Because Blackhawks isn’t a slur? I mean, I never saw how Redskins was derogatory either, but people say it is and that’s the argument against it.
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I don’t see Redskins as being derogatory either, but who’s to say Blackhawks isn’t derogatory to someone else? Who decides and where does it end?
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How about the fact that actual native american tribe and their citizen have stated that it’s offensive to them?
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Native here, I am not offended… so other natives get more of a say on it than I do? Or is my Native quantitatively less Native than theirs? Or is really that I do not qualify because I am not towing the group think line as I am told to?
Any Native that is offended deserves to be offended! Same goes for any OTHER race offended by simple words! Easy to offend is a sign of a simple mind not worth paying any attention to!
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Yeah, you’re sort of what Blacks call an “Uncle Tom”. You drank the white guys’ koolaid. Chyaa, right. 😛
Hell, I’m caucasian, and the “Native” designation offends me! I was born here just like they were. My mom even told me (dirty little family secret 🙂 there’s some native blood in my family from back a few generations ago. I wear that with pride!
I wish we could all just toss this stupid appearance BS. Skin color, bone structure, and gender are so damned irrelevant. What’s in a person’s head’s what matters.
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Hell, I’m caucasian, and the “Native” designation offends me!
Well “Indian” is both confusing and inaccurate. “Aboriginal” would probably be better than “native” but for some reason that wasn’t selected or didn’t catch on.
My mom even told me (dirty little family secret 🙂 there’s some native blood in my family from back a few generations ago.
There’s a good chance that’s nothing more than a family legend. There are millions of people who claim an unspecified quantity of Native American ancestry from an unspecified person.
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Follow caucasians back, and you end up in Europe. Follow (North, Central, and South) American Aboriginals and you end up in Siberia. Follow both of them back, and you end up in Olduvai Gorge. We’re all Ethiopian or African. I’m just a paler shade of Negro than regular blacks.
Perhaps because it’s true. Here in Canada, we had a lot of caucasians interbreeding with aboriginals (there’s lots of Metis here), and we almost all (excepting negros and Chinese?) have Neanderthal genes in us.
“Race” is BS. All it does is enable cultural bias; “us vs. them.”
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“Race” is BS.
That’s a nice thought, but I think most people can tell the difference between an African, a southeast Asian, and a European. Race is an actual thing, even if defining it isn’t easy. Also by denying the reality of race, you are claiming there can’t be any such thing as racial discrimination. But perhaps I misunderstand your claim that race is BS.
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I think you missed my point though… Tim is from Chicago.
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“As someone who has lived in or near Chicago my entire life”
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20150224/10512730124/guardian-details-horrors-chicago-polices-cia-style-black-site.shtml
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Atlanta Braves, Cleveland Indians, Florida State Seminoles, Kansas City Chiefs, Golden State Warriors, Vancouver Canucks are just a few teams with “insulting” names.
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You know, if one takes it far enough at least Ohio and Illinois would have to give up their names. Not sure about other states, but I bet there are a few cities too.
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“Oklahoma” literally means “land of the red people” in Choctaw.
Guess they need a new state name…
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I know the list can go on and on. So why constantly single out one team?
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One note about the Kansas City Chiefs. Their team name is taken from the nickname of the mayor who was instrumental in moving the team to the city. The others (with the possible exception of the Braves and Canucks) are proper nouns (the Seminoles are a Native American tribe) or general descriptors (Warriors need not be members of any particular nationality).
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Atlanta Braves… Criticized for other reasons. e.g., the “Tomahawk Chop”
Cleveland Indians… Not sure how that could be insulting on its own. See Vikings.
Florida State Seminoles… Have an agreement with the tribe, and dispensation to use the spear ceremony.
Kansas City Chiefs… Again, not sure how that’s insulting
Golden State Warriors… Ditto
Vancouver Canucks… The only way that could be considered insulting is that the national nickname is appropriated by one team. See Yankees.
If you can’t see how Redskins is in a different league (as it were) than the above, I don’t know what to tell you other than stop opining on the subject. This is not in your wheelhouse.
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Re: Re: Re:3 Redskin Tobacco Company
I just did a quick search of the US trademark register for “Redskin” related to tobacco and I find no applications or registrations, live or dead.
As far as I can tell, from an extensive search (Google), no one has sold tobacco under that brand in decades, and the only products available seem to be spittoons.
Regardless, if it were a registered trademark it would be subject to cancelation too.
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“Florida State Seminoles… Have an agreement with the tribe, and dispensation to use the spear ceremony.”
Let’s not go overboard here. We’re on Techdirt, here. You can’t own a spear ceremony, even if you are a race.
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“Cleveland Indians… Not sure how that could be insulting on its own. See Vikings.”
The key issue w/the Cleveland Indians is their super-racist logo, a cartoon indian brave that is literally cherry red in color….
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chief_Wahoo
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Exactly! Contrast that with the Washington Redskin’s logo:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/6/63/Washington_Redskins_logo.svg/100px-Washington_Redskins_logo.svg.png
See the difference? One is insulting and the other is not.
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Which is why the logo isn’t the point of this.
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At least two thirds of native americans think “redskin” is insulting – that navajo nation president who showed up in owners box at a redskins game was pulling a stunt because his own council had recently voted 9-2 to oppose the redskins name.
Indian is regarded as an insult by a small minority of native americans. You’ll never achieve perfection, but when a word is considered a slur by at least 2:1 of the people slurred that’s a pretty good sign it is not acceptable.
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Cleveland Indians… Not sure how that could be insulting on its own.
There are those who claim that the term “Indian” is insulting to “Native Americans”.
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Vancouver anything is insulting 🙂
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But they aren’t insulting, they’re just names. Whereas, the word redskin has the ccharacter of being insulting. Though I have to admit, I don’t really get this. It doesn’t seem very insulting in my own linguistic sphere. Still, it probably is a little bit.
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My high school mascot is the Indians, and recently they got together with a Sioux tribe to do some kind of cultural education thing at the school rather than get into a fight about the name. I thought it was a great way to approach the situation.
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How is Canuck insulting? Or Warrior? GSW has not had an Indian in the logo since 1969, so warrior is now generic.
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There haven’t been any real news stories to write about regarding the Blackhawks. That said, if they were to change their famous “Indian head” logo, I’d be all for it.
It’s a particularly easy change to make, actually, as the Blackhawks aren’t even named after the Indian tribe….
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as others say below, not sure why the redskins get piled on while -say- the FS ptui U seminoles get a free pass; ’cause that tomahawk chant is, like, so-o-o-o super respectful of indian heritage…
snort
oh, wait a minute, they bribed enough uncle tom tom’s to get a special dispensation… my mistake…
also agree about team name changes, which often border on the ludicrous: new orleans jazz changing to the UTAH jazz when they moved ? ? ? UTAH, “JAZZ” ? c’mon…
‘yeah, me and martha are going to Salt Lake Jazz Fest with the Hot Mormon Quintet headlining, its where everyone who loves jazz goes…’
just one more reason why sports teams should be locally owned by the citizens, like green bay… which is just one more reason why the sports kingpins will NEVER let that happen again…
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Well, the trademark office can’t do a thing about the chant. They only have authority over the actual trademark.
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…sports teams should be locally owned by the citizens…
Many teams are owned locally. The problem is that it is increasingly rare to find an ownership or senior management who actually played the sport. The teams who have an ownership/management that actually played the sport are the consistently successful teams, even if they don’t make their playoffs. I’ll cite the NBA’s Phoenix Suns as an example. Under the current ownership this team has had more ‘stinker’ seasons than they ever had under the old ownership.
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The teams who have an ownership/management that actually played the sport are the consistently successful teams, even if they don’t make their playoffs.
That’s an interesting claim, do you have any evidence for it or is it just your personal observation?
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I am only aware of one publicly owned professional sports team. In America anyway.
Since owners aren’t playing the sport but actually running an entertainment enterprise/organization I’d say their athletic prowess in their youth is wholly irrelevant….
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Agreed. If they don’t like the team, don’t watch football or root for someone else.
I felt the same way about every single Muslim idiot who martyred himself taking out those evil people who drew cartoons mocking the pederast prophet. But who I hated more were the “progressive” defenders in the media who basically blamed the victim for “triggering” oppressed people with their offensive display of Western hegemony. Those dead cartoonists in Paris would be alive today if only they had checked their privilege.
Funny how the “change the channel” argument only applied to their conservative rivals trying to pull Teletubbies and Will & Grace off the air for promoting a nonexistent “gay agenda.” Now that the shoe is on the other foot, and it’s libertarians (not “conservatives” of the Jerry Falwell set) saying J’Accuse to left-wingers trying to pull South Park and Charlie Hebdo for promoting a nonexistent “systemic white privilege” agenda, “change the channel” is suddenly a racist slogan no different from “Arbeit Macht Frei” or “Segregation Forever”?
I’ve had just about enough of whiners on both sides trying to tell me what I can do or believe or draw or look up online or what have you. I support people’s right to offend. No one has the right not to be offended. Change the channel or turn it off if something bothers you that much. But don’t take away other people’s right to enjoy it if they wish (not that anyone really enjoys a Redskins game, but you get my point).
These whining ‘we know morals better than everyone else’ is just about reached the end of it’s tether. I’d like to point you at another, which reaches the heights of stupidity as well as shows how far these people are willing to go to set up these incidents.
http://www.breitbart.com/tech/2015/11/04/feminists-are-trying-to-frame-linus-torvalds-for-sexual-assault-claims-open-source-industry-veteran/
If there was ever a move guaranteed to backfire you are looking at it with that link. Already business men are saying they would rather not hire women to avoid sexual harassment charges. Men seem to get by without having to resort to such as often. Give a few more years of this and of the incidents reported often here of happenings on uni campuses and women in the workforce will be really hard to find.
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“Breitbart News” is an oxymoron. With an emphasis on moron.
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And that has what to do with anything?
This author is nothing but a wannabe Social Justice Warrior who sees the debate over the team name as a green light to spew ‘Holier than thou’ rhetoric in a desperate attempt to accrue some social brownie points. It’s a football team name, not scripture from the Koran.
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Except at the end, he came to their defense
That filing reads like a list of people I used to go to school with.
Ah, figured it out. The word ‘redskins’ is not offensive if you’re a strict linguistic prescriptivist. Descriptivists who are OK with the term, however, are fucking racists.
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I don’t know. My mind puts “redskin” on the same level as “redhead”.
A racist would find any term referring to “those people” as derogatory by definition, because of who it refers to, not because having a particular tone of skin really matters.
Since when
Since when did America care about Indians?
Let me kill you and take your land…..
Instead of killing you, you can be forced to live in this land we give you.
We give to you we take away from you – America the true Indian givers
Re: Since when
There is of course much truth in that.
At the same time, it’s important to keep in mind that American culture treats Indians differently than other minorities.
There’s a strong strain in the culture that respects Indians because they fought back. It’s true they lost, but not without putting up an impressive fight.
That’s why we have so many sports teams named after Indian tribes and terms – Americans respect those who fight hard.
It may be best today to change the team name, but we should also acknowledge that it was chosen as a term of respect – nobody names sports teams after things they disrespect.
Re: Since when
Tecumseh and his people were valued allies when the US and Britain were bashing it out. There was a deal in place giving them a huge territory around the Great Lakes once the battle had been won.
Of course, the US then stabbed them in the back once they’d outlived their usefulness.
Great Article!
Very Lewis Black. lmoa the whole time.
I still say the problem isn’t the name, but the logo. Go Potatoes!
“Redskins” is about as offensive as “Cowboys”.
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I find the Cowboys VERY offensive. That might be because I’ve got some relatives that live in Dallas who take great pleasure in offending anyone not from Dallas and who also worship the Cowboys.
I have never seen anything wrong with the name Redskins. Until this current age of political correctness fascism no one had a problem with the team name.
Why is it seen as a derogative use of the name instead of celebrating the use of the name?
Are we going to decide all the other team names have to be changed because some random person decides to start being offended?
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Well, now that Somalians are taking over Minnesota, it won’t be long now before “Vikings” is denounced as an offensive symbol of white privilege. Nordic culture — must mean Nazis. Go with Minnesota Al-Shabaabs instead.
Latest News
Just saw this in an article in the Washington Post:
“Redskins owner finally admits that in light of recent events he is no longer willing to endure the embarrassment associated with the team name. From now on the team will be known as the Virginia Redskins.”
Dan Snyder just needs to let it rest, these tribes have been protesting the name for quite sometime including the teams super bowl appearance in 1992 ,before any of the so called liberal crusaders jumped on board.
It’s an insulting name and derogatory towards Native Americans that’s all that needs to be said.
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so some native americans are more equal than others? Or do the ones who are not offended by the name somehow not deserving of their opinion to leave the name as it is.
Interesting arguments but doomed to fail
I’m not comfortable with the idea that approval of a trademark is a form of government speech but I’m also not comfortable with the idea that the US government can be impelled to endorse or display speech which has been deemed vulgar and offensive. Regardless, I don’t see the courts coming around to the idea that this is a first amendment issue and the Lanham Act is not going away, but this is not the end.
Really though, the presence of those other marks on the register does not matter much, since they’ve never been challenged. If they were, some would surely be cancelled, especially the marks that employ seemingly racist language. No doubt confusingly similar marks, and descriptive marks, and offensive marks, make it on to the register, but that’s why there are provisions for opposition and cancelations.
And even after cancelation, there is nothing preventing the use of the REDSKINS trademark under common law, which also undermines the first amendment argument.
Re: Cancellations coming?
I wonder if we’ll see any challenges to some of these marks now that they’re in the spotlight. “Dago” really ranks right up there with “Redskin” on the offensive scale, but the others are more debatable.
Re: Interesting arguments but doomed to fail
But a trademark registration is not an endorsement. From the filing: “It strains credulity that the public ‘closely’ associates GUN CONTROL MY ASS and DOES THIS GUN MAKE MY BUTT LOOK BIG? with the federal government, which very recently registered these marks.”
The government does display the speech, but that’s just their own requirement. “The District Court reasoned that in publishing the Official Gazette and the ‘Principal Register,’ the ‘government is the literal speaker.’ But the government publishes copyright registrations, and thus the court’s theory would permit the government to discriminate against books based on content and viewpoint. The government could refuse to provide permits for unpopular rallies if it simply posted all permits on the Internet.”
Perhaps, but it seems odd in the extreme for the government to claim that something is “its” speech when “it relies exclusively on private citizens to seek cancellation.”
Nothing except the loss of equal protection under the law. Like they said, “The government cannot turn the lights off at a Redskins night game because the government disfavors the name, and defend the action because the Redskins can still play in the dark. Registration confers indispensable legal protections, and the government cannot condition those protections on a trademark-owner’s agreement to forgo disfavored speech.”
The entire POINT of the challenge to the registration was to use the power of the government to get them to change their name; you can’t claim that the First Amendment doesn’t apply.
Re: Re: Great Points
Especially about the publication of copyright registrations. Copyright law makes my head pound and I don’t know enough about how copyright and the first amendment interact.
Since a trademark registration is not considered property under the Fifth Amendment, not being granted a registration may not be considered a loss.
I don’t see that freedom of speech entitles one party government mandated exclusivity over the commercial expression of that speech. Courts have given much greater latitude to laws that restrict commercial speech, and individuals are not robbed of their rights of free expression when the government polices commercial speech.
Further, in my eyes, the intention of the challengers is to stop the use of a disparaging trademark. Whether the owner of the mark chooses to change their name, or whether the challenger wants them to choose a new name is really irrelevant.
Re: Interesting arguments but doomed to fail
Washington Foreskins, now is everybody happy?
Hey Tim, want to buy my RGIII jersey?
assuming such a thing as race....
while there is no scientific (biology) basis for “race” in the common/cultural definition it would seem the phrase “Red” “Skin” is the very essence of “racisim”….
Obviously, body, acidity, oiliness, and depth of roast would enter into a final assessment, but I would totally give “Big Titty Blend” coffee a try.
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Obviously, body, acidity, oiliness, and depth of roast would enter into a final assessment, but I would totally give “Big Titty Blend” coffee a try.
Wouldn’t cup size also be a factor?
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Oh sure. And the company could release another line (same product, different packaging) called, “Men Are Oinkers” or “Tiny Penis Heads” which they could market to women.
Some guys’ attitudes make me wonder how any men ever get laid. I suppose many women are just gluttons for punishment or masochists, just like many men. Hey, commonality! Yippee! What’s good for the goose …
I can all but guarantee you that this research project was the most fun the paralegals on the Redskins’ legal team will have had in their entire careers.
Follow the Money!
So I take it, based on the possible offensiveness of the name, that Redskin potatoes will have to have their name changed (auburn or strawberry blonde, perhaps)? This whole “politically correct” thing has gotten totally out of hand. It all boils down to “Billable Hours”.
Just pick a new name
I’ve said before in similar articles, but the obvious solution is to change the name to something that reflects Washington. This way, everyone can save face. For example, the Senators (baseball) or the Capitols (hockey).
How about the Washington Representatives, with a cartoon senator on the helmet? Or the Washington Beltways, with a cartoon highway? Or the Washington Monuments, a team so strong they can’t be pushed around?
Re: Just pick a new name
Love the “Monuments”.
Representatives is a bit long, and they don’t actually do anything. The Washington Lobby? The Washington Fixers maybe?
That some native Americans find the term “redskins” is not the issue.
First off, there is the problem that a minority is relabeling an accepted term to be pejorative with absolutely no proof as no studies have been performed to determine what percentage of Americans/native Americans find it pejorative. We are just supposed to take the word of what can only be labeled a small minority without proof.
Secondly, as the Redskins’ filing pointed out, to selectively remove copyright on one pejorative term without invalidating all the other pejorative terms is selective enforcement. The copyright office can only remove trademark on all potentially pejorative terms or none of them.
Lastly, the definition of just what is & what is not pejorative is highly subjective and many common terms are considered offensive by some. Must we go down the SJW road and remove them all? Is it sufficient that only one person find a term offensive for it to be refused trademark? If not one, then how many?
Before any movement on banning existing trademarks or refusing to accord new ones can be taken, clear rules must be defined and accepted by the courts.
Re: Clear rules
The trademark office has rules and the courts have found that they are not impermissibly vague. There’s no evidence here of selective enforcement. None of the other marks mentioned have been challenged, and if they were they would go through the same process.
FWIW you are mixing copyrights and trademarks. Two different critters, and two different governmental offices.
Maybe youcan explain to someone mentioned in the appeal
http://www.kivitv.com/news/boise-coffee-shop-finds-themselves-in-the-midst-of-the-redskins-legal-battle