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Friday, April 25, 2008

Anger, Anguish, Calm Follow Acquittal.

By Glenn Minnis | TheRoot.com

The aftermath of a stunning decision in the Sean Bell case.

Sean Bell's parents Valerie and William Bell

And God said let there be peace.

Thus, in the face of anguish most would find unimaginable, the family of Sean Bell and the people of Queens County gathered early Friday to share solidarity as much as to point fingers.

Tensions ran high outside the State Supreme Court in Queens after Justice Arthur Cooperman rendered his stunning acquittal of New York City detectives Michael Oliver, Gescard Isnora, and Marc Cooper. But then, what would you expect when three of NYC's finest and most decorated lawmen are completely absolved and exonerated in the death of a young man who died in a hail of unreturned gunfire on an otherwise peaceful November night in his own neighborhood? Tensions were unavoidable.

Groom-to-be and father of two, Sean Bell, 23, died on what was to be his wedding day on Thanksgiving weekend, 2006.  Tears flowed in Queens on Friday as freely as the bullets flew that dreadful night. Chants of "No Justice, No Peace," and "Murderers" seemed to stretch for miles, often drowning out both impromptu and planned demonstrations. One poignant scene played out after another amid the most somber of backdrops.

Just as Pat Lynch, the outspoken President of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, began to rant about how the verdict sends a message to officers everywhere that they will be fairly treated for confronting all the challenges they face in trying to protect and serve, a rendition of KRS One's legendary 'Who Protects Us From You?' began to blare from the heavens.

"My heart cried out for justice, but my experiences had prepared me for this moment," chimed the Rev. Herbert Daugherty of Harlem.

In time, William and Valerie Bell, the parents of Sean, and Nicole Paultre Bell, the woman he was hours away from wedding, limped from the courtroom, clearly shaken by what had transpired.

They said nothing as they made their way, hand in hand, through droves of equally stunned supporters. But there are times when those who say the least actually reveal the most. Their look said it all: Anguish. Emptiness. Anger. The justice they sought for their beloved had not been rendered. They could choose to rail against the system. Instead, they quietly just walked away.

Glenn Minnis is a New York writer.

(Check out my commentary  on the Sean Bell verdict on Washington's WHUR 96.3 FM Radio at 7 p.m. PEACE)  

6:07 pm edt 

Friday, April 11, 2008

Big-Time College Sports is no Small Game


Just ask Clemson tailback Ray Ray McElrathbey who lost his football scholarship, no doubt to somone who can help the Tigers win RIGHT NOW.


Am I my brother's keeper?

Clemson tailback Ray Ray McElrathbey lives his life by answering yes to that biblical question every day.

So, two years ago with his mother battling a drug addiction and his absentee father crippled by an equally self-sabotaging gambling affliction, the question of what to do with his then 11-year-old brother was a simple one for Ray Ray, all of 19 years old at the time.

He would become the legal guardian to young Fahmarr, who would then join his big brother on the South Carolina campus and, together, they would live the cramped dorm-room life.

I, and many others, have been struck by this story since it first broke, and the tender moment made sports-show highlight reels around the globe; it easily ranks as one of the top feel-good stories of that football season or ever. Ray Ray was on Oprah and ABC News took note, tabbing him its 'Person of the Week.'

But somewhere between the wonton euphoria of college sports — as experienced by Kansas fans this week after their NCAA win in San Antonio — and the bottom-line, financial considerations that govern big-time college sports programs, agendas change as quickly as game plans.

The McElrathbey boys now serve as somber highlights of that reality. Mere months after basking in the national spotlight, Ray Ray and Fahmarr are now simply trying to find a place to rest their heads.

Their touching story, you see, had no place in the world of corporate, collegiate athletics, where the code is as revealing as the one Ray Ray strives to live by: 'Win. All else be damned.'

How else does one explain Clemson coach Tommy Bowden telling Ray Ray that it was time for him to be moving on. The Clemson program decided to pull McElrathbey's scholarship; he can stay through August when he is scheduled to graduate. But the football career is over; his scholarship pulled, no doubt with the intention of offering it to someone who can make a bigger impact on the program than Ray, Ray did as a third string back.

Later, Bowden and company made what seemed the obligatory generous gesture of offering McElrathbey a spot as a graduate-assistant, though the question of just how much of his living expenses it would cover remained in doubt. Now, ask yourself, how could Ray Ray McElrathbey be expected to continue providing any stability for his young sibling when his own survival was in such grave doubt?

Truth is, drastic times demand drastic action, and the tough tactics go both ways. The talk of the collegiate sports world right now is the almost-certain decisions by the less-than-legal brigade of Derrick Rose, 19 [ Memphis];  O.J. Mayo, 20  [USC];  Michael Beasley, 19 [Kansas State];  Eric Gordon, 19 [Indiana], and Jerryd Bayless, 19 [Arizona], to forgo their remaining college eligibility and declare themselves eligible for the NBA draft -- and its attendant millions -- just one-year into the four-year commitments they made to their respective institutions.

But before passing any judgment on those decisions, think of Ray Ray and Fahmarr McElrathbey, and realize just how fragile those commitments are, how subject to change they are at the end of each season by people like Tommy Bowden and the corporate interests they represent.

Without question, being young, gifted and black doesn't always get you what you deserve in this life. You need look no further than Ray Ray and  Fahmarr McElrathbey for testimony. 

Glenn Minnis is a writer in New York.

9:01 am edt 

Saturday, April 5, 2008

Game Recgonizes Game

And this is why they play the games. North Carolina and UCLA both went down in San Antonio. Pedigree be damned. Yeah, yeah, I know Kansas has creed too. But Memphis?

 If that is indeed your train of thought, you need brace yourself for what's surely to come. Translation? When all is said and done, John  Calipari and his gunslinging Tigers will leave the Alamo with the ultimate prize.

Derrick Rose, it's been nice knowing you on the collegiate stage, as the hotshot freshmen guard will surely soon be leaving Graceland for the lure of the NBA's riches. And this is why we follow the games. 

11:09 pm edt 


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It's been a labor of love putting all this together over the last several years. Not to mention a lot of work. But hey, what does folklore tell us? Something about anything worth having is worth fighting for. Yeah, right. You be the judge.



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