This Week's Opening Thought: September 26, 2022
This week’s opening thought: Boston Celtics head coach Ime Udoka is in the news for having a consensual relationship with a cis female staff member of the Boston Celtics organization. The fallout of this abuse of power has dominated segments of the news cycle for days. And yes, before anyone decides to go in on me, this situation is an abuse of power. We’re not going to debate that. And while I have a fundamental problem with people in power having relationships with employees in their organizations who have less power and stature within said organizations, there’s one thing that stood out for me in all the news coverage of Udoka’s indiscretions:
NFL football legend Brett Favre helped a group of white folx commit large-scale welfare fraud, and no one is talking about it.
A rich white cis male who made his money in a heteronormative sport is being investigated for blatant large-scale welfare fraud, and the press and the sports media have barely discussed it.
It’s not even second-page news at this point.
As the situation with Ime Udoka unfolds, its fallout should be the point of discussion around more significant conversations regarding abuses of power and control in our workplaces. But to act like Brett Favre and a group of white people who saw a system to exploit shouldn’t also be a discussion we should be having parallel to the Udoka conversation is surreal.
If we’re talking about abuses of power and privilege, we need to be talking about all of the abuses of power and privilege, not just the ones with melanated folx in the forefront as public figures.
P.S.: Impoverished Black folx in Mississippi are also at the forefront as public figures in the large-scale welfare fraud that Favre and his homies perpetrated. This fraud harms Black communities. The news cycles want to act like they aren’t at the forefront and that their harm isn’t worth discussing. If you learn one thing today, understand that whiteness will always use melanin to harm others, whether as full-on spectacles or bodies to sweep under the rug.