
When Indian cricketers Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj reported racist abuse during the recent Sydney test match, Australiaās ugly racism hit the headlines again.
The most racist media outlets questioned whetherĀ the abuseĀ had actually happened.Ā TheĀ less racist outletsĀ tried to blurĀ the incident,Ā drawing parallels between racist abuse and sledging ā a cricketing term for verbal insults aimed at distracting the opposition.
,Ģż³Ł³ó±šĢż“”µž°äāsĀ sportsĀ journalist, probably had the bestĀ establishmentĀ position.Ā
āRacism happens in Australian sport because there is racism in Australia,ā she said bluntlyĀ on January 12.
She went on:Ā āIn a predominantly white society, with a domination of white voices setting the daily news agenda, it is not a white personās place to decide what is racist and what isnāt.ā
Sheās right. But without a class analysis sheĀ didnāt draw anyĀ conclusions about why victims ofĀ racism are rarely believed, nor howĀ institutionalised racismĀ hasĀ not onlyĀ destroyed the careersĀ ofĀ professional sports people, itĀ has alsoĀ destroyedĀ theĀ lives of many.
Sports commentators areĀ wellĀ aware of the insidious nature of racism in sport. First NationsāĀ player Adam Goodes,Ā aĀ Brownlow medallist and former Sydney Swans footballer,Ā has featured inĀ debates and documentaries aboutĀ the topic.Ā Goodes spent three years being booed and racially vilified, until he was forced into early retirement in 2015.
Last year, the ABCĀ ran aĀ feature-lengthĀ story onĀ the persecution,Ā which startedĀ some 40 years ago,Ā of anotherĀ First NationsāĀ footballer,Ģż³Ł³ó±š former St Kilda playerĀ .Ā Racism destroyed Muirās career,Ā it alsoĀ nearlyĀ ended hisĀ life.
Few,Ā however,Ā draw the conclusion that the same injusticesĀ Muir facedĀ are at play forĀ allĀ First NationāsĀ communities.
Institutionalised racism,Ā a legacy of colonialism,Ā is the cause of so much poverty,Ā aĀ shorter life expectancy and less quality of life forĀ this countryās First Nation's peoples today.Ā Racism is also the context for theĀ highĀ levels of infant mortality, blindness, deafness, diabetes and liver disease they suffer.
From 1788 until today, First Nationsā peoples are still having to fight against corporationās wilful destruction of their land and for theirĀ childrenĀ not to be taken away.
RefugeesĀ and asylum seekersĀ suffer similar vilification, portrayed as āillegalsāĀ orĀ āinvadersā coming to steal land and jobs.Ā It is shameful that the racist scapegoating of a tiny minority isĀ promoted (albeit in different ways)Ā by both major parties.
TheĀ establishmentĀ media reflects the ideology of those who rule society.Ā Rulers benefit fromĀ racism and sexismĀ (and all the āismsā) because they keep usĀ dividedĀ and stop us fromĀ working togetherĀ against exploitation and injustices andĀ challenge the system.
Racism has its historical roots in theĀ development of capitalism.Ā Just as racism helped enable the emerging capitalist class of medieval Europe to accumulate the capital to plunder the native Americas, so today it serves the interests of those in power who use racism to divide workersĀ and deflect anger,Ā especially when times are tough.
Racism in sport,Ā and more broadly against First Nations peoples,Ā wonātĀ end whileĀ it remains one of the bedrocksĀ ofĀ aĀ system which relies onĀ a layer of super-exploitedĀ workers.
The mainstream media, even those who call out racism, wonāt explain that because it would involveĀ challenging the hand that feeds it.
Unlike the big media, we have no reason not to challenge and expose the injustices of the capitalist system. And unlike the big media, we donāt rely on paid sponsors and advertising. We rely on you.
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