Mark Cuban Makes Bold Statements

Dallas Mevericks Owner Mark Cuban is now under the micro­scope for mak­ing the fol­low­ing state­ments. But is it fair to Cuban , the atten­tion he is get­ting for mak­ing these com­ments, are we at a point where we can­not dis­cuss ideas and say what we feel with­out being maligned?

Dallas Mavericks own­er Mark Cuban, attempt­ing to make a nuanced point about soci­ety’s chal­lenges deal­ing with racism, acknowl­edged hav­ing his own “prej­u­dices and big­otries” dur­ing an inter­view with Inc. mag­a­zine that has gone viral.

In this day and age, this coun­try has real­ly come a long way putting any type of big­otry behind us, regard­less of who it’s toward,” Cuban said Wednesday. “We’ve come a long way, and with that progress comes a price. We’re a lot more vig­i­lant and we’re a lot less tol­er­ant of dif­fer­ent views, and it’s not nec­es­sar­i­ly easy for every­body to adapt or evolve.

I mean, we’re all prej­u­diced in one way or anoth­er. If I see a black kid in a hood­ie and it’s late at night, I’m walk­ing to the oth­er side of the street. And if on that side of the street, there’s a guy that has tat­toos all over his face — white guy, bald head, tat­toos every­where — I’m walk­ing back to the oth­er side of the street. And the list goes on of stereo­types that we all live up to and are fear­ful of. So in my busi­ness­es, I try not to be hyp­o­crit­i­cal. I know that I’m not per­fect. I know that I live in a glass house, and it’s not appro­pri­ate for me to throw stones.”

Cuban’s com­ments come at a par­tic­u­lar­ly sen­si­tive time for the NBA, which is the midst of try­ing to force Los Angeles Clippers own­er Donald Sterling to sell his team after he made racial­ly charged com­ments on an audio­tape. Sterling was banned for life and fined $2.5 mil­lion by NBA com­mis­sion­er Adam Silver after the release of a TMZ record­ing, in which he told a female friend, V. Stiviano, not to bring black peo­ple to Clippers games.

On Monday, Sterling was charged with dam­ag­ing the league with his racist com­ments, and has until Tuesday to respond to the charge. If Sterling does not respond by then, that would be grounds for ter­mi­na­tion. Silver’s deci­sion of a life­time ban for Sterling is sub­ject to a vote by NBA own­ers on June, with the com­mis­sion­er need­ing three-quar­ters of the vote to enforce his decision.

[+] EnlargeMark Cuban
Jerome Miron/​USA TODAY SportsMark Cuban’s com­ments come at a par­tic­u­lar­ly sen­si­tive time for the NBA, which is the midst of try­ing to force Clippers own­er Donald Sterling to sell his team after he made racial­ly charged comments.

Speaking at the annu­al GrowCo con­ven­tion, host­ed by Inc. mag­a­zine, on Wednesday in Nashville, Tennessee, Cuban said he knows how he’ll vote but isn’t ready to com­ment on it.

There’s no law against stu­pid,” Cuban said when asked how to keep big­otry out of the NBA, accord­ing to the Tennessean. “I’m the one guy who says ‘don’t force stu­pid peo­ple to be qui­et.’ I want to know who the morons are.”

On the night before Silver’s announce­ment of Sterling’s life­time ban, Cuban called Sterling’s com­ments “abhor­rent.” However, he also said that forc­ing Sterling to sell the Clippers would be a “very slip­pery slope.”

Cuban pledged his full sup­port of Silver’s rul­ing after the fact, but he had been guard­ed on his com­ments on the sub­ject since then until appear­ing at the GrowCo con­ven­tion Wednesday, when he report­ed­ly said that he hates that he might have to be hyp­o­crit­i­cal with his vote on the the mat­ter of Sterling.

The point Cuban attempt­ed to make dur­ing his video­taped inter­view with Inc. mag­a­zine was the impor­tance of help­ing peo­ple evolve from their prej­u­dices and bigotries.

I’ll try to give them a chance to improve them­selves, because I think that help­ing peo­ple improve their lives, help­ing peo­ple engage with peo­ple they may fear or may not under­stand, and help­ing peo­ple real­ize that while we all may have our prej­u­dices and big­otries we have to learn that it’s an issue that we have to con­trol, that it’s part of my respon­si­bil­i­ty as an entre­pre­neur to try to solve it, not just to kick the prob­lem down the road,” Cuban said. “Because it does my com­pa­ny no good, it does my cus­tomers no good, it does soci­ety no good if my response to some­body and their racism and big­otry is to say, ‘It’s not right for you to be here. Go take your atti­tude some­where else.’ ”https://​mike​beck​les​.com/​w​p​-​a​d​m​i​n​/​p​o​s​t​-​n​e​w​.​php