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Hong Kong

The NBA's China Problem Gets Worse After 2 American Arenas Eject Hong Kong Supporters

This week's demonstrations at NBA games are a refreshing reminder that Americans won't just "stick to sports."

Eric Boehm | 10.10.2019 8:10 PM

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If the National Basketball Association (NBA) and its team owners wanted American fans and league employees to stop talking about China and just focus on the upcoming NBA season, they picked a really dumb way to make that happen.

On Tuesday night, security guards at Philadelphia's Wells Fargo Center ejected a pair of fans from a preseason game between the Philadelphia 76ers and the Guangzhou Loong Lions, a Chinese team. The fans had been holding signs reading "Free Hong Kong," and NBC Philadelphia reported that the fans were heard chanting the same slogan during the game. Video of the incident quickly circulated on Twitter.

The moment Sam Wachs and his wife are escorted out of the @sixers preseason game against a Chinese basketball team for yelling "Free Hong Kong." @6abc pic.twitter.com/3HlZxKXDzs

— Christie Ileto (@Christie_Ileto) October 9, 2019

On Wednesday night, when the Guangzhou Loong Lions played a game in Washington, D.C., there were more protesters with more signs. One asked people to "Google Uighurs" in reference to the Muslim-minority group that's been systemically persecuted and forced into internment camps in western China. Others expressed support for the protests in Hong Kong. Again, the signs were confiscated and the fans were escorted from the arena.

But in trying to silence a handful of fans, the NBA has turned a minor public relations crisis into a full-blown Streisand Effect. And while prominent sports media outlets have not exactly covered themselves in glory by trying to ignore the story, it's now quickly becoming unavoidable. By Thursday evening, one of the protestors kicked out of Wednesday's game in Washington had taken to the pages of the New York Post to accuse the NBA of practicing "Chinese-style censorship and authoritarianism on American soil."

The NBA's crackdown on expressing support for Hong Kong's independence began after Daryl Morey, the general manager of the Houston Rockets, tweeted "Fight for freedom, stand with Hong Kong" last Friday night. The tweet was quickly deleted, but China (a huge and growing market for the NBA's product) retaliated by announcing that CCTV, China's state-run television network, would not broadcast NBA preseason games staged this week in Shanghai and Shenzhen.

Social media has made it impossible to contain the protests that have resulted from the league's attempt to repair relations with China's authoritarian Communist Party and its state-funded subsidiaries.

Was proud to #StandWithHongKong at the @NBA's China/@WashWizards exhibition game! (Got kicked out) #FreeHongKong pic.twitter.com/Rqx3fUxGqt

— Patrick Hedger (@pat_hedger) October 9, 2019

Some creative types want to sustain pressure. In less than 24 hours, a GoFundMe page seeking to raise money for "Free Hong Kong" shirts has received nearly $3,000 in donations. The shirts will be distributed outside the Golden State Warrior's arena in San Francisco. Organizer Lee Bishop says he wants to "hold our American corporations accountable to our American values and liberty that should be spread across the globe."

The NBA and its constituent teams are, of course, independent corporations free to do as they please when it comes to allowing political messages to be displayed during games. But it's also right to point out that the league has a history of being involved in political causes, like when it withdrew its annual All-Star Weekend event from Charlotte, North Carolina, in 2017 to protest the passage of a state law discriminating against transgender individuals. Moving that event to New Orleans didn't hurt the league's bottom line. Severing corporate ties to China and potentially losing hundreds of millions of Chinese fans would be financially costly. This has led some people to the reasonable conclusion that the NBA is woke only when being woke makes financial sense.

Exporting American goods and values—including cultural interests like basketball—has helped make the world a more peaceful place. Sending American sports celebrities to China is good for the players, and great for Chinese fans of basketball. But the NBA cannot expect to kowtow to China's demands for censorship without blowback from the folks at home. America is the land of the free and the mouthy.

As with the backlash against Activision Blizzard, an online gaming company that similarly tried to silence pro-Hong Kong opinions, demonstrations at NBA games this week are a refreshing reminder that Americans are often motivated to do even more the thing they are told they cannot do. What's more, our Constitution protects our right to do so.

If the NBA wants to forfeit the speech of its employees for money, it can. It can also bar fans from arenas for just about any reason. But in that case, American fans could give the league hell. T-shirts and signs may be only the start.

The NBA needs to think carefully about whether winning in China is worth losing in America.

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NEXT: Does Volodymyr Zelenskiy's Take on His Chat With Trump Show the President 'Did Absolutely Nothing Wrong'?

Eric Boehm is a reporter at Reason.

Hong KongChinaSportsNBAProtestsFree Speech
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  1. Fist of Etiquette   6 years ago

    So that's what it takes for a Filthadelphia fan to get ejected from something, huh?

    1. Atlas_Shrugged   6 years ago

      Sigh.....we long for the days that a Court was actually in the Philly stadium to adjudicate cases. 🙂

      This is pretty unbelievable; the rank hypocrisy is stunning. I would feel differently if the NBA was trying to be apolitical. But they aren't. They chose to side with communists and totalitarians.

      1. Pod   6 years ago

        And when Trump makes his "big deal" with the Chinese I'm sure we'll hear all about how he sided with communists. Maybe you don't know this but Trump promised Winnie the Poo that he wouldn't say a word in support of Hong Kong. So here you are attacking the NBA for an offense against people fighting this evil empire but barely battering an eye when the supposed leader of the free world betrays the protesters even more.

        1. TripK2   6 years ago

          We should just declare war and get this whole end of the world thing started.

        2. damikesc   6 years ago

          Hmm, we have rumor about Trump vs actual actions by the NBA. Yeah, rumors are way more important.

          Idiot.

        3. Sevo   6 years ago

          "...Winnie the Poo..."

          Lefty 'tards take up entirely too much time making asses of themselves with 'clever' nick-names.
          Fuck off, you piece of shit.

          1. Zeb   6 years ago

            That particular idiocy doesn't seem to be limited to leftards. Plenty of rightards do the same.

            And I find it pretty amusing that Xi is insulted by being compared to Winnie the Pooh.

      2. Teddy Pump   6 years ago

        The NBA ruined basketball a long time ago when they allied with Nike to promote Jordan & dunking over real team basketball...Thus, traveling, steps, palming, carrying the ball etc...are all ok now! It's garbage!

    2. Dillinger   6 years ago

      go Flyers.

    3. joyopo445   6 years ago

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  2. Juice   6 years ago

    Meanwhile in the UK...

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7557947/Shy-awkward-student-19-faces-JAIL-sex-assault-conviction.html

    'Shy and awkward’ student, 19, who googled 'how to make a friend' then touched a schoolgirl, 17, on her arm and waist while trying to chat to her faces JAIL after sex assault conviction
    Student Jamie Griffiths, 19, searched 'how to make a friend' on the internet

    1. John   6 years ago

      The bitch who went to the cops over that deserves to rot in hell

      1. NoVaNick   6 years ago

        No, she doesn’t, but the progtard politicians who made this a crime deserve to be burned at the stake, or drawn and quartered

        1. Dillinger   6 years ago

          no she still does.

          1. Brett Bellmore   6 years ago

            Nah, that's more of a purgatory thing, IMO.

            1. Dillinger   6 years ago

              something is enough.

            2. Trollificus   6 years ago

              She needs mental health care. I'd save the purgatory/hell questions for the parents who raised such a fragile flower to...well, not adulthood apparently, but to the age of 17. Which, off the evidence of the last few years, is the new "4".

        2. Teddy Pump   6 years ago

          +1,000,000!!!

    2. Unicorn Abattoir   6 years ago

      That reminds me of a Big Bang Theory episode.

      (Just jump to around 3:40)

      1. Josef   6 years ago

        Thanks for sharing your thoughts

    3. Zeb   6 years ago

      That's really sad and outrageous.
      Sounds like the only remotely sexual part of the interaction was in the girl's head (she seems pretty messed up too). She thought he would have touched her breast and that makes it sexual assault?

  3. Red Rocks White Privilege   6 years ago

    These protestors should really go whole hog and set up protests outside movie theaters this holiday season.

  4. Rufus The Monocled   6 years ago

    Fuck China.
    Fuck the NBA.
    Fuck Adam Silver.
    Fuck Popovich and Kerr and the other merry band of faux social justice intellectual shit heads in that league.
    Fuck Nike.

    Fuck 'em. Fuck 'em all.

    Let it be known when the moment came to support freedom of speech and liberty we know who the hypocritical cowards in America really are.

    Imagine being a dissident or someone unjustly languishing in prison or gay activists or human rights organizations in China doing God's work with little help and having to watch this sickening display on AMERICAN SOIL. It must be disheartening.

    But then we gotta listen to Kerr's TDS or Lebron's fake outrage or Pop's vacuous history takes or Silver baby gibberish about the NBA being a 'progressive' league.

    Sure. And then you all suck Chinese cock.

    1. Rufus The Monocled   6 years ago

      I forgot....Fuck that owner of the Nets and his 1.4 billion angry Chinese. Yeh, like they have the freedom to express themselves. As if we'd know the truth.

      1. Unicorn Abattoir   6 years ago

        +600 million screaming chinamen.

        1. Rufus The Monocled   6 years ago

          In a forest? Do they make a sound?

          Will their government allow it?

          1. Kivlor   6 years ago

            Am not allow

          2. BigT   6 years ago

            If a person screams in an internment camp, can you hear it?

          3. Paulpemb   6 years ago

            "Are you crazy, Jin Yiang? You can't do that here! This is Palo Alto. We don't enjoy all the freedoms that you have in China."

            1. Josef   6 years ago

              Thanks for sharing your thoughts 🙂

              https://intensivepass.co.uk

          4. Trollificus   6 years ago

            Haaahahah!

            If a Chinaman (or a billion Chinamans) screams in a forest and no one is there to hear it, it makes a sound IF PRESIDENT XI SAYS IT DOES. And only if he says. If you disagree publicly, you will earn, like the Blizzard forum members who mentioned Hong Kong protests, the BAN OF A THOUSAND YEARS!

    2. Aloysious   6 years ago

      Preach it, brother.

      And stop listening to those NBA returds.

    3. R Mac   6 years ago

      Heeeeeeelllllllllooooooooo!!!!!!!!!!

    4. Number 2   6 years ago

      “Silver baby gibberish about the NBA being a ‘progressive’ league.”

      “Progressive” as in “Great Leap Forward?”

    5. Dillinger   6 years ago

      >>>But then we gotta ...

      only if you want to watch shitty hoops ...

      1. Trollificus   6 years ago

        But...but...I can't boycott the NBA, I'd miss the suspense of people taking all those 0 foot shots! An endeavor which has a success rate of barely 99.4%, I mean, dunks are made only 16,000 times per season!

    6. Teddy Pump   6 years ago

      +1,000,000,000,000,000!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  5. Juice   6 years ago

    Oh yeah, a guy I know said he was just passing by the Veriz... er Capital One Arena and he was handed a free T-shirt that said Free Hong Kong. Fuck. I want a free T-shirt.

    1. Don't look at me!   6 years ago

      Made in China. Ironic.

      1. Juice   6 years ago

        I read somewhere that there's a good chance that some of the stuff that says made in China is actually made in North Korea. Who knows?

        1. Brett Bellmore   6 years ago

          That's where China goes for slave labor, when they want extra "slave".

    2. Teddy Pump   6 years ago

      Funny thing: Hong Kong was free, but then they kicked the British out!!!

  6. Juice   6 years ago

    The NBA needs to think carefully about whether winning in China is worth losing in America.

    Same with Activision Blizzard. I just read that revenue from mainland China makes up 5% of their total. Well, they just pissed off a huge portion of the market that sends them the other 95%.

    And they're about to have a big game release with Call of Duty Modern Warfare, which is expected to break sales records. It'll be interesting to see how many gamers can resist buying it.

    1. Don't look at me!   6 years ago

      It doesn’t matter. Gamers aren’t real people.

      1. Longtobefree   6 years ago

        I challenge you to roll for initiative - - - - - -

    2. Unicorn Abattoir   6 years ago

      It's funny. No problems with that stupid Pandaria expansion on WoW, but this sends them over the edge.

  7. Hank Phillips   6 years ago

    If the citizens of Hong Kong won't petition for American statehood, maybe we could trade Mainland China Washington State for HK? They could have Antifa mobs to practice suppressing and we would get educated folks who value freedom after having felt the difference on their hides!

    1. Longtobefree   6 years ago

      Throw in California and New Jersey to sweeten the deal.
      But they have to pay for the wall.

    2. CE   6 years ago

      Don't trade away Washington! We need one low tax state on the West Coast to retire to.

      1. Halykan   6 years ago

        I don't think that's gonna be true much longer. The low tax part, I mean.

  8. chemjeff radical individualist   6 years ago

    This has led some people to the reasonable conclusion that the NBA is woke only when being woke makes financial sense.

    WELL DUH. Did anyone really think otherwise?

    1. chemjeff radical individualist   6 years ago

      The corollary also, appears to be, that the NBA is patriotic only when being patriotic makes financial sense.

      1. Rufus The Monocled   6 years ago

        No shit.

        Plain for all to see.

      2. Unicorn Abattoir   6 years ago

        You might assume the "N" in NBA stands for National, but apparently it stands for something else.

        Anybody want to weigh in?

        1. Rufus The Monocled   6 years ago

          Nazi?

        2. bignose   6 years ago

          Ni hao?

        3. Jerryskids   6 years ago

          Nuckleheads?

        4. BigT   6 years ago

          Naggers

        5. Rik Bitter   6 years ago

          Ne'er-do-well

    2. BigT   6 years ago

      This has led some people to the reasonable conclusion that the NBA is woke only when being woke makes financial sense.

      Not woke. Woke people are oppressive authoritarians. It should read:

      This has led some people to the reasonable conclusion that the NBA is principled only when being principled makes financial sense.

  9. Unicorn Abattoir   6 years ago

    I was truly shocked by this scene. I had know idea the Philadelphia 76ers had fans.

    1. CE   6 years ago

      They've got a good team now too.

  10. Longtobefree   6 years ago

    Once again, I am deprived of my chance to make a political point by boycotting all things NBA, because I have ignored all things NBA for years.
    I didn't watch NFL, so I couldn't boycott that bullshit either.
    Either I am a trendsetter, or completely out of touch.

    1. Pod   6 years ago

      What a fucking surprise. I'm shocked.

  11. Colossal Douchebag   6 years ago

    Wish I could patronize the NBA less, but unfortunately I already couldn't give a shit.

    1. Mickey Rat   6 years ago

      I too will continue my policy of not watching the NBA, as there is a hockey game on somewhere.

    2. damikesc   6 years ago

      One huge plus Clay Travis has pointed out...unlike the NFL, cord cutting is going to CRUSH the NBA. How many of their games are cable? The vast majority of all of their broadcasts are cable and the few network games they have don't draw enough ratings to justify more network games.

      They are less popular than they believe and ESPN grossly overpaid for the privilege of airing their games.

      1. mad.casual   6 years ago

        They are less popular than they believe

        I'm with Longtobefree and Colossal Douchebag when it comes to the NBA and even I've noticed the decline in popularity. Pro basketball used to crop up in polite conversation with relative frequency. Enough that you had to at least know a couple big names and who the team to beat was not to seem like an invalid. Anymore, people don't even ask if you watch pro basketball and/or don't act like you're out of touch if you don't.

        1. damikesc   6 years ago

          Lebron James is on the noticeable downside of his career and they don't have a star remotely able to replace him. And he was, mind you, nowhere near able to replace Jordan. He barely replaced Kobe.

  12. esteve7   6 years ago

    There's no inconsistency here. Being 'woke' just means you are an anti-american radical leftist that rejects western civilization. And who doesn't embody that more than a communist dictatorship?

    The leftist crowd who never takes a minute off in sports or entertainment to bash everyone to the right of Warren, suddenly silent against the thugs on their left? What a shock...

    1. BigT   6 years ago

      ^^ THIS!!

  13. Sevo   6 years ago

    "This week's demonstrations at NBA games are a refreshing reminder that Americans won't just "stick to sports.""

    Not sure this is the proper conclusion, and I'm sure the comment is flavored by the false equivalence regarding that NFL QB impersonator Kaepernick. Fail.
    Kaep had no political issues at all until he got splinters in his ass from sitting on the bench; he's not out of the NFL because of adopting his GF's stance, he's out because he's a whiny loser.
    The NFL, properly, IMO, said 'stuff it; we're here to play football', and then gave him a Jackson to STFU.
    By comparison, the NBA has put themselves in the political arena, given the choice to cancel the game in Charlotte, and Steve Kerr's very loud and public claim to expertise regarding gun grabbing, since his Dad got shot.
    The NBA has not also distanced itself from LB James:
    "While LeBron James was introducing Hillary Clinton at a campaign rally, Curry made no appearances at political events. "
    https://www.sfgate.com/elections/article/After-years-of-silence-Steph-Curry-gets-political-10604186.php

    Pretty sure the proper interpretation is:
    "The NBA has proven itself to be hypocritical, and deserves to be slammed for it."

  14. Biff   6 years ago

    The 76ers? As in 1776? That's about slavery, right? (For the humor-impaired, that was intended as sarcasm.)

  15. buybuydandavis   6 years ago

    "China Problem"?

    Whaaaaaaat?

    Reason has assured me for years that trade with Slave Emperor Xi has absolutely no downsides.

    1. I Callahan   6 years ago

      This. I was waiting for someone to point out the hypocrisy of preaching unfettered free trade as if there were no repercussions with trading with a communist dictatorship.

    2. Zeb   6 years ago

      Free trade is about Americans' individual rights to do business as they see fit, not approval or disapproval of trading partners.
      And I haven't seen anyone claim there are absolutely no downsides, just that the positives outweigh the negatives.

      1. damikesc   6 years ago

        Don't see how years of widespread of censoring content here to appease the Chinese is worth a flood of cheap shit.

        1. Sevo   6 years ago

          "Don’t see how years of widespread of censoring content here to appease the Chinese is worth a flood of cheap shit."

          "Censoring" does not mean what you seem to think, and I'm quite certain you can't even come up with an example of what you claim happened.

          1. damikesc   6 years ago

            Movies routinely change chunks of their story to not offend the Chinese. This isn't unknown information. Gaming has been extremely unwilling to do anything to offend the Chinese for years now.

          2. I Callahan   6 years ago

            Before you infer no censorship happened, maybe you ought to read the article.

        2. Zeb   6 years ago

          Other people seem to disagree. Value is subjective.

      2. Sevo   6 years ago

        ^ Correct.

      3. mad.casual   6 years ago

        And I haven’t seen anyone claim there are absolutely no downsides, just that the positives outweigh the negatives.

        When they do this, do they do it at an individual level or a national one? From an economic standpoint or a personal liberty standpoint?

        My experience is the 'civil libertarian' bullshit that highlight how cheap and easy selling out as a nation and/or as a responsible individual is. Free shit is a reprehensible anti-market deception that all libertarians should reject out of hand but cheap shit in support of oppression is a-OK as long as the numbers balance.

        1. mad.casual   6 years ago

          as long as the numbers balance

          And we don't pay attention to debt when balancing them.

  16. CE   6 years ago

    Oh, so now kissing up to China includes throwing people out of your games in the USA for being pro freedom? Good grief. They're worse than the NFL now.

  17. IceTrey   6 years ago

    While the NBA is a private business they play in arenas heavily subsidized by taxpayers so no they shouldn't be allowed to kick out political protesters.

    1. BigT   6 years ago

      They should name the arenas appropriately as well:

      “Taxpayers Arena”

      “Stolen Money Fieldhouse”

      “IRS Center”

    2. mad.casual   6 years ago

      Also, a ticket for general admission was purchased. They either should've refused or informed about the 'No Free Hong Kong' policy up front and/or refunded the money on the backend. Possibly some sort of mitigation in between, but the story from all corners sounds pretty straight up 'You showed the signs, you're out.'

  18. sanu6662   6 years ago

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  19. Mickey Rat   6 years ago

    "But it's also right to point out that the league has a history of being involved in political causes, like when it withdrew its annual All-Star Weekend event from Charlotte, North Carolina, in 2017 to protest the passage of a state law discriminating against transgender individuals."

    That is a loaded and biased reading of what NC's law did, which was maintain that sex segregated facilities can remain sex segregated.

    1. Number 2   6 years ago

      True. But even if the description were accurate, the NBA, while boycotting North Carolina for being inhospitable to transgendered bathrooms, happily accepts tens of millions from a regime that punishes homosexuality as a crime. One might be forgiven for thinking that throwing people in prison for their choice of sex partner is slightly worse than denying someone’s choice of bathroom.

    2. D-Pizzle   6 years ago

      Thanks for posting this for me. I'll add that unless the NBA supports transgender women being allowed to play in the WNBA, and severs any and all ties with them until they make it so, the NBA can stfu about the transgender issue.

  20. Brett Bellmore   6 years ago

    At some point we're going to have to recognize that, once a multinational has significant assets within the reach of an authoritarian or totalitarian state, it is hostage to the demands of that state, and will do its bidding.

    We have to disentangle our economic and media institutions from China, or they'll just become extensions of Chinese policy.

    Free market ideology is great between free societies in peace time. It doesn't really work between free and unfree societies in an effective state of war.

    1. I Callahan   6 years ago

      Brett once again nails it. The staff writers at reason seem to have an issue with the idea that there are exceptions to every rule.

      1. ThomasD   6 years ago

        It's not an exception. It is a simple question to anyone: Why are you climbing into bed with totalitarians?

        Had they been up front about their "we're all about the money and only the money" then there wouldn't be much controversy over the apparent hypocrisy of their other political stances. We'd all know exactly what they really stand for.

        Meanwhile someone should ask the players association how they feel about living on the finest plantation money can buy?

        1. D-Pizzle   6 years ago

          "Why are you climbing into bed with totalitarians?"

          Well, we have been told for decades that this would make them stop being totalitarians. I guess that hasn't worked out so well.

        2. I Callahan   6 years ago

          Thomas - they threw people out of basketball games for daring to back freedom loving people. If that doesn’t prove that doing trade with totalitarians like the Chinese isn’t a bad idea, I don’t know what is.

      2. Zeb   6 years ago

        There aren't exceptions to every rule. Where did you get that from?

        If you are thinking of "the exception proves the rule", I'd suggest you look up what it really means, it's pretty interesting. It does not mean that every rule has an exception.

        1. mad.casual   6 years ago

          There aren’t exceptions to every rule.

          True.

          Also, there is no rule that says in each, any, or all conflicts between more free institution and less free institutions more free institutions normally or always win.

          Just as with poverty being the natural state of man and the wealthy being the exception, many more humans have been subjects than free men.

        2. Sevo   6 years ago

          ^+1
          Repeating debunked shibboleths gets you nowhere.

    2. Halykan   6 years ago

      At some point you're going to have to recognize that companies are fundamentally hostage to the demands of their customers. If the NBA (or anyone else) wants to put the demands of an authoritarian government over those of its customer base, then it will swiftly become the Chinese Basketball Association, with no business or relevance in the US. Alternatively, they can recognize their own best interests, take the Chinese losses on the chin, and continue being a real company.

      This nationalist garbage about economic patriotism is just that: garbage. You're welcome to subscribe to collectivist fallacies if you want, but it's an odd look to wear around the libertarian parts of the internet.

  21. divo   6 years ago

    I get paid over $123 1 to 2 hours working from home with 2 kids at home.But my best friend earns over $28k a month doing this and she convinced me to try.The potential with this is endless. Here what I've been doing......
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  22. ThomasD   6 years ago

    And, it should be noted. the "China problem" extends to all sorts of companies. Including many of the brave truth tellers of our media.

    https://thefederalist.com/2019/06/20/if-the-media-dont-want-to-be-called-propagandists-they-need-to-stop-publishing-chinese-and-russian-propaganda/

    Sure like to see Reason take an honest look at all this.

  23. mad.casual   6 years ago

    This ejection wouldn't stand up in court, right? Seems like your ticket is a reasonable contract to watch the game and while things like physical violence and harassing players or fans might void that contract, it seems like a court would at least require the NBA refund you the price of your ticket.

    Otherwise, what's next? MAGA hats? And, being clear, this isn't to say that the NBA can't have a 'No MAGA hats' policy, they certainly can. They just that they can't violate contract law and expect legal protection by accepting payment for admission and *then* instituting a 'No MAGA hats' policy.

    1. darkflame   6 years ago

      I'd imagine that this could be an easy lawsuit, because it wasn't like the protesters were running onto the court or anything, so technically they weren't causing a distraction or uproar. At least, no more of one then the other few thousand fans cheering for their teams.

  24. Dillinger   6 years ago

    already wasn't watching NBA anymore because it blows, but now I want to goto a Mavs game with a Free Hong Kong sign.

    1. Brett Bellmore   6 years ago

      I know what you mean, I'm not into professional sports at all, but it would be worth it just to get thrown out.

      1. damikesc   6 years ago

        You could follow one guy's idea and go to the campuses for ESPN's weekly College GameDay broadcasts and bring signs to those...

  25. Mr. JD   6 years ago

    I'm sure they would have been ejected just the same if they were saying "Black Lives Matter", right?

  26. Bill Dalasio   6 years ago

    It can also bar fans from arenas for just about any reason.

    Yeah, don't the stupid tax cattle get that they're just supposed to pay for the venue for their betters and shut the hell up?

  27. Bill Dalasio   6 years ago

    This has led some people to the reasonable conclusion that the NBA is woke only when being woke makes financial sense.

    Those people are wrong. Favoring the totalitarians in Beijing is totally woke. In case you weren't paying attention, those deplorables in Hong Kong were insisting on things like "freedom". Heck, they'd even adopted noted alt-right symbol Pepe as their mascot. They totes weren't checking their privilege. Look at the Twitter mob. It's a perfect match for the Cultural Revolutionary tradition.

  28. ThomasD   6 years ago

    If I actually had tickets to an NBA game I'd show up in a shirt that reads "black lives matter" on the back and "yellow lives matter" on the front.

    Would make for some great visuals as you get escorted out the door.

    1. CZMacure   6 years ago

      https://www.sbnation.com/nba/2018/3/30/17180044/sacramento-kings-announce-partnership-black-lives-matter-build-black-coalition-stephon-clark

  29. damikesc   6 years ago

    As Clay Travis pointed out, it's going to be awkward if, say, the Lakers win the NBA Title and refuse to visit the WH.

    "You played and shut up in front of a REAL-LIFE actual dictator...but you won't visit the elected President?"

    The NBA being "woke" was obliterated in just a few days because they made it clear...they are ONLY about the money. Shame they didn't realize that this could be a problem when they were having such fun being "woke".

  30. Lucius Junius Brutus   6 years ago

    What's important to NBA leftists (owners, executives and players) is that men be able to use women's bathrooms in North Carolina, not that people are are oppressed and killed in communist-occupied china.

    1. JFin33   6 years ago

      Right. They are professionals at virtue signaling.

  31. Jesus McJesusface   6 years ago

    Where was this energy for Colin Kapaernick in support of #BlackLivesMatter? Even if you disagree with him, players and fans alike deserve the right to have their voice heard under the first amendment.

    1. Sevo   6 years ago

      Jesus McJesusface
      October.11.2019 at 6:24 pm
      "Where was this energy for Colin Kapaernick in support of #BlackLivesMatter? Even if you disagree with him, players and fans alike deserve the right to have their voice heard under the first amendment."

      No one stopped that fraud Kaepernick from making his statements; he's welcome to do so.
      But as an NFL QB impersonator, no team is required to hire him to throw interceptions while 'making his statements'

    2. Halykan   6 years ago

      If you mean energy from Reason, it was there, in as much as they're enthused about this development, they were clear in their defense of NFL player's legitimate interest in using their position to protest.

      If you mean energy from Reason's commentariat, I think that libertarian-leaning folks more or less universally despise actual authoritarian governments and cheer their detractors, whereas support for something like BLM is more muddled (or at least more nuanced).

  32. Sevo   6 years ago

    "One asked people to "Google Uighurs" in reference to the Muslim-minority group that's been systemically persecuted and forced into internment camps in western China."

    This is a bit of a distortion, and not surprising if you are informed by what the Han Chinese press reports. And it should be corrected if you want an accurate picture of what's goin' on. There is no "Muslim minority group" in Xinjiang.
    Anything west of Gansu and Qinghai (and Sichuan, for that matter) provinces are considered to be "Chinese" only by the Han, certainly not by the current and historical residents. The majority of the people who live there are 'minorities' only in reference to the huge eastern Han Chinese population; in the western regions (Tibet and Xinjiang), they are majorities; the Han are an occupying minority, assisted by collaborationists.
    The Uyghurs and Tibetans simply live in territories militarily occupied by the Han Chinese; except for the ease of travel, it is very similar to the Soviet occupation of central European countries until the collapse in '89.
    This is nothing new; the Han have, off and on, militarily occupied those regions for something like 3,000 years, mostly 'off' since the occupation costs more than the Han can collect in tribute.
    See "China, a History" - John Keay for a good primer.
    Regardless the Han commies are as yet trying to win the 'civilized nation look-alike' contest; anyone who remembers Tiananmen Square will know they have yet to squash either the HK protesters or the Uyghurs or the Tibetans under tank treads, so there is yet hope.
    But screw the NBA; if Kerr and company can whine about lefty causes and thereafter claim virtuous silence when their wallet is at issue, screw the lot of them for hypocrisy.
    As mentioned earlier; getting off a plane in Xinjiang, my first image was a billboard of Steph Curry peddling his sponsor's shoes. If Apple is to be blasted for 'slave wages', how does Curry get a free ride advertising in an occupied country?

    1. Sevo   6 years ago

      To use another example, the Hungarians were a 'minority' in Hungary compared to the Russian population of the USSR.

  33. yaricay   6 years ago

    I earned $5000 last month by working online just for 5 to 8 hours on my laptop and this was so easy that i myself could not believe before working on this site. If You too want to earn such a big money tehn come and join us.

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  34. IT Shabake   6 years ago

    The NBA needs to think carefully about whether winning in China is worth losing in America.

    نیوراک

  35. voluntaryist   6 years ago

    Strange that we hear a lot about politics in sports as in "...suddenly K.K. shocked America when he knelt and turned a game into a political statement." As if the feds hadn't spent millions subsidizing the "Pledge" and "the National Anthem" at games. So why "suddenly"? Because most Americans are political zombies, willfully blind to being propagandized by the feds, who they lovingly refer to as "my" government, not "the" govt. Public ed has worked. Few survive.

  36. joyopo445   6 years ago

    I earned $5000 last month by working online just for 5 to 8 hours on my laptop and this was so easy that i myself could not believe before working on this site. DGq If You too want to earn such a big money tehn come and join us.

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  37. JFin33   6 years ago

    I have a hard time feeling bad for organizations that profit heartily off of Americans, but refuse to stand up for our values. The NBA deserves every ounce of backlash they get for cowing to Communist pigs.

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