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Freedom

'The Hypocrisy Hurts': Enes Kanter Freedom on Standing Up to China in the NBA

"When it comes to problems happening in America, [the NBA is] the first organization saying, 'This is wrong,'" says the former professional basketball player. But then they're silent for victims of torture.

John Stossel | 1.4.2023 2:20 PM

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John Stossel is seen in front of a basketball court | Stossel TV
John Stossel (Stossel TV)

Teenage basketball star Enes Kanter was shocked when his teammate criticized President Barack Obama on Facebook.

"Dude, what are you doing?" he exclaimed. He feared his teammate would be jailed.

Kanter is from Turkey, where, as Kanter explains in my new video, people who criticize the president do go to jail.

His teammates laughed at him. "They were explaining to me about freedom of speech, freedom of religion, expression, freedom of protest."

That inspired him.

When Turkey's president shut down news outlets, Kanter decided, "I'm going to say something about it."

He tweeted, wrote op-eds, gave interviews.

Turkey's authoritarian rulers retaliated. They jailed his father. "They wanted to set an example: This is what happens if you talk against the Turkish government."

The NBA supported his protest. "[NBA commissioner] Adam Silver texted me twice and said, 'Whatever you need, we are here for you. Keep doing what you're doing.'"

But then he criticized China. Slightly. He wrote, "Free Tibet" on his basketball shoes.

"There's no rule against it," he says. Other players put "Black Lives Matter" and "I Can't Breathe" on their shoes. Criticizing America is encouraged by the NBA.

But "Free Tibet" on a shoe was too much. Celtics officials told him to take them off.

He refused. "I was like, I'm not taking them off because it's literally freedom of speech."

Actually, it's not. America's freedom of speech applies to government. The NBA can legally censor an employee who might cost them money. They did exactly that to Kanter. He didn't get to play.

It's clear what the NBA feared. Just minutes after Kanter tweeted a photo of his shoes, China TV banned coverage of Celtics games. But just temporarily.

The Celtics traded Kanter to the Houston Rockets. The Rockets waived him. He's received no offers from other teams. "I could've played another six years," he says.

He won't.

Some sports organizations defend their athletes against China's oppressive rules. When women's tennis player Peng Shuai accused a Chinese government official of sexual assault and then disappeared for a few days, the Women's Tennis Association said they would support her even if they lost money.

The NBA won't.

They could stand up for the right of one player to speak, to peacefully criticize cruelty. It's reported that the NBA gets 10 percent of its income from China. The NBA makes billions. They can't risk 10 percent?

The NBA's games are extremely popular in China. Chinese leaders probably would have resumed TV coverage. It's not in their interest to ban NBA games forever.

"More people watched NBA games in China last year than the American population," Kanter points out. "I don't really think that China's going to ban every NBA game."

But no one in the NBA supported him. No one in management. No teammate. "Ten years I talk about Turkey. I did not get one phone call. I talk about China one day, me and my manager was getting phone call every hour."

"The hypocrisy hurts me the most. When it comes to problems happening in America, [the NBA is] the first organization saying, 'This is wrong. This is what should happen, blah, blah, blah.'"

But silence for victims of torture.

Kanter has now changed his name to "Freedom." Changed it officially. His real name now is Enes Freedom. "I did it was because I believe the freedom is the most important thing that you can have—after air and water and food….What kills me is how a Chinese dictatorship can pretty much control a 100 percent made American company and fire an American citizen from that company."

Even though Enes Freedom lost a lot, he's glad he spoke out.

"If God gives you a gift, you can give back to people by standing with them," he says. "That means so much to people out there who don't have a voice. If you are not outspoken about some of the issues that are happening, you're part of the problem."

COPYRIGHT 2023 BY JFS PRODUCTIONS INC.

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John Stossel is the host and creator of Stossel TV.

FreedomSportsNBAFree SpeechChinaAuthoritarianismTurkeyJailFirst AmendmentBarack ObamaReligionProtestsMediaTibetBlack Lives MatterTelevisionCensorshipTennisSexual AssaultIncome
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  1. JasonAZ   2 years ago (edited)

    NBA: Black lives matter!!! Slavery is wrong.

    Enes and the rest of us: China currently has 1.5 million people enslaved. What do you have to say?

    NBA: Send us the sweet Chinese slave money! No comment that might offend our gravy train.

    1. JesseAz   2 years ago

      At least LeBron defended him. Oh wait.

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  2. Minadin   2 years ago

    Small quibble:

    "I was like, I'm not taking them off because it's literally freedom of speech."

    Actually, it's not. America's freedom of speech applies to government.

    Freedom of Speech is a principle of Liberty, which we should all try to respect, in that we tolerate the expressions of people or ideas that we disagree with.

    First Amendment protections only apply to the government, but freedom of expression as a concept ought to be a core value of any western democracy, and respect for it should be something that we (the public) demand from entities like the NBA.

    1. Jefferson's Ghost   2 years ago

      "...freedom of expression as a concept ought to be a core value of any western democracy, and respect for it should be something that we (the public) demand from entities like the NBA."

      Yep.

    2. mad.casual   2 years ago

      Small quibble:

      freedom of expression as a concept ought to be a core value of any western democracy

      Is/ought: One need not be Western or Democratic for Free Speech to have value or virtue.

    3. TJJ2000   2 years ago

      Humorously; "western democracy" isn't what teaches that core value.
      The US Constitution does.

      1. Minadin   2 years ago

        The people who drafted the US Constitution and Bill of Rights obtained and informed their concept of Freedom of Expression from many prior Western democratic traditions, some of them more recent to them than others:
        - English Common Law traditions dating back to the Magna Carta, including people like Milton and Locke
        - The French Enlightenment and people like Voltaire and Descartes
        - The German Reformation and people like Luther and Gutenberg
        - The Italian Renaissance and people like Galileo and Bruno
        - And, arguably, all the way back to Classical Greece with people like Socrates (though he did eventually bake the cake, er, drink the hemlock)

        1. cipoyag   2 years ago (edited)

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    4. Nardz   2 years ago

      That's not a small quibble

  3. Longtobefree   2 years ago

    No US company or individual should take any action that would support the Communist Chinese Party.
    Period.

    1. Social Justice is neither   2 years ago

      How dare you come out against the President like that. Brandon deserves better.

  4. Mickey Rat   2 years ago

    The hope was that trade with China would undermine their totalitarian system to make them more open and free.

    The reality is our institutions have been corrupted to bend the knee to the Chinese overlords in the hope of maintaining access to their population and cheap labor.

    1. Quo Usque Tandem   2 years ago

      +

  5. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

    But then he criticized China. Slightly. He wrote, "Free Tibet" on his basketball shoes.

    ... Celtics officials told him to take them off.

    You can always tell who's really in charge by who you're not allowed to criticize.

  6. mad.casual   2 years ago

    His teammates laughed at him. "They were explaining to me about freedom of speech, freedom of religion, expression, freedom of protest."
    ...
    He wrote, "Free Tibet" on his basketball shoes.

    "There's no rule against it," he says. Other players put "Black Lives Matter" and "I Can't Breathe" on their shoes. Criticizing America is encouraged by the NBA.

    But "Free Tibet" on a shoe was too much. Celtics officials told him to take them off.

    He refused. "I was like, I'm not taking them off because it's literally freedom of speech."

    Actually, it's not. America's freedom of speech applies to government.

    Any odds that the teammates who laughed at him and explained "freedom of protest" to him actually framed it as portrayed in the last sentence? I'd put it at a generous 10%.

    I'd put the number who think you can walk into a restaurant and shout obnoxiously and disruptively until the police show up and violate your 1A rights at somewhere around 80%.

    1. VinniUSMC   2 years ago (edited)

      I’d put the number who think you can walk into a restaurant and shout obnoxiously and disruptively until the police show up and violate your 1A rights at somewhere around 80%.

      To be fair, millionaires are generally treated differently, especially if they’re athletes. How would they know any better?

      1. mad.casual   2 years ago (edited)

        To be fair, my point wasn’t because I thought basketball players or millionaires are exceptional fonts of wisdom as much as it is that for a magazine dedicated to creating free minds about free markets, Reason is awful… selective about what it considers free speech, what it considers a mostly-peaceful protest, what it considers corporate speech, and who it thinks should bake the cake. For Gary Johnson or Jo Jorgensen being the mostest unprecedentedly popularest libertarian candidates ever, an awful lot of people still seem awfully uninformed about even pretty basic concepts of liberty.

        AFAICT, even now, after the release of the Twitter files, a government telling any corporation what speech to squelch and what speech to amplify pretty libertarian kosher by the Reason playbook.

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    2. Mickey Rat   2 years ago

      The point is his speech about the cause he was interested in got squelched, but not the ones of the other players because those were only potentially offensive to other Americans.

  7. scape   2 years ago

    When women's tennis player Peng Shuai accused a Chinese government official of sexual assault and then disappeared for a few days, the Women's Tennis Association said they would support her even if they lost money.

    That lasted about a month. After a Zoom meeting with Peng Shuai and the WTA president everything was forgotten. I think the WTA cancelled one tournament. Peng Shuai could have been zooming from a labor camp. The WTA has nothing on the NBA.

  8. DanaSherman   2 years ago (edited)

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  9. OldNassau 2   2 years ago

    If Mr. Kanter wishes to protest, or speak, let him do it off the court, on his own, rather then using the NBA as his megaphone.
    As for changing his name to "Freedom", one Lloyd Bernard Free (aka: World B. Free) preempted him by forty years

  10. williamhoke   2 years ago

    Enes Kanter has been an outspoken advocate for freedom, democracy, and human rights, especially in his native Turkey. He has been particularly vocal in his criticism of the Turkish government and its president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan. He has also been a strong advocate for freedom of expression in the NBA, speaking out against China's human rights abuses and the league's attempts to silence those who criticize China.

    Kanter has been a vocal critic of the NBA's relationship with China, which includes a lucrative broadcast deal. He has been particularly vocal in his criticism of the league's attempts to silence those who criticize China, including Daryl Morey, the Houston Rockets general manager, who voiced support for pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong.

    Kanter has also been vocal in his support of NBA players who have spoken out and Source Link Here against China, such as Kyrie Irving, who refused to wear a league-sanctioned “Free Hong Kong” t-shirt. He stated that he was proud of Irving for standing up for what he believes in, and for not being silenced.

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  12. Olman Grand   2 years ago

    I think that politics and sports shouldn't intersect in any way because sport is made for entertainment, after all. After work, I like to turn on a sport match, place a bet on cbet.gg, and just enjoy my evening. I can't do the same with news, you know? So I think these spheres shouldn't have anything in common.

  13. LisaAguirre   2 years ago (edited)

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  14. Minadin   2 years ago

    I'm moderately hopeful that in Stossel's case, he's over-simplifying for a broader audience on YouTube.

    Maybe?

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