Jack Del Rio and the true cost of speech
Give the Washington football organization credit: It always finds a creative new way to screw up.
โThis time around, itโs an ugly collision of fact, opinion and punishment. Jack Del Rio, defensive coordinator for the Washington Commanders, spent several days last week expounding on the relative differences between the riots that erupted during Black Lives Matter protests in 2020 and the riot that erupted in and around the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
โIt will not surprise you to learn that a professional football coach did not have the most nuanced grasp of a charged, complex political moment in our nationโs history. It will also not surprise you to learn that a professional football organization responded in precisely the wrong way.
โ"A simple question,โ Del Rio said on June 8. โWhy are we not looking into [the riots at the protests], if we're going to talk about [the Capitol riot]. Why are we not looking into those things? โฆ I see images on the TV, people's livelihoods are being destroyed, businesses are being burned down, no problem. And then we have a dust-up at the Capitol, nothing burned down, and we're going to make that a major deal."
โDel Rioโs tweets and comments were the sort of standard-issue โIโm just asking questionsโ superficial whataboutism that plagues our entire national discourse โ if my side has done something bad, your side has done something worse, why arenโt we focusing on X instead of Y, and around and around. Any reasonable points get lost in the rush to own the other side.
โOn one hand, Del Rio was highlighting an undeniably tragic element of the riots that occurred during the BLM protests, the lost lives and ruined livelihoods. On the other, heโs comparing apples to motor oil by focusing only on the outcome of that and Jan. 6, and not the intent.
โThe topic isnโt the real issue here; itโs the response. Put aside what Del Rio said, and focus on what happened after he said it.
โDel Rio suffered reputational consequences, which is appropriate. Any time you say something that others find objectionable, theyโre going to find you objectionable too. Del Rio also suffered some substantial financial consequences, and thatโs where this gets tricky.
โCommanders head coach Ron Rivera levied a $100,000 fine against Del Rio, a hefty sum for listing facts and asking questions โ however inartfully expressed they may have been โ about those facts.
โGranted, part of the motivation behind the fine is that Washington is trying to establish a new stadium within a few miles of the Capitol, and Del Rioโs offhand comments render the team even more toxic than it already is. But Rivera framed the fine in political terms, and thatโs where the tree limb thins out.
โRivera said Tuesday that this isnโt a free speech issue, and heโs right. One more time: The First Amendment protects your right to speech free from government intervention; it doesnโt protect you from consequences of that speech. The federal government isnโt coming for Jack Del Rio. (Although if ever a football team was crying out for federal intervention โฆ)
โThe people celebrating the fine and calling for Del Rioโs job may want to think long and hard about the precedent theyโre establishing here, trying to get someone fired for a disagreeable political statement. If you think Del Rio should go, are you sure youโve never said anything in the past that would now reflect badly on you? Are you really sure? Would you bet your career on it?
โDel Rioโs not blameless here, either. โJust asking questionsโ is only a defense if youโre willing to listen to the answers to those questions, and Del Rioโs apparent inability, after 18 months, to recognize the gravity of Jan. 6 suggests heโs not much interested in hearing anything that contradicts what he already believes.
We can spin out hypotheticals for another three hours. Why donโt we see punishment for political views from the left? What if Del Rio loses the locker room? What if his speech normalizes anti-BLM sentiment? That's grandstanding, not discussing. When we frame the questions ourselves, we give ourselves the luxury of setting up answers we want to hear. Dealing in the facts, and facts alone, leads us from Del Rioโs words to a chilling place.
โPunishment enforces only silence. If your goal is truly to change peopleโs minds, not just shut them down, you donโt do that by firing them, hammering them with six-figure fines or scalding their name on social media. You change their minds by getting them to see a different point of view than their own, to get out of the little nest of social media and reinforced half-truths that we all occupy.
โRather than fine Del Rio, the Commanders could have sat him down with a Capitol police officer or 20 who could explain exactly why the riots were a whole lot more than a โdust-up,โ regardless of the relative levels of property damage. The team could have listened to his perspective as well. Thatโs how we reach common ground โฆ which, I know, is a foreign and unwanted concept now.
โPiercing bubbles. Discussing divergent points of view. Imagine that.
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Contact Jay Busbee at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or on Twitter at @jaybusbee.