Leave it to filmmaker Spike Lee to try to make a political statement at the NBA All-Star Game.
The game--which even though it has been revised many times, still remains the worst of all the pro sports All-Star games--should be as apolitical as can be, but Lee didn't want it to be that way.
His presence at any sporting event is an annoyance--and I say that as an avowed and long-time New York Knicks fan--but his appearance at this game was particularly insulting.
Lee showed up wearing a Palestinian keffiyeh pattern wardrobe outfit, along with a pocketbook with the same fashion statement, and topped with a red cap, all of which which made him look like some type of pro-Palestinian clown.
He has never worn this ensemble at a Knicks game, so why do it here?
It is pretty obvious.
This All-Star game was the first such game to have on its player roster a player who is Israeli. The player's name is Deni Avdija, and he is having a breakout season with the Portland Trailblazers.
Since Lee feels he is always more important than the game being played, it is obvious why he chose such an outfit--
To snub his nose at Avdija, Israel and Jews everywhere, since the NBA has become a major international sport, and his statement can get the most bang for his buck on such a platform, and from his front row seat where everyone can see him.
And the ironic thing is that the game tried a new format this year, with stars born in the U.S. playing against stars ...
Born in other countries.
Lee has shown his antisemitism before, as has Kyrie Irving, who also appeared at the game, even though he wasn't playing in it, sporting a T-shirt with a phrase supporting Palestinians.
You might remember that Irving was booted from the Brooklyn Nets a few years back for his anti-Jewish behavior, so this is nothing new here either.
There were others who attended the game who chose the appropriate clothing to mock Avdija, but no action was taken to thwart this behavior by the league or anyone else.
And what makes this all the more bizarre is that perennial All-Star Lebron James stated during a press conference related to the game that he would like to visit Israel--he has never been there--and he had heard from others what a wonderful place it was.
But then we have Lee and Irving stirring the pot ...
You would think that the NBA would try to stem this type of behavior, which takes away from the game, and actually makes a mockery of it.
And it happening at the first All-Star game with an actually Israeli-born athlete as one of the participants really rubs salt into the wound.
I strongly believe that the NBA should try to take some action against this happening again, even though it might be a free speech issue; that even at a sporting event, people can wear clothing that posits a statement that they want to make, even if it is directed at one player.
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver--a Jew himself--really should have said something or done something after seeing this, because these wardrobe messages were clearly directed at Avdija.
And the NBA should really look at its past when making strides in its present and future, because don't tell anyone, but the NBA, in its beginnings nearly 80 years ago, was a predominately Jewish league, with players and executives by and large being Jewish.
Current players should know this, as should the public.
These types of displays are disgraceful, and when they are directed at one player, in particular, it makes it all even more horrid.
It is now up to the NBA to do something about it, but you know and I know that they won't do anything.
Absolutely shameful, and I really feel bad for Avdija, who doesn't deserve such abuse, an abuse dumped on him simply because he is Israeli and Jewish.
Look, they may not be able to regulate Lee, but Irving--who violated NBA rules of conduct with his support of Nazis just a few years back--well, Silver should come down hard on him, but he won't.
When racial violence broke out due to the very unfortunate George Floyd incident, the NBA was clearly alarmed, and allowed players to do and say what they wanted about that situation, even designing T-shirts for players to wear to denounce this hatred.
But now, with a single player targeted at one of the league's premiere events simply because he is Israeli and Jewish, the NBA needs to come down on those who want to make an All-Star game into a political statement, one that targets one of its own players.
But like I said, they probably won't do anything, and that really is a shame--
And a real turnoff to anyone--Jew and non-Jew alike--who was watching the game, and all NBA games in general--to relax and be free of politics.
But today, everything seems to be political, but when these politics target one single player, that type of anti-social behavior is simply reprehensible.
You just know if Lee and the others were targeting an outwardly gay player, for instance, the league--and society in general--would not let Lee get away with it.
But as usual, if it relates to Jews and Israel, well, it really isn't taken seriously, and nothing is done.
The NBA should know better, because Lee, and Irving, and their cohorts obviously don't know right from wrong.
They are entitled to their opinion, but there is a time and place for it, and that time and place was not at the NBA All-Star game.
Sports is supposed to be the place where everyone is on the same plane, and everyone fights for their team on the court, on the ice, or on the field.
By doing and saying nothing about this incident, the NBA is simply sweeping all of this anti-Semitic behavior under the rug, where it does not belong--
It should be above the rim, spoken about, and dealt with.
That would be a true slam dunk for the league, and for sports in general.

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