4 minute read

EDITORIAL

E ditorial

Viewpoints’ editorials represent the majority opinion of and are written by the Viewpoints’ student editorial board.

Advertisement

PHOTO COURTESY OF LAURENT CIVITCH | FLICKR

Griner controversy tone deaf

Brittney Griner was at a disadvantage. As it is, being a Black Lesbian woman in this world forces her to face unjust discrimination.

Griner doesn’t deserve the scrutiny that she is receiving simply because she is a famous, Black lesbian basketball player that was brought home instead of an ex marine.

Her being in a foreign country facing criminal charges further shows the blatant scrutiny that Black and LGBTQ people face.

Griner was charged with nine years in prison for drug smuggling and possession charges after she was allegedly found with hashish oil while traveling to Russia to play basketball for extra money in her offseason.

WNBA players regularly play in foreign countries in the offseason because they do not make enough money playing in the United States.

She was exchanged for Viktor Bout, an arms dealer from Russia nicknamed “the merchant of death” who was sentenced to 25 years in prison in 2012.

Many say the deal was unfair, but the issue stems deeper than just a trade.

Regardless of who she was traded for, Griner spent 11 months in a foreign prison for something that is legal in her home country. If she was a male celebrity, she would have been home much faster.

In July of 2019 Hip-Hop artist A$AP Rocky was charged with assault in Sweden. He was brought home in August of that year.

Griner is more than just a basketball player. She is a WNBA champion, an eight time all-star and a two-time olympic champion. In other words she is an icon for young American women who face the discrimination of being black and homosexual.

She’s one of the greatest American female athletes of this generation and should be treated like it.

If it were a male Olympic champion, they would have been home in weeks.

Some Americans are angry at the fact that former marine Paul Whelan remains in a Russian institution while Griner is on her way home.

However, we tried to bring him home. The government was trying to reach a deal that exchanged Bout for Griner and Whelan. But they couldn’t get that done.

Whelan’s family understands that a deal that brought Paul home was not possible. “It’s clear that the U.S. government has no concessions that the Russian government will take for Paul Whelan,” Paul’s brother David Whelan told CNN. “And so Paul will remain a prisoner until that changes.”

His family also understands that it was more than just a “trade.”

“It was a choice between bringing home one particular American — Brittney Griner — or bringing home none,” David added.

Bringing Whelan home was not possible. The United States government has been making attempts to bring him home ever since he was placed in prison.

“The Biden administration made the right decision to bring Ms. Griner home,” said David. “And to make the deal that was possible, rather than waiting for one that wasn’t going to happen.”

Many people compare this situation to when Ex United States marine Trevor Reed was exchanged for Konstantin Yaroshenko. Yaroshenko is a Russian pilot who was arrested for smuggling cocaine.

However this situation is not the same.

Russia was using Griner as a bargaining chip. They used her celebrity status as a negotiating tool. Although having plenty of support from the basketball community, other internationally known athletes could have spoken up. Tiger Woods, Serena Williams and Lewis Hamilton: where were you?

Maybe Russia wouldn’t have paid much attention to the millions of fans but it would have put pressure on the United States government to do something.

In Reed’s situation there was not as much media attention surrounding him making it so Russia could not use that as leverage.

Griner is home. A sure fire WNBA hall of famer, an icon for young women and children, an Olympic champion and an American idol is home.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Letters to the editor should be kept to 250 words or less and include contact information. Email letters to viewpointseic@ gmail.com. Viewpoints reserves the right to edit letters for space and to reject libelous or obscene letters. Letters to the editor and columns represent the opinions of the individual writers and do not necessarily reflect those of the entire Viewpoints staff, Viewpoints faculty advisers, student faculty, administration or the Board of Trustees. PRINTING SCHEDULE Copy deadline: February

Photo deadline: February

Ad deadline: February

Next issue: February 1

1

1

9

STAFF LIST

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Jennipher Vasquez

viewpointseic@gmail.com

MANAGING EDITORS Hayden Kulick John Michael Guerrero viewpoints.managing@gmail.com

ADVERTISING MANAGER viewpoints.advertising@gmail.com

NEWS EDITOR Alondra Montes-Martinez viewpoints.news@gmail.com

ASSISTANT NEWS EDITORS Laura Bautista, Jair Ramirez

LIFE EDITOR Angie Escalante

viewpoints.artsentertainment@gmail.com

OPINIONS EDITOR Maria Odenbaugh viewpoints.opinions@gmail.com

ASSISTANT OPINIONS EDITOR Darlene Dukelow-Burton

SPORTS EDITOR Hayden Kulick viewpoints.sports@gmail.com

ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR Peter Gibbs

PHOTO EDITOR Stephen Day viewpoints.photo@gmail.com

MULTIMEDIA EDITOR John Michael Guerrero multimedia.viewpoints@gmail.com

ASSISTANT MULTIMEDIA EDITOR Peter Gibbs

SOCIAL MEDIA & ONLINE MANAGER John Michael Guerrero viewpoints.socialmedia@gmail.com

REPORTERS: Carlos Ayala Santa Ana Arianna Cervantes Jesus Coronel Jazmyn De Jesus Julia Goldman Vianney Morales Leroy Orozco Hannah Padilla-Estrella Liv Pearson Zach Reynosa Dalila Romero William L.G. Stephens Lindsey Tovar Luis Trejo Alyssa Velasquez

JOURNALISM SPECIALIST Matt Schoenmann matthew.schoenmann@rcc.edu

FACULTY ADVISERS Angela Burrell Matt Schoenmann

@RCCVIEWPOINTS

REACH US:

NEWSROOM PHONE: (951)-222-8488 EMAIL: viewpointseic@gmail.com