Charles Barkley -- who once said he doesn't create controversies, he just brings them to our attention -- is at it again.
The basketball analyst
for Turner Sports and former NBA great isn't backing away from comments
he made on the radio recently that people who torched buildings in
Ferguson are "scumbags" and some blacks degrade successful
African-Americans too often as not black enough.
Barkley also agreed with
the grand jury's decision not to indict former Ferguson police Officer
Darren Wilson, who is white, for fatally shooting an unarmed black
teenager.
In an interview on Tuesday, Barkley repeatedly came back to one
point: He doesn't believe that white cops are out to shoot black people
because of racism.
"That's ridiculous," he said.
Barkley called for dialogue, and not just after a controversial incident like the Michael Brown shooting.
"We never discuss race in
this country until something bad happens," he said. And even then it
usually reflects a "tribe mentality."
"Everybody wants to protect their own tribe, whether they are right or wrong," he said.
Barkley, who has had
several of his own run-ins with police, lamented that there are too many
communities that call for cops to come in and clean up the
neighborhood, then cry racial profiling when they do and something
happens.
"We as black people, we
have a lot of crooks. We can't just wait until something like (the Brown
shooting) happens. We have to look at ourselves in the mirror," he said
of people in black communities. "There is a reason that they racially
profile us in the way they do. Sometimes it is wrong, and sometimes it
is right.
Barkley also criticized
the rioters who set buildings and police cars on fire in Ferguson. They
were set on destruction, no matter the grand jury's decision, he
believes.
Instead, everyone should
be like the majority of the people who took to the streets in Ferguson
and other cities, or like the NFL players who held up their hands as a
symbolic gesture before a game.
"Anybody who walks out
peacefully, who protests peacefully, that's what this country was built
on," he said. "But to be burning people's property, burning police cars,
looting people's stores, that is 100% ridiculous."
Brown's stepfather
shouldn't be charged with inciting a riot, he said. (The stepfather,
Louis Head, was captured on video yelling "burn this bitch down" after
the grand jury's decision was announced.)
It was an awful thing to say, but worrying about issues like that clouds the situation, Barkley said.
"One of the problems
with this entire situation is there's so much noise going on, you never
get to the crux of the issue that you need to be discussing," Barkley
said.
In the lengthy interview, Barkley and Baldwin also talked about the Eric Garner case, Ray Rice and the NFL, Chris Rock's comment about income disparity and what the future will be like for the Hall of Famer's former team, the 0-17 Philadelphia 76ers.
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