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Washington Redskins name controversy

The Washington Redskins name controversy involved the name and logo previously used by the Washington Commanders, a National Football League (NFL) franchise located in the Washington metropolitan area. In the 1960s, the team's longtime name—the Redskins—and the associated logo began to draw criticism from Native American groups and individuals.[2] The topic, part of the larger Native American mascot controversy, began receiving widespread public attention in the 1990s. In 2020, the team responded to economic pressure in the wake of widespread recognition of systemic racism by retiring the name and logo. The team called itself the "Washington Football Team" before rebranding as the Commanders in 2022.

In November 2014, a demonstration against the "Redskins" name and logo was held outside TCF Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota before a game against the Vikings.[1]

"Redskin" is a slang term for Native Americans in the United States and First Nations in Canada. The term redskin underwent pejoration through the 19th to early 20th centuries and in contemporary dictionaries of American English it is labeled as offensive, disparaging, or insulting.

For several decades, the team's owners and management, NFL commissioners, and most fans sought to keep the Redskins name, claiming that it honored the achievements and virtues of Native Americans and that it was not intended in a negative manner. Then-team president Bruce Allen noted that three high schools with a Native American-majority student body used the name.[3][4] Supporters also pointed to a national poll taken in 2004 by the Annenberg Public Policy Center, which found that a majority of Native Americans were not offended by the name.[5] The use of public opinion polling methods to measure the opinions of a small, diverse population was criticized by scholars, in particular the use of self-identification to select the individuals surveyed.[6] The name was opposed by the National Congress of American Indians, which said in 2013 that it represented 1.2 million people in its member tribes.

Name change edit

In July 2020, amid the removal of many names and images as part of the George Floyd protests, a group of investors worth $620 billion wrote letters to major sponsors Nike, FedEx, and PepsiCo encouraging pressure on the Redskins to change their name.[7][8] In addition to direct sponsors advocating change in 2020, retailers Amazon, Target and Walmart withdrew Redskins merchandise from their stores and websites.[9] FedEx called on the team to change its name on July 2, 2020.[10][11] The same day, Nike removed Redskins apparel from its website.[12][13]

On July 3, the league and the franchise announced that it was "undergoing a thorough review of the team name."[14][15] On July 7, it was acknowledged that the Redskins were not in contact with a group of Native Americans who petitioned the NFL to force a name change and that Redskins head coach Ron Rivera also stated the team wanted to continue “honoring and supporting Native Americans and our Military.”[16] The team initiated a review which resulted in the decision to retire its name and logo, playing as the Washington Football Team pending adoption of a more permanent name.[17][18][19]

Team president Jason Wright announced on July 12, 2021, that the new name will not include any ties to Native Americans, including the name "Warriors"; research having shown that anything other than a clean break with the past is a slippery slope.[20] While the team expects fans to continue to wear their jerseys with the former name and logo, Native American inspired headdresses or face paint will not be allowed in the stadium.[21]

In January 2022, the team announced that it would choose between Armada, Presidents, Brigade, Red Hogs, Commanders, RedWolves, Defenders and the then-current "Football Team".[22] The new name, the Washington Commanders, was announced on February 2, 2022.[23] In its press release, the team made no mention of the racial controversy, instead emphasizing the military symbolism of the graphic elements in the redesigned "W" primary logo that goes along with the new name. The design of the new "crest" combines elements of the team's history and its connection to the city of Washington.[24]

Amanda Blackhorse responded that the change is an empty gesture, the team's owner and management having made no substantial effort to acknowledge or repair the effects of decades of insults, nor advocate that other teams with offensive mascots also change.[25]

History edit

 
The obverse side of a Buffalo nickel, featuring the head of a Native American, was used as a model for the Redskins logo.

In 1933, the football team that shared both the name and playing field with the Boston Braves baseball team moved to Fenway Park, already home to the Boston Red Sox. Co-owner George Preston Marshall changed the name to the Redskins, more likely to avoid confusion while retaining the Native American imagery of the team[26][27] than to honor coach William Henry "Lone Star" Dietz, whose identity as a Native American was debated.[28] The logo for the NFL Braves was similar to the Redskins logo, a Native American head in profile with braids and trailing feathers.[29] A redesigned logo introduced in 1972 was proposed by Walter Wetzel, a former Blackfoot tribal chairman and past president of the National Congress of American Indians, and was modeled after the likeness on the Buffalo nickel.[30] Members of the Blackfoot tribe express a range of opinions, from support to indifference to strong opposition to the Redskins name based upon their personal experiences.[31]

Advocates of changing the team's name said that stereotypes of Native Americans had to be understood in the context of a history that includes conquest, forced relocation, and organized efforts by federal and state governments to eradicate native cultures, such as the boarding schools of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[32] "Since the first Europeans made landfall in North America, native peoples have suffered under a weltering array of stereotypes, misconceptions and caricatures. Whether portrayed as noble savages, ignoble savages, teary-eyed environmentalists or, most recently, simply as casino-rich, native peoples find their efforts to be treated with a measure of respect and integrity undermined by images that flatten complex tribal, historical and personal experience into one-dimensional representations that tells us more about the depicters than about the depicted."[33]

Origin and meaning of redskin edit

 
Wordmark used by the Redskins (1972–2019)

The historical context for the emergence in the Americas of racial identities based upon skin color was the establishment of colonies which developed a plantation economy dependent upon slave labor. Prior to the colonial era, many Europeans identified themselves as Christians rather than white. "At the start of the eighteenth century, Indians and Europeans rarely mentioned the color of each other's skins. By midcentury, remarks about skin color and the categorization of peoples by simple color-coded labels (red, white, black) had become commonplace."[34]

Documents from the colonial period indicate that the use of "red" as an identifier by Native Americans for themselves emerged in the context of Indian-European diplomacy in the southeastern region of North America, before later being adopted by Europeans and becoming a generic label for all Native Americans.[35]: 627–8  Linguistic evidence indicates that, while some tribes may have used red to refer to themselves during the Pre-Columbian era based upon their origin stories,[35]: 634  the general use of the term was in response to meeting people who called themselves "white" and their slaves "black".[35]: 629  The choice of red rather than other colors may have been due to cultural associations, rather than skin color.[35]: 632 

In the debate over the meaning of the word "redskin", team supporters frequently cite a paper by Ives Goddard, a Smithsonian Institution senior linguist and curator emeritus, who asserts that the term was a direct translation of words used by Native Americans to refer to themselves and was benign in its original meaning.[36] In an interview Goddard admits that it is impossible to verify if the native words were accurately translated.[37] Darren R. Reid, a history lecturer at Coventry University, contends that Native American usage was generally attributed to them by European writers. Reid states that the team logo works together with the name to reinforce an unrealistic stereotype: "It is not up to non-Indians to define an idealized image of what it is to a Native American." The "positive" stereotypes allow fans and supporters to honestly state that they are honoring Native Americans, but this is "forcing your idea of what it is to honour those people onto them and that, fundamentally, is disrespectful."[38][39] Sociologist James V. Fenelon makes a more explicit statement that Goddard's article is poor scholarship, given that the conclusion of the origin and usage by Natives as "entirely benign" is divorced from the socio-historical realities of hostility and racism from which it emerged.[40]

Advocates of changing the name emphasize current meanings in dictionaries of American English, which include "usually offensive",[41] "disparaging",[42][a][43] "insulting",[44] and "taboo".[45] Such meanings are consistent with the usage found in books in the period between 1875 and 1930, which is after that studied by Goddard.[46] John McWhorter, an associate professor of linguistics at Columbia University, compares "redskin" becoming a slur to other racial terms, such as "Oriental", which acquired implied meanings associated with contempt.[47]

A controversial etymological claim is that the term emerged from the practice of paying a bounty for Indians, and that "redskin" refers to the bloody scalp of Native Americans.[48] Although official documents do not use the word in this way, a historical association between the use of "redskin" and the paying of bounties can be made. In 1863, a Winona, Minnesota, newspaper, the Daily Republican, printed an announcement: "The state reward for dead Indians has been increased to $200 for every red-skin sent to Purgatory. This sum is more than the dead bodies of all the Indians east of the Red River are worth."[49] A news story published by the Atchison Daily Champion in Atchison, Kansas, on October 9, 1885, tells of the settlers "hunt for redskins, with a view of obtaining their scalps" valued at $250.[50] For sociologist C. Richard King the lack of direct evidence does not mean that contemporary Native people are wrong to draw an association between a term that emphasizes an identity based upon skin color and a history that commodified Native American body parts.[51]

Trademark cases edit

The meaning of the term "redskin" was addressed in two cases challenging the trademark registrations held by Pro-Football, Inc., the team's corporate entity. The challenge was based upon a provision of Federal trademark law (the Lanham Act) which prohibited the registration of any mark that "may disparage persons, institutions, beliefs, or national symbols, or bring them into contempt, or disrepute." In both cases, the plaintiffs prevailed at trial, establishing that the name Redskin was disparaging to Native Americans. However, both decisions were overturned due to legal issues other than disparagement.

The first case, filed in 1992 by Suzan Shown Harjo and six other Native American leaders resulted in the cancellation of the federal registrations for the Redskins marks by the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB) in 1999. However in 2005 the United States District Court for the District of Columbia reversed the TTAB's decision on the grounds of insufficient evidence of disparagement. Subsequent appeals were also rejected on the basis of laches, that the Native American petitioners had pursued their rights in an untimely manner.[52]

A second case was filed in 2013 by younger plaintiffs not affected by laches, led by Amanda Blackhorse.[53][54] Once again, the TTAB found Redskins to be disparaging under the Lanham Act.[55] In December 2015, the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals struck down the disparagement prohibition in the trademark law in a separate case (Matal v. Tam) involving a denial of trademark registration to the Asian-American band The Slants.[56] On June 19, 2017, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled in favor of Tam, stating "The disparagement clause violates the First Amendment's Free Speech Clause. Contrary to the Government's contention, trademarks are private, not government speech."[57] On June 29, 2017, both the Native American petitioners and the Justice Department withdrew from any further litigation now that the Supreme Court has rendered the legal issue moot.[58] While team owner Daniel Snyder expresses the opinion that the court decision is a victory for the team, the executive director of the NCAI asserts that the name remains a slur, and the decision that grants it First Amendment protection does not alter any of the arguments against its continued use.[59]

Use by Native Americans edit

Supporters of the Redskins name note that three predominantly Native American high schools use the name for their sports teams, suggesting that it can be acceptable.[60] However, in 2013, the principal of one of these, Red Mesa High School in Teec Nos Pos, Arizona, said that use of the word outside American Indian communities should be avoided because it could perpetuate "the legacy of negativity that the term has created".[61] Teec Nos Pos, on the Navajo Nation, is 96.5% Native American. Wellpinit, Washington, a town within a reservation of the Spokane people, is 79.3% Native American.[62] In 2014, Wellpinit High School voted to keep the Redskins name.[63] The third school, Kingston High School in Kingston, Oklahoma is 57.69% Native American.[4]

Native American writer and attorney Gyasi Ross compares Native American use of variations of the word "redskin" with African-American use of variations of the word "nigger"; specifically Natives calling each other "skins" as analogous to "nigga". Ross argues that the use of terms by some members of minority communities does not mean that the same may be used by outsiders; this is generally recognized by white people with regard to black expressions, yet whites feel free to say how Natives should feel about "redskin". Ross also notes that there is no consensus among Natives regarding either opposition to the Washington team's use of the name, or the importance of the issue compared to more immediate concerns.[64] However, in response to the argument that Native Americans ought to focus on social issues larger than a team name, Ross stated that "Native people shouldn't be forced to choose between living or racial discrimination. Those are false binaries."[65]

Controversy edit

In February 2013 a symposium on the topic was held at the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C.[66] Subsequently, the Oneida Indian Nation of New York sponsored a series of radio ads in each city to coincide with games of the 2013 season, each featuring a targeted message.[67] A broader range of persons spoke in favor of change or open discussion, including local government leaders, members of Congress, and President Barack Obama. Statements in support of a name change by academic, civil rights and religious organizations were added to those that Native American groups have been making for decades.[68]

In 2017, when professional sports dealt with a number of racial issues, from individual acts by players to widespread protests during the National Anthem, some commentators speculated why there had been no action to address the stereotyping of Native Americans, including the decision to have the Washington Redskins host a game on Thanksgiving.[69][70][71]

Academic research edit

The issue is often discussed in the media in terms of offensiveness or political correctness, which reduces it to feelings and opinions, and prevents full understanding of the historical, psychological and sociological context provided by academic research on the negative effects of the use of Native American names and images by sports teams.[72] The effect of stereotyping on high or low expectations, confidence, and academic performance has been well-established.[73] This effect is enhanced due to the invisibility of Native Americans in mainstream society and media, leaving stereotypes as the primary basis for thinking about the abilities and traits associated with Natives, including the roles and opportunities Natives Americans envision for themselves. Furthermore, even when stereotypes are positive (e.g. "Native Americans are spiritual"), they may have a limiting, detrimental effect on individuals.[74] Stereotyping may directly affect the academic performance and self-esteem of Native American youth, whose people face high rates of suicide, unemployment, and poverty. Euro-Americans exposed to mascots may be more likely to believe not only that such stereotypes are true, but that Native Americans have no identity beyond these stereotypes.[75] Research indicates that exposure to any stereotypes increased the likelihood of stereotypical thinking with regard to other minority groups in addition to the target of the stereotype, a "spreading effect".[76][77]

 
Chief Zee with other fans

Native Americans opposed to mascots point to the oversimplification of their culture by fans "playing Indian" with no understanding of the deeper meaning of feathers, face paint, chants, and dancing. Richard Lapchick, director emeritus of Northeastern University's Center for the Study of Sport in Society, wrote: "Could you imagine people mocking African Americans in black face at a game? Yet go to a game where there is a team with an Indian name and you will see fans with war paint on their faces. Is this not the equivalent to black face?" [78] The unofficial mascot of the Redskins team was Zema Williams (aka Chief Zee), an African American man who attended games for 38 years beginning in 1978 dressed in a red faux "Indian" costume, complete with feathered war bonnet and rubber tomahawk. Other fans dressed in similar costumes for games.[79][80]

In a report published by the Center for American Progress summarizing the research on "The Real Impact of Native Mascots and Team Names on American Indian and Alaska Native Youth", a case is made that the public debate misses the point, since individual opinions on either side do not matter given the measurable effects on the mental health of Native American young people exposed to such misrepresentations of their ethnic identity, and the often hostile or insulting behavior of non-natives that occur when teams with such names and mascots play.[81][82][83] Clinical Psychologist Michael Friedman writes that the use of Native imagery, in particular the use of a dictionary defined slur, is a form of bullying, the negative impact of which is magnified by its being officially sanctioned.[84]

The majority of scholars argue that the use of any stereotype, whether positive or negative, is a hindrance to the advancement of the targeted group.[85] The national organizations representing several academic disciplines, after reviewing the research done on the issue, have passed resolutions calling for the end of all Native American mascots and images in sports. These include the Society of Indian Psychologists (1999),[86] the American Counseling Association (2001),[87] the American Psychological Association (2005),[88] the American Sociological Association (2007).[89] and the American Anthropological Association (2015).[90] The executive board of the nation's leading organization of scholars of U.S. history approved a resolution in April 2015: "The Organization of American Historians hereby adds its voice to the growing demands by Native American organizations, our sister disciplines, and conscientious people of all ethnic backgrounds, to change the name and logo of the Washington 'Redskins'."[91]

Native American advocates of change edit

 
Protesters of the name, 2014

In the 1940s the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) created a campaign to eliminate negative stereotyping of Native American people in the media. Over time, the campaign began to focus on Indian names and mascots in sports.[92] The NCAI maintains that teams with mascots such as the Braves and the Redskins perpetuate negative stereotypes of Native American people, and demean their native traditions and rituals.[93] The NCAI issued a new report in 2013 summarizing opposition to Indian mascots and team names generally, and the Washington Redskins in particular.[94] In the trademark case, the TTAB placed significance on the NCAI opposition, estimating that the organization represented about 30% of the Native American population at the time the trademarks were granted, which met their criteria for a "substantial composite" of Native Americans finding the name disparaging.[95] In its amicus brief filed in the case, the NCAI states that the combined enrollment of its member tribes in 2013 was 1.2 million individuals.[96]

Many tribal councils have passed resolutions or issued statements regarding their opposition to the name of the Washington Redskins, including the Cherokee and Comanche Nations of Oklahoma, the Inter Tribal Council of Arizona,[97] the Inter-Tribal Council of the Five Civilized Tribes,[98][99] the Oneida Indian Nation (New York),[100] the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe (North Dakota) and the United South and Eastern Tribes (USET).[101] In April 2014, Navajo Nation Council voted in favor of a statement opposing the name of the Washington team, as well as other disparaging references to American Indians by other professional sports franchises.[102] Other Native American groups advocating change include: the Native American Bar Association of DC,[103] the National Caucus of Native American State Legislators,[104] and the Society of American Indian Government Employees.[105]

Civil rights and religious organizations edit

At its 2013 annual conference, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (LCCHR), which includes the NAACP and the ACLU as members, passed a unanimous resolution of the 85 representatives present that, while recognizing that a business has the First Amendment right to use any name that it chooses, others need not be complicit in the use of a pejorative and insulting name; and calling upon all Federal, state and local government entities "to end any preferential tax, zoning, or policy treatment that could be viewed as supporting the franchise as long as it retains its current team name". The resolution also commended the "current and former government officials, media outlets, and other entities that have encouraged the Washington Redskins franchise to change its team name or that have refused to be complicit in promoting the current team name".[106][107] In response, the team released a brief statement reiterating their previous position, and quoting two individuals as being both Native American and Redskins fans who do not want the name to change.[108] The LCCHR also issued a press release in 2014 applauding the decision to cancel the trademark protection for the team's name.[109] The NAACP issued their own press release supporting the TTAB decision stating "The NAACP has called specifically for this name change since 1992, and will continue to stand with the Native Indian community until the derogatory moniker has been changed."[110]

The Fritz Pollard Alliance, a non-profit organization closely allied with the NFL on civil rights issues, announced its support of a name change in 2015 after repeated attempts to discuss the issue with the team owner and representatives. An attorney for the Alliance, N. Jeremi Duru, an American University law professor, made a study of the controversy in which he concluded that Native Americans are justified in finding the name offensive.[111]

In 1992, the Central Conference of American Rabbis issued a resolution calling for the end of sports teams names that promote racism, in particular the Atlanta Braves and the Washington Redskins.[112] The Anti-Defamation League was one of the organizations signing a letter to broadcasters urging them to avoid using the name.[113] The Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism also advocates a name change.[114]

In 2013 a group of 61 religious leaders in Washington, D.C., sent a letter to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and team owner Dan Snyder stating their moral obligation to join the Change the Mascot movement due to the offensive and inappropriate nature of the name which causes pain whether or not that is intended.[115][68]

In June 2015, the United Church of Christ General Synod passed a resolution calling for a stop to using images or mascots that could be demeaning to the Native American community.[116]

Protests edit

Although often assumed to be a debate of recent origins, local Washington, D.C. newspapers published news items on the controversy many times since at least 1971, all in response to Native American individuals or organizations asking for the name to be changed.[117][118] National protests began in 1988, after the team's Super Bowl XXII victory, prompting numerous Native Americans to write letters to Redskins owner Jack Kent Cooke; others boycotted Redskins products and protested, but Cooke rejected the possibility of change.[119] There was a protest of about 2,000 people at the 1992 Super Bowl between the Redskins and the Buffalo Bills; the American Indian Movement's (AIM) Vernon Bellecourt was one of the main organizers of the protest.[120]

From 2013 to 2019, picketing at stadiums occurred occasionally when the Redskins played, particularly in cities with a significant population of Native Americans, such as Dallas,[121][122] Denver[123] and Minneapolis.[124][125] The latter protest was supported by several Minnesota politicians[126][127] and was through documented by two films: Dodging Bullets—Stories from Survivors of Historical Trauma and More Than A Word. Picketing resumed for the 2014 season in Glendale, Arizona, when the team played the Arizona Cardinals,[128] and again the largest rally was in Minneapolis,[129] where estimates of the number of protestors was between 3,500 and 5,000.[130] At a protest in Philadelphia in 2017, Native Americans pointed out the irony of NFL players making a statement opposing racial injustice by "taking a knee" for the National Anthem while one of the teams taking the field continues to use a racially offensive name and logo.[131] Playing in Minnesota for the first time since 2014, hundreds of Native Americans protested against the team name outside of U.S. Bank Stadium during the game on October 24, 2019.[132] On December 8, 2019, members of the Wisconsin Indian Education Association's Indian Mascot and Logo Task Force led a protest at Lambeau Field in Wisconsin. The Oneida Nation sponsored a video shown on the Jumbotron during the game expressing pride in being Native American as the antithesis of the message sent by the Redskins name and logo.[133]

FedEx owns the naming rights to the team's stadium, FedExField, through 2026, and had been the only corporate sponsor officially subject to boycotts by Native Americans: the Osage Nation, the Native American Rights Fund (NARF), and the Central Council of Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes, the largest tribe of Native Alaskan peoples.[134][135][136]

Responses to the controversy edit

Following the February 2013 symposium "Racist Stereotypes and Cultural Appropriation in American Sports" at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian, 10 members of Congress sent a letter to the Redskins' owner and the NFL Commissioner requesting that the name be changed since it is offensive to Native Americans. In response, Daniel Snyder told USA Today: "We'll never change the name. ... It's that simple. NEVER—you can use caps."[137] Snyder addressed an open letter to fans that was published in The Washington Post on October 9, 2013; in which he stated that the most important meaning of the name is the association that fans have with memories of their personal history with the team. Snyder also states that the name was chosen in 1933 to honor Native Americans in general and the coach and four players at that time who were Native American; and that in 1971 coach George Allen consulted with the Red Cloud Indian Fund on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation when designing the logo.[138] In 2013, the Red Cloud Athletic Fund sent a letter to the Washington Post stating that "As an organization, Red Cloud Indian School has never—and will never—endorse the use of the name 'Redskins'. Like many Native American organizations across the country, members of our staff and extended community find the name offensive."[139]

In June 2013, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell defended the name by citing its origins, traditions and polls that support its popularity.[140][141] In February 2018, following the announcement by MLB Commissioner Robert Manfred that the Cleveland Indians would remove their Chief Wahoo logo from the stadium and uniforms, Goodell stated that the Redskins name and logo would remain, primarily citing the 2016 Washington Post opinion poll.[142]

On their website the team stated that a 2014 annual NFL poll showing 71 percent support for the name, "along with the poll taken among Native Americans by the Annenberg Institute, demonstrates continued, widespread and deep opposition to the Redskins changing our name... We respect the point of view of the small number of people who seek a name change, but it is important to recognize very few people agree with the case they are making."[143][144]

Bruce Allen addressed a letter dated May 23, 2014, to then Senate majority leader Harry Reid repeating the position that the name was originated by Native Americans to refer to themselves, that the logo was also designed and approved by Native American leaders, and that the vast majority of both Native Americans and the public do not find the name offensive.[145]

Conservative columnists George Will and Pat Buchanan stated that opponents of the team name are being oversensitive, although Charles Krauthammer drew a parallel between the evolution of "Negro" and "Redskin" from being in common use to being condescending and insulting.[146][147] W. James Antle III, Rich Lowry, and Dennis Prager wrote that outrage over mascots is manufactured by white liberals, rather than being the authentic voice of Native Americans.[148][149][150]

Public opinion edit

From 2013 to 2014, national opinion polls consistently indicated that some majority of the general public opposed changing the name of the team: 79 percent (April 2013),[151] 60 percent (June 2014),[152] and 71 percent (September 2014). [153] The latter poll found that 68 percent of respondents thought the name was not disrespectful of Native Americans, 19 percent said it showed "some" disrespect, and 9 percent said it was "a lot" disrespectful.[153] Three polls of adult residents of the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area found that most respondents supported the team name, but 59 percent,[154] 56 percent,[155] and 53 percent[156] also said that the word "redskin" is offensive to Native Americans in at least some contexts.

Opinion polling was also part of the discussion about whether Native Americans found the term redskin insulting. Two national political polls, the first in 2004 by the National Annenberg Election Survey[5] and another in 2016 by The Washington Post.[157][158][159] were particularly influential. When a respondent identified themselves as Native American, both polls asked, "The professional football team in Washington calls itself the Washington Redskins. As a Native American, do you find that name offensive or doesn’t it bother you?". In both polls, 90% responded that they were not bothered, 9% that they were offended, and 1% gave no response. These polls were widely cited by teams, fans, and mainstream media as evidence that there was no need to change the name of the Washington football team.

In a commentary published soon after the 2004 poll, 15 Native American scholars collaborated on a critique that stated that there were so many flaws in the Annenberg study that rather than being a measure of Native American opinion, it was an expression of white privilege and colonialism.[6] A 2019 poll by University of California, Berkeley surveyed 1,021 Native Americans, twice as many as in any previous polls.[160] 38% of self-identified Native Americans said they were not bothered by the Washington Redskins name. But 49% overall said it was offensive, along with 67% of respondents who were heavily engaged in their native or tribal cultures, 60% of young people, and 52% of those with tribal affiliations.[161]

Native American opinion in support of Redskins name edit

Three Virginia Indian leaders said in 2013 that they are not offended by the name Redskins but are more concerned about other issues such as the lack of Federal recognition for any Virginia tribe.[b][162] Robert "Two Eagles" Green, retired chief of the Fredericksburg area Patawomeck Tribe, stated on a radio talk show he would be offended if the team changed its name.[163] In an article in The American Spectator, the chief of the Patawomeck Tribe, John Lightner, said that while he was not offended by the current name, he would support changing the team to the Washington Potomacs.[164]

On November 25, 2013, as part of the NFL's "Salute to Service" month and Native American Heritage month, the Washington Redskins recognized four members of the Navajo Code Talkers Association briefly during a commercial break. One of them, Roy Hawthorne, has stated, "My opinion is that's a name that not only the team should keep, but that's a name that's American."[165][166] This action was criticized by Amanda Blackhorse, also Navajo,[167] who described it as a publicity stunt.[168] In April 2014, Navajo Nation Council voted in favor of a statement opposing the name of the Washington team, as well as other disparaging references to American Indians by other professional sports franchises.[102] Later that year, members of the Navajo and Zuni Tribes and students from the Red Mesa Redskins High School attended a Redskins vs. Cardinals game as guests of the Washington team.[169]

In 2014, the Redskins released a two-minute video on YouTube entitled "Redskins is a Powerful Name" in which several Native Americans express their support for the team. Of the fourteen individuals, five are members of the Chippewa Cree tribe on the Rocky Boy Indian Reservation in Montana and are associated with the Team Redskins Rodeo club. Two are Mike Wetzel and Don Wetzel, Jr. (Blackfoot), descendants of the logo designer, and the six others are members of diverse tribes and state that they are fans of the team and find nothing wrong with the name, or think it is positive.[170][171][172] One of the individuals in the video is Mark One Wolf, who was reported as being born Mark E. Yancey in Washington, D.C., of African-American and Japanese descent.[173]

Political opinion edit

In July, 2020, the Board of Supervisors of Loudoun County, Virginia, which is the location of the corporate headquarters of the team, sent a letter to the owner urging a change.[174][175]

In the mid-2010s, the majority of those advocating a name change were Democrats, though there was no indication that the issue is of any real significance in electoral decisions given that Native Americans are such a small percentage of the electorate and are not likely to influence the outcome of any election. There are only eight states where Natives make up greater than 2 percent of the population: Alaska, Arizona, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Wyoming.[176] However, polls during that period showed a definite political difference in the opinion of the general public, with only 58% of Democrats opposing a name change versus 89% of Republicans.[177] Statements by political figures have generally been expressions of personal opinion rather than recommendations for government action. There have also been non-binding resolutions advocating name change proposed in New Jersey[178] and passed in Minneapolis,[179] New York State[180][181] and California.[182]

In November 2015, President Barack Obama, speaking at the White House Tribal Nations Conference, stated "Names and mascots of sports teams like the Washington Redskins perpetuate negative stereotypes of Native Americans" and praised Adidas for a new initiative to help schools change names and mascots by designing new logos and paying for part of the cost of new uniforms.[183] On May 22, 2014, fifty U.S. Senators, forty-eight Democrats and two Independents, sent a letter[184] to NFL Commissioner Goodell asking the league, referencing the Donald Sterling case, to "send the same clear message as the NBA did: that racism and bigotry have no place in professional sports." Five Democratic Senators declined to sign the letter, and Republicans were not invited to do so.[185] During his 2016 presidential campaign, Donald Trump defended the name.[186]

DC Metro area jurisdictions edit

The team headquarters is in Ashburn, Virginia and its home stadium, FedExField, is in Landover, Maryland. Much of the local political discussion has been about the location of a stadium, beginning in the 1990s.[187] The mayors of Washington asserted that a return to the District of Columbia was contingent upon a name change,[188][189] a possibility the team had rejected.[190] In 2018 the NAACP also opposed the return of the team to the District unless the name where changed.[191]

For many years, beginning with the departure of the Baltimore Colts, the Redskins were the only NFL team in a large area from Maryland into the southern states. This is slowly changing as Maryland NFL fans move to the Baltimore Ravens.[192] Virginia fans were the more numerous and dedicated supporters of the Redskins, and the state and local governments used economic incentives to encourage the team's relocation of its facilities there,[193] and maintain that the name is entirely a business decision for the team to make.[194][195] Several Maryland politicians stated that the name should change,[196][197][198] but governor Larry Hogan at that time opposed any change, also citing the desire to keep the stadium in Maryland.[199]

Other teams that use the name Redskins edit

The number of high schools using the Redskins name has been in steady decline, 40% having had local efforts to change the name. Between 1988 and April 2013, 28 high schools in 18 states had done so.[200] By December 2017, the number of high school "Redskins" had continued to decline from 62 to 49,[201] including four affected by a 2015 California law.[202] Following the Washington NFL decision, changes by high schools have accelerated, with only 36 remaining.[citation needed]

College teams that had been Redskins changed their names voluntarily decades ago, including: the University of Utah became the Utah Utes in 1972; Miami University became the RedHawks in 1997;[203] and the Southern Nazarene University became the Crimson Storm in 1998.[204]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Originally a translation of 18th-century Mississippi Valley French Peau Rouge, Native American person (peau, skin + rouge, red), a translation of non-deprecatory Native American self-designations such as Fox meeshkwinameshkaata, literally, "one having red skin" : meshkw-, red + -i-nameshk-, skin + -aa-, to have + -ta, participle suffix (used in opposition to designations of persons of European origin as waapeshkinameshkaata, "one having white skin" : waapeshk-, white + -i-nameshk-, skin + -aa-, to have + -ta, participle suffix).
  2. ^ In 2016, Federal recognition was granted to the Pamunkey Tribe of Virginia.

References edit

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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • American Indian Sports Team Mascots
  • Redskins Facts
  • Rebrand Washington Football

washington, redskins, name, controversy, main, article, native, american, mascot, controversy, involved, name, logo, previously, used, washington, commanders, national, football, league, franchise, located, washington, metropolitan, area, 1960s, team, longtime. Main article Native American mascot controversy The Washington Redskins name controversy involved the name and logo previously used by the Washington Commanders a National Football League NFL franchise located in the Washington metropolitan area In the 1960s the team s longtime name the Redskins and the associated logo began to draw criticism from Native American groups and individuals 2 The topic part of the larger Native American mascot controversy began receiving widespread public attention in the 1990s In 2020 the team responded to economic pressure in the wake of widespread recognition of systemic racism by retiring the name and logo The team called itself the Washington Football Team before rebranding as the Commanders in 2022 In November 2014 a demonstration against the Redskins name and logo was held outside TCF Bank Stadium in Minneapolis Minnesota before a game against the Vikings 1 Redskin is a slang term for Native Americans in the United States and First Nations in Canada The term redskin underwent pejoration through the 19th to early 20th centuries and in contemporary dictionaries of American English it is labeled as offensive disparaging or insulting For several decades the team s owners and management NFL commissioners and most fans sought to keep the Redskins name claiming that it honored the achievements and virtues of Native Americans and that it was not intended in a negative manner Then team president Bruce Allen noted that three high schools with a Native American majority student body used the name 3 4 Supporters also pointed to a national poll taken in 2004 by the Annenberg Public Policy Center which found that a majority of Native Americans were not offended by the name 5 The use of public opinion polling methods to measure the opinions of a small diverse population was criticized by scholars in particular the use of self identification to select the individuals surveyed 6 The name was opposed by the National Congress of American Indians which said in 2013 that it represented 1 2 million people in its member tribes Contents 1 Name change 2 History 2 1 Origin and meaning of redskin 2 1 1 Trademark cases 2 1 2 Use by Native Americans 3 Controversy 3 1 Academic research 3 2 Native American advocates of change 3 3 Civil rights and religious organizations 3 4 Protests 4 Responses to the controversy 4 1 Public opinion 4 2 Native American opinion in support of Redskins name 4 3 Political opinion 4 3 1 DC Metro area jurisdictions 4 4 Other teams that use the name Redskins 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksName change editIn July 2020 amid the removal of many names and images as part of the George Floyd protests a group of investors worth 620 billion wrote letters to major sponsors Nike FedEx and PepsiCo encouraging pressure on the Redskins to change their name 7 8 In addition to direct sponsors advocating change in 2020 retailers Amazon Target and Walmart withdrew Redskins merchandise from their stores and websites 9 FedEx called on the team to change its name on July 2 2020 10 11 The same day Nike removed Redskins apparel from its website 12 13 On July 3 the league and the franchise announced that it was undergoing a thorough review of the team name 14 15 On July 7 it was acknowledged that the Redskins were not in contact with a group of Native Americans who petitioned the NFL to force a name change and that Redskins head coach Ron Rivera also stated the team wanted to continue honoring and supporting Native Americans and our Military 16 The team initiated a review which resulted in the decision to retire its name and logo playing as the Washington Football Team pending adoption of a more permanent name 17 18 19 Team president Jason Wright announced on July 12 2021 that the new name will not include any ties to Native Americans including the name Warriors research having shown that anything other than a clean break with the past is a slippery slope 20 While the team expects fans to continue to wear their jerseys with the former name and logo Native American inspired headdresses or face paint will not be allowed in the stadium 21 In January 2022 the team announced that it would choose between Armada Presidents Brigade Red Hogs Commanders RedWolves Defenders and the then current Football Team 22 The new name the Washington Commanders was announced on February 2 2022 23 In its press release the team made no mention of the racial controversy instead emphasizing the military symbolism of the graphic elements in the redesigned W primary logo that goes along with the new name The design of the new crest combines elements of the team s history and its connection to the city of Washington 24 Amanda Blackhorse responded that the change is an empty gesture the team s owner and management having made no substantial effort to acknowledge or repair the effects of decades of insults nor advocate that other teams with offensive mascots also change 25 History editSee also History of the Washington Commanders nbsp The obverse side of a Buffalo nickel featuring the head of a Native American was used as a model for the Redskins logo In 1933 the football team that shared both the name and playing field with the Boston Braves baseball team moved to Fenway Park already home to the Boston Red Sox Co owner George Preston Marshall changed the name to the Redskins more likely to avoid confusion while retaining the Native American imagery of the team 26 27 than to honor coach William Henry Lone Star Dietz whose identity as a Native American was debated 28 The logo for the NFL Braves was similar to the Redskins logo a Native American head in profile with braids and trailing feathers 29 A redesigned logo introduced in 1972 was proposed by Walter Wetzel a former Blackfoot tribal chairman and past president of the National Congress of American Indians and was modeled after the likeness on the Buffalo nickel 30 Members of the Blackfoot tribe express a range of opinions from support to indifference to strong opposition to the Redskins name based upon their personal experiences 31 Advocates of changing the team s name said that stereotypes of Native Americans had to be understood in the context of a history that includes conquest forced relocation and organized efforts by federal and state governments to eradicate native cultures such as the boarding schools of the late 19th and early 20th centuries 32 Since the first Europeans made landfall in North America native peoples have suffered under a weltering array of stereotypes misconceptions and caricatures Whether portrayed as noble savages ignoble savages teary eyed environmentalists or most recently simply as casino rich native peoples find their efforts to be treated with a measure of respect and integrity undermined by images that flatten complex tribal historical and personal experience into one dimensional representations that tells us more about the depicters than about the depicted 33 Origin and meaning of redskin edit See also Redskin nbsp Wordmark used by the Redskins 1972 2019 The historical context for the emergence in the Americas of racial identities based upon skin color was the establishment of colonies which developed a plantation economy dependent upon slave labor Prior to the colonial era many Europeans identified themselves as Christians rather than white At the start of the eighteenth century Indians and Europeans rarely mentioned the color of each other s skins By midcentury remarks about skin color and the categorization of peoples by simple color coded labels red white black had become commonplace 34 Documents from the colonial period indicate that the use of red as an identifier by Native Americans for themselves emerged in the context of Indian European diplomacy in the southeastern region of North America before later being adopted by Europeans and becoming a generic label for all Native Americans 35 627 8 Linguistic evidence indicates that while some tribes may have used red to refer to themselves during the Pre Columbian era based upon their origin stories 35 634 the general use of the term was in response to meeting people who called themselves white and their slaves black 35 629 The choice of red rather than other colors may have been due to cultural associations rather than skin color 35 632 In the debate over the meaning of the word redskin team supporters frequently cite a paper by Ives Goddard a Smithsonian Institution senior linguist and curator emeritus who asserts that the term was a direct translation of words used by Native Americans to refer to themselves and was benign in its original meaning 36 In an interview Goddard admits that it is impossible to verify if the native words were accurately translated 37 Darren R Reid a history lecturer at Coventry University contends that Native American usage was generally attributed to them by European writers Reid states that the team logo works together with the name to reinforce an unrealistic stereotype It is not up to non Indians to define an idealized image of what it is to a Native American The positive stereotypes allow fans and supporters to honestly state that they are honoring Native Americans but this is forcing your idea of what it is to honour those people onto them and that fundamentally is disrespectful 38 39 Sociologist James V Fenelon makes a more explicit statement that Goddard s article is poor scholarship given that the conclusion of the origin and usage by Natives as entirely benign is divorced from the socio historical realities of hostility and racism from which it emerged 40 Advocates of changing the name emphasize current meanings in dictionaries of American English which include usually offensive 41 disparaging 42 a 43 insulting 44 and taboo 45 Such meanings are consistent with the usage found in books in the period between 1875 and 1930 which is after that studied by Goddard 46 John McWhorter an associate professor of linguistics at Columbia University compares redskin becoming a slur to other racial terms such as Oriental which acquired implied meanings associated with contempt 47 A controversial etymological claim is that the term emerged from the practice of paying a bounty for Indians and that redskin refers to the bloody scalp of Native Americans 48 Although official documents do not use the word in this way a historical association between the use of redskin and the paying of bounties can be made In 1863 a Winona Minnesota newspaper the Daily Republican printed an announcement The state reward for dead Indians has been increased to 200 for every red skin sent to Purgatory This sum is more than the dead bodies of all the Indians east of the Red River are worth 49 A news story published by the Atchison Daily Champion in Atchison Kansas on October 9 1885 tells of the settlers hunt for redskins with a view of obtaining their scalps valued at 250 50 For sociologist C Richard King the lack of direct evidence does not mean that contemporary Native people are wrong to draw an association between a term that emphasizes an identity based upon skin color and a history that commodified Native American body parts 51 Trademark cases edit See also Washington Redskins trademark dispute The meaning of the term redskin was addressed in two cases challenging the trademark registrations held by Pro Football Inc the team s corporate entity The challenge was based upon a provision of Federal trademark law the Lanham Act which prohibited the registration of any mark that may disparage persons institutions beliefs or national symbols or bring them into contempt or disrepute In both cases the plaintiffs prevailed at trial establishing that the name Redskin was disparaging to Native Americans However both decisions were overturned due to legal issues other than disparagement The first case filed in 1992 by Suzan Shown Harjo and six other Native American leaders resulted in the cancellation of the federal registrations for the Redskins marks by the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board TTAB in 1999 However in 2005 the United States District Court for the District of Columbia reversed the TTAB s decision on the grounds of insufficient evidence of disparagement Subsequent appeals were also rejected on the basis of laches that the Native American petitioners had pursued their rights in an untimely manner 52 A second case was filed in 2013 by younger plaintiffs not affected by laches led by Amanda Blackhorse 53 54 Once again the TTAB found Redskins to be disparaging under the Lanham Act 55 In December 2015 the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals struck down the disparagement prohibition in the trademark law in a separate case Matal v Tam involving a denial of trademark registration to the Asian American band The Slants 56 On June 19 2017 the Supreme Court unanimously ruled in favor of Tam stating The disparagement clause violates the First Amendment s Free Speech Clause Contrary to the Government s contention trademarks are private not government speech 57 On June 29 2017 both the Native American petitioners and the Justice Department withdrew from any further litigation now that the Supreme Court has rendered the legal issue moot 58 While team owner Daniel Snyder expresses the opinion that the court decision is a victory for the team the executive director of the NCAI asserts that the name remains a slur and the decision that grants it First Amendment protection does not alter any of the arguments against its continued use 59 Use by Native Americans edit Supporters of the Redskins name note that three predominantly Native American high schools use the name for their sports teams suggesting that it can be acceptable 60 However in 2013 the principal of one of these Red Mesa High School in Teec Nos Pos Arizona said that use of the word outside American Indian communities should be avoided because it could perpetuate the legacy of negativity that the term has created 61 Teec Nos Pos on the Navajo Nation is 96 5 Native American Wellpinit Washington a town within a reservation of the Spokane people is 79 3 Native American 62 In 2014 Wellpinit High School voted to keep the Redskins name 63 The third school Kingston High School in Kingston Oklahoma is 57 69 Native American 4 Native American writer and attorney Gyasi Ross compares Native American use of variations of the word redskin with African American use of variations of the word nigger specifically Natives calling each other skins as analogous to nigga Ross argues that the use of terms by some members of minority communities does not mean that the same may be used by outsiders this is generally recognized by white people with regard to black expressions yet whites feel free to say how Natives should feel about redskin Ross also notes that there is no consensus among Natives regarding either opposition to the Washington team s use of the name or the importance of the issue compared to more immediate concerns 64 However in response to the argument that Native Americans ought to focus on social issues larger than a team name Ross stated that Native people shouldn t be forced to choose between living or racial discrimination Those are false binaries 65 Controversy editSee also List of Washington Redskins name change advocates In February 2013 a symposium on the topic was held at the Smithsonian s National Museum of the American Indian in Washington D C 66 Subsequently the Oneida Indian Nation of New York sponsored a series of radio ads in each city to coincide with games of the 2013 season each featuring a targeted message 67 A broader range of persons spoke in favor of change or open discussion including local government leaders members of Congress and President Barack Obama Statements in support of a name change by academic civil rights and religious organizations were added to those that Native American groups have been making for decades 68 In 2017 when professional sports dealt with a number of racial issues from individual acts by players to widespread protests during the National Anthem some commentators speculated why there had been no action to address the stereotyping of Native Americans including the decision to have the Washington Redskins host a game on Thanksgiving 69 70 71 Academic research edit The issue is often discussed in the media in terms of offensiveness or political correctness which reduces it to feelings and opinions and prevents full understanding of the historical psychological and sociological context provided by academic research on the negative effects of the use of Native American names and images by sports teams 72 The effect of stereotyping on high or low expectations confidence and academic performance has been well established 73 This effect is enhanced due to the invisibility of Native Americans in mainstream society and media leaving stereotypes as the primary basis for thinking about the abilities and traits associated with Natives including the roles and opportunities Natives Americans envision for themselves Furthermore even when stereotypes are positive e g Native Americans are spiritual they may have a limiting detrimental effect on individuals 74 Stereotyping may directly affect the academic performance and self esteem of Native American youth whose people face high rates of suicide unemployment and poverty Euro Americans exposed to mascots may be more likely to believe not only that such stereotypes are true but that Native Americans have no identity beyond these stereotypes 75 Research indicates that exposure to any stereotypes increased the likelihood of stereotypical thinking with regard to other minority groups in addition to the target of the stereotype a spreading effect 76 77 nbsp Chief Zee with other fansNative Americans opposed to mascots point to the oversimplification of their culture by fans playing Indian with no understanding of the deeper meaning of feathers face paint chants and dancing Richard Lapchick director emeritus of Northeastern University s Center for the Study of Sport in Society wrote Could you imagine people mocking African Americans in black face at a game Yet go to a game where there is a team with an Indian name and you will see fans with war paint on their faces Is this not the equivalent to black face 78 The unofficial mascot of the Redskins team was Zema Williams aka Chief Zee an African American man who attended games for 38 years beginning in 1978 dressed in a red faux Indian costume complete with feathered war bonnet and rubber tomahawk Other fans dressed in similar costumes for games 79 80 In a report published by the Center for American Progress summarizing the research on The Real Impact of Native Mascots and Team Names on American Indian and Alaska Native Youth a case is made that the public debate misses the point since individual opinions on either side do not matter given the measurable effects on the mental health of Native American young people exposed to such misrepresentations of their ethnic identity and the often hostile or insulting behavior of non natives that occur when teams with such names and mascots play 81 82 83 Clinical Psychologist Michael Friedman writes that the use of Native imagery in particular the use of a dictionary defined slur is a form of bullying the negative impact of which is magnified by its being officially sanctioned 84 The majority of scholars argue that the use of any stereotype whether positive or negative is a hindrance to the advancement of the targeted group 85 The national organizations representing several academic disciplines after reviewing the research done on the issue have passed resolutions calling for the end of all Native American mascots and images in sports These include the Society of Indian Psychologists 1999 86 the American Counseling Association 2001 87 the American Psychological Association 2005 88 the American Sociological Association 2007 89 and the American Anthropological Association 2015 90 The executive board of the nation s leading organization of scholars of U S history approved a resolution in April 2015 The Organization of American Historians hereby adds its voice to the growing demands by Native American organizations our sister disciplines and conscientious people of all ethnic backgrounds to change the name and logo of the Washington Redskins 91 Native American advocates of change edit See also List of Washington Redskins name change advocates Native Americans and Washington Redhawks nbsp Protesters of the name 2014In the 1940s the National Congress of American Indians NCAI created a campaign to eliminate negative stereotyping of Native American people in the media Over time the campaign began to focus on Indian names and mascots in sports 92 The NCAI maintains that teams with mascots such as the Braves and the Redskins perpetuate negative stereotypes of Native American people and demean their native traditions and rituals 93 The NCAI issued a new report in 2013 summarizing opposition to Indian mascots and team names generally and the Washington Redskins in particular 94 In the trademark case the TTAB placed significance on the NCAI opposition estimating that the organization represented about 30 of the Native American population at the time the trademarks were granted which met their criteria for a substantial composite of Native Americans finding the name disparaging 95 In its amicus brief filed in the case the NCAI states that the combined enrollment of its member tribes in 2013 was 1 2 million individuals 96 Many tribal councils have passed resolutions or issued statements regarding their opposition to the name of the Washington Redskins including the Cherokee and Comanche Nations of Oklahoma the Inter Tribal Council of Arizona 97 the Inter Tribal Council of the Five Civilized Tribes 98 99 the Oneida Indian Nation New York 100 the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe North Dakota and the United South and Eastern Tribes USET 101 In April 2014 Navajo Nation Council voted in favor of a statement opposing the name of the Washington team as well as other disparaging references to American Indians by other professional sports franchises 102 Other Native American groups advocating change include the Native American Bar Association of DC 103 the National Caucus of Native American State Legislators 104 and the Society of American Indian Government Employees 105 Civil rights and religious organizations edit At its 2013 annual conference the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights LCCHR which includes the NAACP and the ACLU as members passed a unanimous resolution of the 85 representatives present that while recognizing that a business has the First Amendment right to use any name that it chooses others need not be complicit in the use of a pejorative and insulting name and calling upon all Federal state and local government entities to end any preferential tax zoning or policy treatment that could be viewed as supporting the franchise as long as it retains its current team name The resolution also commended the current and former government officials media outlets and other entities that have encouraged the Washington Redskins franchise to change its team name or that have refused to be complicit in promoting the current team name 106 107 In response the team released a brief statement reiterating their previous position and quoting two individuals as being both Native American and Redskins fans who do not want the name to change 108 The LCCHR also issued a press release in 2014 applauding the decision to cancel the trademark protection for the team s name 109 The NAACP issued their own press release supporting the TTAB decision stating The NAACP has called specifically for this name change since 1992 and will continue to stand with the Native Indian community until the derogatory moniker has been changed 110 The Fritz Pollard Alliance a non profit organization closely allied with the NFL on civil rights issues announced its support of a name change in 2015 after repeated attempts to discuss the issue with the team owner and representatives An attorney for the Alliance N Jeremi Duru an American University law professor made a study of the controversy in which he concluded that Native Americans are justified in finding the name offensive 111 In 1992 the Central Conference of American Rabbis issued a resolution calling for the end of sports teams names that promote racism in particular the Atlanta Braves and the Washington Redskins 112 The Anti Defamation League was one of the organizations signing a letter to broadcasters urging them to avoid using the name 113 The Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism also advocates a name change 114 In 2013 a group of 61 religious leaders in Washington D C sent a letter to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and team owner Dan Snyder stating their moral obligation to join the Change the Mascot movement due to the offensive and inappropriate nature of the name which causes pain whether or not that is intended 115 68 In June 2015 the United Church of Christ General Synod passed a resolution calling for a stop to using images or mascots that could be demeaning to the Native American community 116 Protests edit Although often assumed to be a debate of recent origins local Washington D C newspapers published news items on the controversy many times since at least 1971 all in response to Native American individuals or organizations asking for the name to be changed 117 118 National protests began in 1988 after the team s Super Bowl XXII victory prompting numerous Native Americans to write letters to Redskins owner Jack Kent Cooke others boycotted Redskins products and protested but Cooke rejected the possibility of change 119 There was a protest of about 2 000 people at the 1992 Super Bowl between the Redskins and the Buffalo Bills the American Indian Movement s AIM Vernon Bellecourt was one of the main organizers of the protest 120 From 2013 to 2019 picketing at stadiums occurred occasionally when the Redskins played particularly in cities with a significant population of Native Americans such as Dallas 121 122 Denver 123 and Minneapolis 124 125 The latter protest was supported by several Minnesota politicians 126 127 and was through documented by two films Dodging Bullets Stories from Survivors of Historical Trauma and More Than A Word Picketing resumed for the 2014 season in Glendale Arizona when the team played the Arizona Cardinals 128 and again the largest rally was in Minneapolis 129 where estimates of the number of protestors was between 3 500 and 5 000 130 At a protest in Philadelphia in 2017 Native Americans pointed out the irony of NFL players making a statement opposing racial injustice by taking a knee for the National Anthem while one of the teams taking the field continues to use a racially offensive name and logo 131 Playing in Minnesota for the first time since 2014 hundreds of Native Americans protested against the team name outside of U S Bank Stadium during the game on October 24 2019 132 On December 8 2019 members of the Wisconsin Indian Education Association s Indian Mascot and Logo Task Force led a protest at Lambeau Field in Wisconsin The Oneida Nation sponsored a video shown on the Jumbotron during the game expressing pride in being Native American as the antithesis of the message sent by the Redskins name and logo 133 FedEx owns the naming rights to the team s stadium FedExField through 2026 and had been the only corporate sponsor officially subject to boycotts by Native Americans the Osage Nation the Native American Rights Fund NARF and the Central Council of Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes the largest tribe of Native Alaskan peoples 134 135 136 Responses to the controversy editFollowing the February 2013 symposium Racist Stereotypes and Cultural Appropriation in American Sports at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian 10 members of Congress sent a letter to the Redskins owner and the NFL Commissioner requesting that the name be changed since it is offensive to Native Americans In response Daniel Snyder told USA Today We ll never change the name It s that simple NEVER you can use caps 137 Snyder addressed an open letter to fans that was published in The Washington Post on October 9 2013 in which he stated that the most important meaning of the name is the association that fans have with memories of their personal history with the team Snyder also states that the name was chosen in 1933 to honor Native Americans in general and the coach and four players at that time who were Native American and that in 1971 coach George Allen consulted with the Red Cloud Indian Fund on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation when designing the logo 138 In 2013 the Red Cloud Athletic Fund sent a letter to the Washington Post stating that As an organization Red Cloud Indian School has never and will never endorse the use of the name Redskins Like many Native American organizations across the country members of our staff and extended community find the name offensive 139 In June 2013 NFL commissioner Roger Goodell defended the name by citing its origins traditions and polls that support its popularity 140 141 In February 2018 following the announcement by MLB Commissioner Robert Manfred that the Cleveland Indians would remove their Chief Wahoo logo from the stadium and uniforms Goodell stated that the Redskins name and logo would remain primarily citing the 2016 Washington Post opinion poll 142 On their website the team stated that a 2014 annual NFL poll showing 71 percent support for the name along with the poll taken among Native Americans by the Annenberg Institute demonstrates continued widespread and deep opposition to the Redskins changing our name We respect the point of view of the small number of people who seek a name change but it is important to recognize very few people agree with the case they are making 143 144 Bruce Allen addressed a letter dated May 23 2014 to then Senate majority leader Harry Reid repeating the position that the name was originated by Native Americans to refer to themselves that the logo was also designed and approved by Native American leaders and that the vast majority of both Native Americans and the public do not find the name offensive 145 Conservative columnists George Will and Pat Buchanan stated that opponents of the team name are being oversensitive although Charles Krauthammer drew a parallel between the evolution of Negro and Redskin from being in common use to being condescending and insulting 146 147 W James Antle III Rich Lowry and Dennis Prager wrote that outrage over mascots is manufactured by white liberals rather than being the authentic voice of Native Americans 148 149 150 Public opinion edit See also Washington Redskins name opinion polls From 2013 to 2014 national opinion polls consistently indicated that some majority of the general public opposed changing the name of the team 79 percent April 2013 151 60 percent June 2014 152 and 71 percent September 2014 153 The latter poll found that 68 percent of respondents thought the name was not disrespectful of Native Americans 19 percent said it showed some disrespect and 9 percent said it was a lot disrespectful 153 Three polls of adult residents of the Washington D C metropolitan area found that most respondents supported the team name but 59 percent 154 56 percent 155 and 53 percent 156 also said that the word redskin is offensive to Native Americans in at least some contexts Opinion polling was also part of the discussion about whether Native Americans found the term redskin insulting Two national political polls the first in 2004 by the National Annenberg Election Survey 5 and another in 2016 by The Washington Post 157 158 159 were particularly influential When a respondent identified themselves as Native American both polls asked The professional football team in Washington calls itself the Washington Redskins As a Native American do you find that name offensive or doesn t it bother you In both polls 90 responded that they were not bothered 9 that they were offended and 1 gave no response These polls were widely cited by teams fans and mainstream media as evidence that there was no need to change the name of the Washington football team In a commentary published soon after the 2004 poll 15 Native American scholars collaborated on a critique that stated that there were so many flaws in the Annenberg study that rather than being a measure of Native American opinion it was an expression of white privilege and colonialism 6 A 2019 poll by University of California Berkeley surveyed 1 021 Native Americans twice as many as in any previous polls 160 38 of self identified Native Americans said they were not bothered by the Washington Redskins name But 49 overall said it was offensive along with 67 of respondents who were heavily engaged in their native or tribal cultures 60 of young people and 52 of those with tribal affiliations 161 Native American opinion in support of Redskins name edit See also Washington Redskins Original Americans Foundation Three Virginia Indian leaders said in 2013 that they are not offended by the name Redskins but are more concerned about other issues such as the lack of Federal recognition for any Virginia tribe b 162 Robert Two Eagles Green retired chief of the Fredericksburg area Patawomeck Tribe stated on a radio talk show he would be offended if the team changed its name 163 In an article in The American Spectator the chief of the Patawomeck Tribe John Lightner said that while he was not offended by the current name he would support changing the team to the Washington Potomacs 164 On November 25 2013 as part of the NFL s Salute to Service month and Native American Heritage month the Washington Redskins recognized four members of the Navajo Code Talkers Association briefly during a commercial break One of them Roy Hawthorne has stated My opinion is that s a name that not only the team should keep but that s a name that s American 165 166 This action was criticized by Amanda Blackhorse also Navajo 167 who described it as a publicity stunt 168 In April 2014 Navajo Nation Council voted in favor of a statement opposing the name of the Washington team as well as other disparaging references to American Indians by other professional sports franchises 102 Later that year members of the Navajo and Zuni Tribes and students from the Red Mesa Redskins High School attended a Redskins vs Cardinals game as guests of the Washington team 169 In 2014 the Redskins released a two minute video on YouTube entitled Redskins is a Powerful Name in which several Native Americans express their support for the team Of the fourteen individuals five are members of the Chippewa Cree tribe on the Rocky Boy Indian Reservation in Montana and are associated with the Team Redskins Rodeo club Two are Mike Wetzel and Don Wetzel Jr Blackfoot descendants of the logo designer and the six others are members of diverse tribes and state that they are fans of the team and find nothing wrong with the name or think it is positive 170 171 172 One of the individuals in the video is Mark One Wolf who was reported as being born Mark E Yancey in Washington D C of African American and Japanese descent 173 Political opinion edit Further information List of Washington Redskins name change advocates Politicians and government agencies In July 2020 the Board of Supervisors of Loudoun County Virginia which is the location of the corporate headquarters of the team sent a letter to the owner urging a change 174 175 In the mid 2010s the majority of those advocating a name change were Democrats though there was no indication that the issue is of any real significance in electoral decisions given that Native Americans are such a small percentage of the electorate and are not likely to influence the outcome of any election There are only eight states where Natives make up greater than 2 percent of the population Alaska Arizona Montana New Mexico North Dakota Oklahoma South Dakota and Wyoming 176 However polls during that period showed a definite political difference in the opinion of the general public with only 58 of Democrats opposing a name change versus 89 of Republicans 177 Statements by political figures have generally been expressions of personal opinion rather than recommendations for government action There have also been non binding resolutions advocating name change proposed in New Jersey 178 and passed in Minneapolis 179 New York State 180 181 and California 182 In November 2015 President Barack Obama speaking at the White House Tribal Nations Conference stated Names and mascots of sports teams like the Washington Redskins perpetuate negative stereotypes of Native Americans and praised Adidas for a new initiative to help schools change names and mascots by designing new logos and paying for part of the cost of new uniforms 183 On May 22 2014 fifty U S Senators forty eight Democrats and two Independents sent a letter 184 to NFL Commissioner Goodell asking the league referencing the Donald Sterling case to send the same clear message as the NBA did that racism and bigotry have no place in professional sports Five Democratic Senators declined to sign the letter and Republicans were not invited to do so 185 During his 2016 presidential campaign Donald Trump defended the name 186 DC Metro area jurisdictions edit The team headquarters is in Ashburn Virginia and its home stadium FedExField is in Landover Maryland Much of the local political discussion has been about the location of a stadium beginning in the 1990s 187 The mayors of Washington asserted that a return to the District of Columbia was contingent upon a name change 188 189 a possibility the team had rejected 190 In 2018 the NAACP also opposed the return of the team to the District unless the name where changed 191 For many years beginning with the departure of the Baltimore Colts the Redskins were the only NFL team in a large area from Maryland into the southern states This is slowly changing as Maryland NFL fans move to the Baltimore Ravens 192 Virginia fans were the more numerous and dedicated supporters of the Redskins and the state and local governments used economic incentives to encourage the team s relocation of its facilities there 193 and maintain that the name is entirely a business decision for the team to make 194 195 Several Maryland politicians stated that the name should change 196 197 198 but governor Larry Hogan at that time opposed any change also citing the desire to keep the stadium in Maryland 199 Other teams that use the name Redskins edit Main article Sports teams named Redskins See also List of Secondary Schools The number of high schools using the Redskins name has been in steady decline 40 having had local efforts to change the name Between 1988 and April 2013 28 high schools in 18 states had done so 200 By December 2017 the number of high school Redskins had continued to decline from 62 to 49 201 including four affected by a 2015 California law 202 Following the Washington NFL decision changes by high schools have accelerated with only 36 remaining citation needed College teams that had been Redskins changed their names voluntarily decades ago including the University of Utah became the Utah Utes in 1972 Miami University became the RedHawks in 1997 203 and the Southern Nazarene University became the Crimson Storm in 1998 204 See also editAtlanta Braves tomahawk chop and name controversy Chicago Blackhawks name and logo controversy Chief Wahoo Cleveland Indians name and logo controversy Kansas City Chiefs name controversy List of sports team names and mascots derived from indigenous peoples National Football League controversies Native American mascot controversy Redwashing Indigenous redwashing Syracuse Orange mascotNotes edit Originally a translation of 18th century Mississippi Valley French Peau Rouge Native American person peau skin rouge red a translation of non deprecatory Native American self designations such as Fox meeshkwinameshkaata literally one having red skin meshkw red i nameshk skin aa to have ta participle suffix used in opposition to designations of persons of European origin as waapeshkinameshkaata one having white skin waapeshk white i nameshk skin aa to have ta participle suffix In 2016 Federal recognition was granted to the Pamunkey Tribe of Virginia References edit Cox John Woodrow November 2 2014 In Minnesota thousands of Native Americans protest Redskins name The Washington Post Retrieved May 1 2016 Ending the Legacy of Racism in Sports amp the Era of Harmful Indian Sports Mascots PDF Report National Congress of American Indians October 2013 Retrieved November 13 2017 Allen Bruce May 23 2014 The Truth about the Redskins Name and Logo PDF Redskins com NFL Enterprises Archived from the original PDF on May 24 2014 Retrieved May 19 2022 a b Soong Kelyn April 2 2013 The Other Redskins Philip Merrill College of Journalism Capitol News Service Retrieved December 20 2017 a b Kathleen Hall Jamieson September 24 2004 Most Indians Say Name of Washington Redskins Is Acceptable While 9 Percent Call It Offensive The Annenberg Public Policy Center Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved September 27 2014 a b D Anthony Tyeeme Clark 2005 Indigenous Voice and Vision as Commodity in a Mass Consumption Society The Colonial Politics of Public Opinion Polling American Indian Quarterly University of Nebraska Press 29 1 2 Winter Spring 228 238 doi 10 1353 aiq 2005 0039 JSTOR 4138809 S2CID 154986058 McDonald Scott July 1 2020 Washington Redskins Urged to Lose Name or Millions in Sponsorships Newsweek Retrieved July 3 2020 First Peoples Worldwide Leads Investors Call for NFL Washington Team Name Change Colorado edu Press release June 30 2020 Retrieved July 3 2020 Brassil Gillian R McDonnell Nieto del Rio Giulia Witz Billy Waldstein David July 10 2020 In Campaign Against Racism Team Names Get New Scrutiny The New York Times FedEx requests Washington Redskins to change team name NFL com NFL Enterprises July 2 2020 Retrieved July 3 2020 Clarke Liz July 2 2020 FedEx calls on Redskins to change name following investors demands on sponsors The Washington Post Nike pulls Washington Redskins apparel from its website amid team name controversy WITI TV July 3 2020 Grimes Prince J July 2 2020 Nike removes Redskins name apparel from its website NBCSports com Retrieved July 3 2020 Washington Redskins to undergo thorough review of team s name NFL com NFL Enterprises July 3 2020 Retrieved July 3 2020 Lantry Lauren July 3 2020 Washington Redskins under pressure from corporate sponsors reviewing name ABC News Retrieved July 3 2020 Roman Stubbs July 7 2020 As Redskins conduct name review Native American groups say they haven t heard from team The Washington Post Maese Rick Maske Mark Clarke Liz July 3 2020 Washington Redskins move toward changing controversial team name The Washington Post Retrieved July 26 2020 Bergman Jeremy July 23 2020 Washington will go by Washington Football Team until further notice NFL com NFL Enterprises Retrieved July 26 2020 Kim Allen Sterling Wayne July 23 2020 Washington s football team to call itself Washington Football Team until it settles on a new name CNN Retrieved July 26 2020 Nicki Jhabvala July 12 2021 WFT s new name won t be Warriors or include any Native American imagery Jason Wright says The Washington Post Retrieved July 13 2021 Jesus Jimenez August 4 2021 Washington Football Team Bans Native American Headdresses and Face Paint The New York Times Keim John January 4 2022 Washington Football Team to announce new name on Feb 2 it won t be an early fan favorite ESPN Jhabvala Nicki February 2 2022 Washington Football Team announces Commanders as its new name The Washington Post Retrieved February 2 2022 The Washington Football Team is now the Washington Commanders Commanders com NFL Enterprises February 2 2022 Retrieved February 7 2022 Blackhorse Amanda February 2 2022 A new Washington Football Team name feels hollow to us Native people The Washington Post Retrieved February 2 2022 John Banzhaf May 29 2014 Defense of Redskins Name Shattered Pressure to Now Change Racist Name Grows PRLog org Retrieved November 13 2017 McCartney Robert May 28 2014 1933 news article refutes cherished tale that Redskins were named to honor Indian coach The Washington Post Retrieved August 31 2020 Tom Pollin June 6 2013 Dropping Back In NFL History Lone Star And The Redskins Football Nation Archived from the original on January 16 2014 Retrieved January 13 2014 Boston Redskins 1932 1936 sportsecyclopedia com Sports Encyclopedia Retrieved November 13 2017 Scott Mansch February 19 2014 Don Wetzel Don t call Redskins logo offensive Great Falls Tribune Great Falls Montana Retrieved September 27 2014 David Murray November 18 2014 Is Redskins a racial slur Blackfoot weigh in Great Falls Tribune Retrieved November 14 2017 APA Resolution Justifications PDF apa org American Psychological Association 2005 Retrieved January 21 2013 Carter Meland David E Wilkins November 22 2012 Stereotypes in sports chaos in federal policy The Star Tribune Retrieved January 30 2013 Carter Meland Anishinaabe and David E Wilkins Lumbee are professors of Native American Studies at the University of Minnesota Shoemaker Nancy 2004 Race A Strange Likeness Becoming Red and White in Eighteenth Century North America New York Oxford University Press p 129 ISBN 9780195167924 a b c d Shoemaker Nancy 1997 How Indians Got to Be Red PDF The American Historical Review 102 3 625 644 doi 10 2307 2171504 JSTOR 2171504 Retrieved November 21 2017 Goddard Ives 2005 I AM A RED SKIN The Adoption of a Native American Expression 1769 1826 PDF European Review of Native American Studies 19 2 Retrieved November 14 2017 Guy Gugliotta October 3 2005 A Linguist s Alternative History of Redskin The Washington Post Retrieved August 21 2011 Darren R Reid August 28 2014 Why the Redskins is a Racist Name Darren Reid History Retrieved November 17 2017 Darren R Reid August 28 2014 The Artist in American History 11 Why the Redskins is a Racist Name iTunes com Podcast Retrieved December 17 2017 Fenelon James V 2016 Redskins Sport Mascots Indian Nations and White Racism Routledge p 40 ISBN 978 1315520674 Retrieved December 18 2017 Definition of REDSKIN Merriam Webster Retrieved November 14 2017 The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language Fifth Edition Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company 2011 Retrieved November 21 2017 Redskin Dictionary com Retrieved November 14 2017 K Dictionaries Online Random House Kernerman Webster s College Dictionary Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved November 14 2017 Definition of redskin Collins English Dictionary Retrieved November 14 2017 Bruce Stapleton 2001 Redskins Racial Slur or Symbol of Success iUniverse p 83 ISBN 978 0 595 17167 5 Retrieved November 21 2017 John McWhorter October 12 2015 Why Redskins Is a Bad Word Time Retrieved November 15 2017 Sudip Bhattacharya May 7 2014 Redskin A fun team name or racial epithet Lancaster Online Steinman Communications Retrieved November 14 2017 Michael Taylor a Seneca Indian and an assistant professor at Colgate University The term redskin comes from the Colonial era when some Native Americans were killed in clashes with newly arrived settlers and others were hunted down for a bounty Announcements Winona Newspaper Database The Daily Republican September 25 1863 Retrieved November 15 2017 Simon Moya Smith January 26 2015 Seeking 250 Reward Settlers Hunted For Redskin Scalps During Extermination Effort Indian Country Today Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved November 15 2017 King C Richard 2016 Origins Redskins Insult and Brand University of Nebraska Press p 16 ISBN 978 0 8032 7864 6 Retrieved November 21 2017 Seamon Davin L July 8 2014 Trademark Sensitivity Learning from the Washington Redskins The National Law Review Steptoe amp Johnson PLLC Retrieved November 15 2017 USPTO TTABVUE Trademark Trial and Appeal Board Inquiry System United States Patent and Trademark Office Retrieved November 15 2017 Erik Brady May 9 2013 New generation of Native Americans challenges Redskins USA Today Retrieved May 10 2013 Danielle Gorman August 1 2014 UNITED STATES In a Split Decision the TTAB Affirms Cancellation of REDSKINS Trademarks INTA Journal International Trademark Association Retrieved November 15 2017 Joe Mullin December 23 2015 Asian American band The Slants overturns USPTO rule on disparaging trademarks Ars Technica Retrieved December 24 2015 15 1293 Martal V Tam PDF SupremeCourt gov June 29 2017 Retrieved June 29 2017 Ian Shapira Ann E Marimow June 29 2017 Washington Redskins win trademark fight over the team s name The Washington Post Retrieved June 30 2017 Jacqueline Pata Ray Halbritter July 26 2017 The NFL Needs to Stop Promoting a Racial Slur Time Time Inc Retrieved July 27 2017 Rick Reilly September 18 2013 Have the people spoken ESPN Archived from the original on September 19 2013 Retrieved October 15 2013 Michelle Peirano May 1 2013 In debate over Redskins name is the R word for racism or respect Cronkite News Retrieved February 6 2014 Spokane Tribe of Indians A Socioeconomic Profile 2013 PDF Spokane Tribe of Indians 2013 Retrieved November 17 2017 KXLY Staff June 20 2014 School board votes to keep name Wellpinit Redskins KXLY com Archived from the original on August 18 2016 Retrieved November 15 2017 Gyasi Ross October 16 2013 Redskins A Native s Guide To Debating An Inglorious Word Deadspin Retrieved November 10 2014 Gyasi Ross October 30 2013 The False Binary of the Redskins Controversy The Huffington Post Retrieved November 15 2017 Racist Stereotypes and Cultural Appropriations in Sports PDF National Museum of the American Indian February 7 2013 Retrieved November 3 2017 Erik Brady September 5 2013 Indian tribe launches radio ads against Redskins name USA Today Sports Retrieved November 15 2017 a b Theresa Vargas December 5 2013 Faith leaders urge Redskins owner Dan Snyder and NFL to change team s name The Washington Post Retrieved November 16 2017 Zirin Dave November 17 2017 By Having the Washington R dskins Host a Game on Thanksgiving NFL Owners Show Their True Colors The Nation ISSN 0027 8378 Retrieved November 24 2017 Howard Bryant November 23 2017 How have we not progressed past these mascots ESPN com Retrieved November 24 2017 Alan Fisher NFL team name causes outrage in the US Al Jazeera Retrieved November 24 2017 C Richard King ed 2010 The Native American Mascot Controversy A Handbook Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press pp xi xiv ISBN 978 0 8108 6731 4 Retrieved November 16 2017 Annie Murphy Paul October 6 2012 It s Not Me It s You The New York Times Retrieved February 11 2013 Fryberg Stephanie Markus Hazel Rose Oyserman Daphna Stone Joseph M September 2008 Of Warrior Chiefs and Indian Princesses The Psychological Consequences of American Indian Mascots PDF Basic and Applied Social Psychology 30 3 208 doi 10 1080 01973530802375003 S2CID 55894203 Chaney John Burke Amanda Burkley Edward January 1 2011 Do American Indian Mascots American Indian People Examining Implicit Bias towards American Indian People and American Indian Mascots PDF American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research Centers for American Indian and Alaska Native Health Colorado School of Public Health 18 1 42 62 doi 10 5820 aian 1801 2011 42 PMID 21866499 Retrieved November 21 2017 Kim Prieto Chu March 2010 Effect of Exposure to an American Indian Mascot on the Tendency to Stereotype a Different Minority Group Journal of Applied Social Psychology 40 3 534 doi 10 1111 j 1559 1816 2010 00586 x Shankar Vedantam March 25 2010 Native American imagery as sports mascots A new problem Psychology Today Retrieved February 5 2013 Richard Lapchick August 25 2005 Mascots are a matter of respect ESPN Retrieved February 6 2013 Sarah Kogod December 11 2012 Redskins fan gives himself an Indian name gets DeAngelo Hall s helmet The Washington Post Retrieved January 23 2013 Travis Waldron August 19 2014 Washington Fans Wear Headdresses To Game Against Cleveland Browns Think Progress Retrieved November 16 2017 Erik Stegman Victoria Phillips July 2014 Missing the Point The Real Impact of Native Mascots and Team Names on American Indian and Alaska Native Youth Report Retrieved November 16 2017 Racist names mascots are harmful to American Indian and Alaska Native youth says Center for American Progress ABC7News WJLATV July 22 2014 Retrieved November 16 2017 Amanda Terkel July 22 2014 How Washington s Football Team Creates A Hostile Environment For Native American Students The Huffington Post Retrieved November 16 2017 Michael Friedman Ph D October 6 2014 The NFL is Teaching Us How To Bully Native American Children Psychology Today Retrieved November 16 2017 Mary Magoulick Indian White Relations II Persistent Refashioning Retrieved November 3 2017 SIP Indian Mascot Position Statement PDF Society of Indian Psychologists January 27 1999 Archived from the original PDF on October 31 2015 Retrieved August 19 2013 Opposition to Use of Stereotypical Native American Images as Sports Symbols and Mascots PDF American Counseling Association 2001 Archived from the original PDF on September 15 2013 Retrieved January 23 2013 Summary of the Resolution Recommending Retirement of American Indian Mascots APA org American Psychological Association Retrieved November 21 2017 Statement by the Council of the American Sociological Association on Discontinuing the Use of Native American Nicknames Logos and Mascots in Sport American Sociological Association March 6 2007 Retrieved January 23 2013 AAA Calls on Sports Organizations to Denounce Inappropriate American Indian Mascots PDF American Anthropological Association March 25 2015 Archived from the original PDF on August 9 2015 Retrieved November 21 2017 James Loewen Why Historians Should Demand the Redskins Change Their Name History News Network Retrieved May 1 2015 J Gordon Hylton 2010 Before the Redskins Where the Redskins The Use of Native American Team Names in the Formative Era of American Sports 1857 1933 PDF North Dakota Law Review 86 879 Archived from the original PDF on June 16 2020 Retrieved November 14 2017 Anti Defamation and Mascots National Congress of American Indians Retrieved January 12 2013 NCAI Releases Report on History and Legacy of Washington s Harmful Indian Sports Mascot National Congress of American Indians Retrieved October 11 2013 Ryan Van Bibber June 19 2014 12 questions and answers that explain the Redskins trademark case SB Nation Retrieved November 14 2017 NCAI Amicus Brief PDF Native American Rights Fund Retrieved October 24 2017 Letter to The Honorable Maria Cantwell Chairwoman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs PDF Change the Mascot November 1 2013 Retrieved November 14 2017 Gene Lehmann Leaders of Five Tribes gather at Chickasaw Nation s Artesian Hotel for Intertribal Council Chickasaw Times Archived from the original on October 16 2013 Retrieved October 21 2013 Resolution Supporting Renaming of the Washington Redskins PDF July 10 2013 Retrieved November 14 2017 Theresa Vargas Annys Shin November 16 2013 Oneida Indian Nation is the tiny tribe taking on the NFL and Dan Snyder over Redskins name The Washington Post Retrieved November 14 2017 USET Resolution No 2014 015 Calling On the National Football League to End the Use of the Washington D C Racially Offensive Slur Team Mascot Name PDF October 31 2013 Retrieved November 14 2017 a b Navajo Council UN expert criticize Redskins name Yahoo news Associated Press April 11 2014 Archived from the original on June 11 2016 Retrieved May 31 2018 Native American Bar Association of Washington D C Resolution 2015 1 PDF changethemascot org November 17 2015 Retrieved November 19 2017 National Caucus of Native American State Legislators PDF changethemascot org August 18 2014 Retrieved November 19 2017 SAIGE Position on Derogatory Sports Mascots and Team Names PDF saige org December 5 2013 Retrieved November 19 2017 Michelle Boorstein December 12 2013 Full text Resolution on the changing of the Washington Redskins name The Washington Post Retrieved November 16 2017 Theresa Vargas December 12 2013 Civil rights coalition asks Washington Redskins to change name The Washington Post Retrieved November 16 2017 Washington Redskins Response Statement December 13 2013 Archived from the original on November 7 2017 Retrieved October 26 2021 Civil and Human Rights Coalition Applauds Patent Office Decision on Washington Football Team Name The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights June 18 2014 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved November 16 2017 NAACP Statement on the U S Patent and Trade Office Decision to Cancel the Washington Football Team s Trademark NAACP June 18 2014 Archived from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved November 16 2017 John Woodrow Cox Mark Maske January 19 2015 Civil rights group closely allied with the NFL calls for the Redskins to change its name The Washington Post Retrieved November 16 2017 Resolution Adopted by the CCAR Racism 1992 Archived from the original on March 19 2016 Retrieved September 1 2013 ADL Signs Letter Urging Broadcasters To Avoid Using The Name Redskins The Jewish Daily Forward September 5 2014 Retrieved November 16 2017 U S Jewish Reform Groups Call on NFL s Washington Redskins to Change Name Haaretz Daily Newspaper Ltd December 16 2015 Retrieved November 16 2017 Letter to Goodell and Snyder The Washington Post Retrieved November 16 2017 Scott Taylor June 29 2015 Cleveland church calls on Washington Redskins to change name logo 19 Action News Archived from the original on July 26 2015 Retrieved November 16 2017 Dan Steinberg June 3 2014 The Great Redskins Name Debate of 1972 The Washington Post Retrieved November 21 2017 Fred Hiatt September 21 2014 Moving beyond the imaginary Indians perception Retrieved November 21 2017 Indians Protest The Pittsburgh Press January 23 1988 Retrieved October 16 2013 2 000 at Metrodome Protest Indian mascots The Times News Associated Press January 27 1992 Retrieved November 21 2017 Todd Unger October 13 2013 Protesters call for Washington NFL team to change its name WFAA TV Archived from the original on October 17 2013 Retrieved November 21 2017 Battle over controversial Redskins name comes to Dallas The Dallas Morning News Associated Press October 13 2013 Retrieved November 21 2017 Simon Moya Smith It s always been about the hatred of Indian skin Native Americans allies protest Washington Redskins in Denver NBC News Archived from the original on January 30 2014 Retrieved November 2 2013 Will Brinson October 26 2013 Metrodome will use Redskins name in stadium despite protests CBS News Retrieved November 2 2013 Mark Maske November 7 2013 Hundreds gather outside Mall of America Field to protest Redskins name The Washington Post Retrieved November 8 2013 Dan Steinberg November 7 2013 Minneapolis mayor condemns Redskins name The Washington Post Retrieved November 12 2013 Tad Vezner November 7 2013 Metrodome protesters condemn nickname of Vikings opponent TwinCities com Archived from the original on November 13 2013 Retrieved November 12 2013 Protesters of Redskins name rally in Glendale azfamily com KTVK 3TV Associated Press October 12 2014 Archived from the original on December 13 2014 Retrieved November 22 2017 Thousands stage Redskins protest ESPN Associated Press November 2 2014 Retrieved November 22 2017 John Woodrow Cox November 2 2014 In Minnesota thousands of Native Americans protest Redskins name The Washington Post Retrieved November 22 2017 Jeff Gammage October 20 2017 At Monday s Eagles game demanding an end to use of Redskins The Inquirer Retrieved November 22 2017 Matthew Impelli Donica Phifer October 25 2019 Washington Redskins Spokesman Says Native Americans Proud Of Name Team Will Continue To Use It Despite Recent Protest Newsweek Megan Hart December 8 2019 Protesters Speak Out Against Washington s Logo Mascot At Lambeau Field Sunday Statewide Task Force Against Native American Mascots Organized Event Wisconsin Public Radio Eliott C McLaughlin September 24 2014 Tribal chief No FedEx until Redskins change team name CNN U S Archived from the original on October 3 2014 Retrieved October 2 2014 NARF ends FedEx service over FedEx s sponsorship of the Washington NFL football team June 5 2015 Retrieved November 22 2017 Melissa Griffiths June 25 2015 Alaska s largest tribe boycotts FedEx Juneau Empire Archived from the original on August 4 2017 Retrieved November 22 2017 Erik Brady May 10 2013 Daniel Snyder says Redskins will never change name USA Today Retrieved September 30 2014 Michelle Boorstein October 9 2013 Letter from Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder to fans The Washington Post Retrieved November 16 2017 Michelle Boorstein October 12 2013 Letter from Red Cloud Indian School on the Washington Redskins name The Washington Post Retrieved October 18 2013 U S reps urge end to Redskins ESPN Associated Press Retrieved June 13 2013 Roger Goodell defends Washington Redskins nickname NFL com Wire Reports June 12 2013 Retrieved June 13 2013 Roger Goodell Insists Washington Redskins Won t Change Name After MLB s Indians Ditch Chief Wahoo January 31 2018 Retrieved February 1 2018 3rd Annual NFL Poll PDF Public Policy Polling January 2 2014 Retrieved November 16 2017 Poll Americans Don t Want Name Change The Washington Football Team January 2 2014 Archived from the original on October 26 2017 Retrieved May 31 2018 Bruce Allen May 23 2014 The Truth about the Redskins Name and Logo PDF The Washington Redskins Archived from the original PDF on November 17 2016 Retrieved November 16 2017 Dan Steinberg October 15 2013 Charles Krauthammer and George Will debate Redskins The Washington Post Retrieved November 16 2017 Pat Buchanan October 22 2013 Hail to the Redskins Real Clear Politics Retrieved November 16 2017 W James Antle III November 13 2013 Redskins A Manufactured Controversy The National Interest Retrieved November 16 2017 Rich Lowry October 8 2013 Liberals Fabricate Outrage Over Redskins The team name is an anachronism but a harmless one National Review Retrieved November 16 2017 Dennis Prager August 13 2013 The Left vs the Redskins Teaching people to take offense is one of the Left s black arts National Review Retrieved November 16 2017 Ben Nuckols May 2 2013 US poll finds widespread support for Redskins name AP News Archived from the original on May 5 2013 Retrieved September 28 2014 60 Don t Think Washington Redskins Should Change Their Name Rasmussen Reports June 24 2014 Retrieved November 17 2017 a b Poll 71 percent say keep Redskins ESPN com September 2 2014 Results of SurveyUSA News Poll 20802 October 15 2013 Retrieved November 13 2014 Should the Washington Redskins change their name The Washington Post July 30 2013 Retrieved October 16 2013 Greg Cohen September 25 2014 DC Speaks Keep Redskins name WUSA Archived from the original on October 8 2014 Retrieved May 31 2018 John Woodrow Cox Scott Clement Theresa Vargas May 19 2016 New poll finds 9 in 10 Native Americans aren t offended by Redskins name The Washington Post Retrieved November 13 2017 Scott Clement Emily Guskin May 19 2016 How The Washington Post conducted the survey on the Redskins name The Washington Post Retrieved November 17 2017 Washington Post poll of Native Americans on Redskins team name Survey conducted December 16 2015 to April 12 2016 The Washington Post Retrieved May 24 2016 Fryberg Stephanie A Eason Arianne E Brady Laura M Jessop Nadia Lopez Julisa J March 12 2020 Unpacking the Mascot Debate Native American Identification Predicts Opposition to Native Mascots Social Psychological and Personality Science 12 3 13 doi 10 1177 1948550619898556 S2CID 216371787 Yasmin Anwar February 4 2020 Washington Redskins name Native mascots offend more than previously reported Berkeley News Paul Woody May 15 2013 American Indians in Va have no problem with Redskins Richmond Times Dispatch Retrieved November 21 2017 Dan Steinberg May 29 2013 Retired Patawomeck chief says he d be offended if Redskins change name The Washington Post Retrieved January 22 2014 Mark Sullivan July 3 2014 Patawomeck Tribe Snyder Could Rename the Redskins After Us The American Sectator Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved November 21 2017 Matthew Brown Felicia Fonseca November 27 2013 Code Talker says Redskins name not derogatory AP News Archived from the original on November 29 2013 Retrieved September 27 2014 Mike Jones November 25 2013 Redskins honor members of the Navajo Code Talkers Association The Washington Post Retrieved November 21 2017 Erik Brady November 27 2013 Woman suing Redskins says Code Talkers honor sugercoats racism USA Today Retrieved November 21 2017 Benjamin Freed November 26 2013 Redskins Honor World War II Era Navajo Code Talkers Awkwardness Ensues No one was fooled by the team s publicity stunt The Washingtonian Retrieved November 21 2017 Megan Finnerty October 10 2014 Washington Redskins pay for Natives to attend Cardinals game AZCentral Retrieved November 21 2017 Dan Steinberg August 12 2014 The Redskins now have their own YouTube video about the team name The Washington Post Retrieved November 21 2017 Laura Stampler August 12 2014 Washington Redskins Defend Name With Help From Native Americans Retrieved November 21 2017 Washington NFL team video features Indian Country supporters indianz com August 13 2014 Retrieved November 21 2017 Dave McKenna October 7 2014 Is The Redskins VIP Indian Defender A Fake Indian Deadspin Retrieved November 21 2017 Loudoun County urges Dan Snyder to change team name wusa9 com July 8 2020 Retrieved July 10 2020 Nathaniel Cline Loudoun Board of Supervisors votes to send letter requesting name change for Ashburn based Washington Redskins Loudoun Times Retrieved July 10 2020 Harry Enten June 20 2014 The Politics of the Washington Redskins Name Controversy FiveThirtyEight Retrieved November 18 2017 Scott Clement September 2 2014 New poll says large majority of Americans believe Redskins should not change name The Washington Post Retrieved November 18 2017 Sarah Larimer October 10 2014 N J lawmakers introduce Redskins resolutions ask retailers to avoid the name The Washington Post Retrieved November 18 2017 Peter Callaghan Minneapolis City Council takes steps to ban offensive nickname from U of M stadium MINNPOST Retrieved October 3 2014 Bills New York State Assembly Retrieved July 31 2014 New York State Lawmakers Denounce Redskins Name Pass Unanimous Resolution Indian Country Today May 20 2014 Archived from the original on July 16 2015 Retrieved November 18 2017 The Associated Press July 10 2015 California Assembly votes to urge Washington Redskins to ditch degrading name Archived from the original on November 7 2017 Retrieved November 18 2017 Jordan Fabian November 5 2015 Obama Teams should drop Native American mascots The Hill Retrieved November 18 2017 Letter to NFL Commissioner May 21 2014 Retrieved November 18 2017 Mark Maske May 22 2014 Senate Democrats urge NFL to endorse name change for Redskins The Washington Post Retrieved November 18 2017 John Keim October 5 2015 Donald Trump Redskins a positive name Washington shouldn t change ESPN Retrieved November 18 2017 Serge Kovaleski October 28 1993 Delays Push Back Stadium s Chances for 1995 Opening The Washington Post Retrieved January 26 2013 Mike DeBonis January 9 2013 Redskins name change should be discussed Vincent Gray says The Washington Post Retrieved January 26 2013 J P Finlay January 4 2015 New D C Mayor wants Redskins back in city but with new name Comcast Sportsnet Archived from the original on January 7 2015 Retrieved November 18 2017 John Keim August 17 2015 Bruce Allen Redskins won t change name in order to build new home ESPN Retrieved November 18 2017 Leading National Civil Rights and Racial Justice Organizations Announce Joint Opposition to Washington NFL Team Locating New Stadium in District of Columbia NAACP August 24 2018 Archived from the original on August 25 2018 Retrieved August 27 2018 Philip Speake September 16 2011 Washington Redskins and Baltimore Ravens Fans Battle for Maryland Supremacy Bleacher Report Retrieved June 29 2014 Anita Kumar Mark Maske June 6 2012 Redskins moving training camp to Richmond in 2013 The Washington Post Retrieved November 18 2017 Jonah Goldberg September 26 2013 Terry McAuliffe the Redskins and the Big Lies of Liberalism National Review Retrieved November 18 2017 Brian McNally August 1 2014 Virginia Gov Says It s Not His Place To Comment on Redskins Name CBS Local Media Retrieved November 18 2017 Mike DeBonis October 16 2013 Prince George s County executive calls on Redskins to consider name change The Washington Post Retrieved November 18 2017 Bill Turque November 25 2013 Leggett considers asking Montgomery council to join in call for renaming Redskins The Washington Post Retrieved November 18 2017 Benjamin Freed August 5 2014 Martin O Malley Says the Redskins Should Change Their Name Washingtonian Retrieved November 18 2017 John Woodrow Cox Jonathan O Connell April 11 2015 Tug of war for new Redskins stadium is complicated by name debate The Washington Post Retrieved November 18 2017 The Other Redskins Capitol News Service Retrieved June 16 2013 Zielonka Adam Sinn Dylan December 19 2017 More than a Mascot Redskins High Schools Philip Merrill College of Journalism Capital News Service Retrieved December 20 2017 Melanie Mason October 11 2015 California schools barred from using Redskins as team name or mascot Los Angeles Times Miami Tribe Relations Retrieved October 24 2017 Murray Evans April 22 1998 A Storm on the Horizon SNU Changes Nickname Mascot NewsOK com Retrieved October 24 2017 Further reading editRichman M 2009 The Redskins Encyclopedia Temple University Press ISBN 978 1 59213 544 8 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Washington Redskins name controversy American Indian Sports Team Mascots Redskins Facts Rebrand Washington Football Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Washington Redskins name controversy amp oldid 1181542995, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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