Yes, my guess is this rule is only being proposed because of complaints from a handful of uppity, suburban blacks (Jonathan Martin types) who are sick and tired of being verbally abused by the more ghetto/gangsta types blacks, who are much more common in the NFL -- particularity on defense.
As far as any white "goy" using the "N-Word", isn't it safe to suggest a 15 yard penalty for using that term would be the least of his problems? Riley Cooper uttered the word in private, well away from the field of play, with no blacks around him at a "redneck concert", and it almost cost him his career. It's not clear if Bill Romanowski ever uttered this word on the field, but he's roundly hated by the Kosher media because some believe he "might have" in private.
Nice post, man. Speaking of the “N-Word,” I recently watched a few retch-inducing moments of ESPN’s
“Outside the Lines Special Report: The N-Word.” As always, the program was hosted by the unhealthily-rotund Hebrew Arch Liberal, Bob Ley. The various “commentators” included ESPN’s resident black pantherette, Jamele Hill, Richard Lapchick, Steelers safety, Ryan Clark, Warren Moon, Josh Cribbs, Jason Whitlock, Michael Wilbon, Brianna Scurry, Kareem Abdul-Jabaar, gangster rapper, “Common,” and other inconsequential Negroes....
CAPTION: Lapchick, Hill, and "Common"
Naturally, the trite, tear-jerking, insecurity-laden syllabus of this special report included discussions of the nauseating overutilization of the term in rap “music,” NFL players referring to each other as “niggaz” in the locker room and on the field, black hockey players and the verbal “abuse” they suffered from fans, whining about “slavery,” etc. The portions I watched were sodden with a deep banality, along with an extreme sense of victimhood, racial hypersensitivity, and an embarrassing lack of self-confidence on the part of African Americans. As they attempted to explain the “double standards” of who can use the N-word, how blacks
“took this negative word and made it something positive and part of the black community,” and why high school kids should be “more educated” on the history of this term, this buffoonish crop of “experts” talked in circles as they exuded all of the inherent spiritual weaknesses their brethren exhibit in the streets.
A preview of this pity-party…
[video=youtube;lQn_0uuapN8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQn_0uuapN8[/video]
Richard Lapchick, the “White Negro-Lover Supreme,” actually mentioned an incident in which he was attacked and violently assaulted in the 1970’s for being a white man involved in the civil rights movement. I wonder if he was referring to the story that the poster “Sport Historian” told about the police determining that Lapchick had inflicted the wounds upon himself? Like the Rabbi's who paint Swastikas upon their own temples, Lapchick probably wanted to bleed for his treachearous cause.
Ryan Clark told an interesting story of how Dan Rooney overheard gangster rap (with the N-word heavily featured) being played in the Steeler locker room a few years back and immediately informed the players that he had
“fought too hard and too long” for the civil rights of Negroes for them to play such offensive “music” and refer to each other as “Niggaz.” The players agreed to stop.