Barack Obama and his family probably didn't meet the longtime neighbor of their new crib at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. William "Doubting" Thomas was in the hospital by the time the Obamas moved in Jan. 20. He died three days later from pulmonary disease. He was just 61.But Thomas lived by day across the street from the White House -- 1601 Pennsylvania Avenue, or Lafayette Square -- under a makeshift shell of umbrellas and tarps. He decorated his digs with signs that read "Wanted: Wisdom and Honesty," "Ban All Nuclear Weapons or Have a Nice Doomsday," and "Live By the Bomb, Die By the Bomb."
Thomas (his real name was William Thomas Hallenback Jr.) was a protester. And the White House, our government -- ever respectful of our First Amendment right to free speech -- allowed Thomas to protest pretty much uninhibited from the moment he first plopped down in Lafayette Square on June 3, 1981, until he was hospitalized for the last time almost 28 years later.
More Coverage: Redskins Ban Signs From FedEx Field
Good thing for Thomas he didn't choose FedEx Field in nearby Landover, Md., where the local NFL team plays, to make his stand. He quite possibly would've been tossed summarily into the nearest hoosegow, especially if he dared express displeasure with the club's ownership and management.
Indeed, the worst-run pro sports franchise in the country, if not on the planet, has now turned into a repressive regime. According to Wednesday's edition of Dan Steinberg's D.C. Sports Bog from The Washington Post, the organization is cracking down on fans so put out by the team's dismal 2-5 record -- and even more dismal outlook -- that they've taken to sporting T-shirts and carrying placards expressing their disgruntlement.
There is no other way to describe what the club's owner, Dan Snyder, and his lieutenants are doing to upset fans other than imitating a government with distaste for dissent. After all, when things were going swimmingly for this club, you could bring in all the banners and sport all the T-shirts with homespun slogans that you wished. I know. I was there. I saw them every Sunday at the old RFK Stadium. The upper deck overhang and the lower bleacher seat railings were decorated every game day with colorful and entertaining signs celebrating the team and ridiculing the opponent.But now that there is nothing to celebrate, the new ownership group -- in the front office for 10 years now -- doesn't want to chance having the rest of the world see what a growing portion of the club's longtime loyal fans are thinking. So in recent weeks, it changed stadium regulations. As Washington's chief operating officer David Donovan told Post sports columnist Mike Wise recently on Wise's radio show on WJFK: "The banners, we do have a prohibition against signs and banners in the stadium, and we don't care what they say. We take them down. They get in the way of other people viewing the game, and people get poked in the head -- that stuff happens. We have an absolute prohibition; we don't care what they say."
I remember when the club handed out signs for fans to hold up during big games. I don't recall the club ever ordering fans to hide or take off vulgar T-shirts that always popped up during the annual visit of the Cowboys to RFK or FedEx, where the team has toiled for 13 seasons now. But things were never as insular with this team's ownership as they are now because the outlook surrounding it was never so bleak.
The right of fans to express themselves is as time-honored a part of sports as keeping score. We cheer and support our favorites and jeer our rivals. And sometimes we turn on the very folks who are supposed to bring us good feelings. The latter is part of the game, too -- at least if it isn't totally disrespectful -- and those who can't handle it shouldn't be in it.
The Washington franchise has been around since 1937. It is one of the cornerstones of the NFL, not unlike the New York Giants and Chicago Bears and Green Bay Packers. It is a billion-dollar franchise representing the nation's capital that makes it an example to visitors from around the world about how our sports teams are run. It is no longer setting a stellar example.
The team on the field is bungling its way through another season. The front office's approach to fixing it has turned the franchise into a butt of jokes. It has squandered draft picks and at times spent more money than any other club on personnel only to have the team produce more losses than wins. It has gone through five or six coaches (if you want to count interims) in the last decade. The Post revealed earlier this season that the team has sued longtime ticketholders who want to get out of ticket contracts they can no longer afford in a recession. The club's offensive nickname may be reviewed by the Supreme Court. Now the club is threatening free speech.
Thirty years ago, the Giants were falling apart in embarrassing fashion in large part due to a fight between co-owners Wellington Mara and his nephew, Tim. They'd just come off their sixth straight losing campaign in 1978 and it didn't appear the front office knew what it was doing. So then-NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle stepped in.
Rozelle mediated a truce between the Maras and had them hire a seasoned and respected football man named George Young to run their football operations. Young hired a no-nonsense coach in then-Patriots offensive coordinator Ray Perkins. Perkins assembled a staff that included Bill Parcells and a youngster named Bill Belichick. The Giants wound up making the playoffs five times in the 80s, winning the Super Bowl for the 1986 and 1990 seasons (as well as 2007), and have been a rock-solid franchise ever since.
The time is rapidly approaching where the NFL may want to revisit that piece of history as it relates to its franchise in Washington. I bet some fans would endorse it.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-28-2009 @ 9:48PM
gbalunis said...
Amend!
Reply
10-29-2009 @ 12:18AM
greatqb44 said...
The same guy who didnt want Rush as a owner for what he said...and didnt say.. is talking dissent and free speech...just cant make it up...just cant make it up
Reply
11-01-2009 @ 11:54AM
rob said...
Don't forget the hypocrite also disabled the comments on his Rush piece.
10-29-2009 @ 2:05AM
George said...
Oh Kevin Kevin Kevin, you HAD to bust out the "free speech" card. There IS no free speech issue here. The Redskins can censor ANYTHING they want in their stadium. Much like you had no problem with the NFL punting Rush Limbaugh's team bid because of what he said on his radio show, you should seemingly have no problem with what the Redskins are doing because THEY CAN DO IT and DO IT LEGALLY.
The sooner people get away from the ridiculous free speech argument (which is NOT protected when it comes to a private entity), the sooner you can all focus on the REAL issue: Dan Snyder's incompetency and utter stupidity leading to the slow destruction of what was once a proud franchise. And here's something else to chew on, which I'm surprised you writers haven't jumped on yet: If the NFL goes to an uncapped year in 2010, which as the days pass looms more and more like reality, what is Snyder going to do then? His outrageous spending has done nothing but sink his franchise. And that's WITH a cap restriction on him. Once that cap goes, how much money is he going to throw around now in an effort to buy himself a championship? And how much worse will his team become as they basically will have a mercenary mentality, players signing with Washington because Snyder threw the most money at them?
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10-29-2009 @ 8:02AM
rptuckhom said...
Offensive name of team, Redskins??!! Give me a break!
Reply
10-29-2009 @ 12:03PM
Leonffs said...
Because Blackskins, Whiteskins, or Yellowskins would be just fine as well, right? Give me a break!!
10-29-2009 @ 12:05PM
Leonffs said...
Yeah let's make it something less offensive like Blackskins or Whiteskins!
10-30-2009 @ 9:50AM
jodyrose said...
Leonffs,
So, I guess Kevin BLACKistone should change his name to Kevin Neutralcoloristone, right? Would Kevin Africanamericanistone be better?
11-12-2009 @ 3:06PM
Leonffs said...
@jody
No. Because that's referring to the color of a stone, not a race. If his name was Blackskin or Blackguy that might be a little strange. Try not to be an idiot in the future.
10-29-2009 @ 10:15AM
chilly16 said...
welcome to yesterday's news. this guy is horrible.
Reply
10-29-2009 @ 4:42PM
nickcherryl said...
Tell the truth KEVIN BLACKSTONE, what they need to do is get a white QB with some brains, but I guess slugs like you would pull the RUSH card.
Reply
10-30-2009 @ 7:40AM
NOLAN said...
Well, another attempt to take the fan out of the game; others - bad calls, excessive celebration penalies, uncontrolled behavior in professtional sports, games that are no longer entertaining, and management that no longer cares about the fan. Just look at attendence, stadiums are no longer full, when the Redskins played in RFK, there was a 15 year waiting list for tickets!! Anybody want to trade Synder for the Glazers? Our coach can't even play a player without the Glazers permission.
There are three types of managers; one that makes it happen, one that lets it happen, and one that says what happened. We are seeing the end of professional football.
Reply
11-09-2009 @ 6:05AM
ccravensb said...
Are you sure President Obama isn't running the Redskins??? Their attitude towards their Fans sounds similar to Obama's attitude towards Hard-Working Taxpayers!!!
Reply
11-09-2009 @ 6:08AM
ccravensb said...
The Good news for Redskins...They've been dropped to 1 A High School Football.
The bad news... Thy're still picked to finish LAST.
Reply