Charles Barkley's Breonna Taylor Slander: NBA Legend Still Not 'Role Model'
Charles Barkley’s Breonna Taylor Slander Is Latest Proof He’s ‘Not A Role Model’ - Page 4
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1. Barkley ‘agrees’ with George Zimmerman Verdict
In a similar instance to his slanderous comments about Breonna Taylor, Barkley in 2013 voiced his support for the jurors who returned a not guilty verdict and allowed George Zimmerman to get away with the February 26, 2012, killing of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.
“I agree with the verdict,” Barkley told CNBC’s Maria Bartiromo at the time. “I’m sorry that young kid got killed, but they didn’t have enough evidence to charge him.”
Though there was some “racial profiling,” in the case, Barkley said, “something happened that changed the dynamic that night.”
2. Barkley defends Adrian Peterson amid child abuse scandal
Barkley defended spanking in the aftermath of Adrian Peterson’s child abuse scandal for which the NFL player was indicted on and pleaded guilty to charges of reckless or negligent injury to a child.
“Listen, we spank kids in the south,” Barkley told CBS host Jim Rome on the “NFL Today” show. “I think the question about did Adrian Peterson go overboard? But we all grew up in different environments. Every black parent in my neighborhood in the south would be in trouble, or in jail under those circumstances.”
3. Barkley blames police shootings on Black people

During an interview with CNN’s Brooke Baldwin in 2014, Barkley argued that white cops are not out to shoot Black people because of racism.
First, Barkley explained, “We never discuss race in this country until something bad happens.” He is a Black man and son of the south. When has there ever been a time when America was not bad in terms of its treatment of Black people?
In any event, Barkley added, “Everybody wants to protect their own tribe, whether they are right or wrong.”
He wasn’t finished: “We as Black people, we have a lot of crooks. We can’t just wait until something like (the Brown shooting) happens. We have to look at ourselves in the mirror. There is a reason that they racially profile us in the way they do. Sometimes it is wrong, and sometimes it is right.”
4. Barkley defends police after cops kill Alton Sterling and Philando Castile
Barkley said in 2016 that “there’s a lot of people at fault” for police shootings, not just law enforcement.
“The cops have made some mistakes; black people have made some mistakes,” Barkley said during an appearance on ESPN’s “The Dan Le Batard Show” at the time. “We have to sit back and be honest with each other. The cops have made some mistakes, that don’t give us the right to riot and shoot cops.”
5. Barkley calls Ferguson protesters "scumbags"
“Those aren’t Black people, those are scumbags,” Barkley famously said in 2014 about people protesting the aftermath of the police shooting of teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.
6. Barkley rips “brainwashed” and “unintelligent” Black people

Barkley generalized Black people as a monolith back in 2014.
“We as Black people are never going to be successful, not because of you white people, but because of other Black people,” Barkey said during an appearance on Philadelphia’s “Afternoons with Anthony Gargano and Rob Ellis” radio show. “When you are Black, you have to deal with so much crap in your life from other Black people.”
He continued: “For some reason we are brainwashed to think, if you’re not a thug or an idiot, you’re not Black enough. If you go to school, make good grades, speak intelligent, and don’t break the law, you’re not a good Black person. It’s a dirty, dark secret in the Black community.”
Finally, Barkley added: “There are a lot of Black people who are unintelligent, who don’t have success. It’s best to knock a successful Black person down because they’re intelligent, they speak well, they do well in school, and they’re successful. It’s just typical BS that goes on when you’re Black, man.”
7. Barkley mocks people protesting Confederate monuments
Barkley implied that counterprotesters in Charlottesville, Virginia, were responsible for the deaths of three people killed during the White supremacist terror attacks during the summer of 2017.
He went on to argue that he wouldn’t waste energy on people who would never like him, and he asked of counterprotesters, “What did they think was gonna happen?” He said counterprotesters “whipped up” the energy that quickly became deadly, and he was disappointed that counter-protesters even showed up. “If you go up to meet idiots, idiotic things are going to happen.”
Barkley argued that “most” Black people never think about “those stupid [Confederate] statues” and insisted, “I’m not going to waste my energy.”
8. Barkley says he’s “leery” of calling Trump “racist”
While attending a Democratic debate in Detroit last year, Barkley was asked, point-blank, if he thought Donald Trump was a racist.
“Do I think he’s a racist?” Barkley asked while clearly stalling before finally settling on this gem of an answer: “I’m leery of calling people racist. He said some things that could be construed as racist.”
That answer was decidedly different from the one he gave to a similar question the year before.
“The situation of President Trump is a total overreaction and I feel bad because you see anti-Semitism, racism. People feel emboldened to do things and say things now,” Barkley said in an interview that aired in March 2018. “He definitely encourages it. …I think he panders to his base.”
9. Barkley makes “joke” abut hitting a Black woman reporter
Axios reporter Alexi McCammond wrote on social media last year, “Just FYI Charles Barkley told me tonight ‘I don’t hit women but if I did I would hit you,’ and then when I objected to that he told me I ‘couldn’t take a joke.’”
After the tweet went viral, McCammond wrote, “I hate being part of a story so here’s a reminder that this is so much bigger than me: nearly 20 people per minute are physically abused by an intimate partner in the US. 1 in 4 women and 1 in 9 men experience severe intimate partner physical violence.”
10. Described anti-black racism as “fun”

Responding to the controversy surrounding Miami Dolphins player Richie Incognito’s alleged racist remarks and bullying to teammate Jonathan Martin in 2013, Barkley was asked whether racist talk should be allowed in the locker room.
“The locker room is very fun spirited and it’s sexist, it’s racist, at times,” Barkley said at the time. “It’s all over the place, and I’ve got no problem with that. You know, I got white guys and I’m racist towards them in a fun way and they’re racist toward me in a fun way.”
Charles Barkley’s Breonna Taylor Slander Is Latest Proof He’s ‘Not A Role Model’ - Page 4 was originally published on newsone.com
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