this will make me very unpopular here, i'm sure...
.. but the name Braves has to go.
Before everybody starts hating, let me tell you a little bit about me.
I love the name Braves. i think the Indian warrior is a proud and fierce symbol and I wish we could get it back. I greatly respect native americans and dont want to offend them, but I think that if its tastefully done, a native american is far from offensive. Of course, im not a native american, so my opinion on that isn't worth too much.
However,
As it is we're trying to ride the fence. This has less to do with the school's desire to be PC than it does with the NCAA cracking down on names deemed racially insensitive and other schools' refusal to schedule us (i.e. Wisconsin, for example.) We have retained the name "braves", but shed all references to native american culture.
Ask yourself this: is the name "Braves", still valuable, even though it has become generic? Is it still meaningful despite the fact that it hasn't retained any reference to native americans? Why do we cling to it? tradition? The power of our memories?
I won't deny that its something we have strong feelings for. I grew up in Peoria, and have followed bradley basketball since i was old enough to understand the game. I am a proud alum and attend almost every home game (and a handful of away games a year).
But at what point does the affinity for tradition become counter-productive? is there a time that our love for the familiar becomes a weakness, and not a strength?
I know this is a touchy subject, but i am interested in other people's opinions.
.. but the name Braves has to go.
Before everybody starts hating, let me tell you a little bit about me.
I love the name Braves. i think the Indian warrior is a proud and fierce symbol and I wish we could get it back. I greatly respect native americans and dont want to offend them, but I think that if its tastefully done, a native american is far from offensive. Of course, im not a native american, so my opinion on that isn't worth too much.
However,
As it is we're trying to ride the fence. This has less to do with the school's desire to be PC than it does with the NCAA cracking down on names deemed racially insensitive and other schools' refusal to schedule us (i.e. Wisconsin, for example.) We have retained the name "braves", but shed all references to native american culture.
Ask yourself this: is the name "Braves", still valuable, even though it has become generic? Is it still meaningful despite the fact that it hasn't retained any reference to native americans? Why do we cling to it? tradition? The power of our memories?
I won't deny that its something we have strong feelings for. I grew up in Peoria, and have followed bradley basketball since i was old enough to understand the game. I am a proud alum and attend almost every home game (and a handful of away games a year).
But at what point does the affinity for tradition become counter-productive? is there a time that our love for the familiar becomes a weakness, and not a strength?
I know this is a touchy subject, but i am interested in other people's opinions.
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