Kicking a Man When He's Dead: The Slander of Sean Taylor
WASHINGTON FOOTBALL player Sean Taylor is dead at the age of 24, shot and killed at home in front of his partner and 18-month-old daughter. Four people have already been arrested, three of them teenagers.
It's the kind of senseless, random violence that makes you put your hands on your ears and squeeze your eyes shut until the tears pry loose. The initial reaction here in D.C. has been an avalanche of unbearable sadness. Hundreds of people left flowers, notes and other offerings in front of the team practice facility. Everywhere you looked people were wearing the team colors of burgundy and gold.
I can understand how strange this must seem at a distance. It's not like there are shortages of people to mourn in the nation's capital. D.C. is the violent crime mecca of the
We have the highest HIV rate in the country, recently described as "an epidemic." We are where the Masters of War crafted the lies that have led to the deaths of one million Iraqis and 3,900
But on the ground in D.C., it somehow makes all the sense in the world. Sean
Over the last four years, the city has seen him evolve from a talented but undisciplined player, to an All-Pro wunderkind. Off the field-in this era of oversaturated sports coverage-we followed his journey closely from "wild child" to adulthood, to fatherhood.
Media illusion or not, we felt we knew Sean Taylor-and have wept for his family and their loss. There is nothing wrong with this. If anything, we've borne witness to people's capacity to reach out and care.
BUT NOT everyone felt the better angels of their nature emerge. Within hours-minutes-of
Never mind that
Far more "respectable" voices like the Washington Post's Michael Wilbon wrote, "It's sad, yes, but hardly surprising." Fellow Post columnist Leonard Shapiro had an entire column called, "Taylor Death Is Tragic But Not Surprising."
They were only two of many to take this tack. It was such a slap in the face to
Sports radio was even worse. Examples stained the airwaves, but the repellent Colin Cowherd of ESPN radio incensed a city by saying, "Sean Taylor, a great player has a history of really really bad judgment, really really bad judgment....I'm supposed to believe his judgment got significantly better in two years, from horrible to fantastic?...'Oh, wah wah wah, sensitivity, he's a great person, wah wah wah.' Hey, I don't care, that's fine, he died."
The hypocrisy is breathtaking. If
Now that the truth has come out about
"But it seems as if this is being framed as, he got what was coming to him, when he'd been trouble-free for some time. Maybe I'm being oversensitive, but I just have a hard time believing that if Brett Favre got shot, there would be grafs about his personal drug abuse issues."
Hill's words are welcome. But frankly we should care less if he was in his home, the club,
Yes we weep for Sean Taylor, and by doing so we attempt to reclaim all that a cynical media fronting for a brutal system attempt to take away: our capacity to dare to be human.



