Question

"Crimes Against Humanity," Ward Churchill
Churchill makes a case for seeing the use of American Indian names and degrading and dehumanizing symbols by sports teams as a violation of the Geneva Convention and a crime against humanity. The use of these names and images creates barriers to authentic communication about the realities of history and contemporary life for American Indians. Churchill challenges several myths, including that the use of these symbols is just good clean fun; that this usage "honors' American Indians; and that if some find the practice offensive it doesn"t matter because there are too few left to defend themselves.
According to Churchill, athletes, team owners and the media have editorialized that Indian discomfort with the team names is no big deal, insisting that the whole thing is:
a. good, clean fun.
b. based on tradition.
c. enjoyed by some Native Americans.
d. enjoyed by all Native Americans.

Answer

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