General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDonald Sterling incident from years ago. (Has this already been posted?)
I don't follow sports much and had never heard of Donald Sterling before the recent story about his racist comments. I looked him up on Wikipedia a few days ago. One thing I wanted to find out was if it was true he was married and not separated from his wife, since it seemed like the media was oddly blase about this when referencing his "girlfriend."
Anyway, there was this tidbit under "Personal Life,"
The part about fighting over a Saved by the Bell actress nearly made me laugh out loud. I thought maybe they were just discussing whether this random celebrity was "hot," or something. I didn't realize that they both actually had gone out with her.
Scott died of a drug overdose last year, and I'm old-fashioned enough to not like to speak ill of the dead, besides the fact that Scott's actions wouldn't necessarily be a reflection on his father.
But reading about the case a little more, it certainly seems like Donald pulled strings to get his son out of trouble. At least according to this following account. Has anyone else heard about this?
http://articles.latimes.com/2000/dec/17/magazine/tm-4889/5
Sterling tried to engage Hopkins on the merits of the case. The detective was evasive, but deferential.
"Yeah, you know, and I'm so close to the Police Department," Sterling said.
"Yeah," Hopkins said.
"One day you will meet me in the course of things," Sterling said. "I'm so active in the community."
"Oh, I'm sure I will," Hopkins replied.
"You know Baca [Lee Baca, sheriff of Los Angeles County]?" Sterling asks. "I went with Baca to dinner the other night, and I'm close to Parks [Los Angeles Police Chief Bernard Parks]. I'm just very involved with the Police Department."
Sterling continued: "I wish that you'd give me a little advice. One day in life you're gonna be passing through, and you may need a lawyer to give you good, honest advice."
"Yeah, well . . . ." Hopkins responded.
"And I'm that lawyer," Sterling said. "Donald Sterling, on the corner of Wilshire and Beverly Drive."
Hopkins hemmed and hawed and tried to change the subject, but Sterling returned to it. "But the bottom line, I'm asking you, officer, and please put my name somewhere in your wallet. Sometime in the course of your career, you will want to call me. You know what I'm saying? And your name again is spelled . . . may I put your name down?"
The comments inflamed the Police Department. In a memo to prosecutors, Sgt. Douglas wrote, "We are requesting that your office give special attention to the attached transcript of the telephone call between Det. Mike Hopkins and Shelly and Donald Sterling . . . . There are a number of statements by Donald Sterling that amount to an outrageous attempt at intimidation and influence peddling."
You know, I had been wondering whether Donald Sterling was suffering some sort of dementia that would cause him to make his recent statements. But it seems he's just always been a sleazebag. And it certainly seems like justice was not done back in 1999/2000 regarding the shooting by his son. At least if the LA Times story is accurate.
Smarmie Doofus
(14,498 posts)Wealth buys power. Sterling habitually ( it would seem) exercised his power in the way depicted above. Crude, blatant; w/o pretense of higher purpose.
( Unlike Bill Gates or the Walmart family.)
We ALL want power. It's a bit of a paradox. We're in fact, paradoxical and contradictory in this way. Some of us want to amass it and keep it to ourselves. Some of us want to share it. Most of us want to do a bit of both.
Sterling's on the "keep it to myself" end of the spectrum. Most people w. great wealth are also. The crude , unpolished and somewhat stupid Sterling is just more obvious about it.
jollyreaper2112
(1,941 posts)Sounds like they're all monsters. We'll be a just society when we no longer tolerate such obscene concentrations of wealth and power. Humans are not meant to wield such power. It warps the mind.
AverageJoe90
(10,745 posts)Sure, quite a few wealthy people are assholes thru and thru.....in fact, Sterling goes beyond most! But not *all* of them are bad, though; in fact, you've got exceptions like JFK and FDR.....both of them privileged and both of them rather decent people. Warren Buffett doesn't seem all that bad, either.
Smarmie Doofus
(14,498 posts)... but the life of Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. would be exhibit #1 for the prosecution, seems to me.
A twisted, driven, warped individual..... in most respects.
The next generation of Kennedy's were just acting out a script from Joe Kennedy's head. That's what the offspring of the American nouveau riche were expected to do. Meaning "public service".
jollyreaper2112
(1,941 posts)Only the poor can break the law. The rich are far, far above it. Man, I would love to see him burn. Never gonna happen. Untouchable.
alp227
(32,065 posts)KamaAina
(78,249 posts)A Saved By The Bell: The New Class actress!
Much more Sterling ickiness here:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10024882752