
Why is NIMBY Stephen Curry a finalist for a ‘social justice’ award?
Zachary Faria
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The NBA has announced the finalists for its Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Social Justice Champion Award, with one curious choice on the list: Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry.
Curry is the biggest star included among the finalists and one of the faces of the NBA. By being named a finalist, he has already won $25,000 for an organization of his choice. If he is named the winner, that number would increase to $100,000, and he would be recognized as the āsocial justice championā of the NBA.
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Curry, though, offered a shining example of social justice hypocrisy earlier this year, one that you would think disqualifies him from contention for being named a āsocial justice champion.ā When Atherton, California, was considering allowing a property owner to build affordable housing in the form of 16 three-story townhomes, Curry tried to spike the project. The affordable housing would be built too close to his $30 million mansion.
āWe kindly ask that the town adopts the new housing element without the inclusion of 23 Oakwood,ā Curry wrote in a letter to the town in reference to the housing plan. Build whatever housing you want, but just donāt put any of those icky poor people in affordable housing near his mansion.
On top of that, Curry is also among the NBAās top activists who go completely silent the moment his, and the leagueās, business ties with China are brought up. Curry said he ādidnāt know enough about Chinese historyā to condemn Chinaās Communist government snuffing out freedom in Hong Kong, nor did he have any comment on one of the teamās minority-share owners saying he does not care that China is committing genocide against the Uyghurs.
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When it comes to politics and activism, Curry is nothing more than a hypocrite. His concerns about social justice go out the window the moment actual solutions land too close to his daily life. He has no problem with the NBA, and his contract, being funded in large part by subservience to the Chinese Communist Party, and will happily stay quiet on its human rights abuses.
If the āsocial justice championā award were a serious one, Curry would not have been a finalist. But, in a way, no one deserves to win it more than he. What the pop culture world these days calls “social justice” is built on contradictions and hypocrisies, and none of the finalists embody that more than Stephen Curry.