Mysterious Media Research Center sports blogger Jay Maxson loves to whine about sports figures opining about things other than sports, as his/her Kaepernick Derangement Syndrome makes all too clear, but that’s always been a dishonest complaint — Maxson is only opposed to non-sports opinions are aren’t conservative. He has no problem with, for example, a former NFL player making a video for right-wing PragerU arguing against reparations, something conservatives also argue against.
Maxson’s double standard popped up again in the controversy over the NBA and China, with Maxson suddenly on the side of sports figures who want to say non-sports things — that is, when it comes to support anti-China protests in Hong Kong. In an Oct. 9 post, Maxson trashed ESPN — whom he/she regularly attacks for the crime of not sticking to sports — by claiming “its television commentators treat the controversy with kid gloves,” adding that “ESPN has a working agreement with Tencent, a large Chinese internet company that covers the NBA, and may not want to anger its partners.”
Two days later, Maxson criticized the “woke coach” for the NBA’s Golden State Warriors for refusing to comment about the NBA-China situation while he “ridiculed President Trump and condemned America for abuses and gun violence. A couple days after that, Maxson touted how a newspaper columnist “took the NBA apart for acquiescing to China’s iron-fisted tyrants.”
Similarly, Maxson cheered an attack on LeBron James over a not-very-good statement regarding China, then trashed someone who defended him.
The NBA and some players didn’t exactly handle the China situation well. But Maxson merely showed his same old double standard.