Monday, August 27, 2018



NASCAR Driver Loses Sponsorship Over Father’s Racial Slur … 35 Years Ago

The African American in the woodpile again

A sponsor announced on Friday that it has ended its partnership with NASCAR driver Conor Daly after it was reported that his father used racially insensitive language during an interview in the early 1980s.

Lilly Diabetes pulled its sponsorship from Conor’s No. 6 car in Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity race, citing his father’s alleged use of the N-word 35 years ago, reported Fox News.

Derek Daly, a retired Indy 500 and Formula One driver, was fired days earlier from his role as WISH-TV’s Racing Analyst due to the controversy.

In a statement, the elder Daly admitted to using the word, but denied its connotation.

“I was a foreign driver new in America, driving for an American team, with an American crew, and with an American sponsor – and that if things did not go well, the only ‘”n...” in the wood pile’ would be me,” Derek Daly wrote, saying that the expression was common in his native Ireland and didn’t carry the same racist connotation.

He added that he was “mortified” after he was informed of the derogatory nature of the word and has not used the word since.

Lilly originally partnered with Conor to raise awareness for people living with diabetes. Conor was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes when he was 14 years old.

“The last 24 [hours] have been quite an unnecessarily difficult ride for my family. There is A LOT I want to say … but I’m still here and still racing,” Daly tweeted. “I appreciate the support from [Roush Fenway Racing] and ALL of you.

SOURCE



6 comments:

Anonymous said...

This has to be one of those "sins of the father" moments.

If so, I'm in big, big trouble.

AIB/44

ScienceABC123 said...

Watch out, they'll be enforcing "thought crimes" next.

Anonymous said...


This has reached the point of ridiculous and then gone well beyond.

Anonymous said...

More politically correct nonsense.

Anonymous said...

Most of us are lucky that very little of anything we've ever said or done was recorded in any way until the last decade or so. The current generation (the one pushing this stupidity) will be perpetually unemployed if every word they've ever tweeted or posted is going to be held against them for the rest of their lives. Now that I think of it, someone should go through the social media posts of everyone at Lilly and see how they stack up.

Anonymous said...

The article doesn't mention that Conor Daly is 26 years old, he's being punished for something his father said 9 years before he was even born.