Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr has made it loud and clear that he has no compassion for Jews taken hostage and slaughtered by Hamas. In an interview with The New Yorker, Kerr tore into the United States and Israel:
My dad was killed by Iranian proxies forty-two years ago. I have no regard for the Iranian regime whatsoever. But the answer does not lie in starting a war and killing innocent people. Imagine being a parent of one of the one hundred and seventy-five girls who died when their school was bombed. Their loss, their suffering . . . How are they going to feel about America? Violence begets violence. We’ve seen it in Israel and Lebanon as well. There was an opening for Israel to handle their business with the Palestinians diplomatically that would have solidified the Abraham Accords and allowed stronger alliances with Arab countries that would have really cornered Iran. Instead, Israel sought revenge for October 7th and now seventy-two thousand Palestinians have been killed and Israeli settlers are taking over the West Bank illegally, with the approval of Israel’s government and the U.S. Ambassador, Mike Huckabee. That’s not a path to any sort of peace or security for Israel or the rest of the Middle East.
Kerr's father, Malcolm, was the President of American University in Beirut when he was executed by Islamic Jihad terrorists funded by Iran in January 1984.
Under the circumstances, it is understandable that Kerr identifies with the parents of the 175 schoolgirls who were killed in an American airstrike on Iran. So why does Kerr have no compassion for the families of 1,200 people (mostly Jews) murdered by Hamas on October 7th? All Kerr has to say for October 7th is that Israel should have sought peace with the Palestinians who celebrated the deaths of Jews instead of holding Hamas to account as well as Hezbollah who launched attacks on Israel on October 8th. While there can be no doubt Palestinian civilians have been killed by Israeli forces, like the Hamas run Gaza Ministry of Health, Kerr makes no distinction between Palestinian civilians and Hamas terrorists who not only kidnap, rape and murder Jews but execute fellow Palestinians who do not toe their line.
There is one other important difference between the U.S. airstrike which killed 175 Iranian schoolgirls versus Hamas' attack on Israel on October 7th. The U.S. military did not deliberately target the school much less the schoolgirls while Hamas deliberately targeted civilians on kibbutzim and at the Nova Music Festival. That Kerr is unable or unwilling to make this distinction is telling.
So, do I think these statements should cost Kerr his job? This should not cost him his job any more than his outspokenness against Trump where it concerns ICE. It should be on the basis of the Warriors' performance on the court. Although Kerr has led the Warriors to four NBA Championships, nothing lasts forever. Just ask Alex Cora. The Warriors were 37-45 this year and have missed the playoffs two of the last four seasons since winning their last NBA Title in 2022. Kerr's contract is up and he and the Warriors might mutually part ways.
If Kerr does move on from the Warriors, I am sure there are 29 other NBA teams who would love to have him at courtside. Kerr will one day take his rightful place in the Pro Basketball Hall of Fame.
But being one of the greatest coaches in NBA history doesn't make you a good person. Whatever low regard he might have for the Iranian regime, he seems to have no trouble parroting propaganda from Iranian proxies like Hamas. That Kerr cannot extend the compassion he has for Iranian families with loved ones killed by an unintentional U.S. airstrike to Israeli families with loved one killed in a deliberate attack by Hamas at the very minimum demonstrates personal animosity towards Jews.
At best, Steve Kerr is a fool. At worst, Steve Kerr has malice towards Jews. In which case, he is the sort of the person I would stay as far away from as possible.
