Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

California High School Faces Backlash After Basketball Game Erupts Into 'Where's Your Passport?' Chant Against Opposing Team

Things seemed so much simpler in high school.

Your worst problems were failing grades, your best friends had time to see you, and we all knew the rival school were our biggest evil, right?


That simplified mentality might be the problem though. Especially in a country that regularly demonizes a certain subset of people.

A high school basketball game ended in California with one of the teams chanting "Where's your passport?" at the opposing team.


The game that pit St. Joseph High School, a private school, against Righetti High School, a public school, ended in the virulent chant.

Righetti was losing 74-57 just as the game was wrapping up. In the final seconds of the game, their stands started the chant you can see in the video posted on Twitter.

The St. Joseph principal, Erinn Dougherty, stormed over to the opposing team's stands to let them know it's wrong.



However, Tom Mott, the coach for St. Joseph, was more understanding.

He told the Santa Maria Times:

"I honestly think they were unaware they said a racist thing. They did not intend for it to be racist."

After Dougherty chewed out the Righetti fans, she came around to the same conclusion.

She said:

"Just because I will not allow certain xenophobic statements to be made at my campus and I don't want racially-charged rhetoric here doesn't mean that I don't love and respect the students of this whole community. Not just the St. Joe students but the whole community."
"I think they were good kids who didn't realize what they were saying."

It is surmised that the chant of "Where's your passport?" likely stems from the fact that St. Joseph has three Puerto Rican players, who are U.S. citizens and wouldn't need a passport, and an international player from France.

The Righetti students, who are very diverse themselves, were calling out the private school's apparent international recruitment.

Which, uh, isn't really better.




The Santa Maria Times followed up their initial article with one that included testimony from two anonymous Righetti students.

One of them said:

"The [St. Joseph] students were chanting at our student section that we would be filling them up with gas in the future, so we shot back with our chant, it's simple trash talk."
"They were also throwing their own racist remarks at us before our chant. They were yelling 'where's your green card' at Righetti."

Which, again, doesn't really make this any better. Instead of one team making bigoted chants, it's both.

The issue here isn't whether it was fair of them to make the chant, but that kids are being conditioned to make it in the first place.




Racism and bigotry are both very loudly and very sneakily propagated. Ignorance and consent are required of the community for these kinds of attitudes to continue.

On one hand, these are high schoolers. Who reading this can say they had their life figured out in high school with no more growing to do?

On the other hand, this isn't something that can be ignored, or it will fester and more people will grow up taking these kinds of beliefs to heart.

Our hope is that the administrators have genuine conversations with all these students, and they are given the room to grow into better adults.

More from Trending

Matt Gaetz; alien making heart symbol
Brandon Bell/Getty Images; MediaProduction/Getty Images

Matt Gaetz Dragged After Claiming U.S. Government Has Secret Alien-Human 'Breeding Programs'

MAGA Republican President Donald Trump's first choice for Attorney General is back in the news, but not because his replacement, Pam Bondi, just got fired.

Former Florida MAGA Republican Representative Matt Gaetz made a wild claim while speaking with far-right podcaster Benny Johnson. Gaetz said he was briefed about a top secret breeding program between extraterrestrials and humans being conducted by the United States government.

Keep ReadingShow less
Karoline Leavitt; Donald Trump
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images; Alex Brandon/Pool/Getty Images

Karoline Leavitt Is Getting Dragged Hard After Claiming That Trump Is The 'Most Well-Read Person In The Room'

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt had people rolling their eyes after she showered praise on President Donald Trump for being the "most well-read person in the room."

Leavitt was speaking at George Washington University as part of Turning Point USA's latest tour of college campuses when she made the claim while in conversation with Turning Point USA CEO Erika Kirk. Kirk, the widow of the late far-right activist Charlie Kirk, after Kirk asked her about lessons she'd learned while on the job.

Keep ReadingShow less
Pam Bondi; Screenshot of Donald Trump "South Park" character
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images; Comedy Central

'South Park' Epically Trolls Pam Bondi With Hilariously Gross Send-Off After Her Firing

After President Donald Trump announced that Pam Bondi would be leaving her post as attorney general and "transitioning" to a role in the private sector, South Park shared a fitting send-off from a 2025 episode that featured Bondi.

Although South Park is currently between seasons, the show’s X account posted for the first time in more than two months shortly after Bondi lost her job.

Keep ReadingShow less
Charlie Day smiles on the red carpet during a Paley Center event appearance.
Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images

'Super Mario Bros' Star Charlie Day Just Made A Seriously Dark Joke About Luigi—And Fans Are Stunned

On paper, it’s a softball setup: You voice Luigi. You’re asked about Luigi. You say Luigi.

But Charlie Day… did not do that.

Keep ReadingShow less
A young attendee wearing a NASA cap with a mounted GoPro is interviewed by CNN at Kennedy Space Center ahead of the Artemis II launch.
Courtesy of CNN

CNN Asked A Kid Why He Was At The Artemis II Launch—And His Hilarious Response Is Everything

As crowds gathered for the Artemis II launch on Wednesday, one young attendee managed to steal the spotlight from the rocket itself with a response no one saw coming. The boy was at Kennedy Space Center in Florida with a GoPro strapped to his black NASA cap, having traveled to witness the first human-crewed mission to the Moon in more than 50 years.

As he waited, a CNN reporter approached him with a question whose answer usually involves some variation of “inspiration,” “history,” or “science.”

Keep ReadingShow less