Sports | Washington Redskins Krauthammer: Here's Why Redskins Should Change Name Charles Krauthammer: You wouldn't use 'Negro,' so why Redskins? By Arden Dier Posted Oct 18, 2013 11:57 AM CDT Copied A Washington Redskins helmet sits on the turf during the NFL football teams training camp in Richmond, Va., Saturday, July 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Steve Helber) Conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer weighs in today on the Washington Redskins name controversy: Yes, let's change it, he writes for the Washington Post. But he's quick to point out that he's no fan of the "language police," or "being lectured by sportscasters about ethnic sensitivity. Or advised by the president of the United States about changing team names. Or blackmailed by tribal leaders playing the race card." Even so, he writes, "the fact is ... that words don’t stand still. They evolve." For comparison, he offers up the words "Negro" and "retarded," once used respectfully but now seen as "patronizing and demeaning." The same is true of the word "redskins," he writes. "No matter how the word was used 80 years ago, it carries invidious connotations today." You wouldn't use it to describe Native Americans, not out of fear of the language police, but because it's "tainted, freighted with negative connotations with which you would not want to be associated." And that's why the team should make a change. Click for his full column. Read These Next North Carolina shooting suspect once walked the red carpet. The gunman who killed 4 at a Michigan church was an ex-marine. 'We heard a big bang,' says churchgoer in Michigan Skydivers leap from plane 2 minutes before fatal crash. Report an error