
Julious Threatts (pictured) is 21 years old, but for some reason, he thinks he can create his own fountain of youth. Threatts was caught trying to impersonate a 14-year-old, so he could play in a youth football league.
Threatts used the alias "Chad Jordan" to register for Webb Middle School. The school is located in Tampa, Fla. Threatts told school administrators that he was homeless on the day of his arrival to the school.
After trying to enroll, the Department of Child and Families was called to assist in the situation. That's when Threatts was taken to the cafeteria and even given a snack. When the principal saw him, he immediately noticed that he was too old to be in middle school. He was eventually arrested on trespassing charges.
In addition to his trespassing charge, Threatts is being accused of violating the terms of his probation on an earlier burglary charge. He was kicked off the football team, when coaches from other teams recognized him. He allegedly played in the same youth league a year earlier.
"I brought him into this room with seven of our board members and coaches and said, Come on now, tell us the truth, who are you?" Ray McCloud, one of the youth coaches, told MSNBC. "He looked me right in the eye and said, 'I swear I am who I say I am. I'm Chad Jordan.'
"This guy had us all fooled. I mean this guy acted just like a little kid. Everything about him was a little kid. He's a total scam artist."
Not only did Threatts' story include his own acting ability, it came with documentation. According to media reports, Threatts had a falsified birth certificate as well as a detailed scouting report from a high school recruiting scout alleged to be from Rivals.com. The report analyzed Chad Jordan and said that he is "a very special prospect" who "hasn't signed" but has "offers from USC (University of Southern California), Texas and Florida."
It seems that Julious Threatts doesn't need prison as much as he needs a good psychologist. Some people will go to dramatic lengths to re-create their youth, and I am curious as to whether or not Threatts truly accepts or realizes that he is no longer a 14-year-old.
I once recall speaking to a young black male who was 20 years old and still in high school. He was dropping out soon, since he'd failed so many grades that the school no longer desired his presence on campus. He was completely illiterate and unemployed. I asked the young man what he wanted to do with his life, and he said, "I want to be a football player."
The answer made me sad, because not only was he not going to graduate from high school anytime soon, he'd also never played organized football before. He wasn't very big and didn't seem to have any form of extraordinary athletic ability. All he had was the dream of playing sports that he obtained from watching football every Sunday. He never lived out his dream of being a football player, but was instead sent to prison just two years after our conversation.
This story, as well as the one of Julious Threatts, makes me think of the infantilization of the black male in America. Through sports and hip-hop, black men are in a peculiar partnership with the educational, economic and criminal justice system to keep themselves uneducated, marginalized and perpetually immature.
We have 35-year-old men running around with their pants sagging, hats cocked to the side and imitating hip-hop artists who have far more money than they will ever see in their lives. There are also former athletes with few professional skills in their late 30s, hoping for another tryout with a team who will accept an aging journeyman. It's incredibly sad to watch, and it's time that we all enforce codes of educational effort among African-American men. It doesn't matter if you're not the brightest bulb on the tree, but no one should try their best to remain ignorant.
For us as black men, sports becomes our beacon of hope in a world that has become virtually hopeless. Perhaps by embracing education and simultaneously requesting accountability on the part of school systems that refuse to educate us, we can allow ourselves to become men. How this relates to Julious Threatts, I can't say with complete certainty, but I am convinced that there is a connection.
Watch Threatts recite his "God" poem below:
Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and a Scholarship in Action Resident of the Institute for Black Public Policy. To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email, please click here. 
Comments: (57)
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By: All Winners LOVE Winners aka BABYFACE on 8/30/2010 11:08AM
21
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By: panzhu3d on 8/30/2010 8:39PM
In addition to his trespassing charge, Threatts is being accused of violating the terms of his probation on an earlier burglary charge. He was kicked off the football team, when coaches from other teams recognized him. He allegedly played in the same youth league a year earlier. My boyfriend thinks the same with me. He is eight years older than me, lol. We met online at agelessmat e.c om a nice and free place for younger women and older men, or older women and younger men, to interact with each other. Maybe you wanna check out or tell your friends.
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By: Ruth on 8/31/2010 4:27PM
You statement said Black men. YOU SHOULD HAVE SAID SOME BLACK MEN. tHEN i WOULD HAVE BEEN IN AGREEMENT WITH YOU.
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By: kalyupio on 9/01/2010 7:20AM
I found a great club for you_____H o t B l a c k w h i t e [DOT] c 0 m_____. The best club for seeking the interracial singles, sexy beauties and even hot interracial celebs... I think everyone need to meet some miracle after all the terrible stuff in the news and the economy .You should check it out!!! zzzzz
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By: vdog on 9/01/2010 8:50AM
The LOST GENERATION.
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By: FiveMikes on 8/30/2010 11:16AM
In regards to the following statement... "We have 35-year old men running around with their pants sagging, hats cocked to the side, imitating hip hop artists who have far more money than they will ever see in their lives."
I think this captures a serious difference in the "civil rights" generation and the younger generations. How a man wears his pants and hat (in certain situations) doesn't reflect how smart, focused, educated, or ignorant he is. Some of the men that emulate hip hop artists (in clothing and "swagger") may be Accountants, Teachers, Web Designers, or Thugs during the day.
Older generations are so quick to mislabel and categorize the younger generations because of ridiculous generalizations about how we dress, what music we listen to, and how we wear our hats...kinda like how racist and prejudice people do. It's all kinda sad. It's like you forgot about the bell-bottomed, 4 inch platform shoes, butterfly colors of 1974. How quick we forget.
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By: fedup on 8/30/2010 12:21PM
Id rather see bell bottoms and butterfly colars than to see a grown ass 35 yr old man walking around with his pants saggin singin lil wayne thinkig he got his swagg on.You must be one of the men that the author is talking about smh lol Its bad enough that the younger kids are doing it, and what about that ghetto looking baffonary has anything to do with our civil rights generation? Cmon now lets be realistic these guys have thier pants hanging so low that you see the persons whole backside and another thing is not all of them wear clean underwear lol And if you look on youtube or google you will see that that saggin swagg lol came from prison it is some form of homosexuality something about it telling the other men that they are available smh
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By: FiveMikes on 8/30/2010 12:39PM
This is why I never respond to these on-line articles. People that are inarticulate can't seem to respond w/out degrading the commenter. Whether I wear my pants below my waste or not doesn't really matter to the content of the article. If we're talking about black male empowerment, resorting to ridiculous insults and generalizations isn't really helping. Whether or not you care for bell-bottoms or sagging pants (which aren't really in style, forreal...) doesn't really matter. Personal preference does not equate to what is more insulting or demeaning to others. Let's encourage each other and OPEN the lines of the lines of communication between folks that have differences, as opposed to blasting someone because you disagree with them. FedUp, I hope you're not a member of the older generation, because that would extremely disappointing.
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By: ronndogg on 8/30/2010 5:21PM
you may be right about some of these guys ..but i would wager that the bulk of these guys are not professional businessmen. Perception is reality and if people perceive you a certain way because of what you wear, you can either change your dress or deal with the criticism. I dressed like a child until i grew up and put on the uniform of a professional. If you're not a thug then don't wear the uniform of a thug. What a person wears does reflect an image of that person,whether right or wrong. If i wore bright make-up and big red shoes, people would pint and laugh..and I'd say "I'm not a clown"...i respect your opinion but i must disagree..
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By: NikonF2-AS on 8/30/2010 11:19PM
FiveMikes: You don't have a clue! The comment you made makes you look uneducated, derelict in form, and someone not ashamed to piss on himself. Do yourself a favor and swallow a cap or ask someone to do it for you, you spineless POS!
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