Pigskin Pushers, Football Fanatics, and
Blissful Blindness
February 1 2007
Counterbias.com
by Jason Miller
According
to the inanity dutifully
recited by the talking heads
of the corporate media, the
Middle East is teeming with
hordes of “Islamofascist”
human incendiary devices
lining up to detonate
themselves into martyr’s
paradise.
Fortunately
for us highly civilized
Westerners, those of us
sporting the Y chromosome
can channel Nirvana with a
more click of our second
most treasured tool, the
television remote.
Thanks to the
benevolence of the NFL and
its generous corporate
partners, we can experience
all manner of machismo
delights without departing
the physical plane.
Fierce armor-clad gladiators
satiate our lust for
brutality and violence with
displays of unbelievably
wicked hits and bone-jarring
collisions enacted with
extraordinarily
well-choreographed
athleticism.
Provocatively undressed
human anomalies, the likes
of whom rarely occur
naturally, “cheer on the
home team” as they manifest
our air-brushed, surgically
enhanced male vision of
feminine perfection
Lite Beer, Bud Light, and
Coors Light flood us with
ice cold rivers of their
delectable libations that
free of us of the arduous
burden of our inhibitions.
And where
would we be without “Man
Law” to shield us from our
long repressed anima that
persistently assails our
grossly exaggerated
masculinity?
For about six precious
months of the year, the
pushers of the National
Football League deliver
heavy doses of testosterone,
blood, adrenaline, sweat,
and alcohol. Man fuel
for its addicted minions.
Through the grace of our
corporate gods in the United
States, a host of media
innovations (including a
network devoted to the NFL
and painstakingly detailed
year round analyses) have
significantly diminished the
agony of off-season
withdrawal.
Not far
beneath the artifice of this
ostensibly harmless venue of
entertainment (which has
become indelibly etched into
our collective psyche) lie a
number of baleful elements
that warrant further
examination.
In a 1992 speaking
engagement concerning his
book, Manufacturing
Consent, Noam Chomsky
observed:
"Take, say, sports --
that's another crucial
example of the
indoctrination system, in my
view. For one thing because
it -- you know, it offers
people something to pay
attention to that's of no
importance. [audience
laughs] That keeps them from
worrying about -- [applause]
keeps them from worrying
about things that matter to
their lives that they might
have some idea of doing
something about. And in fact
it's striking to see the
intelligence that's used by
ordinary people in
[discussions of] sports [as
opposed to political and
social issues]. I mean, you
listen to radio stations
where people call in -- they
have the most exotic
information [more laughter]
and understanding about all
kind of arcane issues. And
the press undoubtedly does a
lot with this."
It is worth
noting that in a few weeks, about 125 million US Americans will settle
in for a day of hedonistic pleasure. Hallmark Cards calculated that the
Super Bowl surpasses New Year’s Eve as the biggest party day of the
year. US Americans consume more food on “Super Sunday” than any day
except Thanksgiving. Super Bowl celebrants will engorge themselves with
about 15,000 tons of chips and 4,000 tons of popcorn. Meanwhile, 35,000
human beings will die of starvation.
No wonder we
find the NFL so intoxicating
and alluring. “Mainlining”
hours of visual and adrenal
stimulation enables us to
exercise our “God-given”
rights of gluttonous
indulgence, couch potatodom,
and avoidance of issues that
might stimulate our
perpetually numbed
consciences.
Yet
exercising these “rights” is
an expensive proposition.
Consider the monetary and
social costs of feeding our
addiction. The pushers of
the NFL demand, and receive,
a hefty premium for their
product.
It Taxes
the Imagination
It may seem unbelievable,
but the likes of Washington
Redskins owner Daniel Snyder
are entitled to tax benefits
for a portion of the
salaries they pay to
players. US tax laws enable
NFL owners to depreciate
their employees, thus
classifying football players
as business capital rather
than human beings.
When one of pro football’s
elite sells their team,
their profits are taxed as
capital gains. Hence these
bloated plutocrats are
actually subject to a lower
tax rate than us “mere
mortals” in the working
class.
And remember those
exorbitant skybox seats that
average Joe’s can only
afford in their dreams?
Since 50% of the money
businesses spend on NFL
outings is tax deductible,
corporate elites luxuriate
from “on high” for half
price.
What Happened to Welfare
Reform?
In the late 20th Century,
the public spent $20 billion
to subsidize the
construction of new sports
stadiums. [Who knows how
much higher that figure
would be were we to include
the many interest free loans
and tax free bonds lavished
upon professional sports
team owners]?
Naturally, one wonders what
the working people got in
return for their
“investment”.
Here is what the Cato
Institute concluded:
• "The professional
sports environment in the 37
metropolitan areas in our
sample had no measurable
impact on the growth rate of
real per capita income in
those areas.
• "The professional sports
environment has a
statistically significant
impact on the level of real
per capita income in our
sample of metropolitan
areas, and the overall
impact is negative.
"For example, the
arrival of a new basketball
franchise in a metropolitan
area increases real per
capita income by about $67.
But building a new arena for
that basketball team reduces
real per capita income by
almost $73 in each of the 10
years following the
construction of the new
arena, leading to a net loss
of about $6 per person."
How sadly
ironic is it that in a
nation obsessed with cutting
“entitlement programs” we
offer multi-million dollar
hand-outs to individuals
already wallowing in excess
wealth?
Paul Allen is a case in
point. As owner of the
Seattle Seahawks, he is on
the public dole with the
rest of the NFL
“billionaires’ club”. In the
year 2000 Allen insisted
that the state of Washington
pony up 75% of the $425
million “necessary” to build
a new stadium for his team. His net worth at that
time? $40 billion. Despite
his nearly unlimited
financial means, the state
caved to Allen’s demands for
fear that he would make good
on his threats to move the
Seahawks.
Who Has Boardwalk and
Park Place?
Operating as a “legal”
monopoly enables NFL owners
to maintain tight control of
their market and manipulate
supply and demand for their
product.
Refusing to expand to cities
capable of sustaining an NFL
team allows the monopolists
to artificially inflate the
values of their teams. For
example, from 1997 to 1998
the average value of a
professional sports team
rose from $146 million to
$196 million.
Being members of a cartel
affords Art Modell and his
ilk another avenue by which
to fatten their bottom
lines. Unfettered by the
“nuisance” of competition,
they insist upon, and
receive, insane television
revenues.
Ill-gotten
gains are one thing, but who
picks up the tab?
Ultimately, the fans find
their wallets under siege:
Capitalizing
on their monopolistic
advantage, Al Davis and
company charge ridiculous
amounts for parking,
concessions and tickets.
As the cost
to run commercials during
NFL games rises, major
retailers raise prices to
cover their additional
advertising expenses.
Cable and
satellite television
providers increase their
rates so they can continue
to distribute “product” for
the NFL kingpins.
And lest we
forget, members of the
Football Trust like Paul
Allen are routinely able to
extort outrageous sums of
money from taxpayers.
According to
economist and author Andrew
Zimbalist, the Justice
Department could take action
against the NFL, but it is
"susceptible to
political pressure not to
upset sports."
Pushing
pigskin certainly has its
privileges.
Hey, Coaches, Leave Our
Kids Alone!
Lamentably, the NFL also
reflects the covert, and
sometimes overt, racism
which still pervades our
society. In a March 2006
interview with former NFL
player Anthony Prior (about
Prior’s book, The Slave
Side of Sunday) James
Harris noted that:
"In the NFL, 65% of
the player force--as you
know and well document in
the text--are Black. Six
percent of the general
managers are Black. No--as
you noted--no owners in the
NFL are Black."
Later in the interview,
Prior commented:
"This
is what I call “mental slavery.” Slavery is not limited to bondage
and chains. You got parents, preachers, teachers, coaches,
fundamentally imposing these characteristics on these young Black
children in America, that without sports, you’re going to amount to
nothing. Every Black athlete we see on a professional level, he is
one in 12,000. There are two things that can’t lie: That’s God and
mathematics.”
Prior’s quote
underscores what is perhaps
the NFL’s greatest sin.
Mirroring the deeply
duplicitous Horatio Alger
portrayals of upward
mobility in the US
socioeconomic hierarchy, the
NFL, its loyalists, and a
multitude of college and
high school coaches
perpetuate pernicious myths.
Myths that motivate our
children, particularly those
who are Black and
impoverished, to pursue pipe
dreams, embrace vacuous
values, and severely skew
their priorities.
Contrary to the fallacious
belief that football is a
viable route to a free
college education, only 20%
of college athletes receive
full scholarships. At least
55% play with zero financial
assistance. A 1996 study
determined that a mere 45%
of Black college football
players attained their
degrees.
Another study revealed that
66% of Black teenagers
believe that they will
become professional
athletes. 33% of White
teenagers share the same
misconception. Regardless of
race, the statistical
probability of a teen
growing up to become an NFL
player is infinitesimally
small.
Here are
some sobering statistics
which reveal the virtual
impossibility of their dream
becoming reality:
The US population is 300
million. In 2000 the US
Census indicated there were
10 million males of typical
NFL draft age. Each
individual’s odds of
experiencing life as an NFL
player drop precipitously
when one considers that
there are only 15,000
football players eligible
for the draft each spring.
Of those fifteen thousand,
160 young men secure NFL
roster spots. One hundred
sixty out of 10 million
become NFL players. It
staggers the mind!
While it is
understandable that many
Black teens facing
significant structural
barriers to escaping a life
of poverty aspire to be the
next Michael Vick, Harry
Edwards, a Black sports
sociologist, put their false
hopes and vain efforts into
perspective:
“Statistically, you have a better chance of getting
hit by a meteorite in the next ten years than getting work as an
athlete."
Infantile
Self-Absorption
Imagine what we could
accomplish if we focused
more of our time, energy,
resources, and efforts on
attainable goals and
socially redeeming
activities.
Right here in the United
States over a million people
are homeless at any given
moment. Tens of millions
lack proper nutrition and
access to health care. Our
infant mortality rate is the
highest amongst
industrialized nations.
Untold numbers caught in
Katrina’s Diaspora are still
scattered to the four
corners of the Earth. One in
seven US Americans lives
below poverty level.
And if enough of us amongst
the poor and working class
united, it would be within
our collective power to
mitigate the suffering of
those in need.
Yet we choose to sate
ourselves with the man fuel
so readily proffered by the
NFL. In so doing, we
subsidize the very
billionaires who plunder our
communities’ precious
resources and peddle
delusions to our children.
Pity so many
of us are too busy “living
NFL and drinking Diet Pepsi”
to notice, let alone care….
==
Jason Miller is a wage slave
of the American Empire who
has freed himself
intellectually and
spiritually. He is
currently recovering from his
addiction to the NFL. He
welcomes constructive
correspondence at
willpowerful@hotmail.com
or via his blog,
Thomas
Paine's Corner.