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Amoral Media, Low-life Fans, Spoiled Athletes And Beer (Dennis Prager On Values Alert)
Townhall.com ^ | 11/23/04 | Dennis Prager

Posted on 11/22/2004 9:21:55 PM PST by goldstategop

Two recent events in the world of professional sports offer important insights into American life today.

The NFL story concerns an ad ABC TV showed before Monday Night Football to promote its hit show "Desperate Housewives." As described by USA Today, the ad "showed towel-clad actress Nicollette Sheridan trying to entice Philadelphia Eagles star Terrell Owens to skip the game. He agrees as she drops the towel and rushes into his arms." ABC and the NFL have apologized.

The NBA story concerns the worst American sports riot in memory. At the Detroit arena, members of the Indiana Pacers ran into the stands and fought with fans after fighting with Detroit Pistons players.

Three important lessons:

First, let's finally stop repeating the false notion that big business has conservative values. Big business has no values. Big businesses are concerned with making money for their stockholders. Nothing else matters to publicly owned companies.

Liberals perpetuate the falsehood of big business as conservative for three reasons: They have a materialist view of the world (just about everything is explainable by economic status and motives; it aids in getting people to vote Democrat); many people resent the amorality of big companies; and it seems to counter the argument that the major news media are liberal -- "How could the news media possibly be liberal when they are all owned by large corporations!"

If ABC or Fox or any other network could increase ratings by showing an orgy during "Captain Kangaroo," they would.

Second, it is yet another example of how deep the values divide in America is that liberal commentators overwhelmingly ridiculed concern with ABC showing the raunchy promo right before televising the widely watched Monday Night Football game. From The New York Times sports pages to USA Today's editorial page, there was annoyance with those who objected to the promo, not with the promo itself.

For example, many liberal commentators offered the novel idea that if the football player -- or Janet Jackson -- had been white, few would have objected. The only other liberal annoyance was that a woman was portrayed as a sex object. Nothing about protecting children or the concept of public decency.

Liberal opinion makers tend to have little regard for an issue that deeply concerns most conservatives -- how high or low the decency level of public life is. That is why liberals are more likely to be apathetic toward public cursing as well as to public displays of sexual behavior. Indeed, they consider it the height of conservative hypocrisy for Republicans to order an R-rated movie in their hotel rooms, or curse privately and then object to such behaviors when done publicly.

Yet the difference (which is lost on some conservatives as well) is enormous, aside from what children will see. For those -- conservative or liberal -- who do not see the difference between public and private behavior, I cite the simple example of a man relieving himself. In private it is perfectly appropriate; in public it is highly inappropriate.

In all liberal societies, people are losing a sense of what is appropriate. For most liberals today, the issue of appropriate behavior pales in comparison to prescription drug prices and other economic concerns. That is why Janet Jackson's breast baring at the NFL Super Bowl and the ABC promo are no big deal to most liberals. Yet, to most social conservatives, they represent a society in decline. If you wanted a clear values difference, that is about as clear as it gets.

Third, regarding the fan-inspired riot in Detroit, it is widely believed that alcohol played a major role in the fans' behavior -- such as screaming obscenities at players and throwing objects at them. The availability of alcohol at sporting events despite the fact that fan behavior obviously deteriorates as games progress and self-control weakens is another example of big business putting profits above everything.

But there is a deeper lesson.

From the beginning of the crusade against tobacco I have argued that the war against tobacco was a sign of a morally confused, if not morally lost, generation. That this generation chose to make war on smoking (which is dangerous to one's health but leads to no evil) rather than on alcohol (which accompanies most child abuse, spousal beatings, acquaintance rape and other violent crimes) was almost all one needed to know about the elite's changed moral priorities since the last crusade against a vice (Prohibition).

When I was a kid, people got dressed up to go to ballgames, and the worst words fans screamed were "you're a bum" or "kill the ump." But, of course, many people smoked. Today there is no smoking even at outdoor stadiums, but many fans scream obscenities and routinely act like lowlifes. This is because we have substituted preoccupation with smoking for preoccupation with cursing. We have, in short, put concern with health over concern with character.

One can learn a lot about life from sports. Unfortunately, however, as far as professional basketball and football are concerned, the lessons to be learned are largely negative.

Maybe we should stay home for a while.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Philosophy; US: Michigan
KEYWORDS: character; decency; dennisprager; dh; lowlifefans; nba; nfl; pacers; pistons; spoiledathletes; values
Americans are concerned with the decline of decency in society. Professional sports no longer reflects the best in our society. Dennis Prager offers some thoughts on Thanksgiving Eve as to why this has happened. We need to worry less about people's health and more about society's character. Its time to get our priorities as a nation straight.
1 posted on 11/22/2004 9:21:56 PM PST by goldstategop
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To: goldstategop

OK, let's get one thing straight, I'm not giving up my beer!


2 posted on 11/22/2004 9:24:10 PM PST by jocon307 (Jihad is world wide. Jihad is serious business. We ignore global jihad at our peril.)
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To: goldstategop
Professional sports no longer reflects the best in our society.

Please identify when, exactly, in the last 130 years they have reflected the best in our society?

Ty Cobb going into the stands to beat up a cripple; Ted Williams extending his middle finger to the fans at Fenway three times (turning each time to make sure he covers the whole stadium.

Absolutely rampant alcoholism in pro baseball most of its history. The 1919 Black Sox Scandal.

The point-shaving scandals in the 1950s that almost destroyed college basketball.

3 posted on 11/22/2004 9:25:53 PM PST by Strategerist
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To: goldstategop

bttt


4 posted on 11/22/2004 9:26:53 PM PST by Christian4Bush (The drive for 60 in the Senate begins NOW: only 716 days left until the Midterm Elections!)
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To: goldstategop

Or my cigarettes.

But then again, I would never, ever, ever, throw anything down onto the playing field.


5 posted on 11/22/2004 9:27:31 PM PST by jocon307 (Jihad is world wide. Jihad is serious business. We ignore global jihad at our peril.)
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To: Strategerist

I remember watching that Ken Burns series on baseball on PBS. I bad riot broke out at one game. Someone set a fire that burned down a good portion of the grandstands. That was way back in the early 1900's I think. Fans got stupid back then, too.


6 posted on 11/22/2004 9:33:46 PM PST by FlyVet
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To: FlyVet
I remember watching that Ken Burns series on baseball on PBS. I bad riot broke out at one game. Someone set a fire that burned down a good portion of the grandstands. That was way back in the early 1900's I think.Yep, the early 1900s was clearly a time when the culture of rap and hip-hop music was prevelent in the ghettos that baseball players and fans were coming from, leading to all the violence.
7 posted on 11/22/2004 9:35:17 PM PST by Strategerist
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To: goldstategop
For those -- conservative or liberal -- who do not see the difference between public and private behavior, I cite the simple example of a man relieving himself. In private it is perfectly appropriate; in public it is highly inappropriate.

The media, professional sports, the Left, Hollyweird and most of the other cultural elites who "know better" than us simpletons in flyover country have been publicly urinating on our culture for years.

8 posted on 11/22/2004 9:42:16 PM PST by Choose Ye This Day (DUmmies: You keep visualizing a Kerry win...we'll lead the world and beat the terrorists. Mmmmkay?)
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To: goldstategop

While I usually agree with Dennis, his wishful past is not true in reality: "When I was a kid, people got dressed up to go to ballgames, and the worst words fans screamed were "you're a bum" or "kill the ump." While people didn't weat spandex or hip purses, the words have always been crude; kids or no kids present.


9 posted on 11/22/2004 9:44:25 PM PST by Oystir
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To: Oystir

Enough Already! PRAGER! ? ! Psuedo-rabbi pontifications about the recent idiocy in Detroit. It's bad enough that every miscreant on the planet has used this non-event to visit total dreck on sports fans and hapless uninterested bystanders. Where's the OFF switch?


10 posted on 11/22/2004 10:09:14 PM PST by CBart95
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To: Just another Joe

One for this week's list


11 posted on 11/22/2004 11:17:32 PM PST by Don W (You can tell a lot about a person by how they treat someone that can't help them.)
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