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Cory Booker Wants to Replace Major College Football With a Federally Controlled Pro Game
https://cnsnews.com ^ | By Terence P. Jeffrey | February 3, 2021 | 4:34am EST

Posted on 02/03/2021 9:26:09 AM PST by Red Badger

Two young men grow up in the same neighborhood and spend four years together at the same high school taking the same classes from the same teachers and playing on the same winning football team.

Both are good students and dedicated, hardworking athletes. But one is a journeyman offensive lineman, while the other is an all-state quarterback.

In their senior year, they both decide they want to attend the same prestigious private university that plays in the Football Bowl Subdivision — and where the tuition and board and room exceed $60,000 per year.

The university accepts them both. But the journeyman offensive lineman — who was never recruited to play college football — needs to find a way to come up with the $60,000-plus per year the school will cost.

The all-state quarterback gets a full ride to play on the university's football team.

Meanwhile, according to the Census Bureau, only 36% of Americans 25 and older as of 2019 had managed to earn a college degree. A significant majority — 64% — had not.

Among Americans who started as student athletes at a Division One college in 2013, 90% went on to earn a degree, according to the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Among student athletes who specifically played football at a Football Bowl Subdivision school, 81% went on the graduate.

Was that hypothetical high school quarterback who got a scholarship to play football at a Football Bowl Subdivision school where the tuition and fees exceeded $60,000 — and where 81% of football players graduated — a victim of exploitation?

Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey seems to be claiming he was — at the same time he proves he was not.

"This is one of the few industries in America that is allowed to exploit those who are responsible for generating most of the revenue," Booker told ESPN in December about major college sports.

"The NCAA has exploited generations of college athletes for its own personal financial gain by preventing athletes from earning any meaningful compensation and failing to keep the athletes under its charge healthy and safe," Booker was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.

To repair this perceived evil, Booker joined with Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut to introduce what they call The College Athletes Bill of Rights.

What would this "Bill of Rights" do?

"The most ambitious — and likely the most contentious — provision," reports The New York Times, "would require colleges to share the profits they make with the athletes who generate them. In sports where revenues exceed the cost of scholarships across an entire division — at the moment that would be athletes who play football, men's and women's basketball and baseball — the profits generated in each sport would be shared equally with the scholarship players."

But not with the walk-ons or with the players at schools — or participating on sports teams — that do not offer athletic scholarships.

What type of salary would a college athlete on a scholarship get under Booker's bill?

"Using data supplied by universities to the Department of Education, Booker said that would mean payments of $173,000 a year to football players, $115,600 to men's basketball players, $19,050 to women's basketball players and $8,670 to baseball players who are on full scholarship," The New York Times reported.

To make sure these salaries are paid and colleges fully comply with Booker's mandates, the law would also create a Commission on College Athletics. This commission would consist of nine presidential appointees and would have potentially sweeping powers.

Booker's bill states in part: "There is established a commission, to be known as the 'Commission on College Athletics,' for the following purposes: (1) To act for the benefit of all college athletes without regard to receipt of grant-in-aid. (2) To protect the economic interests of college athletes."

"This group, which would receive $50 million in taxpayer funding for its first two years, would take on a lot of the work of policing college sports," ESPN reported.

The New York Times noted it would also have the power to "ban individuals from working in college athletics."

Booker's bill says: "An enforcement action carried out by the Commission shall be construed as an enforcement action carried out by the Federal Government."

The fundamental flaw in Booker's approach to college athletics is that he looks at it as a financial transaction rather than an educational one.

Amateur college football often teaches young men more important lessons than they can learn in a lecture hall. Booker, who played on a scholarship at Stanford, seemed to explain this himself — even as he was proposing his bill that would convert major college football into a professional game.

"I would not be where I am today without football," Booker wrote in Sports Illustrated last month.

"Football taught me about character, honor, leadership, discipline, grit and so much more," he said. "The men I played with, who coached me, believed in me, taught me and demanded from me, all shaped me in profound and indelible ways. I can never repay them or my sport for what it did for me."

Like other young men who are given a scholarship to attend college and play football there, Booker was not exploited. He was given a great and unique opportunity.

There is also no doubt that the opportunities for college students to learn through athletics would greatly diminish if Booker succeeded in forcing colleges to surrender half their athletic revenues to pay six-figure salaries to students playing those few sports that attract many paying fans.

(Terence P. Jeffrey is the editor in chief of CNSNews.com.)


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Education; Sports
KEYWORDS: booker; collegesports; ncaa; searchbooker
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To: chopperk

IMPEACH!


21 posted on 02/03/2021 9:49:52 AM PST by GnuThere
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To: Nifster

TANSTAAFL.................


22 posted on 02/03/2021 9:50:36 AM PST by Red Badger (SLEAZIN' is the REASON for the TREASON .................................)
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To: PGR88

Frees up my Saturdays


23 posted on 02/03/2021 9:55:42 AM PST by Nifster (I see puppy dogs in the clouds)
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To: Red Badger

Look at any reservation


24 posted on 02/03/2021 9:56:51 AM PST by Nifster (I see puppy dogs in the clouds)
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To: Red Badger

Setting aside the merits of this for a moment, is there even a fig leaf of constitutional authority for ANY of this proposal?

(Yes, I know that we live in a post-constitutional US)


25 posted on 02/03/2021 9:59:40 AM PST by DMZFrank
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To: unixfox

All the more reason to give up football......


26 posted on 02/03/2021 10:00:13 AM PST by Lurkinanloomin (Natural Born Citizens Are Born Here of Citizen Parents)(Know Islam, No Peace - No Islam, Know Peace)
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To: Red Badger; All
Although the day is not over, post-17th Amendment ratification Sen. Booker so far wins violator of the day for Section 3 of the 14th Amendment.

More specifically, he should lose his job as lawmaker under that clause for rebelling against the federal government's constitutionally limited powers by pushing federal action based on constitutionally nonexistent federal government powers to win support from his low-information voters.

Booker and many misguided federal lawmakers like him actually should have gotten themselves elected to a state government, instead of the constitutionally limited power federal government, where he can experiment with his social engineering ideas using 10th Amendment-protected state powers as the early states had intended for those powers to be used.

Justice Brandeis had put it this way about the states being laboratories of democracy.

"It is one of the happy incidents of the federal system that a single courageous State may, if its citizens choose [emphasis added], serve as a laboratory; and try novel social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of the country.” —Justice Brandeis, Laboratories of democracy.

27 posted on 02/03/2021 10:01:00 AM PST by Amendment10
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To: Red Badger

Gay Dodge Ball.


28 posted on 02/03/2021 10:06:17 AM PST by Zathras
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To: Red Badger

Corey served as the teams loofah.


29 posted on 02/03/2021 10:12:50 AM PST by The MAGA-Deplorian (Sarcasm! Its what I mastered in!)
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To: Red Badger

Soviet Union returns.


30 posted on 02/03/2021 10:14:01 AM PST by dforest (RATS are criminals and frauds. Hide anything that belongs to you. They will steal it.)
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To: Red Badger
The New York Times noted it would also have the power to "ban individuals from working in college athletics."

There's the money shot of this bill, the ability to shut out conservative coaches, trainers, players, etc.

31 posted on 02/03/2021 10:14:46 AM PST by sacjones
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To: Red Badger
Bookers' time would be well spent tracking down how much our colleges are getting from the chinese and not being reported.
President Trump started that, and it was quickly shut down with an eo from xiden
32 posted on 02/03/2021 10:19:11 AM PST by SGCOS
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To: Red Badger

Federally controlled; the kiss of death!


33 posted on 02/03/2021 10:30:59 AM PST by CVS-20
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To: Red Badger

Do not care the least bit about anything bad that happens to the NFL...


34 posted on 02/03/2021 10:52:27 AM PST by SuperLuminal (Where is Joe McCarthy now that we desperately need him sober?)
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To: unixfox

Too bad for the rest of us is what I was thinking.


35 posted on 02/03/2021 11:03:05 AM PST by HotHunt
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To: Red Badger

Does the author ever make a point.? Couldn’t get through the hypotheticals.


36 posted on 02/03/2021 11:03:53 AM PST by subterfuge (RIP T.P.)
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To: for-q-clinton

I prefer Sarcastaball.


37 posted on 02/03/2021 11:04:42 AM PST by subterfuge (RIP T.P.)
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To: Tell It Right
"Everybody knows that nobody handles a group’s finances better than the broke federal government."

I heard Harry Dent say this morning that world debt is $520 trillion and that about $250 trillion of that is the USA.

He also said that in a few weeks (he said some number of weeks but I don't remember) we'd be slidding into economic conditions like 1929-1932.

38 posted on 02/03/2021 11:50:37 AM PST by blam
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To: blam

“we’d be slidding into economic conditions like 1929-1932.”

Trumps fault no doubt.


39 posted on 02/03/2021 11:52:11 AM PST by VastRWCon (Fake News")
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To: Red Badger

Hmm.... Gov’t Bread and Circuses..
Do we have a Nero or Caligula in our fraudulently illegitimately elected president?


40 posted on 02/03/2021 12:05:40 PM PST by Doc91678 (Doc91678)
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