Posted on 01/31/2016 9:12:38 AM PST by MinorityRepublican
We just completed another regular season of NFL football. Now letâs see if we can make it the last such season ever played. In its current state, professional football is immoral and we as a society should end its existence.
I imagine some fans of American football felt their hackles rise upon reading that. âImmoralâ is a strong word, impossible to type from anywhere other than the saddle of a very tall horse, which isnât the most comfortable seat for me.
I ate foie gras with Christmas dinner last week and enjoyed it immensely. I know that its production involves torturing ducks, which I think is wrong. In eating it, I am putting my own pleasure over the wellbeing of another living creature.
So I donât take the moral high ground lightly. But I value human life more than avian life, so I will continue to scold those of you who put the pleasure you derive from watching football (and in so doing, paying money to the NFL, propagating its immoral practices) above the wellbeing of the players youâre watching play.
The damage football players suffer need not be debated at this point. The new Will Smith movie, Concussion, is based on one of the many books detailing the mountain of scientific evidence proving that the sport shortens lives.
Efforts to make it safer with better equipment will not work, because the damage happens inside the playersâ skulls, when the brain sloshes around and smashes against its bone casing.
Itâs the speed and power with which players ram their helmeted heads into other players thatâs the problem. The game as it is played today kills the people who play it, period.
(Excerpt) Read more at theguardian.com ...
Dave Bry?
Nobody on this side of the pond ... which means nobody watches ...
Yes, he is one of you.
Utter rubbish. Millions of Americans watch and play the sport. NBC showed the RWC live. Start to finish.
67,000 just filled Soldier Field last year to watch the US play NZ.
Watch a game, you will enjoy it, TV or in person.
CNN makes the same claim as to viewership ...
You seem upset...
Nobody should be taking advice from the Guardian, or the Nanny State British government.
FFS, have you not been following this thread?.
For the spewing of Anglophobia based on what an AMERICAN has written. You are damn right.
Don’t be flippant, you have been exposed on your ignorance.
I don’t get upset at the usual 1776/1812, and WW1/2 comments. I actually pity the idiots who write such ignorance. Their problem, not mine.
Remember, in a nation of 318 million millions of people can do something and it’s still nobody. If 2 million American follow a sport there’s your millions, and they’re less than 1 percent. That’s the thing cable TV has recently figured out, in a big country small niches are still a lot of people.
Sorry, I could resist.
It was a gag line from an American TV series in the 1970’s called “Maude,” produced by famed American TV producer Norman Lear.
Maude, played by Bea Arthur, had a British housekeeper played by Ermine Ginggold (not sure of that spelling), an elderly woman.
The show was about a friend who was a homosexual, and the British housekeeper made the quip, “Oh, I just adore homosexuals. In England, the only one we’re sure isn’t a queen, is the Queen!”
That line popped into my head Scotsman, and I couldn’t resist.
P.S.: I know American football is gaining popularity in the U.K.....a franchise may be coming there soon.
When I lived in California years ago, rugby was rather popular on my college campus. That was pretty rough and tumble.
LOL, fair enough, as a Scotsman, I agree!. English poofs lol.
AF has been on UK tv since 1982, weekly and live, and SB highlights since 1971. It was most popular in the 80s. More a large hardcore now. If that’s not a contradiction.
LOL! Tell the truth. Rugby players eat their dead.
The only time outs are to carry injured players off the field.
I just love logical disconnects!
When we played flag football, we tackled the guy, and pulled the flag off. That’s how its supposed to work, right?
That’s the way we played...and it was always a red flag to hide the blood from nosebleeds.
;-[)
Lear famously adapted (and ironically toned down) the classic BBC series Till Death Us Do Part. Maude was shown here, not sure of the 70s, but def. in the 90s by Sky TV.
Bread and circuses, man!
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