Posted on 11/27/2017 9:40:31 AM PST by Kaslin
As Roger Goodell attempts these next few days to not only save his job but ask for a raise and luxurious perks amid NFL ratings that are plummeting even further into the abyss, undoubtedly many football fans across the country are wondering if our recent national trend towards the hyper-politicization of everything is here to stay.
When Colin Kaepernick began kneeling last summer during the national anthem during football games, claiming that he was doing it to protest what he believed was the oppression of people of color, it caused a sharply divisive uproar across the country that has now snowballed into the persistent anthem controversies weve been seeing this season.
Though it may initially seem this was the first step towards the NFL going the way of ESPNs transformation from a sports network to a quasi-political talk show, in fact the NFL has slowly been edging towards this state of affairs for years.
From Tim TeBow being reprimanded for praying on the field before games to the NFL preventing the Dallas Cowboys from wearing decals to show support for the fallen police officers in Dallas last year, the NFL has seen a variety of polarizing cultural issues begin to spoil what is a defining and unifying American pastime.
After weeks of extraordinarily disruptive protests earlier this fall, Goodell finally decided to attempt to put an end to the controversy by subtly encouraging players to stand for the anthem. Not only did that fail as the kneeling and protests by players continue even now amid the ratings decline, but it seems that this may be the new normal for both professional football and many other aspects of our culture.
Football holds a special place in the American civic spirit. Within itself, it is an exciting sport where athletic prowess and teamwork combine to create a formidable game of skill. However with our culture, it has consistently remained by far the most watched sport in the US and, as a distinctly American sport, remains a symbol of our countrys distinction and pride.
It is now deeply tragic that it has become another political football, so to speak, in the increasingly divisive culture wars weve been seeing as of late in our country.
The fact remains that both sides of the dispute have a case on the merits.
It is, after all, disrespectful to kneel to a flag that represents the noble American ideals of liberty, equality, and justice for all, and that has been preserved through the sacrifices of so many hundreds of thousands of Americans over the course of our history.
Football holds a special place in the American civic spirit. Within itself, it is an exciting sport where athletic prowess and teamwork combine to create a formidable game of skill. However with our culture, it has consistently remained by far the most watched sport in the US and, as a distinctly American sport, remains a symbol of our countrys distinction and pride.
It is now deeply tragic that it has become another political football, so to speak, in the increasingly divisive culture wars weve been seeing as of late in our country.
The fact remains that both sides of the dispute have a case on the merits.
It is, after all, disrespectful to kneel to a flag that represents the noble American ideals of liberty, equality, and justice for all, and that has been preserved through the sacrifices of so many hundreds of thousands of Americans over the course of our history.
Furthermore, it is true that there remain great inequities in criminal justice, law enforcement, and economic opportunity for various groups of Americans that need to be addressed.
However, the NFL is not the place to address these deeply complex and serious policy issues it is a place to play and watch football.
Furthermore, by bringing these issues into a forum as unsuited for their resolution as NFL games, with little substantive discussion as compared to preaching-to-the-choir performances, these questions become far more difficult to properly address.
It seems at the moment that Roger Goodell is likely to continue his term as NFL Commissioner. While undoubtedly there was perhaps only so much he could do given the titanic cultural forces driving these political controversies into our popular culture, hopefully his next few years as commissioner will see better resolution of these issues than the past few.
The NFL disturbances also seem less a cause of our current cultural divide but rather a symptom and accelerator of it. When our divisive political climate simmers down, undoubtedly it will too.
Perhaps in the future us and our descendants will look back at this time as a disappointing era where we let our minor differences and what could be polite disagreements spiral into vitriol and cultural antagonism.
In the meantime, it seems that the politicization of even previously mundane aspects of our daily lives continues. The current NFL kneeling protests show no signs of abating, as the social ripples spread and accelerate beyond any persons control. Whether the NFL can truly prosper let alone survive amid this remains to be seen.
Absurd.
Yep, that premise is just plain insulting.
Isn't it interesting that judges who say its alright for the players to KNEEL during the National Anthem still want you to STAND when they enter the courtroom?
The NFL permitted its players to disrespect our country and our heroes. At the same time, it is also selective in its prohibition certain types of expression that it doesn’t like by players who have conservative leanings.
We too are selective in what we choose to watch and many of us have decided not to watch others who insult our values.
Idiot conflates the NFL and football several times. They aren’t.
I don’t think it’s reversible. I have a saying I use when someone betrays me:
I’m not angry. I just see you differently.
Once you see the man behind the curtain, you can never go back. You just see it differently.
But it is true, just not for the demographics the author intended. Think: political class vs. We the Peons.
OWNER #1: Look at that goofy Kaepernick!
OWNER #2: What's he doing with that kneeling?
OWNER #1: Just stirring up needless trouble.
OWNER #2: Well, He'll be gone next year.
OWNER #1: His coach should stop this right now - fine him and bench him for a couple games.
OWNER #2: Ahh... Let him go. What can it hurt? It's not like it's gonna' cost us money.
You’re referring to the poor grammar? (we vs. us)
It's permanent damage when enough moms and deads decide their sons won't be playing football. The combination of the potential for permanent injury, the lack of patriotism from so many NFL players, the example it sets when owners and coaches don't set standards, and the thuggishness that is setting the tone is an awful lot to turn around. When it's over is when some high schools start dropping their teams, when salaries start getting cut and when those with permanent injury (retired, pro, college and younger) get aggressive about lawsuits because they aren't sure there will be anyone to sue in a few years.
What happens when (not) if insurance is dropped or made prohibitively expensive for college, HS, and Pop Warner football?
An elementary error.
WHAT DOES THAT HAVE TO DO WITH FOOTBALL?
As with others, stopped watching what little I did watch last year.
I don’t give anything to an organization that DISRESPECTS me (for the homies that don’t get it)
I’m guessing the NFL will cease to be within the next 5 years, maybe sooner if the sweetheart TAX breaks go away.
No. Look at the stadiums, NOT the revenue #s or the ratings (both bad).
The stadiums tell you what is coming. Season ticket holders can’t leave, having prepaid. But all of the daily tickets? Not selling. This will affect season ticket holders later.
When the $s start sinking, the “stars” won’t get as much money. More rebellion against white oppression.
This is just the beginning of the collapse. I expect Dallas, Philly, GB, NE, and perhaps the Lions to have nearly full stadiums. But that won’t be enough.
Social responsibility ? They are actually snatching gold chains from the opposing players necks during the game. Its worse than a circus.
Too late.
No NFL for me forever
This will knock “New Coke” down from the top spot on the list of BIGGEST STUPID & AVOIDABLE MANAGEMENT SCREW-UPS.
“Good riddance to the NFL.
The racism and anti American acts that have been commited will never be forgiven or forgotten.
GTHNFL”
Yes, and since this “sport” is dominated by Blacks, let’s move the whole shebang to Africa, and see just how it is “received!” Replace Goodell with Robert Mugabe, he has the time to be “commissioner” now.
............well, one “inequity” is that 90% of young black male deaths are committed by young black males NOT police.
When Colin and his brothers and their MSM “partners” and assorted feel good Liberals start preaching this “inequity” as vehemently as they do some of their other “inaccuracies” maybe they will gain “a little” traction.
Until then, to hell with the NFL. I quit watching it 20 odd years ago.
If they want to get a few white viewers back, a first step is a hair cut for many of them.
Time to start a new American Football League.
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