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Lamentations of a Washington Redskins Fan

With all the talk about Rush Limbaugh’s failed bid to invest in the NFL’s St. Louis Rams, I thought I ought to throw my two cents in. That Limbaugh was shafted again where the NFL was concerned (remember his short stint on ESPN?) is a matter of the public record, so I’m not going to comment much further on that. Instead, I’d like to comment on the exclusive company Mr. Limbaugh attempted to join, that of Professional Sports Team Ownership. In the United States and Canada, there are 137 major-league professional sports teams (32 in the National Football League; 30, each, in the National Basketball Association, the National Hockey League, and Major League Baseball; and 15 in Major League Soccer. The majority of those teams (I don’t know the exact percentages) are sole proprietorships or partnerships, often family owned. Most of the rest are owned by a small consortium of owners (of which Limbaugh was to be a part), a few are owned by outside corporations (The Tribune Company (which owns the Chicago Tribune, the LA Times, and other newspapers) currently owns MLB’s Chicago Cubs, though the team is being sold). And a small number (like the Green Bay Packers) are publicly-traded corporations. It is the individuals and small groups I’d like to say something about today.

I admit to having a prejudice in this case. In fact, it may even rise to the level of bigotry. I loathe sports owners. On the surface, that sounds like an odd thing coming from a solid conservative, but it’s not a case of simply being against management and pro labor. My prejudice also extends to the players’ unions and their bosses. Sports owners have a deserved reputation for being everything the Left hates about business executives. They are usually greedy, anything-for-a-buck, exploit-the-labor-and-the-customer businessmen when it comes to their teams, even if it doesn’t reflect in their other business dealings. Interestingly, many of these businessmen either have traditionally left-wing sources of income (media conglomerates (Former Atlanta Braves owner Ted Turner, the Tribune Company, etc.) , trial lawyers (Baltimore Orioles owner Peter Angelos), etc) or support left-wing causes (The owner of the Atlanta Falcons, Arthur Blank, is a big supporter of Planned Parenthood).

Team owners often get a pass from city leadership because of the revenues sports teams bring to cities and their popularity among local voters. Cities will often fund the building of stadiums and arenas to keep teams around, and owners have been known to extort concessions from cities under threat of moving to another area. Some, including the late Robert Irsay, owner of the Baltimore/Indianapolis Colts get the concessions and move anyway (in Irsay’s case, in the middle of the night without even getting approval from the league). Others know that their best chance for revenues is in their current market, but they dress up the team in a big, modern stadium; market it like it’s going out of style; and put a poor product on the field. 

Among the worst of the lot is Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder. Snyder has not – and likely will not, knowing he will be lynched if he does – threatened to move the Redskins out of the DC area. Having said that, Snyder has done some things recently that have been almost as bad. The national sports media has focused on Snyder’s total mismanagement of the team on the field. He is infamous for spending many times market value for sub-par or past-their-prime big-name players. Yes, there have been some rare gems like the late Sean Taylor, LaRon Landry, Chris Horton, London Fletcher, Chris Cooley, and, maybe, Brian Orakpo, but the majority of the players Snyder has signed have been faded stars or anonymous players used to fill anonymous positions (Kicker, Punter, Offensive Line, etc.). His utter neglect of the Offensive Line has been the direct cause of the team’s sometimes mediocre, sometimes putrid performance on the field. But all of that is what the national fan knows.

What local fans in the DC area see is even worse. Aside from wrecking what had once been a premier NFL franchise, Dan Snyder has gone out of his way to alienate Redskin fans. To make a few extra ticket-sale dollars, he has sold tickets to brokers (who pay a premium). Those brokers, in turn, sell the tickets to visiting team fans (rather than people sitting on the legendary Redskins Waiting List) and the result is a home stadium half full with hostile fans. Season-ticket holders who have been unable (or unwilling) to renew because the prices are too high ($175 per ticket per game in the lower bowl) have been sued for breaching their 5-year commitment (cell phone companies just make you pay for the phone). And now his team is playing as poorly as they ever have, and he’s losing customers by the truckload. Is that the sort of company that Rush Limbaugh would like to join?

I am a fan of the Washington Redskins. I have been for almost 30 years. But rooting for Dan Snyder’s Redskins is analogous to living in Barack Obama’s America. My like of my team, like my love of my country, doesn’t diminish just because an idiot is in charge. I can only await the day when there will be a change at the top.

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Still More Random Bits and Pieces

How is it that the media and the entertainment world can support and defend people like Michael Jackson and Roman Polanski who have done lewd and lascivious things with young children, but when a Catholic priest is accused of having done the same thing 50 years ago, it is used as evidence that the entire Catholic Church is full of demented pedophiles from the Pope right down to yours truly?

Relating to the above, one of the priests at my church recently made the point that the abuse of a good does not diminish the good itself. The Catholic Church – so Catholics believe – is the Church established by God. Even so, humans manage the day-to-day operations of God’s One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic Church. Because humans belong to and manage the Church, and because all humans are inherently flawed, and it takes a lot of effort to work toward perfection, some people will fall, and some of them will fall hard. None of that changes the fact that the Catholic Church is God’s true church, and, therefore, inherently good.

There’s a column in Town Hall today about another abuse by the Anti-Christian Liberties Union. Apparently the ACLU has filed suit on behalf of one individual demanding that a cross that had originally been erected on private land, which land is now public, be removed. Even a transfer of an acre of the land back to private hands – in exchange for five times that amount going back to the government – isn’t enough. The ACLU wants the Government to take back the land and destroy the monument. My take: How is it that people offended by the mention of God take precedence over people offended by the “offence” caused by the mention of God? If God offends you, you need to get your own house in order before you come knocking on my door.

Does the sports media bug you as much as it does me? Does it irritate you that the New York Yankees, a team that hasn’t won the World Series since 2000 are still covered more on ESPN than local teams are covered by their local media? Do you find it funny that the Miami Hurricanes beat two good-but-not-great teams (neither ranked higher than 15th) and jumped from un-ranked to 20th to 9th in two weeks (only to lose decisively to Virginia Tech last week)? Do you notice that media darling Tony Romo has no post-season wins on his résumé and has been playing worse than Jason Campbell (and that’s saying something) this year? Do you even realize that Pittsburgh Penguin forward Sidney Crosby, often hailed as the best player, by far, in the NHL isn’t even the best player on his team? And that if Alexander Ovechkin had Evgeni Malkin on his line, Ovechkin, not Crosby, would have his name on the Stanley Cup? And that almost happened anyway last year? It’s not that the Yankees, the Hurricanes, or Crosby are not very good at what they do (Romo is a separate case), it’s just that the media has tried from day one to make you think they are far better than they actually are. That, by the way, is what is meant by overrated.

Do you notice how disagreement or disparagement of a black man is almost always termed racism? I know I’ve harped on this before, but this is more than just my “it’s racism whenever bad things happen to black people” argument. It’s not just President Obama, either. Go back through the archives and look at any time in the last 20 years when a major black figure has been disagreed with, even mildly. Like when Rush Limbaugh called Donavan McNabb “overrated.” Or during the Michael Jackson trial. Or when the Duke Rape Case started to crumble because it lacked an actual crime having been committed. Such pronouncements used to be limited to the likes of Al Sharpton or Jesse Jackson. Now it’s the norm, particularly where the President is involved.

Conservatives are at a great disadvantage when it comes to enacting their agenda. Since the primary goal of the conservative is to reduce the size of government, accomplishing that goal usually means having to try to eliminate some government agency, regulation, or entitlement. Government agencies, regulations, and entitlements all defy the adage that it is easier to destroy than create. Once the Left creates some new agency, regulation, or entitlement, getting rid of it will be next to impossible, because all the people who rely on that new agency, regulation or entitlement will have to be accounted for somehow. For example, once Social Security was created, people began to rely on it. Now that millions rely on it, scrapping it completely will mean millions of people not receiving income they expected. The same will be true for Obamacare. The idea that it will be easy to get rid of if it is enacted is naïve, at best, particularly once it succeeds in destroying the competition (private insurance companies). The transition from public back to private will be painful in the best possible scenario. On the other hand, a stroke of the pen is all that is needed to take your rights away “for the common good.”

It’s truly amazing how many people who call themselves “liberals” fail to understand the Constitution, religion, or true liberalism. Tragically, we have laws in this country designed to punish churches for speaking out against the established order. I’m speaking of the provision of the tax code that can be used to remove a church’s non-taxable status if that church preaches politics from the pulpit. Rarely is that provision invoked when the politics is to the Left, such as having then-Senator Obama give a campaign speech at a church, or having Jeremiah Wright give one of his “I hate America” sermons. But we always hear it when a church speaks out against homosexuality, abortion, euthanasia, embryonic stem-cell research, etc. The lack of understanding is three-fold: 1. These issues are first, and foremost, moral issues, long before they are political. Churches have an obligation to teach correctly on moral issues, and those that don’t risk condemning their congregations to hell. (If your church teaches that abortion is OK, and you have an abortion on that premise, using “they said it was OK” as an excuse probably won’t fly.) 2. Freedom of speech is one of the most important in our Constitution, and the abridgement of speech that is politically incorrect by sending tax goons after the speaker flies in the face of the letter and spirit of that law. 3. The freedom of religion clauses in the First Amendment were designed to protect churches from the government, not the other way around. There was never any intent to keep the devoutly religious from having a say in government. Neither was the intent to make the government officially atheist, particularly to satisfy the sensibilities of some small minority of the population. The constitution was written by and for a people guided by Christian moral principles, even if some didn’t specifically consider Jesus Christ their own personal savior. The intent was to avoid what was happening in England (and why many of the colonists came here in the first place) at the time, namely the persecution of churches outside the Church of England (Catholics and Puritans chief among them). The only way to do that is to let religion have a voice in government and not to stamp it out. To see what happens when God is stamped out of Government, look at Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, and Communist <insert country here>.

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Update on James Pouillon's Story: There are no updates

I did a little internet search this morning in an attempt to prove a point. And I succeeded. I searched the name James Pouillon to see if any new information had come out on his story. Pouillon, if you don’t recall, was the anti-abortion activist who was killed a few weeks ago with little media fanfare. I posted my rant on the topic on this blog on 17 September. In the search I did, you had to go four pages deep to find anything more recent than that. What I did notice this time – and missed last time because I didn’t search on his name – was that his son, James M., apparently has been quoted as saying that the elder Pouillon “didn’t care about abortion” but was just a misogynist who “wanted to scream at women.” Of course, this allegation got a fair amount of play in smaller (probably fringe Left) publications and made up about a fifth of my search results.  Interestingly such stories didn’t seem to be in the big media, so one has to wonder how much credibility it has.

Sticking with his son’s alleged comments for a moment, speaking ill of the deceased is generally in bad taste, since the deceased cannot defend themselves. Publicly speaking ill of a very recently deceased close family member who died violently crosses the bounds of common decency and is indicative of other issues. What kind of man would accuse his own father – who had been gunned down for holding a sign less than a week earlier – of any sort of bad behavior – true or not – in the media?! Pretending that it’s true, for a moment, it doesn’t change the fact that the elder Pouillon was shot dead and that the murderer is quoted as saying he didn’t like the sign Pouillon was holding. It also doesn’t change the fact that Pouillon was simply holding the sign. There is no indication he was harassing anyone. It also doesn’t change the fact that this story has been essentially buried since 12 September, and almost completely unreported in the media since 17 September.
 
There's still very little news on the prosecution of Harlan James Drake.  Aside from the younger Pouillon's classless interviews, there have been no retrospectives on the elder Pouillon's life.  There has, of course, been no talk about any violent fringe on the Left side of the abortion debate or how such fringe is a lot closer to the "mainstream" pro-abortionists than they would like you to believe (I'm not saying any of that is true, but if you believe the media, it is the gospel truth about the anti-abortion fringe.)  The best the media does with the murder of an anti-abortion activist is report as little as possible about the story to start with, then bury it once the initial wave stops, only bringing it back to the surface for a moment when someone comes forward to disparage the victim.
 
"Journalistic integrity" my foot.
 
HJG
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