On the Collective Football Plantation (Why are American professional sports so goddamn SOCIALIST???)

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september 28, 2017
On the Collective Football Plantation

By Gary Gindler

Quasi-socialism is one of the reasons that American football has not spread to the entire planet, as soccer did.

Most professional sports leagues in the U.S. are quasi-socialist enterprises within capitalist corporate America. Outwardly, the NFL looks like a successful corporation, but from within, this corporation has implemented principles of doing business that are alien to America.


Sooner or later, the conflict between the quasi-socialist paradise inside the NFL and its capitalist encirclement was bound to happen. For too long, this smoldering conflict between serf gladiators and free citizens was in the shadows. Sports organizations have managed to introduce as many socialist ideas into the sport as they could, but now this genie has jumped out of the bottle: on Sunday, Sept. 24, players staged an anti-American demarche and did not stand with their hands over their heart for the national anthem.


All NFL teams are formally independent and have their own owners, as it should under capitalism. However, the profits of these supposedly independent organizations depend not so much on the quality of the game as on the collective agreement with advertisers. If there is a superstar on one of the teams who scores a lot, then all the teams become winners. The profit from advertising is distributed evenly between the teams regardless of the quality of the game and the place in the championship. The league champion earns only slightly more than the worst team.


Leveling is practiced in most professional sports leagues. That is, the worst team gets the best league’s players at the end of the season. The worse the team plays, the better its composition becomes. I hope that the cornerstone of Marxism, "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs" is well-known to everyone. Let me remind you that in the Soviet Union state investments were received only by the lagging collective plantations (collective farms). As an argument, it was said that “weak farms should be helped.” Thus, everything happened in the USSR in accordance with Churchill's words that socialism’s “inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery.” Socialist Obama, like the NFL, also adheres to the principle of the uniform “spreading of wealth.”


Another example of the socialist approach in the NFL is wage controls. The minimum salary for all gladiators is set in advance. If the player is drafted into the team, he automatically becomes a millionaire, regardless of the quality of the game. This, as we know, is one of the main features of the socialist economy. What is surprising is the fact that not only the minimum but also the maximum salary in the NFL is also limited. How well a person plays, how many points he brings to his team does not matter. There is a salary ceiling that you will not jump over. Even in the Soviet Union, there was no such restriction – world-class athletes and show business stars earned without any artificial restrictions.


As early as 2014, Trump called for the abolition of the tax-free status of the NFL on the grounds that they were tax fraudsters, and he was right. In 2015, the NFL voluntarily changed its not-for-profit status and became an ordinary American corporation.


Disrespect for the national anthem led to the fact that the ratings of football games fell across the board. Spectators at many stadiums booed the kneeling players and then left the stadiums. Many fans publicly destroyed their football tickets and burned jerseys of once-beloved players. Sponsors began to abandon the players who knelt down during the performance of the anthem. Serf millionaires, who hate America, got a good lesson.


It is clear that initially the protest of NFL players was inspired by political opponents of Trump. But when it came down to the disrespect of the national flag and humiliation of the national anthem, even the Democrats realized that this boomerang would hit hard on return. After all, professional sports do not produce anything materially necessary and exist only at the expense of their long-standing reputation. A remarkable confirmation of this is the loud silence of the Democrats on the issue of the humiliation of the national anthem. They immediately realized that Trump's position in this matter was one hundred percent winning, and they prudently decided to keep quiet.


In fact, in the United States, there are several million patriotic Democrats who decided not to vote in 2016 because they did not trust the candidate for their party, Hillary Clinton. The patriotic position of the Republicans on the issue of the American anthem will inevitably push many patriotic Democrats toward Trump’s camp.


Compare the current situation to that in which the American pole vaulter Sam Kendricks found himself at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics in 2016. During one of his attempts, he heard the U.S. anthem, which was performed to honor another American athlete. Sam stopped right during his takeoff, threw away the pole, turned toward the American flag, put his right hand over his heart, and sang the anthem to the end. By the way, in Rio Sam Kendricks only placed third, but in August 2017 he became a world champion.


As everybody knows, the wave of protests began with football player Colin Kaepernick last year. It was he who first refused to stand during the performance of the national anthem, and instead knelt. Why did this athlete, who prefers T-shirts with Fidel Castro, go for it? Allegedly because of solidarity with the Black Lives Matter. But in fact, he knelt down to impress his new girlfriend, who is known to be a radical left supporter of BLM.


But after the numerous pogroms committed by BLM in various cities across America during the past year, and the total absence of BLM members in areas hit by recent hurricanes (where it was just plain necessary to save the lives of black Americans), it became clear to all that BLM folks are just ordinary bandits who took cover of fighters against racism.


As a result, last Sunday only 12% of all NFL players did not stand up during the performance of the American anthem, and 88% did it. Actually, regarding this, you can make the point that the attempt to turn the sport into a political weapon has failed, as have other leftists' attempts to use non-standard political weapons.


Quasi-socialism is one of the reasons that American football has not spread to the entire planet, as soccer did, in which there are no elements of socialism at all.


That’s why the final championship game of the American football – the Super Bowl – is watched by about 100 million people (about a third of the whole country). And the final game of the World championship in soccer is watched by more than three billion people (about half of the entire planet).

Gladiators from the NFL made a strategic mistake, and now they are trying to defend an indefensible position. In turn, American football fans will soon remind these quasi-socialist millionaires that under capitalism the customer is always right.
 

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the same why they are teaching our college students this crap these days, and this goes for colleges from east coast to west coast and from north and south, it very sick
 

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That's one positive of soccer. free markets, big teams can buy whoever they want, and it creates awesome teams. let the inferior inefficient teams fail and get relegated and replace them. No browns or jets in Europe. No salary cap bs where the QB takes up 50% of total salary and the owners can be cheap.
 

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That's one positive of soccer. free markets, big teams can buy whoever they want, and it creates awesome teams. let the inferior inefficient teams fail and get relegated and replace them. No browns or jets in Europe. No salary cap bs where the QB takes up 50% of total salary and the owners can be cheap.
very true except for, well, the american MLS which has salary cap, limitations on the number of "designated players" (aka guys that make more than league averages), and no promotion/relegation all in the name of parity.

browns or jets in euro soccer drop to the CFL
 

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If you had more free markets in sports then the players would make more $ and have more control as player movement would be more free. No things like "designated franchise player" or "franchise tag" or "rookie contracts". When is the last time you asked a fan what they didn't like about pro sports and they said "Man, the athletes don't make enough money as the owners have all the power thanks to their quasi-socialist bargaining agreements." Not too often.

So nobody really cares that players have less free movement and make less $ or that it isn't more of a meritocracy. So the only way you could fix it is if you had competition, but there can't really be multiple pro sports leagues because of the startup and infrastructure costs associated with that. So you get these CBA's where the players grind out what they can but ultimately the owners have all the leverage.

These restrictive CBA's have worked pretty well for the big sports leagues. As with most things that restrict capitalism to tilt he odds in your favor, it's a nice racket if you can get it.
 

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Also, on the subject of "leveling" that is the owners just being smarter than people give them credit for. I would say leveling is the perfect happy medium where you can have dominant teams like the Warriors, the Cavs, the Patriots but you also allow the mid-lower tier teams to compete.

If you can artificially limit the pay of the best players then they will become the best values, thus their teams have more sustainability to build around them. Then you can market these teams year after year after year.

But with free agency and the draft the fans of the other teams do have a hope that their teams will have upward mobility.

You don't want it to be like baseball before revenue sharing where the Red Sox and Yankees bought 1/2 the league, that isn't really good for the overall product. Even if it does work in European soccer (which as a red blooded American I am unfamiliar with the extent of their economic structure, although I know it skews top heavy)
 

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