To Stand, or Not to Stand
The controversy about professional athletes refusing to stand for the playing of our National Anthem, has reached the highest office in the land, and while I�m not sure that�s the proper venue for the airing out of such a divisive issue, sooner or later it�s going to have to come to a head, and what the ramifications will be, are still not clear at this time.
My feelings are that to respect the flag and the anthem does not mean you respect or condone every slight or injustice that takes place in the nation they represent, but, and especially in such a public venue, you are showing that you do respect the freedoms we enjoy as a people and the ones who have given and even currently risking their lives to ensure that we stay a free and sovereign nation.
In a ceremony that many times involves a military color guard, a fly over or some other symbol of our military, disrespecting the flag, the banner they fought under and the anthem that was played when they were sent off to war, cuts deep in the veteran population.
The players may say they mean no disrespect to veterans, but many veterans are not taking it that way at all, and a short hop through the internet could bear me out.
And if the protests are meant to garner support for the causes they espouse, they seem to have the opposite effect as the latest polls show and that 70 percent of the American public are not happy with the players kneeling or sitting during �The Star-Spangled Banner.�
There are even those who refuse to go to or even watch a game on television, and with the NFL�s recent ratings and attendance dip, this can�t be good news for a sport which has dominated the airwaves for a quarter century or so.
And there is another consideration.
I consider myself a dyed in the wool football fan, I watch the college games on Saturday and dive into my Sunday Ticket channels on Sunday and, work time allowing, watch Sunday Night Football, Monday Night Football, Thursday Night Football and chomping at the bit by the time the weekend rolls around again.
But, even a football junkie like me has to wonder if the NFL has not reached a tipping point, an over saturation, such a ready availability that any novel appeal has been rubbed off and that the broadcaster�s foray into political and social comment is an irritating pill to swallow.
Have we reached a point in America that even a sporting event has to be politicized?
We are bombarded with news reports, news flashes, news alerts, fake news, twenty-four hours a day and in this age of commentators, talking heads and guests seeking to sway opinions one way or another, we face constant sensory overload, constantly broadsided by not just the news but the dissection, coloring and spinning of the facts.
Can we not even watch a sports event, which used to be sacrosanct territory where we could escape the ever-present political blabber and enjoy a couple of hours of excitement and entertainment?
The upshot will probably not be the �killing of the golden goose,� but could well result in the severe wounding as a significant portion of NFL revenue comes from television and if ratings fall enough, since the networks, no matter how sympathetic they may appear, are in it for the money and if they can make more by dropping professional football and broadcasting a tiddlywinks tournament, they will do so.
NFL owners are also in it for the money, and if enough season ticket buyers drop their ticket subscriptions and corporate entities begin to give up their expensive luxury boxes, if TV revenue shrinks and the grandstands are only half full on Sunday, the owners will no longer afford to pay the exorbitant salaries a fiscal domino theory goes into effect, the bloom could fall of the professional football rose in a hurry.
Is this going to happen?
I certainly hope not.
Only time will tell.
What do you think?
Pray for our troops our police and the peace of Jerusalem.
God Bless America
� Charlie Daniels
PLEASE READ BEFORE YOU POST
Feel free to comment on Charlie's soapboxes, but please refrain from profanity and anonymous posts are not allowed, we need a name and you MUST provide a valid email address. If you provide an email address, but leave the name as "Anonymous" we will pick a name for you based on your email address. No one other than website administrators will see your email address, not other posters. If you post without a valid email address, your comment (whether positive or negative) will be deleted. � TeamCDB
Comments
Post a CommentComments
Posted by Iplay
Posted by Susan
Posted by Rhonda
Posted by Plowboy
Posted by Fred
Posted by Shawn
Posted by Ann
Posted by Paul
Posted by Rick
Posted by Darrell
Posted by Jim
Posted by Jon
Posted by Annabell
Posted by Martha
Posted by T
Posted by Buford
Posted by Chuck
Posted by Craig
Posted by Peter
Posted by Ronald
Posted by Mike
Posted by Gail
Posted by Bill
Posted by LANIE
Posted by Ronnie
Posted by Joe
Posted by Jim
Posted by Mark
Posted by Marie
Posted by Paula
Posted by Tia
Posted by T. R. Post
Posted by Dan
Posted by Chuck
Posted by Roger
Posted by chris
Posted by Tom
Posted by Todd
Posted by Jesse
Posted by Mari
Posted by Craig
Posted by jack