FOOTBALL & FAKE PATRIOTISM

Submitted by Mike Krieger via Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

When the Jets paused to honor soldiers of the New Jersey Army National Guard at home games during the past four years, it was more than a heartfelt salute to the military — it was also worth a good stack of taxpayer money, records show.

 

The Department of Defense and the Jersey Guard paid the Jets a total of $377,000 from 2011 to 2014 for the salutes and other advertising, according to federal contracts. Overall, the Defense Department has paid 14 NFL teams $5.4 million during that time, of which $5.3 million was paid by the National Guard to 11 teams under similar contracts.

 

The agreement includes the Hometown Hero segment, in which the Jets feature a soldier or two on the big screen, announce their names and ask the crowd to thank them for their service. The soldiers and three friends also get seats in the Coaches Club for the game.

 

– From the New Jersey Star Ledger article: Jets’ Salutes Honor N.J. National Guard but Cost Taxpayer

Like everything else in America, faux patriotism is also for sale.

I’ve written previously about how uncomfortable the superficial “honor the troops” displays at sporting events makes me feel. In the post, “Stop Thanking Me for My Service” – Former U.S. Army Ranger Blasts American Foreign Policy and The Corporate State, I noted:

I have to admit, whenever I find myself in the midst of a large public gathering (which fortunately isn’t that often), and the token veteran or two is called out in front of the masses to “honor” I immediately begin to cringe as a result of a massive internal conflict. On the one hand, I recognize that the veteran(s) being honored is most likely a decent human being. Either poor or extraordinarily brainwashed, the man or woman paraded in front of the crowd is nothing more than a pawn. Even if their spouse hasn’t left them; even if whatever conflict they were involved in didn’t result in a permanent disability or post traumatic stress disorder, this person has been used and abused, and thirty seconds of cheering in between ravenous bites out of a footlong hotdog from a drunk and apathetic crowd isn’t going to change that. I don’t harbor negative sentiments toward the veteran.

 

On the other hand, the entire spectacle makes me sick. I refuse to participate in the superficial charade for many reasons, but the primary one is that I don’t want to play any part in the crowd’s insatiable imbecility. It’s the stupidity and ignorance of the masses that the corporate-state preys upon, and that’s precisely what’s on full display at these tired and phony imperialist celebrations.

Of course, it’s not just me that finds these scenes hard to stomach. Many troops have come forward and expressed the exact same sentiment. For example, as Rory Fanning, who served in Afghanistan with the 2nd Army Ranger Battalion noted:

These two ceremonies seemed to catch a particular mood (reflected in so many similar, if more up-to-date versions of the same). They might have benefited from a little “awareness raising” when it came to what the American military has actually been doing these last years, not to say decades, beyond our borders. They certainly summed up much of the frustration I was feeling with the Concert for Valor. Plenty of thank yous, for sure, but no history when it came to what the thanks were being offered for in, say, Iraq or Afghanistan, no statistics on taxpayer dollars spent or where they went, or on innocent lives lost and why.

 

Will the “Concert for Valor” mention the trillions of dollars rung up terrorizing Muslim countries for oil, the ratcheting up of the police and surveillance state in this country since 9/11, the hundreds of thousands of lives lost thanks to the wars of George W. Bush and Barack Obama? Is anyone going to dedicate a song to Chelsea Manning, or John Kiriakou, or Edward Snowden – two of them languishing in prison and one in exile — for their service to the American people? Will the Concert for Valor raise anyone’s awareness when it comes to the fact that, to this day, veterans lack proper medical attention, particularly for mental health issues, or that there is a veteran suicide every 80 minutes in this country? Let’s hope they find time in between drum solos, but myself, I’m not counting on it.

 

We use the term hero in part because it makes us feel good and in part because it shuts soldiers up (which, believe me, makes the rest of us feel better). Labeled as a hero, it’s also hard to think twice about putting your weapons down. Thank yous to heroes discourage dissent, which is one reason military bureaucrats feed off the term.

Very well said, and now we learn that these spectacles are often even more phony than originally suspected. NFL teams are being paid millions of dollars to host them. From the New Jersey Star Ledger:

TRENTON — When the Jets paused to honor soldiers of the New Jersey Army National Guard at home games during the past four years, it was more than a heartfelt salute to the military — it was also worth a good stack of taxpayer money, records show.

 

The Department of Defense and the Jersey Guard paid the Jets a total of $377,000 from 2011 to 2014 for the salutes and other advertising, according to federal contracts. Overall, the Defense Department has paid 14 NFL teams $5.4 million during that time, of which $5.3 million was paid by the National Guard to 11 teams under similar contracts.

 

The agreement includes the Hometown Hero segment, in which the Jets feature a soldier or two on the big screen, announce their names and ask the crowd to thank them for their service. The soldiers and three friends also get seats in the Coaches Club for the game.

 

Aside from the Hometown Heroes segment, the agreements also included advertising and marketing services, including a kickoff video message from the Guard, digital advertising on stadium screens, online advertising and meeting space for a meeting or events.

 

Flake said there was nothing wrong with the Guard using football games to recruit soldiers. The problem, he said, was spending taxpayer money on a program that, on its face, appeared to be a generous gesture by a football team.

The Daily News also covered this story, with a choice line from one of the most authoritarian members of Congress, Peter King. A man so completely insane, he makes neocons blush. He defended the spending of taxpayer money on superficial, faux patriotism:

Rep. Pete King (R-L.I.) also said “it’s money well spent.”

 

“People watching the NFL are generally inclined to be pro-military,” King told The News. “As far as the Jets, in addition to whatever money they’ve gotten from the (Department of Defense), I do know they are very actively engaged with veterans. The Jets do far more on balance than they get paid for.”

Football and fake patriotism. The new American Dream.

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14 Comments
robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
May 11, 2015 9:35 pm

Just dang. Money that should be used by the VA to help Vets goes to NFL teams; sort of patriotic prostitution propaganda. MFR: Vets are about 0.1% of the American population; an Elite that suffer hardships and give their blood instead of constantly rob you blind. .

bb
bb
May 11, 2015 10:10 pm

I used to love professional sports especially football. Now I detest , loathe and hate fucking sports. Maybe I just grew up.

kokoda
kokoda
May 11, 2015 10:14 pm

jr….your message is obtuse, especially at the end.

bb
bb
May 12, 2015 12:49 am

What does obtuse mean? Especially at the end?

Winston
Winston
May 12, 2015 5:46 am

Vietnam almost put the country into civil war after 4 years. How in the fucking world can these wars go on for almost 14 years? Corporate brainwashing, Media propaganda. Of all the things I hate about the MSM “thank you for your service” has got to be the biggest one.

I am a veteran and served for 6 years. Big deal. Did I do it for my country. No not really. I did it to escape Philadelphia and poverty. A fucked up city with not alot going for it. (that was in the early 80s obviously has not gotten better LOL)

I did it for my wife, for my kids, maybe for my parents, so they would think I was not a total fuck-up. The last reason I did it for was “my country”. All this faux patriotism really makes me ill. At least I was in the “cold war” poking holes in the ocean. I was doing more to “protect our freedom” than killing brown people in the desert.

I would speculate given my reason for joining, when this country did have jobs and given today’s sorry state of choices, most join for economic reasons. If you don’t want to work at McDonald’s, or Best Buy. Go into crushing debt for a degree, what choice do you have to get a descent check to start a family.

I know there are still opportunities, but a lot less than 30 years ago. “thank you for your service” is just another propaganda line like “they hate us for our freedom” oh that makes me really laugh!!! I always think about that line when TSA wants to feel my junk…

Southern Sage
Southern Sage
May 12, 2015 7:11 am

Hey, I am a veteran too. USMC. I was lucky in that there was no war on at the time. Proud and happy to have served, but so what? it is a normal duty of citizenship. I deserve no thanks for my service. I got the GI Bill, so I figure I am even with the U.S. people.
Peter King? Thank God somebody mentioned this guy. I stand in awe of him. He is – beyond any doubt – the most completely stupid person on earth. All hail Peter King!

harry p.
harry p.
May 12, 2015 8:24 am

bb,
well said, pro sports have literally turned into the circuses that kept the romans entertained as their lives were destroyed by their govt.
i too find little to enjoy in regards to the large aports events and think they mostly contribute to the hivemind/borg mentality.

John Coster
John Coster
May 12, 2015 8:35 am

Football is a game I used to be pretty good at and still love to watch. NFL Patriotic? What a total crock of shit. These fascist lard assed bureaucrats should be tarred and feathered by some real American patriots. Well, if you’ve guessed that I might be slightly prejudiced in favor of a certain New England football team and its quarterback, you’re right. Deflate gate! The real deflated balls are those of idiots who so unjustly censored my team and its quarterback. From what I read (before I got too pissed off to continue reading) the “reasoning” behind the Brady suspension etc. was that the morons on the NFL tribunal had determined that it was more “probable” than not that Brady had had some hand in manipulating the ball pressure. This is so typical of the profoundly UNPATRIOTIC behavior of these whored out clowns. While they’re marching around waving flags and indulging in militaristic spectacles that Hitler would envy, they are trashing one of America’s bedrock principles> All are innocent till PROVEN guilty. The NFL is allowing itself to become another branch of the Security State propaganda machine, an enforcer of the very UNAMERICAN denigration of individual freedom. This Kafkaesque absurdity deserves the contempt of everybody. It is an insult to the basic principles the United States was founded on, an indication of how far many of our public institutions have sunk. The NFL is a disgrace.

Maggie
Maggie
May 12, 2015 9:05 am

I had to march in a parade in dress blues one Veterans Day, holding my fhree foot section of one of those enormous flags on my left shoulder. I now have terrible pain in that shoulder… I’m going to complain to the VA about that. Do you have any idea how HEAVY that flag is, held aloft?

Well, neither do I, but it can be figured out. Anyway. by the end of the 2.5 mile parade, most of us carriers were hobbling.

So, yes… I’m against such displays.

Rife
Rife
May 12, 2015 10:58 am

someone please define patriotism. Is it “my country, right or wrong”? Is it a patriots duty to criticize if he believes our gov’t is wrong? Do you have to support all present and future wars? Were the youth who protested against the illegal, evil (got reparations?) war, bringing it to a earlier end and saving many American lives and those of their victims, patriots or traitors?
Or is it something that you just have to faith in, like religion, which if you thought about too much, you may quit believing…..?

Rise Up
Rise Up
May 12, 2015 11:56 am

An acquaintance I have was a special forces “operator” in Iraq and served a couple of tours with lots of medals awarded to him. He suffered some serious wounds including nearly losing his arm at the shoulder. His brother was killed in action there. He told me within a year after returning to civilian life he figured things out that he was only supporting the MIC vs. any patriotic claims he was told when he enlisted. He’s pretty bitter about it all now.

flash
flash
May 12, 2015 12:38 pm

pledge it.

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yahsure
yahsure
May 12, 2015 1:38 pm

The whole RaRa thing for the military just makes me sick now.
I keep wondering how many will actually remember their oath when the SHTF.

Lysander
Lysander
May 12, 2015 7:47 pm

yahsure said:
“The whole RaRa thing for the military just makes me sick now.
I keep wondering how many will actually remember their oath when the SHTF.”

Yeah, I’m sorta curious about that myself. The “Oath Keepers”, who are invisible in Boston apparently, and the military folks who swore an oath will be put to task. My dad served over 32 years in the Army, as I’ve mentioned before, and one thing he was good at was the military culture mindset. Follow orders…Fuck politics…America right or wrong. I’m NOT mocking him, this is what kept him and millions of other men going in the wars. It’s a powerful mindset, people.

What’s going to happen in FUSA when things get sporty? Your guess is as good as mine, but one thing I will tell you…..don’t put any stock in any ‘Oath Keeper’ bullshit. That sounds all kool and the gang right now, but when the metal meets the meat, I’m convinced those guys will simply obey any orders to save their families and their own asses.