AP - ‘”What is necessary is an objective investigation,” Specter
said at a news conference in the Capitol. “And this one has not been
objective.”
The Pennsylvania Republican was unforgiving of his criticism of NFL
commissioner Roger Goodell, saying that Goodell has made “ridiculous”
assertions that wouldn’t fly “in kindergarten.” The Senator said
Goodell was caught in an “apparent conflict of interest” because the
NFL doesn’t want the public to lose confidence in the league’s
integrity.
“They are enormous role models for everybody,” Specter said. “If you
can cheat in the NFL, you can cheat in college, you can cheat in high
school, you can cheat on your grade-school math test. There’s no limit
as to what you can do. I think they owe the public a lot more candor
and a lot more credibility.”‘
A few months ago when this all broke lose I wrote a post about where it was all headed. The link to the full text is here but below I will post some of the latter part of the article.
I Told You So
From my post entitled “Big Brother is Watching” dated February 14th, 2008:
It was Only a Matter of Time
Well, now they have gone farther. First, they used the excuse that
steroids are illegal drugs to begin the investigation, then they said
they were lied to so they needed to go farther, then they said they
needed to protect kids so they went farther (sound familiar? Weapons of
Mass Destruction, Liberating the Iraqi People, Spreading Democracy).
Now, they are going after football. This has nothing to do with the
use of illegal substances, this has nothing to do with perjury, this
has only to do with our “right to honest football games.”
So now we have arrived at the stage where the Federal Government is
preparing to directly intervene in the affairs of a major sports league
in order to ensure our “right to honest football games.” The only
question now is, how will they do it? What are their plans to make sure
football stays honest?
Well, here’s how I think the process is going to go.
Congressional Hearings
This is the logic next step. Congress will call before them Roger
Goddell and company to testify about the integrity of the game, the
extent to which teams are cheating, and possible collusion between
teams and the NFL front office.
They’ll even threaten to end the NFL’s Anti-Trust exemption. Then
what? Will they really break up the NFL? Separate it back into the AFL
and NFL? Destroy the Super Bowl? Crush America’s largest major sport
and a billion dollar generator for the cities lucky enough to land a
Super Bowl?
This will drag out for a while, wasting millions of our dollars, and
distracting from real issues our government was designed to confront.
Commission to Investigate the Integrity of the National Football League
Shortly after these hearing wind down I’m pretty sure that Congress
will “conclude” that it is in the “best interests of the American
people” to establish a commission designed to investigate the integrity
of the game. They will poke and prod and examine everything that every
NFL team does on and off the field.
Maybe they will even have representatives at every team meeting and
every practice just to assure ethics are being maintained. All at the
cost of millions to the taxpaying public.
Bureau of Fairness in Sports
After that it’s only a matter of time before the Federal net gets
cast wider to include other sports. The NBA, NHL, MLB, NASCAR, NFL, all
of them will be subject to the judgment of Federal authorities charged
with ensuring they maintain integrity. That they do not cheat and play
the game the right way.
Additional millions and billions will be spent by the Federal
government to ensure that athletes compete fairly. That they don’t
cheat, that they obey the rules set out to the letter. Who knows, maybe
they’ll even make those rules into laws. Punishable by fine or
imprisonment by the Federal Government.
Maybe they will take over punishment from the leagues so that if you
violate the rules of the game you will be punished by a public entity
rather than a private organization. Maybe they will integrate the major
leagues into the greater apparatus of the Federal Government so they
can watch it more closely.
Conclusion
We let this happen and by the time somebody steps up to stop it the
government’s intervention in major sports will be seen as “necessary.”
After all, they are just trying to protect the children.
The fact that someone who say was have a right!!!!!!!
to “honest football” is ridiculous. That’s not a right I’m particular
concerned with losing. In fact, I’m pretty sure it’s not a “right” most
people care about. Did you stop watching the Patriots after you found
out they cheated? Me neither.
Instead of worrying about our “right to honest football” why doesn’t
Congress worry about our right to a transparent government? Why don’t
they worry about our economy and the various wars in which we’re
embroiled? Why don’t they worry actually trying to do the things for
which governments are established?
…That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among
Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, That
whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it
is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it… (Declaration of
Independence)
I don’t believe the Founders were talking about our “right honest
football.” I don’t think they would be applauding Congress’ actions
now. In fact, I think they may encourage us to enact our final right
described above, before it’s too late.
No doubt many who read this will think I’m being ridiculous. I
wonder, a year ago if someone told you a Senator would be concerning
himself (as a legal matter) with cheating in the NFL you would’ve said
it was ridiculous.
Well, now they are and we must begin to seriously discuss what they will do next.
Conclusion (Part Deux)
And so it has come to pass. This all began benignly enough. We have
charged Congress to protect us, to preserve us, to care for us, and to
tell us what is right and wrong. We have enabled the government to step
in and spend money and time on things like the NFL when half a world
away citizens are sent to die in a sandbox for an unknown cause.
When responsibility is handed over to government and our sense of
entitlement increases the growth of State power is inevitable. We
believe that it is the government’s job to secure our entitlements and
to use any means necessary to do so. We can’t be expected to raise our
own children, handle our own finances, manage our own health, defend
ourselves and our families, or even oversee our own pass times.
And so the government reins in society to raise “good Americans,”
steals our money in order to provide us “Social Security,” regulate our
personal habits to ensure our health, invade foreign nations to protect
us (while leaving our border completely undefended), and investigate
our sports organizations to provide us “honest football.”
Some people are happy that Congress is investigating this situation
because they hate the Patriots. These people mystify me but they also
explain to me how we got here. People are naive enough to believe that
if they hand over their power to government it will act only on their
behalf and never against them. Well, when the popular claim that
“every” NFL team does this is proven true I wonder if they will be
surprised when Congress goes after their team?
This is what happens when “rights” become “entitlements.” Rights are
something to be protected, entitlements are things to be given. But for
everything that is given something must be taken: and in this game what
is taken is freedom.
“We have a right to honest football games,” quoth Senator Arlen Specter (R-PA).
Excellent, now we will have the Feds assuring us “honest” football
games. The government of the United States is now and from hence forth
will be directing resources generated by the labor of Americans
everywhere to ensuring will have “honest football games.”
Never mind that we have a War on Terror costing us billions to fight
with no clearly defined objective, never mind that we have a sluggish
economy which is going to be “stimulated” by a poorly-planned and
useless economic “package.” Never mind that we habeas corpus is being
violated routinely by our own government (an issue we fought a war
over). Never mind that in order to fight “terrorism” Americans are
going to be scrutinized, examined, and approved by Federal officials
and files on each one of us will be collected, maintained, and
proliferated to the various states through the Real ID Act.
Never mind any of that, what’s really important is that Federal authorities guarantee our “right to honest football games.”
A Joke Gone too Far
A couple weeks ago I wrote a few posts on Congress and the President
taking action against the New England Patriots. They did so because of
the dangerous precedent set by letting Congress investigate steroid
usage in baseball and prepare to regulate that sport.
I sincerely hope Arlen Specter does not waste further tax payer
money while he’s at work by reading my blog because shortly thereafter
he actually began the process of intervening in football. He wanted to
know why the NFL had destroyed the video tapes and why the penalties
against the New England Patriots were not harsher (like what? Give the
Eagles a Super Bowl ring?).
Way back when all these steroid scandals were hitting the papers I
was one of the ones who said this was dangerous. When Congress called
before them baseball players to question them about their usage of
drugs I said they had gone too far. Most everyone disagreed. After all
this is what they deserved, those smug millionaires defacing “our”
sport. Most salivated with the thought that their government was going
to prosecute these cheaters.
They dismissed my (and plenty of others) calls for caution as a
ridiculous slippery slope argument. This is as far as they’ll go, they
said, no farther.
It was Only a Matter of Time
Well, now they have gone farther. First, they used the excuse that
steroids are illegal drugs to begin the investigation, then they said
they were lied to so they needed to go farther, then they said they
needed to protect kids so they went farther (sound familiar? Weapons of
Mass Destruction, Liberating the Iraqi People, Spreading Democracy).
Now, they are going after football. This has nothing to do with the
use of illegal substances, this has nothing to do with perjury, this
has only to do with our “right to honest football games.”
So now we have arrived at the stage where the Federal Government is
preparing to directly intervene in the affairs of a major sports league
in order to ensure our “right to honest football games.” The only
question now is, how will they do it? What are their plans to make sure
football stays honest?
Well, here’s how I think the process is going to go.
Congressional Hearings
This is the logic next step. Congress will call before them Roger
Goddell and company to testify about the integrity of the game, the
extent to which teams are cheating, and possible collusion between
teams and the NFL front office.
They’ll even threaten to end the NFL’s Anti-Trust exemption. Then
what? Will they really break up the NFL? Separate it back into the AFL
and NFL? Destroy the Super Bowl? Crush America’s largest major sport
and a billion dollar generator for the cities lucky enough to land a
Super Bowl?
This will drag out for a while, wasting millions of our dollars, and
distracting from real issues our government was designed to confront.
Commission to Investigate the Integrity of the National Football League
Shortly after these hearing wind down I’m pretty sure that Congress
will “conclude” that it is in the “best interests of the American
people” to establish a commission designed to investigate the integrity
of the game. They will poke and prod and examine everything that every
NFL team does on and off the field.
Maybe they will even have representatives at every team meeting and
every practice just to assure ethics are being maintained. All at the
cost of millions to the taxpaying public.
Bureau of Fairness in Sports
After that it’s only a matter of time before the Federal net gets
cast wider to include other sports. The NBA, NHL, MLB, NASCAR, NFL, all
of them will be subject to the judgment of Federal authorities charged
with ensuring they maintain integrity. That they do not cheat and play
the game the right way.
Additional millions and billions will be spent by the Federal
government to ensure that athletes compete fairly. That they don’t
cheat, that they obey the rules set out to the letter. Who knows, maybe
they’ll even make those rules into laws. Punishable by fine or
imprisonment by the Federal Government.
Maybe they will take over punishment from the leagues so that if you
violate the rules of the game you will be punished by a public entity
rather than a private organization. Maybe they will integrate the major
leagues into the greater apparatus of the Federal Government so they
can watch it more closely.
Conclusion
We let this happen and by the time somebody steps up to stop it the
government’s intervention in major sports will be seen as “necessary.”
After all, they are just trying to protect the children.
The fact that someone who say was have a right!!!!!!!
to “honest football” is ridiculous. That’s not a right I’m particular
concerned with losing. In fact, I’m pretty sure it’s not a “right” most
people care about. Did you stop watching the Patriots after you found
out they cheated? Me neither.
Instead of worrying about our “right to honest football” why doesn’t
Congress worry about our right to a transparent government? Why don’t
they worry about our economy and the various wars in which we’re
embroiled? Why don’t they worry actually trying to do the things for
which governments are established?
…That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among
Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, That
whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it
is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it… (Declaration of
Independence)
I don’t believe the Founders were talking about our “right honest
football.” I don’t think they would be applauding Congress’ actions
now. In fact, I think they may encourage us to enact our final right
described above, before it’s too late.
No doubt many who read this will think I’m being ridiculous. I
wonder, a year ago if someone told you a Senator would be concerning
himself (as a legal matter) with cheating in the NFL you would’ve said
it was ridiculous.
Well, now they are and we must begin to seriously discuss what they will do next.
Last week I wrote a couple of posts about how Congress was banning the Patriots from the Super Bowl because they cheated and then that the President was going to support the move in his State of the Union.
Some people took it the wrong way, as Patriot basing, which I freely
admit I am guilty of. However, my point was criticizing Congress and
their meddling in sports. There are more important things for Congress
to be worrying about than cheating in sports: a chaotic war, a sluggish
economy, a declining dollar, and many more.
I was being tongue-in-cheek last week; then I wake up today and find
out that Senator Arlen Specter (R - PA) is calling NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell before him to explain why they destroyed the Patriots’ tapes of the Jets’ signals.
Integrity of the Game
It all started with Congress taking baseball to task over steroids.
That was a move applauded by many observers. They were sick of
suspected cheaters succeeding and claiming for themselves some of the
most sacred titles in the game. When baseball did nothing, the
government stepped in and spent millions of taxpayer dollars
investigating the state of Major League Baseball.
Most supporters were simply glad that these players weren’t going to
get away with cheating. But Congress had a grander vision, they would
ensure that cheaters wouldn’t succeed so that children wouldn’t grow up
thinking cheating is the key to success.
When discussing the matter with the New York Times Senator Spector
said, “The American people are entitled to be sure about the integrity
of the game. It’s analogous to the CIA destruction of tapes. Or any
time you have records destroyed.”
Congress and the Constitution
I would love for anyone to point out where exactly in the
Constitution it outlines Congress’ role in protecting the “integrity of
the game?” Is this really what we want our government doing? They are
all ready discussing making it a requirement that public highschool
athletes be subject to random drug tests, maybe next they will have a
government representative on the sidelines, in the meetings, and in NFL
board rooms to make sure they are doing things with “integrity.” Sounds
almost like what the Soviet Union used to do. Correction, it’s exactly
what the Soviet Union used to do.
This is no place for government. When Congress began investigating
steroids many people, myself included, said this set a dangerous
precedent. Those who wanted to see those mighty and corrupt baseball
players brought low said we were making a ridiculous “slippery slope”
argument.
It appears, that we were all too right. What’s next? What sport will
be left untouched? There will always be accusations of (and actually
instances of) cheating in pro sports so where does Congress stop?
The Bed We Made
As much as I blame Congress for this horrible misuse of my tax
money, I also blame all of those who cheered their actions in the
steroids issue. There is an old saying that I always apply to any new
power we grant to our government officials, “give ‘em an inch, and
they’ll take a mile.”
Now, they are taking the first step of that mile. Who knows what new
regulations they will impose on the NFL but I’m sure some will be
coming. Perhaps there will be a new integrity clause or maybe teams
will have to report to a new government bureau to ensure they are doing
things “the right way.”
Conclusion
I was joking last week, but now, I’m really not surprised. Once we
gave to Congress the responsibility of monitoring pro sports it was
only a matter of time before they stepped in to the NFL. Now, we just
have to hope the damage is limited. That the cost of Congress’ new
venture isn’t too great; that the regulations they hope to impose won’t
impact the game too much.
This is our bed, though, and now we’ve got to lie in it.
I am a FOX sports blogger because I like to talk and have opinions about pretty much anything and everything. I like pretty much any sport but I love football (basketball's a close second). The NFL is the only major sport I watch all season but I watch the others sporadically. My favorite teams are the Dallas Cowboys, Dallas Mavericks, San Antonio Spurs, Chicago Bulls, Detroit Red Wings, Atlanta Braves, and Boston Red Sox.