Why I'm Boycotting the National Basketball Association (NBA)

The National Basketball Association had its opening night last night. For most this might not be a big deal, but to me it is. I've decided to stop watching NBA basketball games on TV. I'm boycotting. This goes along with other changes I've gone through in my later years such as boycotting the Presidential election and the representative political system, growing my hair long and refusing to think like the bastards want us to think.

I've changed and I continue to change, I think for the better.

The reason for my boycott? Greed. The money involved in the NBA reads like a who's who of top Corporate and Banking CEOs. No other "profession" that I can think of pays all of it's employees up and down the line the exorbitant salaries the NBA pays its players, coaches, and managers. Except their counterparts on Wall Street. The National Football League (NFL), Major League Baseball (MLB) and the National Hockey League (NHL) are right behind.

The salaries of the top players are now in the 20-40 million plus per year range, not counting endorsements which brings some to the 50-80 million per year range. Within a few years there will be players "earning" $100 million per year. The first NBA player billionaire was/is Michael Jordan, there will be many more behind him. The NBA is a perfect example of a global corporation raking in the money and wealth in a predatory capitalism system that hurts way more people than it helps. The NBA is a poster child for wealth inequality in this country and the world.

I can no longer in good conscience watch their games. Not only that, I've lost any desire to watch.

This is a big deal to me because I've been an avid basketball fan and player since I was about eight years old. I used to watch Pete Maravich, Wilt Chamberlain, Bill Russell, Jerry West, all the old time greats on TV starting in black and white on into color TV. I practiced and practiced, and grew and grew, until I became pretty good myself. I made All State my senior year in high school and went to a small college on a full scholarship but ran into some personal problems and ended up joining the Navy at the end of my first year. Back then we could join for two years, which I did, and then went right back to college and playing basketball. I ended up becoming a small college All American and a free agent for the Golden State Warriors. I came close to my dream of playing in the NBA. I didn't make it but played five years professionally in Germany in the Bundesliga then came back to the states and played competitively until I was almost fifty.

So ya, I've been a Basketball Jones man. I've been in gyms on three continents, 10 countries and about thirty states.

But I'll no longer patronize the NBA because it is part of the predatory capitalism system causing tremendous wealth inequality and the accompanying poverty around the world. It is perpetuating and institutionalizing a level of wealth inequality that has become unbelievable. Contracts in the range of 5 -10 million per year are considered "normal" for bench players. It's insidious because it causes children and teenagers to think that's normal. It isn't fucking normal. It's immoral.

It is part of the .01, controlled by the .01 percent and the side of the Class War that you and I aren't on. It is the opposition in the Class War, the real revolution that we must wage against predatory global capitalism. It is a global corporation that benefits from global U.S. imperialism and in effect contributes to genocide and war. It's players are nothing more than extremely highly paid gladiators for the ruling elite and its upper middle class to upper class apparatus. Do I blame the players? Like I blame the hedge fund managers, the stockbrokers, the corporate suits, ya I blame them. We can't go thru history saying no one except the top dude or dudess was to blame. Fuck it, you want to be that greedy, you're part of the problem.

You want to be a billionaire, Fuck You.

Maybe the NBA hasn't really changed that much, it's just the same progression this capitalist system has pushed everything everywhere.

But evidently I've changed because I can't stand to watch a NBA game now. I don't know how long I can do this, some will understand that, some won't. But I do know I FEEL differently. I can't rail on about wealth inequality, predatory capitalism, imperialism, corporatocracy, oligarchy, the 99%, etc., without including sports and entertainment and the NBA tops the list in my book.

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Alphalop's picture

I completely stopped watching or supporting pro sports franchises about 2007 or so and after the initial withdraw period ended I find I don't miss it at all.

The whole thing was getting a bit too cult like for me to be comfortable with anyway, the way some sports fans would so immerse themselves in the identity of "their" team was kinda sad and creepy to watch.

What really started the ball rolling for me was listening to the professional baseball players during their first strike whine about how much they were getting paid to play a game when I was watching my friends and family members destroying their bodies and health in the trades for pennies...

Tack on the way they con taxpayers into paying for their giant stadiums with special accommodations for the elites and my disgust was pretty much complete.

And that is just the tip of the iceberg sized list of reasons to not support the professional sports industries.

If you really wanna watch a game go catch an amateur one, or even better actually go and find some people to play it with rather than enjoy it vicariously.

The plays might not be as 'Big' but the spirit of the game will be more pure as will be the joy of those participating in it.

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"I used to vote Republican & Democrat, I also used to shit my pants. Eventually I got smart enough to stop doing both things." -Me

Big Al's picture

My jump shot is measured by sheets of paper I can jump over, about 5 sheets now. The militarization and corporatization of professional sports has sealed the deal for me. It's become so disgusting I can't enjoy watching anymore.
You're right, participate or go watch the kids play.

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Pricknick's picture

are just the modern day equivalent of the gladiator games. The only difference is that the poor who surround todays coliseums can't afford to get in to watch the lions get eaten by the saints.

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Regardless of the path in life I chose, I realize it's always forward, never straight.

Lily O Lady's picture

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"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"

lotlizard's picture

https://infogalactic.com/info/Paper_Lion

The Wall Street Journal called the book the "best book ever written about football." … The Saturday Review said, "[Author George] Plimpton captures with absolute fidelity how the average fan might feel given the opportunity to try out for a professional football team."

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when it was first published, and I saw Pete Gent in some interviews. Among the themes it contained, I remember racism, fixing the games, police giving special treatment to players and coaches, drugs, homophobia...
I haven't watched a professional football game since, quit watching basketball back in the 80's, and pretty much focused on equestrian sports.
Well, in the Olympics held in the US, I recall the Mexican jumping team got caught jumping their horses over rails with nails in them, to "encourage" the horses to snap up those knees. In that same Games, an American, some super rich guy, was caught up in a scandal where he had paid to have a horse killed for the insurance policy. The guy who actually killed the horse testified.
I do not watch any sport, including high school sports.

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

Thanks Big Al. You reminded me of Chomsky from a long time ago, made me think. Here he is quoted on alternet from the Chomsky Reader, my bold and emphasis:

QUESTION: You've written about the way that professional ideologists and the mandarins obfuscate reality. And you have spoken -- in some places you call it a "Cartesian common sense" -- of the commonsense capacities of people. Indeed, you place a significant emphasis on this common sense when you reveal the ideological aspects of arguments, especially in contemporary social science. What do you mean by common sense? What does it mean in a society like ours? For example, you've written that within a highly competitive, fragmented society, it's very difficult for people to become aware of what their interests are. If you are not able to participate in the political system in meaningful ways, if you are reduced to the role of a passive spectator, then what kind of knowledge do you have? How can common sense emerge in this context?

CHOMSKY: Well, let me give an example. When I'm driving, I sometimes turn on the radio and I find very often that what I'm listening to is a discussion of sports. These are telephone conversations. People call in and have long and intricate discussions, and it's plain that quite a high degree of thought and analysis is going into that. People know a tremendous amount. They know all sorts of complicated details and enter into far-reaching discussion about whether the coach made the right decision yesterday and so on. These are ordinary people, not professionals, who are applying their intelligence and analytic skills in these areas and accumulating quite a lot of knowledge and, for all I know, understanding. On the other hand, when I hear people talk about, say, international affairs or domestic problems, it's at a level of superficiality that's beyond belief.

become aware
become aware
become aware
I sense a theme

Peace

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Big Al's picture

I tend to not give most people a pass anymore for not understanding what's going on in the world. They can spend hours on their Iphones and the internet looking at pictures of the Kardashians and reading about sports, but their eyes glaze over when you tell them their government is killing innocent children. It's like "la la la la la I can't hear you!", they don't want to know, they don't want to discuss it, they don't want to take any responsibility in it.

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Mark from Queens's picture

devotes a chapter to the negative impact of Nike's Michael Jordan ad campaign of "Just Do It." I especially found it convincing and incisive, because it is a treatise on the 80's being ground zero for the narcissism, greed, Get-Rich-Quick schemes, vapid consumerism, prestige, power and self-aggrandizement that still plagues us today (something I firmly believe, and equate to why I also loathe so much of most of the music from then).

An excerpt from the inside binder: "Today's mindless and hyper narcissism, Sirota argues, first became the norm when an 80's generation weaned on Rambo one-liners and "Just Do It" exhortation embraced a new religion - with comic books, cartoons, videogames, and other even children's toys serving as the key instruments of cultural indoctrination."

He really eviscerates Jordan, who could have made enormous impact on underprivileged and besieged young minorities, but instead had the opposite impact, as his deification instilled materialism, hero/money worship, and self-important fantasy.

“You can’t explain much in 60 seconds, but when you show Michael Jordan, you don’t have to,” Nike CEO Phil Knight once said, explaining why his company spends three times as much on marketing its heroes as it does on basic capital expenditures. “People already know a lot about him. It’s that simple.”

Whereas we used to merely get our basketball entertainment from the actual Michael Jordan, we now also get our money advice from the Michael Jordans on CNBC and our ideological marching orders from pundit Michael Jordans on MSNBC and Fox News. For everything else, we rely on one of the two Chicagoans to rival Jordan for individual brand dominance: Oprah.

The other Chicagoan, of course, is President Barack Obama–the reigning MVP of a politics and government that was first Jordanized in the 1980s.

Though the grassroots tumult of the 1960s strengthened the notion of collective “people power,” the Jordanization of 1980s society helped permanently solidify America’s political faith in the so-called Great Man Theory of History–i.e., that history is really the story of a few larger-than-life Michael Jordans (or Ronald Reagans, George W. Bushes or Barack Obamas), not mass movements of workmanlike Horace Grants (or local activists). (Grant played third fiddle to teammates Jordan and Scottie Pippen.)

Sirota includes this bit from Vanity Fair writer David Kamp, from an article called "Rethinking the American Dream."

But it was in the 80s that the American Dream began to take on hyperbolic connotations, to be conflated with extreme success: wealth, basically. The representative TV families, whether benignly genteel (the Huxtables on The Cosby Show) or soap-opera bonkers (the Carringtons on Dynasty), were undeniably rich. “Who says you can’t have it all?” went the jingle in a ubiquitous beer commercial from the era, which only got more alarming as it went on to ask, “Who says you can’t have the world without losing your soul?”

Bill Russell would have been an oddity in the 80's.

Right on, Al and everyone here. We've all been heavily indoctrinated into the world of big-time professional sports worship. It is a tough one. I also have many childhood memories tied up inextricably to the baseball diamonds of my youth, in which I played organized ball from age 5 to 18, an All-League shortstop in my junior year of high school. I still have wondrous dreams about running a post pattern, then a flag pattern, and catching those two passes for touchdowns on my JV football team's first win in 3 years. The smell of the autumn grass, the butterflies in the stomach coming off the school bus at the opposing team's field, the bulky padding you never really got used to and the foreboding sense that you could always get really hurt - that all comes back very real. I cherish all these memories, and how central it was to my family life, as we spent all summer at the baseball fields together. At home as a kid watching with Dad was great too.

But I too have given up watching and following, to such an extent that it doesn't even register anymore of what sports are on with each passing seasons, whether it's the start of it or in the playoff mode. I hardly care anymore when I spend the whole day out on a Sunday, ever pausing once to peek in on a game. This for a guy who bought season tickets for the Jets for almost 20 years. My loyalty to them eroded commensurate to my political awakening. The military flyovers, the constant ever present RW jingoism and bigotry in the stands, the growing and enveloping fascist alignment with the military and police. Fuck these people, I thought; they're not my friends. Finding out owner Woody Johnson was a big RW political donor helped seal it for me.
I'm not going backward.

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"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:

THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"

- Kurt Vonnegut

Big Al's picture

That's a good point, mostly right wing billionaires are now in charge of teams in professional sports. It's another benefit of being a billionaire, you can own your own sports team. Be King of the city.

Extreme wealth has become normalized. I wrote something awhile back about Tom Brady's "house" and how it looked like a German castle. It becomes expected as a symbol of your wealth to have the biggest mansions and yachts. I saw a picture of Jordan's yacht the other day. The money they receive has to keep going up and up to feed the insatiable need to have more than the next person, to be that much more important.

Joachim Noah has been railing about war. I looked up his net worth, it was around 270 million. Last year alone with his NBA salary and his businesses he made 80 million. You don't get that kind of wealth without trampling on the rest of the planet one way or another.

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Wink's picture

The college game is Way better.

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the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.

lotlizard's picture

Harvard versus Yale — New Haven, Saturday, November 19.

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