I’ll get right to it. Let’s put aside anything that Rush Limbaugh did or did not actually say. You surely know by now that he quite apparently did not utter the “smoking gun” of statements that was attributed to him…the one wherein he applauded slavery for its role in building the South. There remains no evidence that he actually said it. Anyway, focusing on what he did or didn’t say is to miss the grand point here.
The point is the gross dishonesty of the NFL’s employers and employees drawing boundaries on the basis of ethics, morality, right and wrong, or whatever you want to call this sort of thing.
The problem with making public pronouncements like those we’ve heard is the matter of selectivity. If you’re going to come down on Limbaugh for the “crime” of being an outspoken conservative, what do you do with Michael Vick, Adam “Pacman” Jones, or any of the numerous other popular players and faces of the NFL who’ve been associated with overtly criminal acts over the last several years? If you’re NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, you let ‘em keep playing. Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice in a murder investigation…a murder investigation…and his career has progressed without skipping a beat. It’s worth noting that Lewis was originally indicted for the actual murder, and ultimately reached a settlement with the victim’s family in 2004. Still, ESPN analysts lionize Lewis each week during football season…but it’s Limbaugh who’s the demon.
(Funny enough, as I am writing this, a commercial for the NFL’s official team merchandise just came on the television, a commercial featuring the aforementioned Ray Lewis; it’s curious where NFL honcho Goodell draws his own lines of “appropriateness.”)
NFL players like Mathias Kiwanuka and Bart Scott have stated publicly they won’t play for any team Limbaugh owns…that their principles are worth more than that. Really? Their principles? I researched to find any evidence of Kiwanuka or Scott taking any such “principled” stands at any other point in the NFL careers…when they’ve had ample opportunity to do so, given the very public legal and moral failings of their compatriots through the years…and I found none. Indeed, Bart Scott, currently with the Jets, seems to have quite happily played alongside Ray Lewis on the Baltimore Ravens from 2002 to 2008; now he’s “Mr. Principle” in the matter of Rush Limbaugh, a guy who, by all objective accounts, can be considered nothing more egregious than simply an ideological adversary. It’s beyond laughable.
I’m often asked by friends and acquaintances who’ve known me for so many years and who read my columns why and how I’ve become increasingly embittered in they ways that I have; it is precisely events like “Limbaugh-gate” that prompt people like me to become more cynical about, and more critical of, so-called mainstream society. The hypocrisy, the disingenuousness, all of it…is more than we can take. There’s not even a token effort made any longer to even look balanced. If you’re a conservative like Limbaugh or like the many, many millions throughout America who also see themselves thusly, you’re a target. Fair enough; now I know where I stand. Now that I know I am the enemy, I can guiltlessly regard the other side as my enemy…and work to bring about the complete destruction of their ideology as they endeavor to bring about the complete destruction of mine.
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Robert G. Yetman, Jr. Editor-At-Large www.ChristianMoney.com
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