Monday, February 02, 2015

Curmudgeon Jared Taylor: Why I Hate the Super Bowl

Re-posted by Nicholas Stix

“The more a man knows about professional sports, the more I wonder about his judgment. The more a woman knows about professional sports, the more I wonder if she’s a woman.”

Jared Taylor
 

Why I Hate the Super Bowl
By Jared Taylor
January 31, 2015
American Thinker

Years ago, when I was living in Silicon Valley, I spent Saturday night at a friend’s house and drove home on Sunday. The freeway was empty -- spookily, worryingly empty. I began to wonder if the Rapture had happened, or if there had been a nuclear war. The next day, I learned why the freeway was a desert. Everyone in California had been watching the Super Bowl.

I have never understood why anyone cares about professional sports. I must have been seven or eight when my father shocked me by explaining that not everyone who plays for the New York Yankees is from New York. “What?” I remember thinking. “They let people from Boston or Chicago play with the Yankees? The whole thing is a fraud.” Why do New Yorkers care about a bunch of strangers who are going to defect to some other team if they get a better offer?

Nothing is so colossally, magnificently unimportant as professional sports. Unless you have money on the game, whether the Bumble Bees beat the Polar Bears has real-world consequences that can be measured to a value of precisely, exactly, irrefutably zero. Win or lose, nothing changes. No one has been fed or clothed, nothing has been produced, no problem solved -- it’s a gigantic waste of time. And yet the happiness of millions hangs in the balance. There are fully grown adults who seem to care more about a game than the results of a biopsy.

College sports can mean something. The team represents a school, and athletes are friends and classmates -- except when the players are basically professionals who have to take make-believe classes to get a degree, and go to their own separate gyms and dining halls. I was a good deal older than seven or eight when I learned something else shocking: a coach can make more money than the college president. At the University of Alabama, the football coach makes $7.3 million a year; the president makes $535,000, or less than one thirteenth the coach’s salary. Winning football games is much more important than running the university.

[Well, yes. Who cares about competently running universities? Jared sounds like a 19th century man.]

I’m not completely against spectator sports; just meaningless spectator sports. People on high school teams and minor-sports college teams are real students who represent their schools. People watching a high school game care about the school and probably know some of the players; winning or losing means something when there is a genuine connection to the team. National teams make sense for the same reason, except in cases like the French national soccer team that looks more Senegalese than French.

So why do we pay grown men to play children’s games? Why do people bother with professional sports? Some fans say they admire the skill of the players; I admire jugglers and acrobats. A lot of men say it’s sublimated warfare. Since men don’t get to work off excess testosterone by raiding enemy tribes anymore, they watch overpaid louts smash each other instead. How pitiful is that? You don’t satisfy your appetite for steak by watching someone else eat one. If a man really wants the thrill of combat he should get on the field himself. That’s what amateur leagues and masters competitions are for.

[My chief of research talks like that. These guys just don’t understand!]

Sports are a great way to fill an empty mind. People who can’t name the last 10 presidents can proudly tell you who won the last 10 Super Bowls. And sports make boobs into experts; people with no discernible opinion on anything else can tell you why it was a mistake to trade away the second-string quarterback. The more a man knows about professional sports the more I wonder about his judgment. The more a woman knows about professional sports the more I wonder if she’s a woman.

But there’s something deeper at work. Before I was a family man, a friend talked me into going to a bikini contest. The girls pranced out one by one, fully clothed, and stripped down to bikinis -- some of them quite modest. That was pleasant enough, but the men set up a terrible din. They bellowed like bulls and screamed like banshees at every new bit of anatomy that came into view.

This set me to musing. What an exercise in power the evening must have been for the girls. They reduced a whole roomful of men to howling idiocy just by wriggling around. Even at my dreamboat best, I never had that effect on women.

And I was struck that the men in the room sounded just like sports fans. They even shouted the same thing -- “Go, go, go, go!” -- as the girls pulled off their clothes. I don’t claim to understand it, but judging from the primitive noises, sports must reach as deeply into the male psyche as sex.

Of all American professional games, the Super Bowl is the most expensive, the most hysterical, and possibly the most vulgar. People actually think that part of the fun is being able to talk about the commercials the next day. The commercials! The Super Bowl is certainly the most pretentious game in American sports. The pre-game and half-time shows are as gussied up with patriotic bunting as a political convention. The promoters and commentators act as if it’s our patriotic duty to watch their silly game.

But maybe they’re right. Super Bowl Sunday might as well be a national holiday. Americans celebrate it almost as earnestly as Christmas or Thanksgiving, and with a lot more gusto than Memorial Day or Presidents’ Day.

When is the nation more united than at the kickoff? Blacks and whites are sucked together down the Super Bowl’s red gullet. It’s an orgy of red-white-and-blue meaninglessness so powerful it could even turn Somalis and Guatemalans into Americans. Nothing else can.

So go ahead and join the crowd in front of the TV set on February first. When you get up four hours later asks yourself if you don’t feel soiled. I’ll be at the Smithsonian, and I’ll have the place to myself.

Jared Taylor is the editor of AmRen.com

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Let me help him out with the bikini and sports reactions:

The sexual aggression pathways and the general aggression/rage pathways in the brain are very close to each other.

It is why not a few violent criminals get sexually aroused when they commit violent acts.

A study on cats show that their rage and sexual aggression pathways are very easily triggered.

http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110209/full/news.2011.82.html

Anonymous said...

Jared Taylor is exactly correct.

Stan D Mute said...

Jared would have done better to also note the disgusting spectacle of watching white men cheer for thug illiterate negroes wearing tights. It's not like any mainstream publication will option his article, he has no reason to avoid the subject. What he does describe however is the behavior of children. And that's about right. American men, western men, have become old children. A meaningless game is more important than the negroes running wild through their cities raping their women and murdering all while bankrupting the nation to keep them from behaving even worse.

Nicholas said...

Stan,

My hunch is that Jared was seeking to write a genteelly charming essay, which precluded writing about the obvious racial issues. Race makes everything ugly.

Chicago guy said...

Sports are basically all right as long as things don't get blown out of proportion. Unfortunately, the popular sports have become big business from top to bottom, from the owners looking for taxpayer handouts for new stadiums to the roided-up athletes on down to gouging for a lousy hotdog. There's way too much hype involved and one gets the feeling of being in the midst of a mindless herd of cattle. That's become a turnoff. People would be better off if they engaged in some physical activity themselves; it doesn't have to be at an elite level, just something to burn off some nervous energy and get outside a bit. It would be best if the money stream deflated somewhat so that it could all come down to something more reasonable. The herd-think at present is just too much for me.