Intern_8033 wrote:Noam Chomsky wrote:...
Chomsky is a pretty astute fellow, and he’s written some compelling arguments. This, I think, is not really one of them. He’s obviously not a sports fan, and admits he knows nothing about them, so why anyone would take his views on sports to heart is beyond me. You might as well ask John Ashcroft what he thinks about rock music.
Obviously, competitive sport can be viewed as a chauvinistic, testosterone-imbued pig roast and all the things Chomsky alludes to. Certainly watching the advertisements usually accompanying a sports broadcast would lead you to believe so. This year’s All Star Game coverage began with images of flags, eagles, and F-14s taking off from aircraft carriers, as if there is some connection between America’s pastime and jingoistic support of the war in Iraq (thank you Fox).
However, a fan of sport can see things differently. There
are many values and lessons that can be experienced easily through participation in sport. Teamwork is the most obvious of these (cue “The Untouchables”). Learning to fail is another one. The last time I played competitive baseball was in little league. I was on a traveling All Star team (no, really) and we were in a tight game mid-way through the tournament. To make a long story short, I logged the final out of the game, striking out to an excellent pitcher (I think it was Danny Almonte’s caucasian counterpart) with the tying run in scoring position. I had always prided myself on my ability to make contact at the plate, and when this happened, I was devastated. After that, my family moved to a larger community where the competition was even more intense, I dropped out of sports all together (and gravitated toward music) and didn’t even pay attention to them until years later, after I had gotten over the jocks vs. geeks mentality, which is basically what Chomsky is describing above. In hindsight, I wish I had continued to play sports; I let the taste of failure defeat me, and I have tried to learn from that experience in my present life.
Of course, spectator sports are another matter, and the lessons that sports can teach are wholly lost when it comes to professional sports, where winning and money are everything. There is, however, a great deal of artistry that can be perceived in virtually any sport when one knows a bit about the game. Bottom line is, there are all kinds of people in the world. There are Neanderthals who are going to see the world the way they do regardless of whether sports exist or not. Everyone needs to be entertained. It’s stupid to criticize sport itself simply because one dislikes patterns of behavior exhibited by certain sports fans. Maybe some people don’t like metal because they think it contributes to anti-social behavior or even violence.
Noam Chomsky wrote:you're taught from childhood that you've got to worry about the Philadelphia Phillies, where I was. In fact, there's apparently a psychological phenomenon of lack of self-confidence or something which affected boys of approximately my age who grew up in Philadelphia, because every sports teamwas always in last place, and it's kind of a blow to your ego when that happens, people are always lording it over you. But the point is, this sense of irrational loyalty to some sort of meaningless community is training for subordination to power, and for chauvinism.
I am a Mets fan. I am a Mets fan because I live in the "meaningless community" of Queens. I do not feel a lack of self-confidence or any such tripe because they are, well, the Mets. I try to take something positive out of the experience of watching a Mets game. Like, let’s see what the team’s up and coming talent is like. Or, let’s see how not to run a 100 million dollar organization. Or, well the comedians can insert their own jokes here. More significantly, they provide me an outlet for my self-deprecating sense of humor. If they’re not going to win (and they do a lot of not winning), I might as well laugh and cheer at every bumbling, embarrassing play they make (and they make a lot of them). I think it’s better to be able to berate your team, than say, to beat your girlfriend. Some people appreciate sports and some do not. More often than not, the ones that don't are those that aren't any good at them, as Steve has alluded to. Arguing that sports are bad because they lead people to complacent acceptance of the more important issues surrounding them is both elitist and inane. People do not need sports to ignore the larger world around them; there are plenty of other distractions available to do the same.
-greasygoose