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Ethics Quote of the Week : NPR Sports Commentator Frank Deford On Football, Values and Brains
From:
Jack Marshall -- ProEthics, Ltd. Jack Marshall -- ProEthics, Ltd.
For Immediate Release:
Dateline: Alexandria, VA
Wednesday, September 17, 2014

 

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?A new study shows that almost one-third of NFL players will suffer long-term cognitive problems. Granted, that?s professionals, but obviously younger brains are at jeopardy on all gridirons. What mother or father can any longer willfully allow a son to play such a game with such odds? Verdict: Football is dangerous to your brain.?

?NPR Sports commentator Frank Deford, in his weekly commentary, this time focusing on the deteriorating reputation and public image of pro football, and how football fans, so far at least, don?t seem to care.

It?s dangerous to your brain in more ways than one.

The NFL Vikings, for example, having decided first that sitting out one game with pay was sufficient to punishment for their star running back who beat his four-year-old son black and blue, then reinstating him for the next game, apparently on the theory that it had thrown a bone to critics, then pulled him off the roster again following new reports of an old story, involving Adrian Patterson allegedly beating another toddler son. (Patterson spreads his seed far and wide and with great generosity and abandon, having an estimated seven or more children with an equal number of unmarried women. The NFL and NFL fans have never shown any disapproval of this irresponsibility conduct, of course.) Now, we have no evidence in this latest allegation beyond text messages in which Patterson admits giving the boy a ?woopin,? which is presumably the same as a ?whuppin.? Patterson?s lawyer says nothing happened, and indeed, no complaint was made and no charges were filed. So what does the Vikings? move mean? Is the NFL team concluding from this ambiguous incident that what Patterson did to his other child (that is, one of his many other children) was worse than the horrific photos already showed they were? How much worse could his conduct be? Is it sending the message that all corporate punishment is wrong? Who the hell is the NFL, which allows its players to maim each other, to tell me that I?m a child abuser if I spank my son? Or are the Vikings simply proving, as the league itself did it when banned Ray Rice only after a video showed him doing what it had to know he had done when it suspended him earlier for only two games, that it has no clue what?s right and what?s wrong, what is acceptable violence and what is unacceptable, what the public will ignore and what is so bad that it shouldn?t matter whether the public will ignore it or not?

Football is as dangerous to your values as it is to your brain.

Deford, in the first part of his commentary, notes that there is no indication than any of the revelations about their players? disturbing proclivities, nor the league?s dishonesty, incompetence and moral obtuseness in reacting to them will harm the NFL?s popularity at all:

?If American banks, which nobody likes, are too big to fail, then the NFL, which everybody likes, is too popular to fail. Probably too big by now too. Despite all the negative news recently, has it really been damaged? ?Do you see any indication that fans have, in disgust, turned to Gilligan?s Island reruns Sunday afternoons? Not to mention Thursday, Sunday and Monday nights?Do you have any friends who have sworn off watching NFL games? Have you??

Well, yes, Frank, I have, and I also have friends who have. I agree that the NFL is an ethics corrupter, but a tipping point is on the horizon. Soemtimes the American public is slow, but it usually figures things out and does the right thing. I am old enough to remember people saying the same thing about boxing, that it was a great sport and that the public would always love it, because they always have. Then Mike Tyson became the face of boxing, and all the kings horses and all the Sugar Ray Leonards couldn?t save it. Quick: who is the Heavyweight Champion?

Yes, the public can be slow. Some pompous assassin writing  anonymously in a Washington Post comment thread recently attacked me, calling me a ?nincompoop? because I wrote here in October 2012 that I was confident that Mitt Romney would win the election because Obama was a self-evidently a weak leader, and Americans historically and consistently prefer strong leaders over weak ones. (He also said I was a ?self-declared ethicist??you know how I love that one?and that Ethics Alarms was a ?vanity blog?). The polls were very close when I wrote made that prediction. Yes, I was a nincompoop for not believing the public to be nincompoops. I did not predict that the press would successfully suppress the administration?s cover-up of Benghazi; I did not see Superstorm Sandy presenting a photo-op bonanza for Obama to appear presidential without actually doing anything in a crisis; I underestimated the African-American voters? determination to make the election about group identification rather than leadership; I underestimated the foolish apathy of extreme conservatives, many of whom sat out the election because Romney was too moderate for them. Mostly I was wrong to assume that sufficient members of the public had figured out yet, as I had early in 2009, how hopeless and overmatched Obama was as President? after all, most of the media was working overtime to hide it from them.   I think they understand now, though. And Americans still prefer strong leaders, if they can remember what it?s like to have one.

But I digress. Sorry.

At the end of his commentary, Deford calls for positive steps to be taken to protect our brains from football, calling for ?some brave college conference with high academic standards ? like the New England Small College, the Midwest, the North Coast, the Southern California IAC ? [to] have the courage to lead the way and drop football.?

I think it will happen, just like it happened to boxing, unless those who run the sport acquire some ethical values and the wisdom to know how to use them. That?s pretty hard to do with brains, however.

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Sources: NPR, New York Times

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