Opinion

Roger Goodell And The NFL’s State-Sanctioned Monopoly Need To Go

Ron Hart Contributor
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With all the cowardly decisions, especially the recent National Anthem enforcement and the concussions (CTE) deceptions, the real question is: Why does Roger Goodell make $44 mil a year for running the NFL, a monopoly sanctioned by Congress?

Maybe the NFL is in cahoots with Washington to distract the citizenry from  lawmakers’ own doings, much like the “bread and circuses” of ancient Rome. Football diverts attention and placates the masses. (It’s also said to satisfy men’s innate lust for war but, just to make sure, Washington has us in a bunch of real wars, too.)

Trump, to his credit, clearly loves football; why else would he wear that helmet hair? But getting rid of the taxpayer-subsidized, tax-exempt status,  antitrust exemptions, etc. of the NFL would be a good move for Trump  right now.

With all its revenues, why can’t the NFL stand on its own? Anheuser-Busch alone paid $1.4 billion for NFL rights. If you want to sell beer to 18-34-year-old males, the NFL’s the place. If you want to sell power tools, also advertise on the NFL, although maybe also the WNBA.

The American justice system, like the NFL, has tons of laws and rules, often laws layered upon laws by the ruling classes so they can prosecute whom they want, when they want, for whatever they want. Thus, it is within the power of the NFL and its beleaguered commissioner, Roger Goodell, to pursue one thing and not another. Just ask “Deflate-gate” victim Tom Brady.

Goodell has had a long string of odd decisions. He toyed with penalties for uttering the N-word or sexist slurs. Yet he weighed free speech issues and reached a compromise: Players can listen to rap music but are not allowed to sing along.

Goodell has dictatorially tinkered with some rules; he once decreed that players can no longer celebrate TDs by dunking the football over the goalpost crossbars. That didn’t go over well.  If Americans wanted to watch a sport with no dunking, we’d watch Ivy League college basketball.

Goodell threatened North Carolina and threatened to pull the Super Bowl from Arizona over legislation he viewed as anti-gay. He didn’t follow through with his threat, but the publicity dashed any hopes Arizona or North Carolina had of hosting the Tony Awards. And the gay rodeo business is non-existent in Arizona now. The NFL and Goodell feel that strongly homophobic attitudes should be confined to rap songs and its locker rooms.

California’s liberal laws create issues which make governing the NFL difficult. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said the NFL should allow players to smoke pot. Yet if a player gets arrested for a bag of weed in California, the pot is legal but the plastic bag is illegal. Now with the Chargers, Raiders, Rams and 49ers floundering there, California has apparently also declared itself a sanctuary state for bad NFL teams.

The League is in constant litigation settlements. The NFL Oakland Raiderettes cheerleaders sued and settled with the team for $1,250,000 – or, as their lawyers told the ladies, a quarter-million dollars.

To reach out to women, Goodell even added a female referee to the NFL.   The gender clash proved problematic. When the woman ref threw a flag and the player would ask what he did wrong, she would just cross her arms and snip, “Oh, oh, I think you know what you did wrong.” And then she would administer the penalty: usually ten minutes of tense silence.

Per Snopes: Here’s what the game Operations Manual says regarding the National Anthem, according to an NFL spokesperson:

During the National Anthem, players on the field and bench area should stand at attention, face the flag, hold helmets in their left hand, and refrain from talking. The home team should ensure that the American flag is in good condition. It should be pointed out to players and coaches that we continue to be judged by the public in this area of respect for the flag and our country. Failure to be on the field by the start of the National Anthem may result in discipline, such as fines, suspensions, and/or the forfeiture of draft choice(s) for violations of the above, including first offenses.

So Goodell does not enforce the NFL rule that teams must stand for the National Anthem, yet he prosecutes Tom Brady for “Deflate-gate.”  Who then, may I ask, really has deflated balls?

A syndicated op-ed humorist, award-winning author and TV/radio commentator, Ron may be reached at Ron@RonaldHart.com or Twitter @RonaldHart.


Perspectives expressed in op-eds are not those of The Daily Caller.