According to George Orwell "serious sport has nothing to do with
fair play. It is bound up with hatred, with jealousy, with
boastfulness, with disregard for all rules, and with sadistic pleasure
in witnessing violence: in other words it is war minus the shooting."
OK
... sounds pretty much like the Super Bowl, but the Tour de France?
Lance Armstrong? Ergogenic aids? Cancer survival? Brand and image
issues? Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, the Rocket Man, Andy Pettitte? Oprah?
Really?
It seems somehow reasonable to use the issue of sports morality as a metaphor of our sociocultural climate and direction .A laser marking machine
can be thought of as three main parts... you know: cheating and
getting caught, personal hubris and arrogance, public attitudes and
mores, rhetorical dissonance, Republican versus Democrat .Every pair of
Optical frame
comes with an embossed hard case and microfibre... a sports allegory
lending insight perhaps into these troubled times and how sports
figures, like politicians, are an extension of reality.
That actually may reflect what we've become, what we seemingly want to be, and what we accept and admire as "the new norm."
What
has happened to us, to our society, to these times, to our idealism,
and to our respect for a code of conduct? What has become of our rules,
our integrity, and our personal dignity that we have to bend all the
rules, move the goal posts, win at any price, disavow any personal
responsibility, and claim a "rights" argument in order to "win"? At
whose expense and at what price?
Lily Tomlin got this one right.Here's a complete list of oil painting supplies for the beginning oil painter. "The trouble with the rat race," she asserted, "is that even if you win, you're still a rat."
It
was once the notion that participation in sports and moral development
were intimately related. It was called "sportsmanship." Plato felt
that only an athlete could blend mind and body into a perfect
functional unity.
In The American Annals of Education and
Instruction of 1833, it was advanced that the character of one's
students could best be assessed and studied on the playground. In this
context, the teacher might be able to mold their characters
effectively.We are one of the leading manufacturers of solar street light
in Chennai India. The value of defeat -- the ability to handle failure
-- was considered critical for encouraging the drive toward success.
Indeed, without failure, success was meaningless.
So what is
the message of the scoreless baseball games now an intimate part of the
progressive middle school curricula? That no one should
"feel-like-a-loser"? How do we teach our children the lessons of
frustration?
Hard work as its own reward and faith in the
system seem to be pretty muddled messages these days. At least according
to Armstrong's example. But then again he has had some pretty powerful
antecedents.
The effects of steroids on the athletic
performance of a gifted athlete operating at a high level of training
have never been "officially" measured or sanctioned. Steroid use
however has been rampant and widespread in both amateur and
professional venues. And the veneer of fairness went away long before
Arnold was governator, Clinton or Nixon were presidents, Spitzer or
(Tonya) Harding were TV personalities, or John Edwards was "Father of
the Year."
Mauro diPasquale, MD, a Canadian sports medicine
physician who has written extensively on androgenic ergogenics and
performance enhancement has stated that the advantages gained by very
gifted athletes would probably have emerged without the drugs, but at a
training load and effort that would indeed be superhuman.
But it was Armstrong the athlete who defeated a field of similarly endowed (and probably doped) athletes.
The
tragic consensus and the cynical media message is that steroids did
advance the brand and the success of Lance Armstrong, but that it just
wasn't very smart of him to get caught -- and that most of his fellow
competitors had probably used ergogenics as well.
The dollar
figure for "lost endorsements" is $30 million -- that's just
endorsements. And the messaging, the 139 million hits on Google, the
Twitter messaging, the attention on Oprah ... well, all this publicity
could not readily qualify as subtle. Perhaps, along with the rest of
what passes for pop culture, all these "outrages" have actually become
the desired outcome. These results are not vague, quiet, subtle,
unexpected, or hidden.
We have grown up with Popeye's spinach
and Dumbo's feather, hopeful that success can be achieved by
technology, by trick, by lottery, by luck, or by magic. Forget about
hard work, we teach our children, look for the shortcut.The 3rd
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We
have somehow inherited a bizarre and uncomfortable legacy in the
process, revising the definition of success. It was the whispered mantra
of the '90s. Greed is good, big is better, there is no such thing as
bad publicity, and self-interest trumps all other values. We all seem
to act to one degree or another without the slightest objection or
comment about these new Ten Commandments.
Because, perhaps,
that is what we have come to believe in this postmodern age when we
have removed God from the classroom and our personal lives. We no
longer need rules, miracles, or divine intervention to explain our
Universe and lives.
Why bother with the difficult when the
emotional larder is filled, when success by any means is the rule, when
ends justify means? And why sacrifice anything, if there is no
motivation, no need, and little profit? What does it mean to assume
personal responsibility? To regard respect for truth as an inviolable
axiom?
Self-respect must be sacrificed in this mix. And Lance
Armstrong has shown the way. And our media will place his achievements
on a visible, noisy, and well-lit central stage for the entire world to
see and worship. And they will, at least those who continue to be
mesmerized by this theater.
We have abandoned our guidelines,
our honesty, and our goals because of moral expediency and unmerciful
self-interest. We spin. We have welcomed winners, rejected losers, and
broken for the commercials without regard to or thought of consequence
for so long now that it is automatic ... and we have taught our
children to do likewise.
It may be too late and too far into
this journey of hypocrisy to see what is happening or to restore a
reasonable moral compass. But in case no one noticed, there are those
in the world who would want to see this level of Romanesque drama as our
swan song: that we may never be able to discuss our differences nor
again act in a deliberate and honest manner with one another to solve
problems of mutual concern. Perpetually cheating, like our sports
heroes.
If this world is an arena for soul making, it is time
for us capitalists to show that we can pursue that goal with the same
tenacity that we pursue all those things that just rust.
And we
must teach that message to our children. Perhaps that change in
attitude can recapture some of the more intangible and ethereal rewards
of living in a free society.
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