I forget what year it was, but SDS at ISU planned a half-hour silent vigil
during the noon hour. Rumor spread that the football players were going to
vamp on it. But a few minutes before it began, a line of _black_ football
players showed up about 30 yards away across the quad. They did nothing –
but neither did anyone else! That is political solidarity – silent version.

 

Carrol

 

  _____  

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Joseph Catron
Sent: Saturday, February 25, 2012 3:27 PM
To: Progressive Economics; Progressive Economics
Cc: Forum for the discussion of theoretical issues raised by Karl Marx and
the thinkers he inspired; marxist-debate; a-list; lbo-talk; Forum for the
discussion of theoretical issues raised by Karl Marx and the thinkers he
inspired; marxist-debate; a-list; lbo-talk
Subject: Re: [Pen-l] College football player on hunger strike in support of
university workers

 

On Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 2:46 PM, c b <[email protected]> wrote:

Rarely do we see student-athletes, football players, get involved in
political matters that affect the universities where they play.


Which brings to mind Dave Zirin's observation that conventional sports
history "is a bosses' history based on bluster and lies… And most sports
writing is unbearable, painting every athlete like the love child of John
Wayne and Sarah Palin."

For actual history that isn't rooted in the kind of tired social cliches in
which College Football Central traffics, see his A People's History of
Sports in the United States of America. The Guardian reviews:

As much as the head-in the-sand liberals and die-hard conservatives tried to
"keep politics out of sport" (by which they meant left-wing, radical or
progressive politics – they had no problem with flag-waving) the struggles
of the 1960s seeped into every corner of US sports, including football.

As Zirin shows, by 1968 many of the jocks expected by the authorities to
keep the freaks in line (and to set a good, unquestioningly patriotic
war-supporting example) were striking, protesting and marching alongside the
freaks. Playing for the St Louis Cardinals, David Meggyesy started
organising his teammates and circulating a petition against the war. His
on-road roommate Rick Sortun "had been a Goldwater Republican in 1964...
When he came back from training camp in 1968 [he was] a member of the Young
Socialist Alliance."

One of the most amazing protests took place at the University of
Washington's Husky stadium in 1972 where – to protest the war – the players
in the venerable and high-profile varsity-alumni game refused to take the
field for the second half until a statement announcing the team's opposition
to the war was read over the public address system.

"A half a stadium of captive Nixon supporters, stuck in their seats, unable
to ignore their idols' antiwar beliefs" went predictably berserk with rage
and frustration. But, says eyewitness Dean Paton, quoted in A People's
History, they were drowned out by anti-war football fans.

That's anti-war American football fans, cheering anti-war American
footballers, one of whom, Dave Kopay – who had to be restrained from
launching himself at the abuse-screaming right wingers – "later made history
as the first retired male athlete to come out of the closet."


http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/blog/2008/sep/18/2

-- 
"Hige sceal þe heardra, heorte þe cenre, mod sceal þe mare, þe ure mægen
lytlað."

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