Anthem = Elephant in the room

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Good1, Sep 28, 2017.

  1. Good1

    Good1

    People argue about what is the appropriate response to the national anthem ritual.

    Nobody's talking about the appropriateness of the national anthem in the first place, prior to pro football games.

    People say, kneelers are politicizing an event where people just want to relax, eat hotdogs, drink beer, and scream for a favorite team, in order to forget about their 40+ hour work week grind.

    But the anthem already politicizes the event!

    Worse, the politicization became more acute in 2009, in the NFL, when branches of the military used a tax payer funded budget to induce the players to come out of the locker rooms, and subject themselves to a public ritualistic loyalty test for fan consumption and owner enrichment (they have been paid to induce the players come out of the locker room).

    I say the anthem at games appears for the same reasons the players were induced to come out of the locker rooms in 2009 and publicize their faith in a dubious symbol that nobody really knows what it means: exploitation.

    The anthem, if it was meant to find some grounds of unity before players took sides in a game, no longer serves as a point of unity. So, it must be banished.

    Other points of unity should be found, if unity is seen to be that important a ritual prior to taking sides in a game.

    Can't anybody think of something that would unite everybody?

    Otherwise, why not make up a song for each battle the U.S. has fought for the last 200 years and see how everyone takes sides on the issues surrounding that battle?

    One game could be dedicated to all the battles in Syria, for example.

    Why insert something so divisive into a light hearted game?
     
    Last edited: Sep 28, 2017




  2. Lay off the pepperoni pizzas after 11:00 at night and see if that helps you to clear your head a little.


    -Tree
     
  3. Good1

    Good1

    Presumably the flag stands for all the battles fought to bring this nation to where it is now.

    Are you expecting the players to publicly display a favorable position for all battles, all campaigns, all manipulations, all bombs...all generals, all presidents?

    Tillman expressed an indiscriminate position in favor of anything that was ordered. He signed up, and paid for it. He represents everybody that is targeted each game by military recruitment tools.
     


  4. Which planet you posting from? Or are you on the mothership circling the hale-bopp comet?


    -Tree
     
  5. Good1

    Good1

    You're proving my point that nobody wants to talk about the elephant in the room.

    Given all the ways generals and presidents have used military personel, the flag has become something extremely vague.

    Nobody knows what it means.

    They hope it means something that stands up against bullies.

    But when evidence mounts that the flag represents a bully, then what?
     
  6. This is an interesting perspective.

    But remember, to be a good american(whatever that is):

    [​IMG]
     
  7. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    This is the anthem that the leftists really support. I might as well post their favorite national national anthem here so Tony, exGOPer, FC, and others can enjoy it.

     
    Tom B likes this.



  8. Wow. I guess this is what it looks like when you try to get all your education from watching video games.

    -Tree
     
  9. Good1

    Good1

    I say we go full flagtard and use the Marine's hymn before every American game!



    Especially the part about the shores of Tripoli. We all know what that was about.
     
  10. Good1

    Good1

    Or how about this one, the song of Sgt McKenzie:

     
    #10     Sep 28, 2017