USA TODAY International Edition

WHY IS NFL COMMITTING SUICIDE?

Sports used to be fun, but these protests are divisive and pointless. Can’t we just play ball?

- James Robbins James S. Robbins, a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs, has taught at the National Defense University and the Marine Corps University.

Remember when you could enjoy pro football without getting lectured on politics? Not any more. The NFL is on a politicall­y correct suicide course, alienating fans and wrecking ratings. It can thank former San Francisco 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick, who last year started the fad of refusing to stand for the pregame national anthem because he did not want to “stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color.”

This year the flag protests are a mass phenomenon, with more than 200 players taking a knee last weekend. Members of the Baltimore Ravens and Jacksonvil­le Jaguars appearing at London’s Wembley Stadium even chose to dishonor the U.S. flag on foreign soil. But they stood for God Save the Queen, the anthem that was playing when most of Africa was placed under British colonial rule. These jocks probably were not history majors.

Defenders of the kneelers say the protest is itself an expression of Americanis­m, invoking the First Amendment and tradition of dissent. But this is not a First Amendment issue.

SPEECH IN THE WORKPLACE

Employers are allowed to regulate speech in the workplace. The NFL’s personal conduct policy says all employees “must refrain from conduct detrimenta­l to the integrity of and public confidence in the NFL,” which these protests surely are. The league regularly clamps down on social messaging, such as wearing cleats commemorat­ing the heroes of the 9/11 attacks or decals honoring slain Dallas law enforcemen­t officers. Taking a knee for God can also be problemati­c; just ask Tim Tebow. But the anthem protests are explicitly league-sanctioned activities.

The kneelers drew President Trump’s ire, who said the proper response to the protests should be, “Get that son of a b---- off the field right now. Out. He’s fired!”

NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell bizarrely responded, “The NFL and our players are at our best when we help create a sense of unity in our country and our culture,” which is the exact opposite of what the league is doing. The New Orleans Saints stated they “believe strongly in honoring our flag and the national anthem and what it represents,” while encouragin­g the contrary. Former Saints fan Denise La Grange Fox publicly burned her team memorabili­a, saying the team had “ruined and taken the fun out of sports.”

These protests are divisive, distractin­g and pointless. They are a public relations nightmare that the NFL shows no sign of stopping. Goodell and others want to preach about free expression, but most fans probably prefer their football free of guilt-tripping toxic politics.

REVENUE, TAX SUBSIDIES

Many people are simply tuning out. Television ratings are down double digits so far this year, following an 8% drop last season, and a poll in July found the number one reason was the flag protest issue. Another poll this month found a third of adult Americans are less likely to watch NFL football because of the kneelers. The low ratings could mean league revenue taking a $200 million hit.

It can get worse as the NFL continues to squander the goodwill and political cover it has enjoyed for decades. The public might be less willing to support massive taxpayer subsidies for stadiums.

Maybe Congress would find it beneficial to open investigat­ions into how much the league has known about the degenerati­ve brain disease endemic among players, and whether it has knowingly put players at risk by ignoring it the way the tobacco industry ignored evidence of the link between smoking and cancer.

Perhaps the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion could review the consequenc­es of playing profession­al football and issue a blizzard of new regulation­s. The Federal Communicat­ions Commission could examine whether the league engages in monopolist­ic behavior negotiatin­g television deals. And the anthem protests could start a useful debate over why the billionair­e team owners and millionair­e players need all the subsidies, legal loopholes and other public support that keep their sports entertainm­ent business afloat.

Or, the teams could stop all the grandstand­ing and play football.

 ?? MARK J. REBILAS, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? During the national anthem before the Cardinals vs. Cowboys game in Glendale, Ariz., on Monday night.
MARK J. REBILAS, USA TODAY SPORTS During the national anthem before the Cardinals vs. Cowboys game in Glendale, Ariz., on Monday night.

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