The Columbus Dispatch

Double standard allowed Tebow to be attacked for his faith

-

Once, Social Security was the “third rail” of politics. Touch it and face political death. Now it is homosexual­ity. Criticize anything gay people do and you risk ostracism, fines, suspension or loss of your livelihood.

Michael Sam, the first openly gay player to be drafted by a National Football League team — the St. Louis Rams picked him 249th in the last round — is being treated by the media and those in the gay-rights movement as the equivalent of an early American pioneer.

Miami Dolphins safety Don Jones, apparently, didn’t get the memo. Jones tweeted “OMG” and “horrible” after he saw Sam and his boyfriend kiss each other live on ESPN. His tweet was quickly taken down, but the political correctnes­s police swooped in anyway. Jones has been fined and suspended. He’s also being forced to attend “educationa­l training” to get his “mind right,” to borrow a phrase from the film Cool Hand Luke. This sounds like the old communist “re-education” camps.

Dolphins coach Joe Philbin called Jones’ comment “inappropri­ate and unacceptab­le.” Jones issued a statement that read like it had been written by a lawyer, apologizin­g for his “inappropri­ate” tweet and taking “full responsibi­lity” for his comment.

How quickly things have changed from the recent experience­s of Tim Tebow. When the quarterbac­k heroically led the Denver Broncos to a playoff victory in 2012 and dropped to one knee, as he often did to express gratitude to God (a move that quickly became known as “Tebowing,” which spawned countless YouTube parodies), he was widely ridiculed by many of the same entities that now defend Michael Sam, including some NFL players and even Saturday Night Live, which in a skit had “Jesus” offering Tebow advice while sitting next to him on a locker-room bench.

When the Broncos released Tebow, he was mocked again, not only for his faith but also for claiming to be a virgin who wanted to save himself for marriage. In an increasing­ly secular and licentious culture, this sort of thinking and expression, apparently, must be silenced.

During Tebow’s brief profession­al career, TV ratings spiked, jerseys and other gear with Tebow’s name on it sold well and, according to Ad Age, “In terms of influence, Mr. Tebow is now in the top 40 of 3,000 celebs … on par with Tom Hanks, Lady Gaga, Taylor Swift, Jennifer Aniston and Steven Spielberg.”

Yet, Tebow endured a sometimes silent and often shouted campaign to brand him in a negative way. He was called “polarizing.” It was said he had “baggage,” though his “bags” were considerab­ly lighter than many other profession­al athletes who have had drug and alcohol problems, incidents with guns at strip clubs and numerous out-of-wedlock children.

The Nation’s Dave Zirin revealed the secular left’s real problem with Tebow when he

Tebow endured a sometimes silent and often shouted campaign to brand him in a negative way. He was called “polarizing.”

wrote that Tebow “is a religious figure in a country that is uncomforta­ble talking (about) religion.” Really? I would venture to guess there are probably more people attending church on Sunday mornings than attend NFL football games on Sunday afternoon. Such is the bias of those who hold disdain for people of strong faith because it apparently exposes flaws in themselves they prefer not to see.

After the Broncos cut Tebow, haters took to the comment page of The Huffington Post:

”Awwwww. I bet this makes the Baby Jesus weep. Tim should have prayed more.”

”Hey Tim, are you getting the message now? Nothing fails like prayer.”

”We’re all going to h--l and we’re excited about it. Don’t be jealous.”

”Where is your God now, Tebow?”

NFL players who joined in the mockery were not fined, discipline­d or forced into education training camp. Such is the cultural double standard between the way Michael Sam is being treated and the experience of Tim Tebow. But what should one expect these days when anything goes, except for free speech critical of the LGBT crowd?

Cal Thomas writes for Tribune Content Agency.

 ??  ??
 ?? Commentary ??
Commentary

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States