Whenever I hear sports fans on talk radio or personally chat with people
about sports both Spectator and participatory games – the depth and
breadth of the conversations are not surprising. As a teenager fan, I
knew the batting averages of half the players in the American League. It
is the American way.
This mental diligence does not carry over, by and large, into their role
as voters. Compare the differences.
1. Sports fans do their homework. They know the statistics of the
players and teams are deeply involved in analyzing strategies and
tactics on the playing filed. To them the game is a study not a hunch or
knee jerk reaction. The looks, smiles, big salaries and rhetoric of the
players mean nothing unless they are based on performance. Fans also
look forward, thinking about foreseeing and forestalling their opposing
team’s adjustments and responses.
The same cannot be said about most voters. Half of them do not even know
the name of their member of Congress. Half of them do not even come to
the game on Election Day to register their opinion.
2. Fans hold the hierarchy responsible – from the players to referees
(umpires), to the coaches, managers and owners.
Voters, on the other hand, have allowed top down forms of no-fault
government. This is true even when votes are not properly counted or
elections are stolen. Presidents, Governors and Senators,
Representatives are rarely held accountable for their most series
boondoggles, failures or wrongheaded policies. Smiles and rhetoric go a
long way on the likeability index in contrast to studying their actual
voting records. Voting records recede into the dark mists while the
propaganda materials of the politicians shine in the bright lights.
3. Fans analyze reasons for defeat or victory not just on what
happened in the ninth inning or in the last two minutes of the final
quarter. They understand that the seeds of winning or losing are planted
throughout the game.
Voters just look at the final voting count at the end of Election Day.
As a result, they miss the dynamics before elections to understand what
were the influential factors. Focusing on the latter had led some
scholars to conclude that Al Gore cost me more votes than I cost Al Gore
in the 2000 election.
4. Fans evaluate the dual performance of the teams – offensive and
defensive. They know that both who made it happen and who let it happen
are keys to grasping the game. They know when a team beats itself.
:Voters almost always focus on which Party or elected officials proposed
a policy or a nomination. Rarely do they criticize their favorite Party
for not stopping bad bills or judicial nominees.
5. Fans understand that chronically losing teams need different
players and managers. Beyond just booing loudly at their home team, they
have many specific ideas about replacements and which positions need
fresh talent.
Voters, many of whom are on automatic because they are hereditary
Republicans or hereditary Democrats, seem resigned to the same field
year after year. After ten years of losses to the Republicans at the
local, state and federal level, Democratic voters still meekly go to the
polls sensing they are voting for the least worst choices. Instead of
asking “why not the best?” voters too often appear resigned, not
demanding a new game plan, new players and managers.
6. Sports fans complain loudly, and engage in robust arguments with
opposing fans. They have a long memory. I know because my small
Connecticut home town was split down the middle – Red Sox fans on one
side and Yankee fans on the other. The Red Sox fans never let us forget
that their team gave the Yankees their best early players, including
Babe Ruth.
Except for one or two fervent issues, voters tend to give politicians a
free ride about dozens of other positions that may affect them adversely
in their daily lives and dreams of a better future for their children.
Single-issue voters are easily captured by politicians who support them
on that issue and are allowed to escape accountability for dozens of
other subjects.
7. Fans are never satisfied—observe Yankee fans for example—but
voters settle for very little and let their expectation levels run down
year by year. Their cynicism makes them say that they’re not turned onto
politics which is why politics has been turning onto them very
disagreeably. And the golden rule of this brand of politics becomes –
“he who has the gold rules.”
One thing is for certain. If fans were as serious about politics as
they are about sports they, as taxpayers, would not be paying for
stadiums and arenas that should be paid for by private capitalists and
the wealthy owners of professional sports teams.
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