

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR FREE NEWSLETTER
Daily news & progressive opinion—funded by the people, not the corporations—delivered straight to your inbox.
5
#000000
#FFFFFF
To donate by check, phone, or other method, see our More Ways to Give page.


Daily news & progressive opinion—funded by the people, not the corporations—delivered straight to your inbox.
Today, the greatest multitude in the history of the United States will be tuning into the same television show at the same time. The 2012 Super Bowl, to be played between two major media markets, the New England Patriots and New York Giants, kicks off at 6:30 pm. This year's game can also be called, "The East Coast Bias Bowl," the "ESPN Nocturnal Emission Bowl" or the "Pox on Both Houses Bowl."

Popularity plus polarization will mean epic ratings. It also means a pox of sponsors branding Indianapolis's Lucas Oil Field within an inch of its life. But while the high rollers will party down and Fortune 500 companies will have an unparalleled audience, the city of Indianapolis will reel under the weight of our national party.
Bloomberg News, which no one will mistake for The Nation, headlined an article, "Super Bowl Lands on Taxpayers' Backs as Indianapolis Stadium Deal Sours." Bloomberg describes a state of affairs in Indy where "Super Bowl fans are riding zip lines through downtown" while "taxpayers are digging deeper in their pockets to pay for the stadium where the game will be played."
They report that local officials have had to hike sales and hospitality taxes to pay off $43 million in "unexpected financing costs." The Bloomberg article joins a withering piece in the Indianapolis Business Journal about how the local economic impact will be less bonanza than meteor. No amount of extra shifts for waiters and parking lot attendants can match the tax burden they will endure in order to play host. But at least city planners can have that zipline and the "800,000-square-foot exposition" called "The NFL Experience"
This Woodstock for the 1 percent in the state capital has, as we've been covering, been coupled with the passage of the anti-union, anti-wage, "right to work" laws by the Republican-dominated Indiana statehouse. It seemed earlier this week that the Occupy movement along with the AFL-CIO and joined by a highly supportive NFL Players Association could translate into a serious show of force right at the gate of the stadium. There have been marches this week through "The NFL Experience" of more than 1,000 people, and today NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith spoke and marched in a 400-person UNITE rally at the city's main Hyatt Hotel.
This has been welcome, with one person describing it to me as "electrifying," but the state's union leaders are also explicitly pulling back from any kind of public showing in front of the stadium or on the Super Bowl grounds this Sunday. Nancy Guyott, president of the Indiana AFL-CIO, said today, "The Indiana State AFL-CIO does not plan nor condone any attempts to disrupt the Super Bowl. While we understand the anger and frustration of working Hoosiers' over the disgraceful passage of the so-called, 'right to work' bill, the appropriate outlet will be at the ballot box, not the Super Bowl." She made clear that no state locals would be participating in any rallies in any kind of official capacity.
De Smith in his Thursday press conference said that the NFLPA was committed to challenging other states where "right to work" laws have been proposed, but did not speak to any action this Sunday. In addition to a sigh of relief from the local media, Laura Crewson blogging for Daily Kos Labor endorsed a plan of action. "With the NFL Players Association having vocally opposed that law, it's an opportunity to draw attention to labor issues in the state," she wrote. "At the same time, you don't want to be the assholes who actually disrupted the Super Bowl, so there's a line to walk here."
There are two problems with this approach. The first is this strawman idea that the choices Sunday are either to "be disruptive" or do nothing. A loud and proud picket on the Super Bowl grounds might not win adherents among those who can afford tickets, but it would be a way to raise awareness on a national scale. The same is true if players wore a patch on their shoulder, helmet or even chinstrap. Given the anti-labor and "right-to-work" initiatives being considered in Minnesota, Arizona and even Michigan, there cannot be enough visibility. Also, given the politics that swamp the Super Bowl, from the corporate branding to the military commercialism to the anti-abortion ads, why should labor be at all sheepish about having a voice on game day?
But no one should assume that the union leadership's words will be law on Sunday. If the Occupy movement has taught people anything it's that fortune favors the bold. Already, there is a demonstration called for noon at the Indianapolis state house, but that could be just the appetizer. The Wall Street Journal quoted Tim Janko, a steelworker from northwest Indiana, and Perry Stabler, a retired steelworker, who both said they would be seen and heard on game day. Janko said, "I'm going to picket the Super Bowl because this is wrong," he said. "I'm going to have a Teamster drive me into town." Stabler also commented, "Union workers built that stadium, they should have the right to demonstrate in front of it.."
The people of Indiana are angry. I'm not sure telling them that anger has its time and its place is going to do the trick.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Today, the greatest multitude in the history of the United States will be tuning into the same television show at the same time. The 2012 Super Bowl, to be played between two major media markets, the New England Patriots and New York Giants, kicks off at 6:30 pm. This year's game can also be called, "The East Coast Bias Bowl," the "ESPN Nocturnal Emission Bowl" or the "Pox on Both Houses Bowl."

Popularity plus polarization will mean epic ratings. It also means a pox of sponsors branding Indianapolis's Lucas Oil Field within an inch of its life. But while the high rollers will party down and Fortune 500 companies will have an unparalleled audience, the city of Indianapolis will reel under the weight of our national party.
Bloomberg News, which no one will mistake for The Nation, headlined an article, "Super Bowl Lands on Taxpayers' Backs as Indianapolis Stadium Deal Sours." Bloomberg describes a state of affairs in Indy where "Super Bowl fans are riding zip lines through downtown" while "taxpayers are digging deeper in their pockets to pay for the stadium where the game will be played."
They report that local officials have had to hike sales and hospitality taxes to pay off $43 million in "unexpected financing costs." The Bloomberg article joins a withering piece in the Indianapolis Business Journal about how the local economic impact will be less bonanza than meteor. No amount of extra shifts for waiters and parking lot attendants can match the tax burden they will endure in order to play host. But at least city planners can have that zipline and the "800,000-square-foot exposition" called "The NFL Experience"
This Woodstock for the 1 percent in the state capital has, as we've been covering, been coupled with the passage of the anti-union, anti-wage, "right to work" laws by the Republican-dominated Indiana statehouse. It seemed earlier this week that the Occupy movement along with the AFL-CIO and joined by a highly supportive NFL Players Association could translate into a serious show of force right at the gate of the stadium. There have been marches this week through "The NFL Experience" of more than 1,000 people, and today NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith spoke and marched in a 400-person UNITE rally at the city's main Hyatt Hotel.
This has been welcome, with one person describing it to me as "electrifying," but the state's union leaders are also explicitly pulling back from any kind of public showing in front of the stadium or on the Super Bowl grounds this Sunday. Nancy Guyott, president of the Indiana AFL-CIO, said today, "The Indiana State AFL-CIO does not plan nor condone any attempts to disrupt the Super Bowl. While we understand the anger and frustration of working Hoosiers' over the disgraceful passage of the so-called, 'right to work' bill, the appropriate outlet will be at the ballot box, not the Super Bowl." She made clear that no state locals would be participating in any rallies in any kind of official capacity.
De Smith in his Thursday press conference said that the NFLPA was committed to challenging other states where "right to work" laws have been proposed, but did not speak to any action this Sunday. In addition to a sigh of relief from the local media, Laura Crewson blogging for Daily Kos Labor endorsed a plan of action. "With the NFL Players Association having vocally opposed that law, it's an opportunity to draw attention to labor issues in the state," she wrote. "At the same time, you don't want to be the assholes who actually disrupted the Super Bowl, so there's a line to walk here."
There are two problems with this approach. The first is this strawman idea that the choices Sunday are either to "be disruptive" or do nothing. A loud and proud picket on the Super Bowl grounds might not win adherents among those who can afford tickets, but it would be a way to raise awareness on a national scale. The same is true if players wore a patch on their shoulder, helmet or even chinstrap. Given the anti-labor and "right-to-work" initiatives being considered in Minnesota, Arizona and even Michigan, there cannot be enough visibility. Also, given the politics that swamp the Super Bowl, from the corporate branding to the military commercialism to the anti-abortion ads, why should labor be at all sheepish about having a voice on game day?
But no one should assume that the union leadership's words will be law on Sunday. If the Occupy movement has taught people anything it's that fortune favors the bold. Already, there is a demonstration called for noon at the Indianapolis state house, but that could be just the appetizer. The Wall Street Journal quoted Tim Janko, a steelworker from northwest Indiana, and Perry Stabler, a retired steelworker, who both said they would be seen and heard on game day. Janko said, "I'm going to picket the Super Bowl because this is wrong," he said. "I'm going to have a Teamster drive me into town." Stabler also commented, "Union workers built that stadium, they should have the right to demonstrate in front of it.."
The people of Indiana are angry. I'm not sure telling them that anger has its time and its place is going to do the trick.
Today, the greatest multitude in the history of the United States will be tuning into the same television show at the same time. The 2012 Super Bowl, to be played between two major media markets, the New England Patriots and New York Giants, kicks off at 6:30 pm. This year's game can also be called, "The East Coast Bias Bowl," the "ESPN Nocturnal Emission Bowl" or the "Pox on Both Houses Bowl."

Popularity plus polarization will mean epic ratings. It also means a pox of sponsors branding Indianapolis's Lucas Oil Field within an inch of its life. But while the high rollers will party down and Fortune 500 companies will have an unparalleled audience, the city of Indianapolis will reel under the weight of our national party.
Bloomberg News, which no one will mistake for The Nation, headlined an article, "Super Bowl Lands on Taxpayers' Backs as Indianapolis Stadium Deal Sours." Bloomberg describes a state of affairs in Indy where "Super Bowl fans are riding zip lines through downtown" while "taxpayers are digging deeper in their pockets to pay for the stadium where the game will be played."
They report that local officials have had to hike sales and hospitality taxes to pay off $43 million in "unexpected financing costs." The Bloomberg article joins a withering piece in the Indianapolis Business Journal about how the local economic impact will be less bonanza than meteor. No amount of extra shifts for waiters and parking lot attendants can match the tax burden they will endure in order to play host. But at least city planners can have that zipline and the "800,000-square-foot exposition" called "The NFL Experience"
This Woodstock for the 1 percent in the state capital has, as we've been covering, been coupled with the passage of the anti-union, anti-wage, "right to work" laws by the Republican-dominated Indiana statehouse. It seemed earlier this week that the Occupy movement along with the AFL-CIO and joined by a highly supportive NFL Players Association could translate into a serious show of force right at the gate of the stadium. There have been marches this week through "The NFL Experience" of more than 1,000 people, and today NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith spoke and marched in a 400-person UNITE rally at the city's main Hyatt Hotel.
This has been welcome, with one person describing it to me as "electrifying," but the state's union leaders are also explicitly pulling back from any kind of public showing in front of the stadium or on the Super Bowl grounds this Sunday. Nancy Guyott, president of the Indiana AFL-CIO, said today, "The Indiana State AFL-CIO does not plan nor condone any attempts to disrupt the Super Bowl. While we understand the anger and frustration of working Hoosiers' over the disgraceful passage of the so-called, 'right to work' bill, the appropriate outlet will be at the ballot box, not the Super Bowl." She made clear that no state locals would be participating in any rallies in any kind of official capacity.
De Smith in his Thursday press conference said that the NFLPA was committed to challenging other states where "right to work" laws have been proposed, but did not speak to any action this Sunday. In addition to a sigh of relief from the local media, Laura Crewson blogging for Daily Kos Labor endorsed a plan of action. "With the NFL Players Association having vocally opposed that law, it's an opportunity to draw attention to labor issues in the state," she wrote. "At the same time, you don't want to be the assholes who actually disrupted the Super Bowl, so there's a line to walk here."
There are two problems with this approach. The first is this strawman idea that the choices Sunday are either to "be disruptive" or do nothing. A loud and proud picket on the Super Bowl grounds might not win adherents among those who can afford tickets, but it would be a way to raise awareness on a national scale. The same is true if players wore a patch on their shoulder, helmet or even chinstrap. Given the anti-labor and "right-to-work" initiatives being considered in Minnesota, Arizona and even Michigan, there cannot be enough visibility. Also, given the politics that swamp the Super Bowl, from the corporate branding to the military commercialism to the anti-abortion ads, why should labor be at all sheepish about having a voice on game day?
But no one should assume that the union leadership's words will be law on Sunday. If the Occupy movement has taught people anything it's that fortune favors the bold. Already, there is a demonstration called for noon at the Indianapolis state house, but that could be just the appetizer. The Wall Street Journal quoted Tim Janko, a steelworker from northwest Indiana, and Perry Stabler, a retired steelworker, who both said they would be seen and heard on game day. Janko said, "I'm going to picket the Super Bowl because this is wrong," he said. "I'm going to have a Teamster drive me into town." Stabler also commented, "Union workers built that stadium, they should have the right to demonstrate in front of it.."
The people of Indiana are angry. I'm not sure telling them that anger has its time and its place is going to do the trick.