The
Pentagon shells out millions for sports leagues to "support the
troops" with cheap stunts.
Arturo Pardavila III / Flickr |
I go to a lot of Major League Baseball games. I really love the
sport.
Yet if you’ve been to a baseball game in the last decade, you’ve
probably noticed some changes. National Guard members now perform flag
ceremonies between innings.
Military recruits are enlisted right on the field.
Surprise reunions of deployed men and women and their families play out before
an audience of thousands.
The games have morphed into choreographed patriotic events.
Who’s paying for this hoopla? As it turns out, the Pentagon.
The total tally may top $10 million — and even reach $100 million, if you count the
military’s marketing deals with NASCAR.
The senators call this military marketing “paid patriotism.”
For millions of your tax dollars, the Pentagon is buying things like ceremonial first pitches for recent
veterans, club-level seats for vets at football games, and airport greetings
for returning service members.
If that sounds crass to you, you’re not alone.
“We appreciate if they honor the men and women in uniform, but
not to get paid for it,”said McCain, himself a decorated war hero.
“If the most compelling message about military service we can
deliver…is the promise of game tickets, gifts, and player appearances,” his
report concludes, “we need to rethink our approach to how we are inspiring
qualified men and women to military service.”
I’d go further than that.
Patriotism is a good thing. It can be unifying and inspiring.
But what we’re seeing at sporting events isn’t patriotism. It’s nationalism —
propaganda, even — and it’s potentially dangerous.
The Pentagon even pays for “sponsored” renditions of God
Bless America.
Irving Berlin wrote that song in 1918 as a show tune for
a revue called Yip Yip Yaphank. Years later, it served as the
official campaign song for both Franklin Roosevelt and his Republican opponent
Wendell Willkie. In the 1950s it was adopted by the fledgling civil rights
movement before becoming a rallying cry for supporters of the Vietnam War in
the ’60s.
On September 11, 2001, God Bless America began
a new life when members of Congress sang it on the steps of the Capitol —
supposedly spontaneously — as they gathered to mourn the terrorist attacks from
earlier that day.
Since then, it’s become an official part of Major League
Baseball games. In several stadiums the tune has replaced Take Me Out
to the Ballgame in group sing-alongs during the seventh-inning
stretch.
In fact, this former show tune has become mandatory in some
places.
In 2008, a fan at Yankee Stadium was restrained and then ejected by police officers for
attempting to leave his seat for the restroom while the song was playing. The
following year, three minor league fans of the now-defunct Newark Bears were
ejected from the stadium for refusing to stand during the song.
If it’s freely chosen, standing for the national anthem is
patriotic. Forcing people to stand for God Bless America isn’t.
This is about more than taxpayer money. The government has no
business propagandizing the American people.
OtherWords
columnist John Kiriakou is an associate fellow at the Institute for Policy
Studies. He’s a former CIA counterterrorism officer and senior investigator for
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. OtherWords.org.