Summer Is Here and So Are the Sailboats

Right on cue, Summer Solstice arrived on June 20 and ushered in temps well into the 90’s, providing the first blast of real heat for Southern New England this year. It was about time too, the choruses of “When is it going to warm up?” were getting a little stale.

Well, warm up it did. With schools out and summer vacation just getting into full swing, the shoreline beaches were packed today and the roadways leading to them were clogged starting early in the morning. Routes 4, 1 and 102 were at near standstills around noon today and the traffic was sustained well into the afternoon as those who couldn’t get to the beach early,  made their way down later in the day.

Across the bay in Newport, the situation was much the same, except in the case of the City by the Sea, there is a cruise ship anchored offshore and plenty of tourists were on hand in the city’s shopping and tourist areas, spending money and providing a much-needed boost to the state’s economy.

The tourists in Newport also got to see a real show today, as the eight teams vying in the America’s Cup Race Series were all in the water today, testing the carbon fiber hulls and various sails in advance of next week’s races, scheduled to kick off on Thursday.For those unfamiliar with America’s Cup racing, the ships have evolved over the years but the premise is the same; just think of it as NASCAR, for the very rich.

The RIEDC has done a fantastic job putting this event together, partnering with America’s Cup Race Management and NBC Sports, among others. Unlike America’s Cup races here in years past, these races will be visible from shore and the base at Fort Adams will provide spectacular views of the action from very close in-shore. There will be plenty of other activities on site with action taking place from 11 am – 7 pm from June 28-July 1. Prior to the 28th, entrance to Fort Adams and the racing facilities will be free, anyone wishing to attend on race days will have to purchase tickets and pay to park.

How Sports Shapes Our Politics and Why it Matters


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Still think sports and politics exist only in exclusive hemispheres?

On Thursday, June 7, the Smith Street entrance to the Rhode Island Statehouse was dominated by a two-story Green Monster-green banner congratulating the Boston Red Sox on the 100th anniversary of Fenway Park.

Inside, state officials were struggling to deal with the aftermath of that day’s bankruptcy filing of 38 Studios, the video game company that Curt Schilling, whose hero status in New England seemed enshrined in granite after pitching the Red Sox to one big victory after another en route to two world championships, brought to Providence…thanks to a $75 million loan guarantee offered in 2010 by the state Economic Development Corporation and supported by the vast majority of state officials at the time.

Would an entrepreneur who had not helped end the Red Sox’ 86-year world championship drought have been offered such a deal? Would an African-American athlete (other than perhaps Magic Johnson) have been the recipient of such largesse at R.I. taxpayers’ expense?

Sports and politics do bleed, clash, and intersect not only on the large stages of society, but also on smaller ones such as the local pro and college teams you follow, and even youth sports, as a quartet of journalists and activists made clear at Saturday’s Netroots Nation 12 forum “How Sports Shapes Our Politics and Why it Matters,” NN’s first sports-related panel

While the sports world may sometimes seem to be another arm of establishment power (athletes and coaches preaching God, country and family, Schilling supporting conservative causes and NBA legend/Nike pitchman Michael Jordan’s famous reason for steering clear of politics, “Republicans buy sneakers, too”), there is something else bubbling beneath the surface, said Dave Zirin, Sirius XM host, author and contributor to ESPN’s “Outside the Lines,” who boasts of being once called “state-run media scum” by Rush Limbaugh.

The sports world has given birth to radicals in the past, he said, most notably Muhammad Ali, whose resistance to the draft made him an international celebrity well beyond that usually accorded a world heavyweight champion. While many athletic superstars have arrived since, notably Jordan, Tiger Woods and LeBron James, none have pursued influence beyond world championships and multimillion-dollar endorsement deals.

“It says something about how successful the people who run sports have been at disassociating sports from radical politics,” Zirin said.

Which is not to say progressive politics and pro sports don’t co-exist. This year, he said, the NBA has seen players respond to the Trayvon Martin murder (including Carmelo Anthony’s “I am Trayvon Martin” Facebook photo) and the Phoenix Suns’ protest of Arizona’s SB 1070 immigration crackdown by wearing their “Los Suns” jerseys for home games.

Then there is the “It Gets Better” campaign, born of the rash of suicides among LGBT teens, managed by Eden James, campaign director for Change.org, a website promoting online petitions that has become a go-to source for fans ranging from those wanting coaches fired to seeking apologies from players who have made sexist, homophobic or racist statements.

The series of videos designed to promote acceptance of the LGBT community  began last year with a San Francisco Giants fan who wanted to see his team take the lead on the cause. With the support of 6,000 online signatures from Giants fans (and several mayoral candidates), the team produced a video with messages of support from several players and coaches.

“We asked members to start petitions to their own teams. It’s what we call a wildfire petition, taking a national issue to local targets,” James said.

Sam Maden, a 12-year-old Red Sox fan from Nashua, N.H., whose gay uncle Chris had recently died, saw the video and started a petition to the Red Sox to create one of their own, said James.

“The Red Sox weren’t originally interested in a video, but after Sam got national coverage, they realized it might be a PR issue. It became a tipping point,” said James, noting that a number of other teams have joined the Red Sox and Giants in producing “It Gets Better” videos (but the New York Yankees don’t have one yet).

Even though Title IX, which brought about the explosion of growth in girls’ and women’s sports, is celebrating its 40th anniversary this year, gender equality, identification and sexuality issues in sports still haven’t gone away, said Diane Williams, a teacher and coach at Williston Northampton School in Massachusetts, a former high school and college athlete, and current member of the Pioneer Valley Roller Derby team.

“I’ve heard about young girls not playing sports because they feared being perceived as gay,” she said.

The “lesbian question” has long hovered over the promotion and marketing of the most successful women’s pro sports league in the country, the WNBA. For every lesbian player like Sheryl Swoopes who has come out, there are many whose sexual identity remains under speculation.

“The WNBA has worked to portray a particular identity for its athletes,” William said. “If you were gay, they’d say, ‘That’s great, but please don’t ruin it for us.’ ”

Dr. Eddie Moore Jr., director of diversity at Brooklyn Friends School, wrote his dissertation on a study of African-American football players who attended small colleges in theMidwest, who found many people whose encounters with their race came only via television. He said he was struck by the response of one player in particular: “They believe the myths and stereotypes about you.”

Displaying Forbes’ list of the top 10 most hated athletes (with only two whites, the NBA’s Kris Humphries and NASCAR’s Kurt Busch) and statistics that 97 percent of the nation’s newspaper sports editors are white (94 percent men), Moore said much of what readers and viewers learn about athletes “is told from a white male supremacist viewpoint.”

When athletes’ troubles make the media, he said, “The frame isn’t ‘white athlete,’ it’s ‘nigger.’ Is this frame possible influencing the way in which you do your work?

Sports talk radio is not always distinguishable in viewpoint from news talk radio, admitted Zirin: “It’s a wretched sewer designed to police athletes who speak out.”

But those who sometimes find sports talk shows like WEEI’s morning “Dennis & Callahan” indistinguishable from conservative talk radio perhaps shouldn’t push the next button so soon, Zirin advises.

“It’s one of the few areas where people of all political stripes tune in. It’s an interesting place to challenge ideas beyond the politically segregated world we live in.”

The forum was moderated by Charles Modiano, sports media critic and editor of POPSpot.com.

Race Cars and Revolution

In the introduction of my book, I confess embarrassment at the amount of sport stories I produced. Sport fascinates me. It arouses passions that let some sort of larger human narrative be told. Sport anthropomorphizes cultures; a mass of individuals expresses itself as a single person. And the more culturally complex the league is, the more interesting and insightful those anthropromorphized narratives become.

Thus, I most closely follow international soccer and Formula 1 racing. Where the former is a century-plus old, well-established entity in terms of the hierarchy of impact players (nations), Formula 1 has enjoyed a radical reshaping over the past decade. Originally a European deal, F1 is now truly global, but, unlike FIFA, exclusive. There’s a club – a crazy, heterogeneous club – of nations that host F1 races in 2012. These countries now host F1 races:

  • China
  • Turkey
  • India (Frymaster less than several threes back-marker Force India)
  • Malasia (actually, one of the earlier Asian races)
  • Singapore
  • Bahrain
  • Abu Dhabi

Right? 1/3 of the schedule is in Asia. (In 2012, for the first time since 2007, when our disastrous 2005 race on the infield course at Indy finally got us kicked out of the club, the US will host a race at our new track outside Austin, TX. My detailed review of that track is, you know, in that stupid book.)

Bahrain and US Military Power

One of the countries listed above is undergoing a people’s revolution. And I’m sad to report it is not Austin, TX. It’s Bahrain, home to the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet, sent their to keep a close eye on our oil, er, national interests. Oil, USA, racing cars, coincidence…? Nah.

Yeah, so Bahrain’s people aren’t so keen on tyranny. But I guess the government is. And you and I are paying for it. For over a year, the Bahraini people have been protesting their government, and that government has been fighting back.

This compendium of stories that relate to the F1 race makes for interesting reading. Last year’s race was postponed – swapped with India’s inaugural – so the government could, you know, get people settled down. The race ran in the fall, not the spring. What are the odds that the stun grenade that smashed that guy’s face in the top story from the first protests was Made in the USA?

This year, well, we’ll have to see what happens. F1 and the auto manufacturers that drive it are, ostensibly, a progressive force in global sport…? F1 is the birthplace of technologies that have massively improved the civilian automotive fleet’s fuel efficiency and safety. Refueling in a race is a thing of the past. Eventually, it will be 100% biofuels, then electric, then on-site produced renewables.

And Mercedes – a “works” team and league-wide engine supplier – has rules about who and what they can be supporting. Tyranny ain’t on the list. If Mercedes and Mercedes-powered teams had to drop out of a race, well, that race wouldn’t mean that much. That nation would probably get kicked out of the club.  (See the devastation that Germany’s democratic socialism has wrought?)

I admit it; I watch sport because it lets the media tell me things about politics and culture that media actually doesn’t want to tell me. So, how about those Bruins?!?

Right to Work (for Less)


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Waging war on public sector unionized employees last year, with Governors Walker, Kasich and LePage leading the charge, lawmakers are now gearing up to take on private sector employees in this year’s sessions in legislatures in states across this country. Indiana is in the forefront of the war against workers’ rights with its governor, Daniels, set to introduce legislation into a Republican-led legislature that will make Indiana a “right to work” state. Right to work states have enacted laws that do not require union membership of employees working in union shops, therefore allowing free-riders to enjoy all the benefits of being a member without having to pay dues.

However, with this year’s Super Bowl being played in Indianapolis, a high-profile union in the form of the NFL Players’ Association has issued a statement weighing in on subject.

“Right-to-work is a political ploy designed to destroy basic workers’ rights. It’s not about jobs or rights, and it’s the wrong priority for Indiana.”

The statement also notes that as union members, players aren’t alone; they are joined by employees working the concession stands and everyone else that brings the games to their fans. Making note of teamwork, how right to work laws will decrease the average income of working families in Indiana by approximately $1,500 and urging Indiana legislators to reject the  measure.

Right to work states were predominantly in the South and West but as Republicans have gained control of legislatures and governors’ mansions in traditional “Rust Belt” states, there has been a steady eastward and northward drive to circumvent what was once protected under the National Labor Relations Act. The Wagner Act, as it was first known when passed in 1935, ensured protections for union organizing with union security being one of its main tenets once employees had chosen to organize.

In 1947, the Taft-Hartley Act was passed by Congress, over the veto of President Harry Truman with the president calling it a “slave labor” act. A year later, Truman campaigned against a “do nothing congress” and won re-election in a landslide. However, the act gave states the right to impose a right to work status on workers and many did just that.

Just this week, the Republican-controlled house in Indiana passed a work to right to work bill through its Employment, Labor and Pensions Committee by a vote of 8-5 in what was called a “charade” vote by state Rep. David Bartlett after a five minute hearing where no amendments were allowed and no discussion heard. Fellow Democratic state Rep. Clyde Kersey stated, “I think the light of democracy just went out in the Indiana House,” after the vote was taken. A vote to pass the measure in full can be taken as quickly as later this week.

A few things known about right to work states is that on average, workers make $5,333 less a year than in non-right to work states. Workers are still protected from paying union dues if they conflict with their beliefs and workers are better protected in states where there are protections in place for workers. The only ones benefitting from a right to work statute are employers, not workers. Employers will save money from this law, not the other way around. In states where a right to work law was enacted, such as Oklahoma, where job creation was touted, no such job creation took place and manufacturing jobs have actually been lost.

This cynical and broad-based attack on workers’ rights from Republicans and chambers’ of commerce benefits no one and in the long run will hurt the economy of Indiana as workers have less and less to spend with lower wages. Now is not the time to be decreasing the earning and spending power of the local workforces.


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