A spot-on essay on the common good and profit in kids sports - I read it without realizing who wrote it
I read most of the essay before i saw the name or had an inkling it was someone in public office.
It is written as a parent whose junior high child plays in a hockey league. Parents arent allowed to videotape their own kids games (!!) even to show the other parent the film, or grandparents.
Why not, you ask?
You arent seriously going to tell me its about protecting the children are you? In THIS America?
No, its because the private-equity backed owners of the league want people to pay $37 a month to subscribe to an AI-driven tape recording that they provide.
Virtually everything in America has become a commodityeven middle-school hockey. Every minute of our life is fodder for profit maximization. And when everything exists primarily for someone elses gaineven your childs Saturday-afternoon gameit breeds emptiness and resentment.
That discontent doesnt stay contained. It spills, inevitably, into our politics. Donald Trump is a symptom, not the cause, of Americas spiritual unraveling. He is no ordinary symptom. He could prove fatal to our 250-year experiment in multicultural democracy. But our nation would make a grave error if we believed we could repair what is broken within us simply by defeating Trumpor his successorat the ballot box. A deeper rot festers in the American soul: a callousness toward our neighbors, a me-first selfishness, a relentless focus on getting mine even if it leaves others behind. Today, we worship false cultsprofit at any cost, consumerism instead of citizenship, a blind faith in technology, a winner-takes-all politicsthat leaves us feeling empty and devoid of purpose.
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Americans want to feel powerful and connectedin their individual life, in their family life, and in their community. They want work that feels meaningful and tethered to something more than the cold accumulation of profit. They want to live in communities whose fate is determined not by faraway forces but by the contributions and shared projects of their neighbors. They want a capitalism that rewards ingenuity and hard work but doesnt leave people living lives of indignity. They want ethical and moral rules that bind everyone, with no exemptions for people with money or political power..
Most people I know especially young people are fed up with commercialized
everything. It has become harder to remember just how free our lives were of constant advertising. But occasionally I DO remember. I DO remember my days filled with a school that was not corporate, textbooks written by scholars free of advertising, biking to the library, church service on Sundays, playing tennis for free at the city courts, playing board games or outdoor games with family or friends. Television had ads, but we werent paying a monthly fee, and there were 3 or 4 channels with solid programming. You interacted with people everywhere you went, and you were expected to be polite to each other and treat each other like humans. Nobody was selling naming rights either.
Chris Murphy has a new book coming out called Crisis of the Common Good. If this essay is an indication, it is a valuable badly needed perspective.