The Last Super Bowl? As NFL Ends Troubled Season, XFL Could Capitalize On A Divided America
PAUL KERSEY • FEBRUARY 3, 2018
The Philadelphia Eagles meet the New England Patriots in the Super Bowl on Sunday (February 4). But, 52 years after it began, this may be the last time the Super Bowl commands American football fans’ undivided attention—because America itself is dividing.
World Wrestling Entertainment [WWE]’s Vince McMahon announced January 25 that he is
bringing back the XFL, and
Main Stream Media enforcers are furious.
[‘Alt-Football?’ Left Furious At Return Of XFL, WND, January 26, 2018] But they shouldn’t be surprised: the return of the XFL is only natural at a time when
the NFL is taking sides in the culture war against the Historic American Nation. And, just as Donald Trump rallied actual Americans to defy the MSM, McMahon could find a large constituency ready to defy our hostile elite.
Of course, President Trump blasted the NFL players who knelt in protest during the national anthem,
saying they should be fired. MSM journalists backed the anti-American players, and dutifully pressed McMahon on the flag issue at his press conference—especially as the XFL’s colors are now red, white and blue. McMahon made it clear his players would stand for anthem:
“I think, again, it’s a time-honored tradition to stand and appreciate the national anthem with any sport,” McMahon said during a press conference introducing the league. “Here in America–for that matter, in any country…so I think it’d be appropriate to do that.”
[
XFL players should stand for national anthem, Vince McMahon says, by Thomas Barrabi,
Fox Business, January 25, 2018]
And, in another sharp break from NFL practice, McMahon also said that players
would not be allowed to compete if they have criminal records. [
No kneeling, no criminals: XFL’s new rules draws cheers, jeers on Twitter, by Pete Blackburn, CBSsports.com, January 25, 2018]
McMahon’s make sense considering his background. Though raised in North Carolina, he’s spent his adult life in Connecticut, where, after buying out his father’s stake in the WWF wrestling organization, he worked to consolidate wrestling territories across the country into the WWF (renamed WWE in 2002). The new wrestling franchise became a global phenomenon that created icons like Hulk Hogan, the Ultimate Warrior, Stone Cold Steve Austin and
The Rock. From being a regional sideshow, McMahon turned the WWE into a powerful trendsetter in both sports and entertainment.
The WWE has traditionally drawn on Politically Incorrect themes to create both heroes and villains. Older fans will remember Hulk Hogan
desecrating the Soviet flag, as an American audience cheered wildly.
But in more modern times, right-wing Americanism was treated with more complexity.
Consider one “Jack Swagger,” who called himself a Real American, would use “We The People” as his slogan, brandished a Gadsden flag, and, as he himself noted, somewhat prophesized the rise of Trump. [
Jack Swagger Talks WWE’s Fascination With Foreign Heel Gimmicks, Fightful, December 15, 2017]
Swagger’s manager, “Zeb Coulter,” once went on a rant that Glenn Beck’s
The Blaze called an attempt to “defame” the Tea Party. Coulter screamed:
I look around and I see a country I don’t even recognize. I see people with faces not like
mine. I see people that I don’t even know what they’re saying. They can’t even talk to me. And I look around and I think, where did all these people come from? But most importantly I think, how do we get rid of ’em? We the people! Americans, real Americans, know the truth! Zeb Colter knows the truth! Jack Swagger knows the truth! Because this is the land of the free and the home of the brave, not the land of the free and whoever wants to cross our borders! … It’s our country and it’s our land, to protect and defend!
[
Have You Heard the WWE’s Wildly Racist ‘Tea Party’ Wrestling Character Named Jack Swagger?, by Erica Ritz, February 20, 2013]
Originally, Swagger was supposed to be a heel (villain). But he
eventually became a face (good guy), with the audience joyously embracing his slogan of “
We the People.”
In some ways, it presaged how Donald Trump himself went from reality show heel to hero in the eyes of so many Americans.
And that’s no accident. Trump (a WWE Hall-of-Famer) and McMahon are long-time friends, partnering together in the 1980s to promote WrestleMania IV and V at one of Trump’s Atlantic City properties [
Donald Trump and WWE: How the Road to the White House Began at ‘WrestleMania,’ by Aaron Oster,
Rolling Stone, February 1, 2017]. In 2007, they even faced off in a match at WrestleMania XXIII. (You’ve probably seen the edited video in which
Trump clotheslines McMahon with a CNN logo.)
Donald J. Trump
✔@realDonaldTrump
#FraudNewsCNN #FNN
8:21 AM - Jul 2, 2017
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And while Vince’s wife, two-time CT GOP Senate nominee
Linda McMahon, is hardly an immigration patriot, President Trump nonetheless chose her to be head of the Small Business Administration and
hosted the McMahon family at the White House.
Vince McMahon appears to be a pure
civic nationalist. He calls
Martin Luther King his “
hero.” But he also told
Playboy in 2001 that “This country gives you opportunity if you want to take it, so don’t blame your environment” . [
The Story of Vince McMahon, by David Shoemaker,
The Ringer, June 2, 2016] Such
proud patriotism doesn’t square with a “mainstream” rhetoric demanding adherence to concepts of “white privilege” and “structural racism.”
Thus, it’s not surprising McMahon’s attempt to Make Football Great Again was quickly denounced as racist by the checkmarks on Twitter and as “divisive” by ESPN pundits. [
Well That Didn’t Take Long: Rebooted Xfl Already Being Called Racist,By Donn Marten,
Downtrend, January 25, 2018]
Consider the reaction of one Bruce Arthur[
Email him] a SJW sports columnist for the
Toronto Star
Bruce Arthur
✔@bruce_arthur
XFL 2020 teams
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Orlando Rage
New York-New Jersey Deportations
Birmingham Confederate Statues
Chicago What About Black-on-Black Crime
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Las Vegas Anthem Respecters
Memphis KKK Chapter
San Francisco No Gay Cakes
Los Angeles ICE Sweeps
3:54 PM - Jan 25, 2018
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Or ESPN’s Michael Wilbon:
“t seems like just garbage—like he wants to sell some sort of whitewashed, idealistic brand of something to the country. I don’t think people are going to buy that. I don’t think you have enough people to fill the spots to even play it. The game is going to end in two hours, you can’t have a criminal record, you can’t have any rebels because you’re all going to salute the flag. I don’t believe in people like this. I don’t believe in this guy, specifically.”
[
ESPN’s Wilbon Describes the XFL as a ‘Whitewashed, Idealistic Brand’ of Football, by Trent Baker, Breitbart, January 25, 2018]
These are arrogant reactions considering NFL ratings were down 10 percent in 2017 from the prior year, with white fans making up 85 percent of the lost viewership. [
The NFL’s 2017 ratings slide was mainly fueled by white viewers and younger viewers, by Jason Clinkscales, AwfulAnnouncing.com, January 8, 2018]. The actions of black players may have been praised by Leftist sportswriters, but many fans saw them as divisive.
Enter the XFL.
As the Daily Caller’s
Scott Greer noted:
“They [fans] don’t want politics, they just want to sit back, relax and watch the game. And that’s what Vince McMahon understands. He has a very tough challenge competing against the NFL and the already-crowded field of sports right now, but just promising a politics-free sport where everyone stands for the anthem and we ban everyone with criminal convictions, you know, I think a lot of Americans would like that, and he sees a market opportunity right now.”
[
TheDC’s Greer On Fox Business: Americans Want Politics-Free Sports, by Justin Caruso, Daily Caller, January 26, 2018]
In fact, there does seem to be a market for people who want to see a positive image of their country and who are disgusted with the NFL. [
Veterans group not backing down from NFL over #PleaseStand ad rejected for Super Bowl program, by Peter Dawson, Star-Telegram, January 31, 2018] Like Trump, McMahon still believes the USA is like the nation of his youth, where hard work and love of country are the recipe for success in life. And he aims to serve that market.
But McMahon may be underestimating what he’s facing. Colorblind patriotism
is increasingly denounced as “white nationalism” today. And an increasing number of white people don’t just want an escape via politics-free entertainment—they really want their country back.
As even professional sports begins to divide, every American is going to have to take a side on far more fundamental questions in the near future.
The conflict is irrepressible.
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