By Jeffrey Lord on 10.14.09 @ 11:37AM
NFL Commissioner, Colts owner supported controversial candidates.
How stupid do these people think the rest of us are?
In the middle of the Rush Limbaugh–NFL episode, in which liberals
have been busy circulating made-up Limbaugh quotes to sabotage
Rush's opportunity to buy in to an ownership role in the St.
Louis Rams, comes this news item.
"NFL lines up to stop Rush" reads the
small story in today's New York Post.
The story quotes Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay this
way: "I, myself, couldn't even consider voting for him.
Words do damage, and it's something that we don't need." Irsay
also says: "As a nation, and as a world, we've got to watch our
words and our thoughts. They can do damage."
And NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell puts it this
way: "Divisive comments are not what the the NFL is all
about. I would not want to see those kind of comments from people
who are in a responsible position in the NFL."
Really? If words do damage, what about actions? If comments
are divisive, what about actions? If one has to watch, as Irsay
suggests, "our words and our thoughts" -- what about
actions?
Like, say, the actions of Mr. Irsay when he contributed $2,000 to
the John Edwards for President campaign in 2004? Mr. Edwards, you
may recall, was the great left-wing hope in 2004 and the running
mate of that well-known non-controversial John Kerry in the 2004
election. Should a man who owns an NFL football team even be
remotely associated with a man as divisive as John Edwards? No
problem, apparently, because Edwards is a liberal, unlike Rush
Limbaugh. Who, wonder of wonders, has employed "words and
thoughts" in opposition to Mr. Irsay's favorite non-controversial
candidate. Who, of course, has not only a lot of controversial
"words and thoughts" but one pretty significant action that seems
to have permanently sidelined his career and lots more than that.
Mr. Irsay, it turns out, has a habit of
controversial contributions to controversial politicians who,
like John Edwards, are not Limbaugh fans. There's the $200 to
Democrat Congressman Patrick Kennedy of Rhode
Island, the $500 to Democrat Congressman
Edolphus Towns of New York, and so on and on. Perhaps most
interesting is the Irsay $5,000 that went to Gridiron
PAC. Here Mr. Irsay's money was spread out
among candidates with names like Congressional Black caucus
Chairman James Clyburn of South Carolina, Senator Christopher
Dodd of Connecticut, Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont, and the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.
But wait! There's more! Just when you think
Mr. Irsay's controversial contributions could not be
controversial enough, here's another set of controversial
politicians with whom he has chosen to associate himself. The
names?
George W. Bush ($1,000), George W. Bush and Dick Cheney ($2,000),
and George W. Bush and Dick Cheney ($2,000 again).
And Mr. Goodell? He who is opposed to things
divisive "from people who are in a responsible position in the
NFL."
Mr. Goodell, who presumably gets his paycheck from running the
NFL, uses his money to give campaign contributions to
non-divisive people like New York Senator and Democrat Charles
Schumer ($1,000 just this year), the non-controversial Democrat
and Congressman John Conyers of Michigan ($500) and, like Mr.
Irsay, Commissioner Goodell has given $5,000 to the Gridiron PAC,
where his money has been doled out to the likes of the Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee, Senator Dodd and Senator Leahy.
And, also like Mr. Irsay, the NFL Commissioner has sent his
checks to the uncontroversial and non-divisive George W. Bush and
Dick Cheney and, yes, John McCain.
So what do we have here?
What we have is a game within a game. Within the game that is
professional football and the NFL, we have another game
altogether.
It too is played by serious professionals. It's called,
"controversy and divisiveness for me, but not
for thee." Or, more accurately, not for Rush.
This game also has a name.
It's called hypocrisy.
And James Irsay, owner of the Indianapolis Colts, and NFL
Commissioner Roger Goodell, are the stars of the team.
There are a lot of owners and players in the NFL. How many of
those who are opposing Rush Limbaugh's participation in the NFL
play the same game as Irsay and Goodell?
Good question. Surely the answers will be forthcoming in the days
ahead.