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Sports Versus Politics

One recognizes truth, while the other doesn’t know the meaning of the word.

It has long seemed to me that there is far more rationality in sports, and in commentaries on sports, than there is in politics and in commentaries on politics. What has puzzled me is why this is so, when what happens in politics has far more serious effects on people’s lives.

To take one common example, there are many people who believe that if the market fails, the government should step in. But, if Robinson Cano strikes out, does anyone suggest that the Yankees should send in a pinch hitter for him on his next time at bat?

Everyone understands that a pinch hitter can also strike out, and is less likely than Cano to get a hit or a home run. But the very possibility that the government can fail when it steps in to substitute for a failing market seldom occurs to many people. Even among some economists, “market failure” is a magic phrase that implies a need for government intervention.

We could argue about the empirical evidence as to when government pinch-hitting is better or worse. But there is seldom even an argument at all in some quarters, where government intervention follows market failure as the night follows the day.

Milton Friedman once pointed out, “A system established largely to prevent bank panics produced the most severe banking panic in American history.” Many other examples could be cited where government intervention made a bad situation worse.

But most discussions of the role of government never even reach the point of looking for empirical evidence. Today, for example, there is much gnashing of teeth in the media because Democrats and Republicans can’t seem to get together to create a bipartisan plan for government intervention to solve our current economic problems.

Those who cry out that the government should “do something” never even ask for data on what has actually happened when the government did something, compared to what actually happened when the government did nothing. That could be a very enlightening trip through the archives.

Sports statistics are kept in a much more rational way than statistics about political issues. Have you ever seen statistics on what percentage of the home runs over the years have been hit by batters hitting in the .320s versus batters hitting in the .280s or the .340s? Not very likely.

Such statistics would make no sense, because different batters are in these brackets from one year to the next. You wouldn’t be comparing people, you would be comparing abstractions and mistaking those abstractions for people.

But, in politics and in commentaries on political issues, people talk incessantly about how “the top one percent” of income earners are getting more money or how the “bottom 20 percent” are falling behind. Yet the turnover in income brackets over a decade is at least as great as the turnover in batting average brackets.

In the course of a decade, the top 400 income earners include a couple of thousand people. The income received by the top 400 (as a statistical bracket) has risen, both absolutely and as a share of all income, even while the average income of the average person who was in that bracket at a given time has fallen by large amounts. How can this be? The short answer is turnover.

Turnover in sports creates no such confusion.

If players A, B, and C all have batting averages in the .320s this year and, put together, they hit 100 home runs, while players X, Y, and Z all have batting averages in the .320s next year, and together they hit 120 home runs, we could say that .320s hitters were increasing the number of home runs they hit. But A, B, and C could easily be hitting less than 100 home runs next year.

It all depends on whether you are talking about what is happening in statistical brackets or what is happening to actual flesh-and-blood individuals who were in those brackets at one time but not another time. We understand that when we talk about sports statistics. But not when we talk about statistics on political issues like income differences.

Do our IQs just drop spontaneously when we turn to politics? Or are there many people in politics and the media with vested interests in misstating issues, and lots of experience in doing so? I think it is the latter, especially during an election year.

 

COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM

About the Author

Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www.tsowell.com. To find out more about Thomas Sowell and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (13) |

Von Mises Jr| 8.7.12 @ 7:36AM

For those still confused, conservatives are the Pittsburgh Steelers and liberals are the Detroit Lions.
Lesson: Don't bet the farm on Detroit to win the Super Bowl.

The Big E| 8.7.12 @ 8:51AM

The difference, Dr. Sowell, is that after Robinson Cano strikes out, he doesn't engage in a disinformation campaign to convince fans that, in reality, he hit a double down the left field line, or that despite appearances to the contrary, his strikeout was exactly what the team needed at the time. And the nation's sortwriters don't join in, reporting his claim that he actually hit a double down the left fireld line as the truth, and tacking on that the non-existent double drove in two runs which were actually driven in by the hitter ahead of him in the lineup.

Al Adab| 8.7.12 @ 11:19AM

A wise fellow (I wish I could remember who) once said that to understand America one must understand baseball. It is the perfect reflection of our societal ideals: individual achievemt and teamwork.

Bob K| 8.7.12 @ 9:20AM

"Lies, damned lies and statistics," attributed to Disraeli are 2nd only to "Money is the mother's milk of politics," which is attributed to Jesse Unruh.

Both are needed in volume to sustain our absurdly long presidential campaigns of 18 months or more. Somebody has to pay the pipers in the pundit industry! That includes the people who write for A. S. online too!

Peppermint Tea | 8.7.12 @ 9:48AM

Dr. Sowell understands sports and statistics. UNLIKE some idiot statistics scientists that insist that at 280 batting average is "who you are" and you are just going to the plate to find out the which of the mathematical possibilities will result in an outcome. A real hitter is processing the history and the real-time possibilities of the speed, trajectory, and location of the next pitch.
Individual achievement is what makes a good team.

Cpm| 8.7.12 @ 12:13PM

One only has to read hack Mike Lupica to see Sowell's truth.

JimH| 8.7.12 @ 2:29PM

Lupica, is, or was, I haven't read him lately, a decent sports writer who ventures out beyond his area of competence. Unlike several AmSpec political writers who keep trying to show us what terrific sports writers they are as well.

JD| 8.7.12 @ 12:16PM

"Today, for example, there is much gnashing of teeth in the media because Democrats and Republicans can't seem to get together to create a bipartisan plan for government intervention to solve our current economic problems."

Exactly. Liberals demand that Republicans appear with a "solution," where "solution" is DEFINED as government intervention, which is liberal.

Conservatives "have no ideas" because the liberal DEFINITION of an idea is a liberal policy. By definition, no conservative idea can meet this definition.

And for not playing their word game, they think WE'RE stupid.

Tom Kyba| 8.7.12 @ 1:57PM

Thanks Cpm. You referenced Mike Lupica and now I have indigestion.

Joe D.| 8.7.12 @ 3:14PM

Right on Target again Mr. Sowell.

Thanks

Indy| 8.7.12 @ 7:09PM

Dr. Sowell, there you go again, making perfect sense. The electorate has been dumbed down, the "do something" cry has become part of their DNA, we need more of do nothing.

JD| 8.7.12 @ 10:25PM

The Left wants to label us "do nothing". But "do nothing" is not our plan. Our plan is to eliminate the causes of problems (which are often government). Liberals, by contrast attempt to paper over the symptoms of problems with new programs (and thus create more problems).

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