We’ve been told that this not about sex or sexuality. This is about
football. This is about civil rights. This is about the latest
incarnation of Jackie Robinson.
Well, if you actually believed all the hype you might want to think again. The NFL draft was sealed with a homosexual kiss.
It was already outlandish for our president and other national
leaders to celebrate the fact that a top college football player,
Michael Sam, announced, “I want the world to know I’m attracted to other
men” (paraphrased.) That was groundbreaking, major news?
It was already outlandish for him to be getting major endorsement
offers despite the likelihood that he would be a late draft pick (if
drafted at all). As observers noted, this was completely unprecedented.
It was already outlandish for Roger Goodell, the commissioner of the
NFL, to say, “I want to see Michael Sam get an opportunity to play in
the NFL,” especially in light of his claim, stated in the very next
sentence, that, “We like to say the NFL is the ultimate meritocracy. If
you can play football, they want to see you play. The teams want you.
The fans want you. And that’s ultimately what it’s all about.”
Well, if that what it’s all about, if it’s simply a matter of
football ability, then why make such a big deal out of this one player?
If it’s simply a matter of merit, why were there fears that it would
be a PR disaster if Sam wasn’t drafted? Why should Goodell express his
desire that Sam gets an opportunity to play if it’s just a matter of
which player is best suited to play in the league? Or will the NFL (and
other leagues) soon be required to have a gay quota?
It turns out that the NFL was able to avoid the feared PR disaster
when the St. Louis Rams drafted Sam in the 7th round as the 249th pick
(putting him dangerously near the end of the picks), with Rams’ coach
Jeff Fischer making the appropriate comments, namely, that, “In the
world of diversity we live in now, I’m honored to be a part of this and
I’m excited about his opportunity to help this football team win.”
But no sooner was Sam’s pick announced that the NFL had a new issue to deal with (or celebrate?): its first homosexual kiss.
Yes, in an emotional moment played endlessly on the airwaves and
captured in still photos that made the headlines, Sam and his boyfriend
hugged and exchanged a brief kiss, as the NFL officially welcomed its
first openly gay player.
So much for this not being about sex or sexuality. So much for this
being about what’s best for the team. And heaven forbid you express any
displeasure with this homosexual moment, especially if you’re an NFL
player or coach. All perceived “homophobia” will be prosecuted sternly.
Miami Dolphins’ player Don Jones already found himself in trouble
when he tweeted out “OMG” and “horrible” in response to the gay kiss.
He quickly deleting the tweets, but not before coming under criticism
from Dolphins’ general manager Dennis Hickey, who stated, “I was made
aware of it and I was disappointed in those comments. That’s not what we
stand for as an organization.”
So, as an organization, the Miami Dolphins have a problem with one of
their players expressing his dissatisfaction with two men kissing on
camera? This is what Jeff Fisher means by the “world of diversity we
live in now”? (I’m wondering how common it is to see a male college
player kissing his girlfriend on screen after being drafted, which makes
the Michael Sam moment stand out all the more.)
Not only, then, must Sam’s teammates embrace him without the least
expression of discomfort in the locker room or elsewhere (perhaps when
he’s with his boyfriend too?), but the entire league must embrace him
kissing his boyfriend without the least expression of discomfort. After
all, we are told, this is what the league now stands for.
And so, after the much ballyhooed annual draft event, the big talk is
not about the #1 pick, Jadeveon Clowney, or quarterback sensation
Johnny Manziel being picked #22. It’s about pick #249. And it’s about
the NFL’s first homosexual kiss.
And I almost forgot. This is not about sex or sexuality. It’s just
about football. And anyone who isn’t celebrating this moment is a
homophobe.
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