Reasons to just do away (I am not suggesting a government ban) on competive sports. Ex. basketball, football, baseball, damn near everything else. I wasn't always like this. Had a conversation with wife of a co-worker 20 some years ago and thought she was nuts. Funny how time and reconsideration can change a person outlook.
A huge waste of time. Unproductive except for large corporations and inflating players egos.
It reinforces division and us vs. them attitudes. Not unity and cooperation like what is needed today.
Add in b.s. like taking a knee during the anthem and men in womens sports, let's just do away with competive sports.
If you want to 'stick it to the man' of overpaid athletes and mega-rich sports conglomerates, please consider.
The sentence about overpaid athletes is even dumber. Sure they're paid well, some of them, because of all the money their sports are earning. The owners are paid much much better. Anyone who's more mad at the athletes than the owners is an idiot.
I did miss the overpayed athelete line. They are entertainers who put their bodies on the line for a short career and deserve every penny they get and more.
Ok. But what are cooperatively opposing? A computer in a game? Fine but that's still a competition. A game by definition means a certain level of competition as a result of being oppositional by nature.
I had this same thought recently about the "divisive oppositional mindset" however I would like to think that for a majority it's an outlet for that competitive instinctual drive. Thus not allowing that mindset to run your everyday life.
This just reads like "I don't like this thing and here's the reasons why, let's get rid of it entirely. Also I like guns." What about the folks that don't like guns?
Now they have no sports and no guns.
I'd rather get rid of guns and lower the people getting shot stats, than the "sports fans have done a bollockry again" but no one was killed stats.
I never followed any competitive sports, always found them quite boring. Add to it the insane levels of corruption and abuse prevalent in commercial sports and I find it hard to understand how people can even enjoy them.
As a Canadian, the only way you'll take hockey away is over our collective cold dead bodies. Hockey is practically a religion up here and I wouldn't have it any other way.
I don't have a problem with competitive sports and such, but I do wish that it wasn't such a large part of our collective culture. I don't follow sports, and especially American Football. I have blue hair and last year nearly everyone was asking if I did it for the Detroit Lions. People who knew I had it for two years previous were asking me. Strangers in the store. I see ads for sports adjacent things when I don't go to the websites like that or watch the games. Tired of seeing it everywhere.
I have long thought that there’s way too much emphasis placed on pro sports in society, but there are a few aspects to this. First, I agree that it inflames division and tribalism. I’ve had people act angry and want to start fights with me because they saw my license plate and grumbled something about football, or I was wearing a hat for some sports team I wasn’t even aware of and people were upset about it. The amount of attention and money spent on basically watching adult adults play little kid games is absurd. Incredible amounts of money are spent on stadiums and salaries.
Still there are positive aspects. The competitive and high profile nature does propel people to exceptional feats of athleticism. The same goes for Olympic sports. Olympic stadiums are a bit of an excess, but there are benefits to international relations that come from the Olympic games. A question I have is as far as the Olympic it goes, what sports are not competitive? Even solo sports are done as a competition.
But generally, my perspective is that if people are interested in sports, they should play them themselves. I don’t know why it would be so exciting to go watch someone else play basketball or something. You should just play basketball if you like it so much.
But generally, my perspective is that if people are interested in sports, they should play them themselves. I don’t know why it would be so exciting to go watch someone else play basketball or something. You should just play basketball if you like it so much.
While I agree playing is superior and I don't watch any sports wher I don't personally know the players/competitors, there are plenty of people who are not able to play themselves because of age, injury, complete lack of ability, and they still want to be a part of the experience. Watching kids play is fun, as long as the competition is friendly.
I was commenting on pro sports and somewhat college athletics. Kids sports are cool imo except for how overly engaged and competitive the parents get about it.
Sure, not everyone can play sports themselves. If they tried it more though, they'd be more likely to be able to. I'd bet the majority of sports fans are not unable to engage in athletic activity. I do realize that watching sports is also different than playing sports. That's what I'm being critical of though.
Sport sucks, it's boring and teaches kids how to sort people into us vs them based on arbitrary nonsense.
But like belief in divine agency, it's presence across most societies throughout history probably means it's just unfortunately a part of the human experience.
Edit: "men in womens sports": this is absolute garbage that doesn't happen and being worried about it marks you as gullible, hateful and ignorant.
Well run sports programs for kids teach them to work together and challenge themselves. The best even teach ways to handle failure and to grow from practice.
Poorly run ones promote the us vs them and other negative aspects.
Obsession over corporate sports is a problem but many people enjoy it. I'm sure you have hobbies or activities that aren't productive.
I don't follow professional sports but I also don't care if people aren't interested in 3d printing, cats, cooking, sci-fi media or any of my other hobbies.
(Cooking falls into hobby because it's not about survival but taste.)