Last
week, in a move that doesn’t appear to have its origins in
publicity-seeking, Kenner Mayor Ben Zahn dispersed a memo to donors of apparel
and equipment for the city to use in parks and recreation. It requires city
approval of such items and bans outright anything from Nike.
While the letter doesn’t mention the event
specifically, recently the company started a marketing campaign honoring the 30th
anniversary of its “Just Do It” slogan. This featured one of its representatives
for the next several years, who will receive a reported tens of millions of
dollars million for his trouble: Colin Kaepernick, an ex-professional football
quarterback known for having one good season and a penchant for using the pregame
playing of the National Anthem as a prop to air personal grievances against his
country’s policies and political system.
The initial ad lauds Kaepernick, who has expressed support for the Castro regime in Cuba and worn socks depicting police officers as pigs, as a sort of rebel willing to stand up for his beliefs. After he began his Anthem protests, he subsequently had a nondescript season and declared himself a free agent for the 2017 campaign, only to find no takers.
Clearly on the athletic decline, it’s debatable whether
he could have made a National Football League roster, but the negative
publicity he brought to the league likely shut the door totally to continuing on
the gridiron, with his becoming a marketing liability no team would wish to
bear. But he’ll make starter’s pay now from the perception, as the advertising ploy
tries to convince, that he gave up a career because of his beliefs that he
would not yield in the face of persecution.
Poppycock. Forcing himself into a ritual event that
signifies many things – the sacrificing of one’s life for his country and the representing
of an indisputably superior set of human values and ideas, among other salutary
sentiments – is the act first and foremost of a narcissist. He has many avenues
by which to pursue his political agenda (which
relies on dubious premises woefully short on facts) that don’t involve
calling attention to himself by antagonizing stadium crowds and television
viewers. He made himself the Westboro
Baptist Church of the NFL.
Of course, both Nike and Kaepernick are in the
business of making money, so if they think this arrangement will earn it, so be it. At the
same time, Kenner under Zahn’s leadership doesn’t have to subsidize the mock
heroism Nike peddles and half-baked ideology of somebody obviously not a brain
surgeon.
Zahn’s directive can’t make donors stop giving
Nike products to the city, but in its refusal to accept these, if they want to
help youth and others in athletic pursuits, givers will stop buying such items
and thereby negatively affect the company’s bottom line. It’s a perfectly valid
expression of government policy (along the lines of the state’s refusal
to do bond business with entities that encourage circumscribing legal Second Amendment
rights) and if Kenner’s citizens don’t like it, they can vote Zahn out or pressure
the City Council to change it.
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