NFL Super Bowl game was great. The guys wearing blue beat
the guys wearing red, and Bad Bunny and Lady Gaga made MAGA snowflakes cry.
But the NFL can also teach Americans a huge lesson
about economics, “socialism,” and the differences between Republican “free
market” nuts and FDR’s re-regulation of the American economy that created the
largest middle class in history and the first in the world to include more than
half of a nation’s citizens.
Most Americans would be highly offended, for example, if
the NFL took big bucks from Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg or somebody
like these monopolists to change the rules so whichever team gave the League
the most money could have an extra three players on the field at all
times.
But that’s pretty much exactly what Reaganomics and
deregulation have brought us in our marketplaces; it’s the staggering
difficulty that every small business in America faces today in the
form of massive corporations like Walmart, Facebook, X, Google, and Amazon.
For capitalism to work in a way that doesn’t produce
oligarchs and monopolies, it must be regulated. Capitalism, after all, is just
a game that people play using money and mutually agreed-upon rules. Just like
football.
The NFL heavily regulates football in the United States,
at least the football played by its teams. Those regulations include how many
players are on the field at any time, exactly what constitutes a down or a
touchdown, and rules about how players may physically contact each other, and
under what circumstances.
The NFL’s super-socialist regulations also decide
which team gets first pick of new players: they decided that the worst-performing
teams should have first choice of newly available players,
giving every team an opportunity to rise through the ranks in the following
season.
It’s much like progressive income taxation and the estate
tax, giving the little guy a chance while slightly restraining those already at
the top. These regulations guarantee the safety and stability of the game
itself, and guarantee that fans of football have a consistent experience,
because everybody understands and follows the rules.
That’s not meritocracy; it’s planned redistribution of
future resources to maintain league balance. If American public policy worked
this way, the millionaire opinion bots at billionaire-owned Fox “News” would
spontaneously combust.
The league also pools its television and licensing
revenue and divides it equally among all teams: No owner gets
richer just because they’re in a bigger market. In a pure “free market,” the
Cowboys and Giants would drown everyone else in cash. The NFL says, “Nope,
everybody eats.” That’s redistribution by design.
And they impose a hard salary cap so rich owners can’t
simply buy championships, and they require owners to spend what is effectively
a minimum wage on players rather than hoarding profits. Teams that overspend
are punished: that’s collective control of capital to prevent oligarchy, the
exact thing conservatives scream about.
NFL teams are also required to spend a minimum
percentage of shared revenue on their players. Owners can’t just hoard money;
they must reinvest in labor. That’s closer to social democracy than
laissez-faire capitalism.
The NFL figured out something America forgot after
Reagan: markets only work when rules prevent the powerful from rigging the
game.
In other words, the NFL is a regulated market with enforced rules that prevent monopolies, protect labor, and preserve competition. And because of that, small-market teams can win, dynasties don’t last forever, and fans get a fair game. If the American economy were run more like the NFL, we’d have fewer oligarchs, more competition, and a much healthier middle class.
But imagine if Milton Friedman, Robert Bork, or the
other idiots like them who first advised the Reagan administration and now have
guided Republicans ever since were to have taken over the NFL.
The teams with the wealthiest owners would always get the
best players and thus would win every game. They might even decide that the
team that gave the NFL the most money could have an extra player or three on
the field at various times.
They’d assure us that the teams that didn’t perform as
well just have to “pull themselves up by their bootstraps.” Perhaps their
problem is just that their players are “lazy,” these people would tell us, and
the solution is to cut their salaries and reduce the amount of protective
equipment they can wear so that they will have a “incentive” to play harder and
increase their performance.
Then the richest teams would begin buying the poorer
teams, until all the teams are owned by three or four billionaires. Sounds like
every industry in today’s America. But conservatives would try to convince
you it would create a football paradise, right?
Of course it wouldn’t be a paradise: Fans would stop
watching, kids would stop dreaming of playing, and the game itself would
collapse under the weight of rigging and unfairness. Not to mention that if the
socialist NFL ever actually tried some crazy “free market” stupidity like that,
Congress would be holding hearings within a week, and the public outrage would
be deafening.
But when the same thing happens in our economy, we’re
told by Republicans that it’s just “the free market.” We’re told that
“monopolies are natural,” that “billionaires are geniuses,” and that working
people who can’t get ahead in a rigged system somehow “deserve their fate.”
We’re told by these fools that any attempt to re-write
the rules so the American economy is fair again and our middle class can
recover from the massive $50+ trillion hit it’s taken from 45 years of
Reaganomics is “socialism,” even though FDR’s system is exactly how every
successful capitalist system in history has worked.
Franklin Roosevelt understood this. He knew markets don’t
self-police any more than football does. Without referees, rules, and
consequences, the biggest and most ruthless players take over, the game stops
being a game, and democracy itself is put at risk. And when the morbidly rich
write the rules, they inevitably only benefit themselves; everybody else gets
screwed.
The NFL doesn’t regulate football because it hates
competition: it regulates football and “redistributes” wealth and opportunity
so competition can exist at all. America once did the same thing with
capitalism, and the result was the greatest middle class the world had ever
seen.
Two-thirds of us were in the middle class when Reagan
came into office and could get there with a single paycheck thanks to FDR‘s
and LBJ‘s “socialist” New Deal and Great Society policies. Today it’s
only roughly 45% of us and requires two paychecks. All because of 45 years of
Reaganomics.
The choice in front of us is simple. We can keep pretending that letting billionaires write the political and economic rules and own the media is “freedom,” or we can remember that a fair game is what freedom looks like. Because when the rules only work for the owners, the rest of us aren’t players anymore. We’re just there to watch, pay, and lose what little we have so the billionaires can buy another super-yacht.
-Thom Hartmann









