The NFL Pro Bowl, an event that routinely
bores fans as much as watching the 1978 Best Picture Winner, The Deer Hunter. Not only does the Pro
Bowl lack any sort of meaning but what it generally lacks in entertainment
value it makes up for in aberration. This year’s Pro Bowl may actually come
with some entertainment value, albeit off the gridiron, as the NFL has once
again thrown morality to the wind.
Unbeknownst to The
Cornercube the NFL, apparently, selects “honorary captains” at the Pro Bowl
for each team (NFC Team and AFC Team). This year the NFL selected as one of its
four “honorary captains” former Atlanta Falcons quarterback, Michael
Vick. Although Michael Vick revolutionized the NFL by being the first
quarterback to rush for over 1,000 yards in a single season (a feat that
wouldn’t be broken until, ironically, this year by the Raven’s quarterback,
Lamar Jackson), Michael Vick is also remembered as being a felon for his role
in running a dogfighting ring in which he abused, tortured and even killed dogs
who did not perform well in fights. Once Vick finished serving his 18-month
federal prison sentence he would return to the NFL in 2009, playing for the
Philadelphia Eagles, New York Jets, and Pittsburgh Steelers and eventually
retiring in 2017. Vick is now a football analyst for FOX.
The issue with this whole disagreement is the very fact that
it seems confusing how a former NFL player becomes an “honorary captain.” The
NFL gives very little indication regarding the requirements to become an
honorary captain and just provides a brief synopsis of the honorary captains’
role. The role of an honorary captain is to be a “mentor” to the Pro Bowl
players. First, the idea that professional athletes need mentors on the sideline
for a game that means absolutely nothing, is ridiculous. If the “honorary
captain” was solely named due to his ability on the field, then the animal
rights activists’ argument is moot, since they are missing the purpose of the captain.
However, the fact that the NFL specifically stated that the “honorary captains”
will be acting as “mentors” provides some sort of moral stature that players
(again, professional athletes, not some high school team) should look up to.
The NFL, as it always does, has placed itself in this moral
gymnastics’ dilemma, in which instead of just giving in, they hold their ground
and defend their moral ambiguity. Goodell seems to be reasoning that because
Vick has turned his life around and done good, that he deserves to represent
the NFL and be a mentor. That’s fine, but some past bad actions, no matter the
time or recourse done to mitigate the damages, simply preclude the actor from
reaching certain milestones.
However, society has either become all too forgivable or
simply desensitized by egregious actions. The latter seems to be holding truer
than the former. For instance, Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, in his
high school and college years, was accused of sexually assaulting women and one
such victim even testified during his Senate nomination hearing to such
egregious behavior. The Senate, even with hearing quite convincing testimony,
ruled that these past actions will have no bearing on Kavanaugh’s ability to be
an impartial and fair judge, a judge who will rule on women’s rights matters,
such as abortion. Then, of course, the
Commander in Chief, Donald Trump, can payoff porn stars for sex, brag about
“grabbing women by the pussy”, make fun of a journalist with a disability, call White Supremacists “good people”, disavow
all Hispanic migrants as “rapists”, bribe a foreign power for personal
political gain and consistently refuse to follow and uphold the rule of law
(i.e. the Constitution), still has half of America saying (ironically after
coming out of church), “that’s our guy!” Then of course there is the Republican
Senate, which should be held liable for their willful negligence in failing to
uphold the Constitution and check the President’s abuses.
So, if you are appalled by the fact that Michael Vick is
named an “honorary captain”, open your eyes. America, and the world, have
fallen into this frightening sense in which character, morals, sacrifice and a
good heart are sidelined, while the preference for amorality, fear, anger,
selfishness, and a lack of sincerity prevail.
The Cornercube
believes that Michael Vick has learned from his terrible actions. However, The Cornercube does not believe that
Michael Vick should represent the NFL after embarrassing it so terribly.
Goodell shouldn’t be celebrating Vick’s ability to act rationally or morally,
Goodell, like the rest of us, should have simply required it. Holding someone
to a simple level of morality, especially someone who will hold a great deal of
power, shouldn’t be hard for society to do, it should come naturally.