Livin’ on a Prayer

young family money worries

I personally identify with the characters in Bon Jovi’s ballad, “Livin’ on a Prayer”. My wife and I had to struggle to make our way in the world. Looking back, it was hard. Keeping food on the table for the kids and making rent was a grind. Working the temporary, part time, and occasional job while going to school stretched our endurance and patience. It’s the act of striving, though, that is necessary for building character. Without it, who knows, our human development would have been stunted.

I keep this in mind as politicos appeal to our vanity to get our votes. Their refrain is that it’s someone else’s fault, that somebody else is holding us down. We are victims of hazy, generalized “elites”, “globalists”, the “top 1%”, the patriarchy, “whiteness”, a nearly endless and fuzzy collection of others. “The deck is stacked”, we are reminded. We have no more agency than a six-year-old. They offer more government goodies to suspend us in greater dependency. Today, it’s true of the Right and Left.

Trump and MAGA offer an insulated and perpetual economic playpen under a plethora of subsidies (no tax on tips, Social Security, overtime, and crony capitalism) and protective tariffs. No need to worry about competition. Our bankrupting Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are mostly held above reproach. We get to slide our way to insolvency while content in our firm belief in the unbelievable.

The Left, meaning the Democratic Party in toto, screech the loudest for debilitating dependency. Their response to creative destruction is for everybody to be a coder, and, of course, more government bennies. Biden declared war on coal and his retort to those with a big fat crosshair on their livelihoods was (see #1), “Anybody who can go down 300 to 3,000 feet in a mine, sure in hell can learn to program as well . . . .” There you have it. He’s going to kill your jobs and communities. As for you, just go pound sand . . . in college. Biden promised that the rest of us will pick up the tab.

If you’re 23 and still haven’t “found yourself”, Nancy Pelosi boasts that a young adult can cling to their parents’ healthcare policy till age 26. She gushed in 2009 during the Obamacare debate (see #2):

“Just think of the difference that this would make for young people. They’ll be able to do what they want to do without having to find a job that has healthcare benefits.”

There you have it; their answer to the discomforts of striving is to make somebody else pay for it. It is so outrageous if wasn’t so pitiful. Extend adolescence to your mid-twenties.

Juxtaposed is Bon Jovi’s reality of striving, the painful, sometimes slow, grasping for the next rung in upward mobility. It’s how life becomes a molder of men and women. The formula for entering the middle class hasn’t changed: get married, stay married, have kids, work hard, and never stop learning, in no particular order. At times, it’ll seem like you’re “livin’ on a prayer”. Good, prayer is a good thing.

Please listen to the lyrics of Bon Jovi’s “Livin’ on a Prayer”. It could well be the anthem of our initiation into adulthood. In Latin, Carpe Diem.

RogerG

Sources:

1. “Biden Suggests Coal Miners Learn to Code To Be Prepared for ‘Jobs of the Future’”, James Crowley, Newsweek, 12/31/2019, at https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-new-hampshire-campaign-code-1479913.
2. “Pelosi appeals to youth in health bill”, Mike Soraghan, The Hill, 10/14/2009, at https://thehill.com/homenews/house/52350-pelosi-appeals-to-youth-in-health-bill/.

A New NFL Season . . . And I’ve Had Enough.

 

*The NFL announced the continuation of the “social justice” messaging in the endzone for the 2025 season.

Yes, I’m complaining again. Maybe I shouldn’t. But I can’t help but notice that pro-football, both the NFL and Division 1A college in this era of the transfer portal and NIL, has swelled beyond an athletic contest of trained, skilled, and fit athletes under great coaching into an extravaganza, a bacchanalia in many cases, a show to rival anything on Broadway, and embellished with trendy ideological crusades. A manufactured over-the-top enthusiasm is evangelized in the commercials that glosses over reality. The whole thing from the pregame to halftime and afterward has become our secular society’s version of America at worship, a worship of the outlandish.

Our pews are emptying but 100,000-seat stadiums packed, tv ratings off the charts. But where’s the game; where’s the simple fact that this is a match between teams of the highly honed in mind and body? The comely Carrie Underwood struts out on a runway to belt out the theme of Sunday Night Football amid pyrotechnics, strobe lights, and flashy cameos of rock and football celebrities. The Sao Paulo game between the Chiefs and Chargers had a gaudy Super Bowl-style halftime that’ll rival anything in February, or the raunchiest Mardi Gras. Again, where’s the game; where’s the clash of great athletes in shoulder pads in all this hubbub?

Trendy ideological beliefs permeate the production. Five years after George Floyd, the deadly summer of chaos, defund the police, metropolitan downtowns laid waste, and the subsequent flight of business and the middle class from these toxic environments, the NFL is still pursuing “social justice” – er, “equity”. The games continue to be festooned with a national anthem for a racial group. End zones are tattooed with “End Racism” or “It Takes All of Us”. Is this a Democratic Party rally or a game?

Yeah, “end racism”, and end the gratuitous virtue signaling. The NFL overtly perpetuates the myth that men and women are equal in their fascination for sports (see #1 for insight into that). The NFL lavishes funds on flag football so the girls can show off their physical prowess (proof that everyone is over-paying for this thing). I thought that transgenderism abated the illusions of physical “equity”. It’s more than expanding the fan base. Throughout, including the commercials, physical differences are whitewashed, and women are equally gonzo as the men. It’s as if the NFL is busy shaming those women, maybe most, of different inclinations. It appears to be the NFL’s vast social engineering project.

It’s true. The NFL is proof of John O’Sullivan’s First Law (see #2): “Any organization not explicitly and constitutionally right-wing will sooner or later become left-wing.” Thanks, Roger Goodell, for the garish twice-weekly cultural revolution. I just want a game absent all of the folderol.

Watch Greg Kelly and Megyn Kelly (no relation) on her show. I won’t vouch for everything said but sympathize with the sentiment. I, too, am done with the NFL.

Oh, by the way, you can drop that ridiculous kickoff routine.

RogerG

Sources:

1. For instance, review “A Sex Difference in the Predisposition for Physical Competition: Males Play Sports Much More than Females Even in the Contemporary U.S”, Matt Hayward, editor, NIH: National Center for Biotechnology Information, at https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3498324/.
2. Can be found in “John O’Sullivan’s First Law: All organizations that are not actually right-wing will over time become left-wing”, Emil O. W. Kirkegaard, at https://emilkirkegaard.dk/en/2021/05/john-osullivans-first-law-all-organizations-that-are-not-actually-right-wing-will-over-time-become-left-wing/.