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Should Military Use Our $$ to Sponsor NASCAR Teams?


By davidswanson - Posted on 10 July 2012

Is the ideal military recruit an independent thinker who refuses illegal orders, an obedient automaton who does anything he's told, or a vicious sadist eager to rape and kill?  Is courage more important or strength? Does it make the slightest difference if a soldier is gay?

We can agree to disagree.  But most people are going to agree that the ideal recruit is not a drooling idiot who announces, "I want to join up because the military sponsors NASCAR drivers."  Yet, the U.S. Army says that's how it gets a third of its recruits -- from motorsports sponsorships.  Recruitment stations at racetracks help.

The U.S. military spends billions of dollars every year on recruitment and advertising, producing video games and movies, flying jets over football games, taking gas guzzling vehicles and inflatable soldiers to picnics, etc.  I'm not even talking about military bands, which have a massive budget all their own.  I'm talking about the campaign to make killing look like a cool and painless sport, a campaign funded in the way that a campaign to save our climate would be properly funded if we had one.  We spend enough money attracting and recruiting each new recruit, that we could have hired him or her, and some of their friends, to do something useful.  I say "we" because it's our money. 

We spend $80 million a year on military sponsorships of sporting events, primarily NASCAR and primarily through the innocent-sounding National Guard.  New recruits into the Guard are often falsely told they won't have to go to war.

Here's military spending on professional sports sponsorships in the past two years, in millions of dollars:

                        FY11       FY12
Army               $18.7       $16.1
Nat’l Guard     $67.1       $53.9
Navy                 $3.7         $4.2
Marines            $2.5         $2.3
Air Force          $2.5         $2.6
Air Guard         $1.6         $1.2
Total               $96.1       $80.3

A bipartisan measure in Congress has passed through the House Armed Services committee that would stop this.  The effort has been led by Congresswoman Betty McCollum (D, Minn.) and Congressman Jackson Kingston (R, Ga.).  This is a case of the more progressive Democrats lining up with the Republicans who actually mean some of that talk about cutting spending, and against the Congress members of both parties who give funding the war machine top priority.  That latter group includes House Armed Services Committee Chairman Buck McKeon (R-Calif.) who is fighting to restore the funding.

Dale Earnhardt, Jr., whom the National Guard has paid $136 million over the past five years to put a National Guard sticker on his race car and wear the logo on his uniform, predictably agrees with McKeon.  Yet McKeon has not agreed to wear the logo of any of his war profiteering campaign funders. (Attention: graphic artist needed to produce that image!)

Congress members funded by weapons corporations are intent on avoiding the minor cuts imposed by last year's Budget Control Act, much less the serious cuts needed to benefit our economy, the environment, our civil liberties, or the nations at risk of facing our bombs.

The Army on Tuesday appeared to see the writing on the wall, announcing that it won't sponsor NASCAR next year.  But we need Congress to ban all military sports sponsorships by law.  The National Guard is a far bigger funder than the Army.

If we can't cut this, then what can we cut?  And if we can cut it, we will have estabished that military spending is not sacred.  At that point, perhaps we'll be able to address the much larger problem.  We are dumping over half of federal discretionary spending into war and war preparation, while funding is cut for education, infrastructure, fire departments, food stamps, and everything else.  Pro-war progressives like to claim that cuts are bad, period.  Yet, if we were to cut a few hundred billion out of war spending and put it to good use, we could lead the world in all those desirable categories where we're trailing, like education, security, happiness, ... and I'd say health too except that we're spending twice what we need to on that already -- the trick there is to get rid of the for-profit insurance companies that are swallowing our dollars.

Sports without militarism would open up enjoyment of sports to people who dislike killing, and it would take away a powerful marketing strategy for those trying to convince us that killing is just another sport.

No Military NASCAR could be the start of a cultural demilitarization, if we follow through.

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I don't care if they advertise at sporting events, but they also ought to advertise at Harvard, Yale, Ohio State, and USC football games.

I have nothing against NASCAR fans; they are as American as other sports' fans. The military knows, however, that there are more young people out of jobs or about to be out of jobs at those events than there are at  a Big 10 event.

What surprises me is that the fans of NASCAR don't react tothe insult of being singled out as the most likely harvest for young people to go get themselves killed, and that the military wouldn't think of approaching the "elite" and the unengaged in the same fashion.

What themilitary should not be doing is advertising that they are the home for the rough and tumble types and are not interested in the college educated and professionals. I guess those types have "better things to do" with their lives.

Every one else besides the NASCAR fans is off the hook, so they don't waste their advertising bucks on them.

It's been 39 years, and it has failed. Reinstate the draft and give everyone a stake in the wild-ass war-related decisions made by adminstrations, and the cowardly lack of decisions by worthless congresses.

I'll be most happy when I see the son or daughter of a war profiteer wearing the uniform and leading the charge.

S Cook, LTC USA (Ret)

but two wrongs don't make a right

keep em away from harvard too

This question goes far beyond NASCAR and raises the kind of fundamental question GENERAL BUTLER raised regarding his Fascist, "Muscleman" service to Late Capitalism, and its Western Fascism.   General Butler gave a speech to the idiot, know nothing VFW veterans about his role as a Class thug, "muscleman" for Western Banks in Latin Amerika, for Fascist, LATE CAPITALISM.    The corporate families of Amerika turned to him to be the SHOCK TROOPS FOR THEIR FASCISM, FASCIST COUP, against FDR and its crippled, corrup class democracy.     He turned them in to the public, for their Fascist alliance, to Western fascist Capitalism, in alliance with NAZI GERMANY.


These corporate fascist ruling families were never prosecuted,  for TREASON, instead, the corporate media hid the totalitarian attempt by fascist corporate elites to destroy democracy.     GENERAL BUTLER knew he was being used as a class whore, class thug to serve Fascist Capitalism..... HE TURNED AGAINST WESTERN FASCISM, FASCIST CAPITALISM, but the corporate media, and its elites hid this history from the public to avoid the real conclusions, that PUBLIC TAXES, SOCIAL WEALTH was usurped, stolen for CLASS THUGS, FASCISTS,  NAZIS IN AMERIKA.

 

Army ends longtime sponsorship of NASCAR team

The U.S. Army will end its decade-long NASCAR team sponsorship after this season, the Army announced Tuesday, a move many believe is the result of a Minnesota Congresswoman's efforts to end military spending with professional sports teams.

The Army spent roughly $7.4 million with Stewart-Haas Racing this year to co-sponsor the No. 39 Chevrolet driven by Ryan Newman. In a statement Tuesday, the team said the Army has decided not to renew its sponsorship in 2013, "due to a reallocation of its marketing budget that will not include a presence in NASCAR."

The announcement drew an immediate response from Congresswoman Betty McCollum, a Minnesota Democrat, who has campaigned for more than a year to reign in military spending, including the military's sponsorship of NASCAR and other sports such as ultimate fighting and mixed martial arts. According to her office, the military spends more than $80 million a year on sports sponsorships for recruiting and retention, including the Army and National Guard sponsorships in NASCAR.

. . . In late June, NASCAR officials said they expect a close relationship would continue between its patriotic teams and fans and the military, with or without the team sponsorships.

http://www.news-journalonline.com/racing/nascar/2012/07/11/army-ends-longtime-sponsorship-of-nascar-team.html

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