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David Sirota
David Sirota
3 Feb 2012
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The Stadium-Mob Mentality

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One thing you can confidently say about 21st-century America is this: Our icons of seemingly frivolous spectacle often embody deeply significant and disturbing truths. What was Balloon Boy but a deadly serious commentary on national gullibility and misplaced priorities? What was Joe the Plumber but a fun-house reflection of our destructive deification of ignorance? And what was Matt Bellamy last week other than proof that much of our country could care less about its Constitution?

The instantly famous image of police removing the 29-year-old from Cleveland's Progressive Field was largely presented by the media as hilarious and justified — and the predictable applause, blog comments, talk-radio calls and Facebook posts embraced that portrayal. Bellamy, the logic went, deserved to be tossed because he was wearing LeBron James' new Miami Heat jersey in the city that James deserted. And not only was Bellamy wearing the jersey, he dared to flaunt it by pointing at it, prompting boos from fans and physical assault via projectile foodstuffs. In response, police say they ejected Bellamy for his own safety.

Before you chime in with a fist-pumping "good riddance!" remember that Progressive Field is not some private club — the taxpayer subsidies that built the stadium effectively make it a public space, ostensibly subjecting it to the Constitution. Also remember that police officers, as taxpayer-funded instruments of state power, are sworn to uphold that Constitution — and specifically, the First Amendment's requirement that the state refrain from "abridging the freedom of speech." And remember, too, that Bellamy's jersey didn't run afoul of the few court-authorized exemptions from the First Amendment — it didn't, say, violate obscenity statutes or endorse violence.

So while Bellamy was undoubtedly being provocative, that's his constitutional prerogative — one that police were obligated to protect. Instead, they removed him to wild applause, making this event perfectly illustrative of a nation that, for all its pro-Constitution rhetoric, increasingly ignores its founding document.

The First Amendment, after all, doesn't say you only have the freedom to say things that others approve of (or, in this case, wear jerseys that the hometown crowd likes). Nor does it say that, despite your right to free speech, fellow citizens have an equal right to physically assault you if they don't like what you are saying. It doesn't say these things because the framers knew that if government restricts speech on the basis of content, freedom ceases to exist. They also knew that freedom of speech can only survive when government intervenes to defend — rather than silence — speech.

But in an America that has largely succumbed to the stadium-mob mentality, those are apparently outdated notions — even beyond the ballpark walls. This is a country that didn't flinch when the Bush government's spokesperson warned citizens to "watch what they say" — just as we didn't flinch when the Obama government's mouthpiece menacingly told Americans to be "exceedingly careful" with their speech. During the 2004 election season, few noticed USA Today's report that "dozens of people" were "banished from or arrested at Bush political rallies," many "simply for holding signs or wearing clothing that expressed opposition to the war and administration policies." In most election campaigns since, just as few citizens seem to care that authorities now confine party convention protestors to "free speech zones" — the implication being that there is no First Amendment outside the police-designated cage.

Simply put, we are a country that no longer expresses the outrage that Bellamy rightly voiced after he was ejected from the game.

"I don't understand the reason why they kicked us out," he told reporters. "We paid like everybody (and) they kicked us out for me wearing what I want to wear."

His anger is warranted. Our silence and cheers speak volumes.

David Sirota is the author of the best-selling books "Hostile Takeover" and "The Uprising." He hosts the morning show on AM760 in Colorado and blogs at OpenLeft.com. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com or follow him on Twitter @davidsirota.

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Comments

4 Comments | Post Comment
At what does his right of free speech override the right of other spectators to watch the game without this clown interfering?
Comment: #1
Posted by: Sean
Fri Aug 6, 2010 4:13 AM
Re: Sean - LOL, WHAT? Have you been to a sports game lately? There's always some drunk idiot screaming out against a player, manager, coach, umpire, bat boy, etc. There's always stadium-provided boom sticks, vuvuzelas, cowbells, etc. ONE guy standing up and pointing to his #6 Heat jersey is interfering? Get a clue. What's going to happen next season when the Cavs play the Heat? Are the police going to remove anyone in a Miami jersey? Is the crowd going to erupt into chaos and a riot break out?

No, the only problem here is the poor sport, woe-is-me, pity party the Cleveland fans threw for themselves when they assaulted this guy (even if he was just trying to be a jerk). The police we obligated to arrest anyone who assaulted him by throwing food and bottles. They had no standing to remove the man from a game for which he paid his entry fee, simply because he wore a different teams jersey.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Nathan H.
Fri Aug 6, 2010 11:11 AM
I too like the Consitutional protection of 'free seach' But somehow I never equated 'free speach' to a ballgame crowd---who often cheered for mayhem on the field. Screams of '"kill the unpire'" gets the crowd to roar approval.

You would never see a guy with a Trojan' sweater sitting in the Bruin side or visa versa. That guy might survive but his swaeter would not.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Cole...
Fri Aug 6, 2010 12:19 PM
None of this is hard to explain. We've become a nation of cowards and punks, whether we're talking about our habit of attacking small, less developed countries or about a crowd threatening the life of one individual for daring to support the other team. In both cases, Americans today will only attack those who are smaller, weaker, powerless. Think of our welfare "reform" policies. This was a matter of the powerful taking from the powerless. As a direct result, the infant mortality rate among our poor has been rising while the life expectancy of our poor has unlike most of the world been on a downhill slide. This is unique among modern nations. This doesn't outrage us; a guy wearing the wrong jersey does. That says a lot about the American character today.
Sean, all this guy did was wear a LeBron James' Miami Heat jersey and pointed at it. So? How did that interfere with "the right of other spectators to watch the game"? He was one guy in a stadium full of people, many milling around, talking to others, shouting out, vendors passing by. No one had to pay any attention to him. He had no power to change anything. Seeing an opposing idea does NOT interfere with your rights. You don't like his jersey? So what? You're a grown up, and grown ups can handle the fact that we all have different favorites in sports.
Comment: #4
Posted by: DHFabian
Fri Aug 6, 2010 10:19 PM
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