There�s been talk all this week about that stunning report
from former Senator George Mitchell revealing that Major League Baseball
players, including some of the sport�s biggest stars, have been using steroids
for years. The findings prompted my fellow journalist and friend Dick Starkey
to recall an important insight into America by the eminent social critic,
Jacques Barzun. A Frenchman by birth, now 100 years old and living in Texas, Barzun,
like his illustrious ancestor Alexis de Tocqueville, has been a canny
interpreter of the American character. �Whoever wants to know the heart
and mind of America,� he once wrote, �had better learn baseball.�
So what do we learn about ourselves from the Mitchell
Report? That something is flowing through our veins other than red corpuscles.
It turns out owners, players and the players� union were complicit in
ignoring the growing use of steroids and other illegal drugs in our
national pastime. But suppose our national pastime has
become our national pathology? Ours is a society on
steroids, and we�re as blind as baseball�s owners were a decade ago.
In our drugged state, we cheer the winners in the game of
wealth, the billionaires who benefit from a skewed financial system -- the
losers, we kick down the stairs. We open fire hoses of cash into our
political system in the name of �free speech.� Television stations that refuse
to cover government make fortunes selling political bromides over
public airwaves. Pornography passing as advertising assaults our senses,
seduces our children, and pollutes our culture. Partisan propaganda gets
pumped up as news. We feed on the flamboyance of celebrities. And we
actually take seriously the Elmer Gantrys who use the Christian Gospel as
a guidebook to an Iowa caucus or a battle plan for the Middle East. In the
face of a scandalous health care system, failing schools, and a
fraudulent endless war, we are as docile as tattered scarecrows in a
field of rotten tomatoes.
As for that war, you may have heard that a quarter of
the heavily-armed �shooters� working in the streets of Baghdad for the
Administration�s mercenary Blackwater foreign legion are
alleged to be chemically influenced by steroids or other mind-altering
substances.
The other day, before Mitchell issued his report, the former
pitcher Jim Bouton was holding forth on the importance of a level playing
field in the sport at which he had long excelled. Were he playing today,
Bouton said, he wouldn�t want to lose his livelihood because his competitors
had an unfair advantage.
You don�t get a level playing field with performance
enhancing drugs, any more than you get an honest government with
political action committees and bundled contributions, or a fair economy with
some derivatives, hedge funds, and private equity managers taxed at rates lower
than their janitors. You get a level playing field only when the fans
demand it. Suppose people stopped attending games in large numbers, stopped
watching on TV, stopped buying the products hyped by the icons. The
leveling would happen, or baseball as a money-making business would die.
It�s not likely to happen. If we can't organize to stop a brutal,
bloody war in Iraq, or rectify an economic system that divides us further
every day, we can hardly expect collective action from baseball fans.
There was a lesson in George Mitchell�s report that I'm not
sure even he recognized. The day Americans don�t feel strongly enough
about the need for level playing fields to fight for them -- the
day when cutting corners and seeking an edge become the national
pastime -- is the day democracy will be lucky even to find a seat in the
bleachers.
Bill
Moyers is managing editor of the weekly public affairs program Bill Moyers Journal, which airs Friday
night on PBS. Check local airtimes or comment at The Moyers Blog at www.pbs.org/moyers.