From The Progressive <[email protected]>
Subject Super Bowl and super issues
Date February 10, 2024 5:00 PM
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Dear Progressive Reader,

This weekend is the fifty-eighth Super Bowl. As Mark Fiore illustrates ([link removed]) , swirling in the background of this year’s contest is the absolutely nutty theory that Kansas City tight end Travis Kelce (who appeared ([link removed]) in a TV commercial for Pfizer to promote COVID vaccines), and pop star Taylor Swift (who inspired ([link removed]) 35,000 young fans to register to vote), and perhaps the entire NFL are involved in a conspiracy ([link removed]) to keep Donald Trump out of the White House. Well, as they say ([link removed]) , “correlation is not causation”—it might just be that
they all agree (for many ([link removed]) very good ([link removed]) reasons ([link removed]) ) that Donald Trump should not occupy the White House.

But there are other issues around the Super Bowl, too. It’s historical link ([link removed]) to militarism, the ever-increasing understanding ([link removed]) of traumatic brain injuries caused by the game, and the rise in violence against women that occurs ([link removed]) every year on Super Bowl Sunday are all significant concerns. This week, on our website, David Masciotra interviews Rhonda LaValdo of Not in Our Honor ([link removed]) about the continued appropriation of Native American history, themes, and identities in team names, mascots, and symbols. “The NFL is tone deaf. They say that they are trying to raise awareness about systemic racism, and yet they are insulting one of the most marginalized [groups of] people in this country,” she explains
([link removed]) . LaValdo’s group plans a protest at the game, and hopes to enlist the support and influence of Swift as well. “She must know the chop is wrong, because she never does it. . . . I wish she would say something. It would help.”

Elsewhere on our website this week, Jeff Abbott reports on ([link removed]) the recent reelection of El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele; Safa Ahmed examines ([link removed]) the growing links between Hindu nationalists and the Christian right in the United States; Joe George reviews ([link removed]) the new German film The Teachers’ Lounge; and journalist Jim Morris chronicles ([link removed]) his long look at the industrial poisoning of workers. Plus Sabine von Mering pens an op-ed ([link removed]) on the ways military spending exacerbates the climate crisis; Johnny Dudley looks at
([link removed]) the need for a different lens in examining and dealing with gun violence; and Jacqueline White opines ([link removed]) that we must rethink our approach to youth homelessness.

In our ongoing coverage of the wars and violence in the Middle East, Stephen Zunes looks at ([link removed]) the origins of the Houthis in Yemen, and how the United States could have chosen a different path in 2011; Glenn Sacks supports the right ([link removed]) of teachers to criticize actions by the Israeli government without fear of censorship; and Dana Hassneiah responds to the war in Gaza from her vantage point as a Palestinian physician living and working in the United States. “Even half a world away,” she writes ([link removed]) , “I feel the threat of extinction.”

Please keep reading, and we will keep bringing you important articles on these and other issues of our time.

Sincerely,
Norman Stockwell
Publisher

P.S. – Don’t miss a minute of the “hidden history” of 2024 – you can still order The Progressive’s new Hidden History of the United States calendar for the coming year. Just go to indiepublishers.shop ([link removed]) , and while you are there, check out some of our other great offerings as well.

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