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Many Americans don’t see sports as promoting love of country (i.e., evil nationalism)

#1
C C Offline
https://news.osu.edu/many-americans-dont...f-country/

RELEASE: From the singing of the national anthem to salutes to military personnel, patriotic displays permeate major sports events in the United States.

But only about half of Americans (47%) surveyed in 2018-2019 agreed that sports teach love of country, according to a new study. Even fewer believed sports teach respect for the military (34%) or teach people how to be an American (33%).

“The patriotic imagery and messages in sports are so common that many people don’t even recognize it is there,” said Chris Knoester, lead author of the study and associate professor of sociology at The Ohio State University. “That suggests many people probably don’t realize how nationalism and patriotism are taught and encouraged through sports in America.”

Knoester conducted the study with Evan Davis, visiting assistant professor of sport management at St. John Fisher College in Rochester, New York. Their results were published online recently in the journal International Review for the Sociology of Sport.

Survey data came from the National Sports and Society Survey (NSASS), sponsored by Ohio State’s Sports and Society Initiative.

The survey was completed by 3,993 adults who volunteered to participate through the American Population Panel, run by Ohio State’s Center for Human Resource Research. Participants, who came from all 50 states, answered the survey online between the fall of 2018 and spring of 2019.

The research was designed to analyze how much Americans noticed the patriotic messaging in sports, Davis said. “We have the singing of the national anthem, the giant flag, the military flyovers – it is part of our culture and people accept it as normal – so much so that it is often not even noticed,” Davis said.

“But can you imagine going to a theater and having everyone stand up before the movie and sing the national anthem? It is really a unique part of sports in the United States.”

Results showed that while many people didn’t see sports as promoting patriotic messaging, some groups were more likely to see such messages. In particular, men, heterosexuals, Christians and Republicans were more likely than others to say that sports teach love of country, respect for the military and how to be an American.

“These tend to be groups that have traditionally had high status in the United States, been comfortable with their situations, and therefore have positive feelings about these values,” Knoester said. “It makes sense that they are more aware and supportive of these cultural messages in sports.”

But, unexpectedly, the researchers found that some lower-status groups – Black, Latino and high-school educated Americans – were more likely than white and college-educated people to agree that sports taught love of country, respect for the military and how to be an American. “That may be because sports are seen as more meritocratic than the rest of society and offer more opportunities for advancement in our society for people who are not white and college educated,” Knoester said.

Not surprisingly, people who identified more strongly as sports fans were also more likely to agree that sports promote these cultural values. This suggests that sports fans are not only especially aware of these messages, but they explicitly, or at least tacitly, approve of these messages because of their continued passion for sports, he said.

Knoester said this research is a first step at trying to understand how Americans view the messages promoted by sports. “Based on our findings, it seems that most Americans do not recognize sport as a social institution that promotes nationalism – although there is good evidence that it does,” he said.

“We need to continue to research which cultural messages are promoted through sports, why, and to what effect.”
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#2
Syne Offline
2018-2019, huh?
Did the professors forget that national anthem protests started in 2016? People certainly recognized patriotic messages and imagery then...and how they were being pissed on.
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#3
Leigha Offline
Internationally speaking, I don't think it's customary for countries other than the US, to have their national anthems precede a sporting event, unless they're competing against another country or maybe in the finals. So, if they're just looking at that as some type of gauge - naturally, they might see Americans as nationalistic and ''too'' patriotic.

I’m not sure why patriotism is now conflated with white supremacism? If you’re patriotic, it can simply mean that you respect your country and its values - in the case of the US, we celebrate democracy. For now, anyway.
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#4
C C Offline
Quote:https://news.osu.edu/many-americans-dont...f-country/

[...] The research was designed to analyze how much Americans noticed the patriotic messaging in sports, Davis said. “We have the singing of the national anthem, the giant flag, the military flyovers – it is part of our culture and people accept it as normal – so much so that it is often not even noticed,” Davis said....


Well, I certainly didn't notice or remember this being a wholly new thing after 2009:

How the Pentagon Paid for NFL Displays of Patriotism: “Until 2009, no NFL player stood for the national anthem because players actually stayed in the locker room as the anthem played,” ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith explained in 2016. “The players were moved to the field during the national anthem because it was seen as a marketing strategy to make the athletes look more patriotic. The United States Department of Defense paid the National Football League $5.4 million between 2011 and 2014, and the National Guard $6.7 million between 2013 and 2015 to stage onfield patriotic ceremonies as part of military-recruitment budget line items.”

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy later confirmed that players did not appear on field for the anthem until 2009, and Vice notes that Smith’s claim was checked by an ESPN researcher.
- - - - - -

It’s not just the NFL: According to SBNation, the biggest sports leagues in the United States have received more than $10 million from the Department of Defense for patriotic displays. That includes the NFL, MLB, NHL, MLS, and NBA. SBNation also notes the figure doesn’t include NASCAR — perhaps America’s most popular sport. Further reporting from The Washington Post found NASCAR was actually the biggest recipient of Department of Defense money. The stock car racing governing body received more than $1.5 million in 2015 alone.
- - - - - -

But according to Snopes, players always had the option to be on the sidelines for the national anthem during Sunday afternoon games. It was only during primetime games that they didn't, due to broadcast time limits or issues. After 2009, they did appear during primetime games. But the paid patriotism didn't mandate them to be there.

What's True

NFL players were not required to be on the sidelines during the playing of the U.S. national anthem for primetime games prior to 2009.

What's False

Players always had the option of standing on the sidelines during the national anthem, and there is no evidence that "paid patriotism" initiatives begun in 2009 required them to do so.
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#5
C C Offline
(Dec 1, 2021 11:07 PM)Leigha Wrote: Internationally speaking, I don't think it's customary for countries other than the US, to have their national anthems precede a sporting event, unless they're competing against another country or maybe in the finals. So, if they're just looking at that as some type of gauge - naturally, they might see Americans as nationalistic and ''too'' patriotic.

I’m not sure why patriotism is now conflated with white supremacism? If you’re patriotic, it can simply mean that you respect your country and its values - in the case of the US, we celebrate democracy. For now, anyway.


Do to the war trigger of their WWII nationalism, it's perhaps understandable why Japan and Germany deflated their patriotism afterwards.

Minus the festivities and ceremonies, here's are a couple of glances at international patriotism levels.

More narrow definition of patriotism used for the first one, that yields very different results.
- - - - - -

The Most Patriotic Countries (World Atlas): Patriotism is the willingness of citizens to fight for their country.

[...] The level of patriotism differs by region with countries from the Middle East and North Africa (M.E.N.A) having the highest score at 83% while countries in Western Europe scored very low at 25%.

[...] Morocco and Fiji emerged as the countries with the highest rate of patriotism in the world with a patriotism rate of 94%.

[...] Pakistan and Vietnam came in second with a tied score of 89%, Bangladesh scored 86%, Azerbaijan scored 85%, Papua New Guinea scored 84%, Afghanistan and Georgia tied on a 76% score.

The following countries had a patriotism score of 72%, India, Finland, Turkey, Philippines, Thailand, and Armenia.

[...] A big percentage of women are willing to fight for their countries (52% of the sample) as compared to 67% of men.

Young people between ages 18-34 showed more willingness to fight at 66%.

When regions are compared depending on religion, regions with more Muslim populations were more patriotic at 78%.

[...] It is crucial to mention regions and countries that did not do so well in the patriotism score. Most people from developed countries are not as willing to fight for their countries as compared to those former developing countries.

Although not at the bottom of the list... America scored 44%, Switzerland scored 39%, Denmark scored 30% while Britain scored 27%.

The least patriotic countries were Germany, Netherlands, and Japan at 18%, 15% and 11% respectively.
- - - -

Most patriotic countries (World Population Review): Patriotism is the devotion to, vigorous support for, and/or feeling of pride for one’s country. These feelings relate to one’s own homeland, including historical, political, cultural, or ethnic aspects.

[...] Respondents were asked whether they believe they live “in the best country in the world,” and their answer determined which were the most patriotic. The top ten most patriotic countries (based on what percentage answered “yes”) are:

The United States (41%)

India (35%)

Australia (34%)

The United Arab Emirates (27%)

Saudi Arabia (25%)

Thailand (25%)

Philippines (15%)

Indonesia (14%)

The United Kingdom (13%)

Denmark (13%)
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#6
Yazata Offline
If you want to see patriotism mixed with sports, look at international soccer matches. Watch the World Cup. It's just false to suggest that Americans are unique in that regard.

What used to be the case is that sports used to be one of the most obvious places where all sorts of people, young and old, black and white, male and female, rich and poor, could all come together as one in solidarity and cheer for the same team. It was a unifying experience and that was one of the best things about sports.

But then that spirit got Kaepernicked. Suddenly sports were an occasion for divisive left-activism. That's when I stopped watching most sports.
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