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America’s Republican guard (Irish Ingrates)
Irish Times ^ | Sept 19, 2006

Posted on 09/22/2006 7:17:25 PM PDT by go-dubya-04

Bruce Selcraig on why so many US golfers align themselves to right-wing politics and born-again Christianity

15/09/06: During Ryder Cup week, were it not for the zesty uniforms or a tell-tale buenos días, the casual fan might be excused for no longer seeing much difference between the European pros and their American counterparts.

They all seem to have their retinues of personal trainers, agents and nutritionists. They swing and dress much alike, excepting the neon plumage of an Ian Poulter or Jesper Parnevik. They drive the same luxury cars, have similar messy divorces, and whether they be from Denmark or Denver offer up the same golf cliches in a globalised TV-ready English that pleases their corporate sponsors.

It’s not really surprising considering that more Europeans than ever play the US tour, and many of them, including Ryder members Colin Montgomerie, Luke Donald and Paul Casey, played their college golf in the US. But there’s still one significant cultural divide that, while hardly apparent to the casual golf fan, has now become so sensitive an issue most players simply avoid addressing it when they’re on the other’s turf. Simply put, many Europeans and other international players are put off by the overwhelming number of American PGA Tour players who identify themselves as George Bush-loving Republicans who support the US occupation of Iraq.

"Every movie you see, every book you read is like, ‘America, we’re the best country in the world,’" German Alex Cejka told me in May at the Byron Nelson tournament in Fort Worth, Texas. "When I hear this (from players) I could throw up. Sure it’s a great country . . . but you cannot say ‘we have the most powerful president in the world, the biggest country in the world’ . . . It’s sad that they are influenced by so much bullshit."

The affable and well-read Australian Geoff Ogilvy, who won the US Open and has lived in Arizona with his Texas wife for four years, says: "A lot of their conservative views (on tour) are way off the map . . . I think George Bush is a bit dangerous. I think the world is scared while he’s in office, (but) there’s less tolerance of diversity (in opinions) over here (and) people have more blind faith in their government."

Various Europeans have hinted that they have similar views, but say privately they’ll be crucified in American locker-rooms and newspapers if they publicly oppose Bush, his fundamentalist Christian agenda or the Iraq war.

"That’s the new way of American censorship," said Parnevik, as he baked on the driving range in Fort Worth. "People get hurt very badly if they speak out."

Two years ago American baseball star Carlos Delgado, who is from Puerto Rico, silently protested the Iraq war by refusing to participate in the ceremonial singing of God Bless America during games. He was later booed at many stadiums and called "un-American" on radio talk shows.

Americans boycotted the Dixie Chicks band when the lead singer of the Texas trio, Natalie Maines, told a London audience: "Just so you know, we’re ashamed the president of the United States is from Texas."

And sure enough, when told of the above comments by European golfers, American tour player Olin Browne, a 14-year veteran, responded thus: "The players who like to criticise America sure do like to come over here and play in our events."

While these random comments are just that, they seem to closely mirror the attitudes of other nations toward America, which were exhaustively surveyed in 2005 by the non-partisan, Washing ton DC-based Pew Research Center. In that study, which surveyed 17,000 people in 16 nations, approval ratings of the US have plummeted since 2002 – France at 43 per cent, Germany and Spain 41, Britain 55 – and respondents overwhelmingly blamed the policies of George Bush. Even in Canada, America’s closest ally, positive feelings about the US fell from 72 per cent in 2002 to 59 per cent last year.

Now no one is suggesting the world of professional golf is some cauldron of political ferment or that pro golfers anywhere care more about foreign policy than hitting crisp irons.

In America, with several notable exceptions, most pros seem like friendly apolitical athletes who, if the conversation veers from golf, can talk about football or "reality" TV but seem clueless about current events and have little inclination to read books – not unlike Bush, who memorably confessed to a lack of interest in literature.

It’s a cliche but a telling one that in the US PGA Tour media guide the most popular "special interest" listed by the players is fishing – followed by hunting.

The famously laid-back but college-educated Fred Couples, no doubt speaking for many on tour, once told me during the Bill Clinton years that he had never voted.

Ask about politics on the American tour and you’ll get a lot of "I don’t care", and the occasional butt-chewing. "You won’t get anything out of me," said Tom Watson testily. "Nothing. Nada. It’s none of your business."

But there is definitely a sizeable and often vocal element among the Americans that follows politics, advocates right-wing Republican policies – tax cuts for the rich, corporate welfare, pro-death penalty, anti-gay marriage, anti-labour unions – and increasingly, identifies with evangelical Christian ideology.

In a Sports Illustrated survey of 76 US Tour players published in March, 88 per cent said they supported the American invasion of Iraq, and 91 per cent supported Bush’s controversial nomination of Samuel Alito to the US Supreme Court – a judge who was welcomed by Republican and fundamentalist Christian groups as the court’s swing vote in one day outlawing abortion.

This Republican tilt on tour has been documented since at least the Ronald Reagan administration and is so widely accepted as fact that in the presidential election year of 1996, Golf Digest asked me to do a story on tour politics and specifically hunt for any golfer who would actually admit to supporting Clinton, a Democrat. (In 1993, some Republicans on the American Ryder Cup team threatened to boycott a visit to the White House to protest a Clinton tax plan that raised taxes on the rich.) My search turned up only one heretic – the former US Open winner Scott Simpson – a free spirit and "born-again Christian" who has now reversed his thinking and supports Bush.

For those unfamiliar with American politics, the Republican party has become inextricably tied to the evangelical Christian movement, which can mobilise millions of votes through its churches to affect local, state and national elections. George Bush, who campaigned for office as a born-again Christian, is the icon of the evangelical movement and once famously told a group of Amish farmers: "I trust God speaks through me. Without that, I couldn’t do my job."

Not by accident, the American pro golf world, which has been heavily influenced by corporate America and Republican politics for at least 30 years, now has such a strong element of Christian fundamentalists that the entire Ryder Cup leadership – Tom Lehman, Corey Pavin and Loren Roberts – are self-professed born-again Christians. Roberts was even converted and baptised at a tournament.

In the book The Way of an Eagle, Lehman says: "God has definitely used golf in a great way over the last several years. I think of myself as a Christian who plays golf, not as a golfer who is a Christian. So whatever kind of job I do, there is a way for God to use that as a tool. In society at large, especially the way golf is growing, there is a huge platform for golfers."

Perhaps because of his public Christianity and several incidents of less-than-Christ-like behaviour, Lehman has developed an unfavourable reputation in some golf circles. John Huggan, the European golf correspondent for Golf Digest, recounts how Lehman confronted him angrily when he wrote about Lehman’s much-criticised behaviour in 1999 at the Ryder Cup outside Boston, when he led the ghastly American charge of players across the 17th green following Justin Leonard’s miraculous putt.

"How dare you," Lehman told Huggan. "How dare you sum up my whole character on the basis of that one incident."

Huggan replied that it was the only negative story he had ever written about Lehman, among many flattering ones, and that his whining was unprofessional. To which Lehman said, "Well, f*** you then," and marched off.

I would have thought maybe Huggan just caught his holiness on a bad day, but I had my own brief glimpse of the inner Lehman some years earlier. Lehman, who has never hidden his right-wing politics, once overheard me say the word "Clinton" while I was interviewing a caddie on the driving range of the Texas Open in San Antonio.

Unsmiling, he stopped in mid-stride, walked over and said, "You mean that draft-dodging baby-killer?" and then walked on. (Clinton opposed criminalising abortion, which most Republicans support, and he openly admits that as a Rhodes scholar he used family influence, just as Bush did, to avoid the Vietnam War.)

There are now official chaplains and weekly Bible study groups, or "fellowships", on each of the four American pro tours, and various players either display the Christian fish symbol on their golf bags or wear a popular cloth bracelet that says "W.W.J.D" – What Would Jesus Do.

"It’s not seen as so strange any more for a player to be open about his faith," former tour pro Bobby Clampett told Golf World. "They’re no longer called ‘The God Squad’ or ‘Jesus Freaks’ like we were 20 years ago. Now it’s cool."

Well, perhaps not everywhere.

David Feherty, the former Europe Ryder Cup member from Northern Ireland who is now a popular TV golf commentator in America, believes the very public display of fire-and-brimstone Christianity is still unsettling to most Europeans.

"I think a lot of Europeans find that conservative Christian thing as frightening as conservative Muslims," he says. "If you find any European pros who are in that Bible-thumping category, it’s usually because they’ve been to the United States."

Again, the Pew Research Center studies shed some light. Their 2002 survey of 38,000 people in 44 nations found that more people in the US (59 per cent) said religion was "very important" to them than in any other developed country – vastly more than even heavily Catholic Italy (27 per cent) or Poland (36 per cent).

Feherty, who lives in Bush’s home state of Texas, offered that the Europeans shouldn’t be seen as a bunch of "godless heathens" because they don’t advertise their Christianity. "I think they believe it’s your own business. Keep it to yourself."

But the larger question of why so many American pro golfers – more than football, basketball or baseball players – relate to right-wing Republicans would be fodder for a political-science class. When I’ve asked that question of tour players over the last decade, the initial response is a familiar one among the upper class. It goes something like this: "We pull ourselves up by our own bootstraps, and we don’t like the government giving away our money."

Or, as American journeyman Robert Gamez told me in May: "We love our money . . . Democrats want you to pay for everyone . . . George Bush is all about family values. Look at us. We’re all into our families. And we believe what Bush stands for. He’s done a great job so far." (In reality, Bush and the Republican Congress have gutted many programmes for the poor and cut benefits for war veterans to help fund his tax cuts for the wealthy, but true fiscal conservatives aren’t happy. According to the Congressional Budget Office, Bush has produced America’s third largest budget deficit in the last century, at over €352 billion for 2006.)

The conventional wisdom for why so many American golf pros vote Republican is that unlike their European mates, many of them were raised in upper-class, homogenised neighbourhoods – often gated suburban estates – and learned their golf at private, all-white country clubs. (Born from that mentality, the American PGA Tour expressly prohibited blacks from playing in its tournaments until 1961.)

In that environment they were surrounded by like-minded Republicans who shared their love for golf. When the young players arrived on tour they found virtually everything of any value literally handed to them, from Dell laptop computers to new cars, clothing and stock-market advice, all happily provided by corporate sponsors who love to associate themselves with the squeaky-clean image of the PGA Tour.

It’s an exceptionally privileged life, but they’re happy to remind you that they have no guaranteed contracts like most American sports stars, say, a Michael Jordan, who would have been paid his entire multi-year contract with the Chicago Bulls even if he sustained a career- ending injury.

From that lap of luxury, with CEOs calling on their mobiles asking for putting advice, it’s not hard to imagine that the American tour pros see their lifestyle being attacked by those less fortunate.

"My taxes are wasted on people who don’t give a damn," I heard 10 years ago from 1993 Ryder Cup member John Cook, who has earned €9.3 million in his career and now lives in the elite Florida community of Isleworth, outside Orlando. Tanned like the California surfer he once was, and eminently likeable, Cook surveyed the typical tournament scene of corporate tents, courtesy Cadillacs and gentle pop tunes wafting from a Four Seasons Hotel and declared without a hint of irony how he was adamantly opposed to raising the US minimum wage, which at the time was €3.40 an hour. In a full decade it has only risen to €4.18, roughly half the Irish minimum.

"I’m the luckiest man alive," Cook told me, "but I’ve earned my money. I pay my taxes. Liberals are always fighting what this is all about – the corporate boxes, people working hard, not getting something for nothing . . . I don’t know many liberals."

And therein lies the problem. America has become a very polarised place, where people of like religion and politics carefully gather themselves in "right-thinking" communities, schools, churches and workplaces. During Bush’s six years in office this trend has only intensified, with our 50 states now routinely referred to as red for Republican or blue for Democrat, based on the TV networks’ colour-coded election coverage. In many ways, the famed American melting pot is a myth, and tolerance an illusion.

"There is a lot of ethnic and racial diversity in the US," Jesper Parnevik told me, pausing to choose his words carefully. Like all the foreign players I spoke to he has found much to love about Americans and didn’t want to sound unkind.

"But they all seem to hang with each other. Rich with rich. Republican with Republican . . . In Europe, we seem to have a broader mix of friends."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
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To: go-dubya-04

It's all of Olde Europe...they're just jealous of American power and frustrated that our troops on the continent and our H-bombs at the ready have prevented those silly b*stards from rearranging the colors on their map agin. 'Ef em (but don't forget the 25% of Euros that are aligned with us).


41 posted on 09/23/2006 6:48:15 AM PDT by Pharmboy (Every single day provides at least one new reason to hate the mainstream media...)
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To: go-dubya-04
For the first time in my life, I am ashamed to say I am of Irish descent.

Because an Irish hack wrote an article you don't like?

42 posted on 09/23/2006 6:56:17 AM PDT by Invisible Gorilla
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To: go-dubya-04
LOL!

We ought to all write the IT and DARE them to publish that letter.

Not only ignorant, but cowards too.

43 posted on 09/23/2006 6:59:28 AM PDT by AnAmericanMother ((Ministrix of Ye Chase, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary (recess appointment)))
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To: Invisible Gorilla

No, because this is quickly becoming the predominant view in Ireland. As I said in a later post, I still have cousins there and they are among the majority of young Irish who feel this way and I have finally gotten sick of it.


44 posted on 09/23/2006 7:19:50 AM PDT by go-dubya-04
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To: go-dubya-04

The Irish of Ireland are not our friends. THe vast majority of them hate our guts.


45 posted on 09/23/2006 7:42:38 AM PDT by DogBarkTree (The United States failure to act against Iran will be seen as weakness throughout the Muslim world.)
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To: ErnBatavia

I'll stuff a note on his front door knob to that effect. :)


46 posted on 09/23/2006 8:35:06 AM PDT by Torie
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To: DogBarkTree
"The Irish of Ireland are not our friends. The vast majority of them hate our guts. "

You aren't wrong with that assessment of Irish feelings towards Americans. Read their blogs sometime, pure unadulterated hate. Well, hate usually begets hate. The only problem is that most Americans are not aware of the hatred Europe has for US.

47 posted on 09/23/2006 9:18:52 AM PDT by CremeSaver (I don't repeat gossip, so listen carefully.)
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To: go-dubya-04

"Don't mistake our coming to your country as some sort of endorsement. We were much better off in Ireland."

48 posted on 09/23/2006 9:40:10 AM PDT by TimSkalaBim
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To: go-dubya-04

For the first time in my life, I am ashamed to say I am of Irish descent. This is dispicable! Where would Ireland have been if it wasn't for Irish-American support over the last 50 years? I will never again return to the land of my ancestors.
_________________________________________________________

Yeah 50 years wasted raising money for terrorsit groups who show their thanks by training your enemies, boy they ask you bend over and you say stick it up me paddy, lol.


49 posted on 09/28/2006 7:29:17 AM PDT by MadMitch
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