By Adrian Chan-Wyles
THE
SOCIO--economic structure of world football is controlled by the vicious
bourgeois institution of the Federation of International Football Associations
(FIFA), and the regional Football Associations it has spawned.
The exploitative tentacles of FIFA spread far and wide into
all poor and working class areas of the world.
It spreads the myth that all poor people, if they can kick a ball, can become
multi-millionaires overnight, if only they tried hard enough!
But e reality is very different. A very small number of
working class men originating from advanced industrial, or industrialising
nations, are chosen from a mass of applicants to be streamed into the exclusive
training regimes that more or less ensure a job as a professional football
player upon graduation. These men are taken out of their natural socio-economic
(working class) conditions, and immediately thrust into a middle class,
financial utopia, where they can earn millions of pounds a year working for
just 90 minutes a week, and personifying a developmental, bourgeois myth. The
reality is more brutal.
For a small number of working class men to be privileged in
this manner, the majority of the working class and the oppressed around the
world must be kept firmly in their place. The majority of the masses in the
world actually finance this gigantic money-making machine that only benefits
the minority – that is the ruling class –which reaps all the financial benefits.
Even after paying the individual players millions of pounds, there is still a
tremendous amount of money leftover, which flows only from the working class
toward the ruling class, through a relentless process of accumulation.
This process is
maintained not only by the selling of associated merchandise such as football
shirts, boots, flags, DVDs, CDs, and other paraphernalia, but relies heavily upon
slave-labour, whereby very small children spend 12 to 16 hours a day, working
in appalling conditions, in factories situated in the poorer areas of the
world. This highly exploited workforce
sews the shirts, footballs, and flags together, which are then played with by
the rich adults and children of developed countries as a matter of leisure.
This exploitative
situation is compounded by working class males (in developed countries such as Britain),
who spend hundreds of pounds of their hard earned money per week, in attending
football matches of teams occupying the Premier League. The Premier League and others like it are the
main money-making device that FIFA uses to drain the poor people of the world
of their wages. In Britain a ticket for
a single football match can cost more than the national government believes a
family should live for a week, when in receipt of state benefits!
In this regard,
supporting football becomes an addiction that paradoxically destroys the very
same working class that its mythos claims to be saving.
Modern football evolved during the industrialisation
process of Britain from an ancient game played in and around villages. The
bourgeois wanted the working class controlled during every part of their day,
and this extended to the regulation of their leisure time.
As factories closed for Saturday afternoons, the working
class males were encouraged to attend football matches held in purpose built
stadiums, and spend a part of their earnings on the price of admission. Their
wives and children were not yet welcome, and had to stay at home. The police
patrolled the football stadiums ensuring that the euphoria of victory or the disappointment
of defeat remained only amongst the working class, who were encouraged to fight
amongst themselves.
It was essential
that this discontent never spread onto the streets. This harsh control was
considered necessary wherever working class men congregated en masse, so as to
prevent the possibility of the development of class consciousness, and of
revolutionary fervour, as such a development threatened the overthrow of the
bourgeoisie.
On the pitch 22 working class men confront one another in
two teams of 11 each, moderated by a referee and two linesmen. The game is
played for 90 minutes, with a 15-minute break for half-time, when the two sides
change the half of the pitch they have to defend. The time of 90 minutes is
purely arbitrary and together with the 15 minutes break, as well as the time it
takes the paying audience to assemble for the start and disperse at the end is
designed simply to waste time on a Saturday afternoon. There is nothing special
about this time, and indeed, compared to contemporary sports, seems a
ridiculous length of time for anything significant to happen, or effectively hold
an audience’s attention.
The football
stadium and the pitch are microcosms of bourgeois society, within which the working
class are allowed to exist providing they follow strict rules that benefit the
bourgeois, but are detrimental to the working class.
These rules, or “laws,”
are taught as being beneficial for all, when obviously they are purely
arbitrary and designed to maintain the highest level of exploitation. There is
also the indication that all good laws originate with God, and have a
mysterious origin, when in fact all these regulations emerge from the minds of
fat capitalists who have probably never kicked a ball in their lives.
The referee is the “judge”
who must be obeyed, and he is assisted by two assistant-judges (or “linesmen”).
A player who infringes a rule is “booked” – similar to how a police officer
records a suspect’s details – and receives a “yellow” card which amounts to a “warning”
or a “fine”, whilst the “red” card represents expulsion from the pitch, or the
removal from society, as in being sent to prison or exiled.
The message is
simple within modern football; the authorities must be obeyed, or there will be
punishment.
Quite often the
working class resent these measures, but aim their discontent at perceived
foreigners, rather than at their middle class overlords. The ruling class
allows and encourages this deception, as it takes the working class attention
away from what is really going on – such is the seductive power of modern
football.
Football teams, with their distinctive, different coloured
football kits, became the subject of a pseudo-regionalism that was used to
infect the mind of the working class, and divert their attention away from the
real enemy in society – the highly ruthless and exploitative bourgeoisie. It is
the bourgeoisie that is the real enemy of the working class, but if working
class men have their attention aimed at the supporting of a local football
team, (a false construct), and pitching that support against another local
football team, (another false construct), then true revolutionary knowledge is
not developed.
Modern football is used by the bourgeoisie to keep the
working class in their place. This exploitation is more or less
self-sustaining, just like any drug addiction.
On the world level the
pseudo-regionalism of football is replaced with pseudo-nationalism.
It is exactly the
same psychological structure that expands its parameters out of regionalism, (in
other words disliking others because they come from a different local place),
into the hating of others because of their different ethnic and cultural origin
– in other words racism.
Modern football is
both highly exploitative and addictive.
In the minds of its victims – the working class – like any addiction it
is rationalised as the “beautiful game”, and its inherent racism is viewed as
an aberration rather than as a foundational structure of its history.
Modern football
today, at either its local, national, or international levels, serves as the
bedrock of racism and far-right political parties. Aggressive young men meet at the football
grounds to racially abuse other supporters or players, whilst exchanging
extremist ideological information.
FIFA knows that it
can not stamp racism out of football, because to do so would destroy the highly
lucrative financial structure that is in place.
It is up to the working class to develop their class consciousness, and
break the addiction that is modern football, that viciously holds them in
psychological and financial servitude.
The English Premier League is a very successful capitalist
enterprise – and this is exactly what it is meant to be. That it just so
happens to be the game of football that is used to generate millions of pounds
is irrelevant to the process of the accumulation of profit itself. As long as
the money keeps flowing, the Premier League will be considered successful.
Of course this measure of success is purely fiscal, in as
much as this “success” has absolutely nothing to do with performance on the
pitch. This explains why the financially “successful” Premier League, has not
been able to produce eleven English footballers since its inception in 1992
that can dominate at the world level, for the simple reason that it does not
have to.
Playing well and
winning games is irrelevant to the money-making process. The only way the standard of play would
increase is if there was a system-wide fall in financial income, created by
people protesting en masse by not going to football matches.
This scenario would
generate a market force that would effect how the capitalists who run the
Premier League, that is the English FA, approach the game, but it is unlikely
to happen due to the sustained mirage of tribalism, which is reinforced on the
terraces every week, through a false sense of achievement and failure. The bourgeois system of modern football is
designed from top to bottom to prevent the working class from joining together
in solidarity.
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