primetime
Pro Bowl Player
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2005
- Messages
- 13,636
- Reaction score
- 15,379
Re: OT: NLRB gives Northwestern players the right to unionize
There's nothing "kids game" about football. The entire high school-to-NFL pipeline is professionalized and commercialized, and there are real and pressing health concerns in this "kid's game." It's a multi-billion dollar industry with massive lobbies in government.
The idea that players must be compensated with education is paternalistic. They should be able to choose what they spend their wages on like any other worker. Some may prefer not to spend their money on education, especially when they do not have the time necessary to dedicate to their intellectual development while working a full-time job as college football players.
What's interesting is this is an issue that both libertarians and socialists agree on, given that the NCAA is a cartel and therefore a "market inefficiency." The means to the end is where the differing opinion lies - libertarians would say each player should negotiate their own worth based on demand for their talent, socialists would say workers have more power collectively.
That's absolutely correct - and those are the people who will benefit the most from their scholarship and the actual education.
How much is it actually worth? In some top tier universities, it's approaching being worth a quarter million dollars.
Not bad for playing a kids game for a couple years.
There's nothing "kids game" about football. The entire high school-to-NFL pipeline is professionalized and commercialized, and there are real and pressing health concerns in this "kid's game." It's a multi-billion dollar industry with massive lobbies in government.
The idea that players must be compensated with education is paternalistic. They should be able to choose what they spend their wages on like any other worker. Some may prefer not to spend their money on education, especially when they do not have the time necessary to dedicate to their intellectual development while working a full-time job as college football players.
What's interesting is this is an issue that both libertarians and socialists agree on, given that the NCAA is a cartel and therefore a "market inefficiency." The means to the end is where the differing opinion lies - libertarians would say each player should negotiate their own worth based on demand for their talent, socialists would say workers have more power collectively.











