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crime and punishment sports subsidy

A Big Step Over the Vomit

“Two hours before the Washington Capitals play in Chinatown on a crisp November evening,” Candace Buckner wrote recently in The Washington Post, “a man stretches out on the pavement near Sixth and F streets NW, wrapped beneath a gray hoodie that he’s using as a blanket. Around the corner, a woman rolls a blunt outside the arena’s sportsbook entrance, and soon the waft of marijuana will perfume the area. There’s a spillage of vomit, green, near the tree on the sidewalk. Another man, this one cradling his arms behind his back and mumbling, doesn’t seem to notice the mess as he walks over it and bends over to pick up old cigarette butts.”

Might there be some connection between the state of downtown Washington, D.C., and the decision by the owner of both the Washington Capitals hockey team and the Washington Wizards NBA team to relocate them outside the city to Virginia?

“The District faced competition from Virginia,” explained a separate news story, “only because Leonsis had begun quietly exploring a new home for his teams in 2022, after years of complaining about crime and the noise of buskers outside his arena.”

There was not only less vomit but more room to be had in Virginia. For an even more expensive “public-private partnership” project. 

My fellow Virginia taxpayers and I are not crowing — Washington’s loss is our loss. We will no doubt pay for the privilege of experiencing even worse traffic and pricier tickets to hockey and basketball games . . . with higher taxes. 

Politicians can make names for themselves with these big sports franchise grabs. That’s what happened 30 years ago in the District of Columbia’s Chinatown. 

But the names have moved on, and now so have the games.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob. 


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2 replies on “A Big Step Over the Vomit”

While the costs of state-subsidized sports are largely diffuse, so that victims must pay more than those costs to fight them, the benefits are concentrated, ensuring a bloc of supporters.

Amongst those beneficiaries are providers of sports journalism. News about sports draws a significant viewers and readership, and so journalists do not typically explain to the general public the actual costs and benefits.

Tragically, many of those not long ago deeply offended by the woke virtue-signalling by major leagues, and by kowtowing to the Chinese state by the NBA and some of its star players, have conveniently forgot all that, and are again parking in front of their television sets or buying tickets to see the game. Punks.

If they can’t pay for their new stadium without our taxes, they can stay right where they are.
I won’t support them in either case, mostly for the reasons Daniel noted above.

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