[PRCo] Re: THEIR 6TH SUPERBOWL WIN!

Edward H. Lybarger trams2 at comcast.net
Thu Feb 12 09:12:11 EST 2009


I second Dennis's motions! 

-----Original Message-----
From: pittsburgh-railways-bounce at lists.dementia.org
[mailto:pittsburgh-railways-bounce at lists.dementia.org] On Behalf Of Dennis
Fred Cramer
Sent: Thursday, February 12, 2009 9:08 AM
To: pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org
Subject: [PRCo] Re: THEIR 6TH SUPERBOWL WIN!

The city and county are not the same and the economic variances across both
the county and region are staggering.  It is one thing to found memories of
what once was and another to live in the reality and see it day to day. 
Realize that the Steeler Nation exists because so many people had to leave
this area to find meaningful employment and people feel a need to belong to
a social group that has little rules.  Religion does not work as well today
because there are expectations.  Belonging to a group in Facebook, MySpace,
this group, or something as vague as Steeler Nation is comforting to many. 
We can do it from the comfort of our homes without necessarily having to
make any commitments.

The Steelers won, not me or any of the other patrons.  We are the ones who
had new sports stadiums shoved down our throats when we voted them down. 
The politicians like to talk about the incredible revenue teams bring to an
area.  There were 10 regular season football games in Heinz Field played by
the Steelers, one day of WPIAL high school playoffs and about 6 PITT games. 
Far too little usage for my tax money.  They should have let the Pirates go.

They thought if they built a new park that everything would be
wonderful--build it and they will come.  They never considered traffic to or
from the games.  Watch other cities and see how there stadiums have parking,
road, and many times rail access.  Pittsburgh is a nightmare when there is a
sporting event and the Rooney's want public money to build an entertainment
complex.

I do not spend money on sports and think there is far to much emphasis on it
in the media.  Too many people want to live their lives through someone else
than themselves.  We stopped at the Grove City outlets on the way home from
Niagara last weekend and in this struggling economy, the Steeler store was
jammed with people spending incredible amounts of money thinking they own
the team.  It is a business and all professional sports owners & players
realize that.  They have to meet a budget and try to get what they can. They
sit on the couch and call themselves sports enthusiasts.

We have seen rude behavior by all sorts of people in all sorts of settings. 
Many times alcohol has a lot to do with it.  I remember playing at Three
Rivers in the early '70's and seeing people being carried out because they
were so drunk.  Many stadiums have built family zones and a few even have a
district magistrate office in the stadium.  It is just as bad in high school
sports.  I spent 40 years as a student and teacher in music programs
directly involved in sports programs and many times the parents bring the
wrong attitudes. Many fine coaches leave the profession, because of "expert
parents" who gained their expertise by watching sports on TV, want to run
the show instead of letting the professional teach.  Don't even ask about
performance enhancing drugs given by parents to their kids to help them
improve.

If their was as much time effort and concern actually spent on learning our
educational system might not be the basket case that it is today.  Parents
cannot afford to provide them with the basics needed to succeed, but they
all have $80.00 team jerseys on their backs and a cell phone in their
pocket.

Enough of the tirade, I am going to spend the day celebrating on of my
favorite persons 200th birthday.




Dennis F. Cramer
      Trombone









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