The town was divided as it had never been before in its history and it was all because of one player on the Allendale high school Fighting Scapegoats football team.
Ronald had gone out for the Scapegoats his freshman year even though he had never played the game, gone to practice or so much as cracked a playbook. He proclaimed it was unnecessary to subject himself to such pedestrian routine because he watched NFL football on Fox, so he knew “all there is to know about the game.”
Teachers and administrators said he should not be eligible to play because of his refusal to conform to the rules and regulations of the school. He declared that rules and regulations were for others, not him.
His arrogance appealed to about 40 percent of the student body—those who regularly were given detention, who painted graffiti on the walls, who slept in history class and who never opted for advanced courses in math and science, or who otherwise did not seem to fit in with the mainstream students.
When he defied authority, they cheered him on even as local businessmen and the newspaper’s sports editor opposed allowing Ronald to join the team when his only qualification was that his father was wealthy and gave him an allowance that exceeded the income of most of the town’s executives.
When the school’s conference demanded to see Ronald’s transcript to determine if he was even academically eligible to play football, he sued to block release of his grades.
“I’m a stable genius,” he boasted. “I know a lot of words.” He promised to release his transcript at some future, unspecified date. “I’m the most transparent student at Allendale,” he said as he launched his campaign to make the team.
He proceeded to plaster the school’s hallways with posters proclaiming his ability to “Make Allendale Great Again.” He passed out specially-made baseball caps with block letters “MAGA” emblazoned across the front. The caps were the school colors, of course: red with white lettering.
His campaign was a dog whistle to bigots at the school and in town as he vowed to rid the team of “undesirables”—the code word for Hispanics and the team’s Islamic kicker. The 40 percent of the student body cheered even louder as he advocated roughing up any student dissenters.
School administrators and the local citizenry became even more alarmed at the prospect of Ronald representing the school but Ronald went on Twitter to condemn all his critics as “losers—just like Allendale’s football program has been a loser.” He promised to turn things around the first season and to erase the athletic program’s deficit when he began attracting “record crowds.”
It soon became evident that no one could match his campaign rhetoric, financed as it was by his allowance and the groundswell of support from the raucous sector of the student body that drowned out protests from the more rational but silent majority. One by one, community leaders who initially opposed his acceptance became his advocates in the hopes they could be included in his inner circle and not incur his wrath later on.
The first to curry favor was the head football coach, who received a generous offer—with threatening overtones—to keep his job if Ronald was named quarterback and captain.
School administrators, in an effort to demonstrate the lack of mainstream support for Ronald, decided to put the question to a vote. The student body decisively defeated the proposal to allow Ronald to play. But the team, at the urging of the head coach, voted unanimously to accept him. So, despite a majority of votes against him (he claimed hundreds of non-students voted), he became the Allendale Fighting Scapegoats’ quarterback and captain.
The first few games were against weaker opponents, so-called rent-a-wins in football parlance. But even against inferior opponents, quarterback Ronald had far more interceptions than completed passes and the team managed to lose every game. Ronald, however, declared himself as the most valuable player in tweets after each loss.
His teammates resented his attitude of superiority as did the head coach. But oddly enough, large crowds turned out to watch this clown disguised as a football player. They had never seen a player this dirty who would flagrantly hit opposing players out of bounds and trip, body slam, and blindside his own teammates. For the first time in years, home games were sold out and the school’s booster club suddenly jumped on the Ronald bandwagon.
Loss after embarrassing loss ensued, but one would never know it from listening to Ronald who declared his performance in each loss as stellar and blamed his leaking offensive line for allowing sack after sack. The 40 percent likewise picked up on his proclamations and tweets and blamed the offensive line, the defense, even the cheerleaders and the band and on at least one occasion, the lunchroom supervisor.
As teammates began leaving the team in disgust, players Ronald had once hailed as “great players” were suddenly described as “quitters” and “losers.” Sometimes he tweeted insults about ex-teammates during games and even while in the huddle.
When the local sports editor, who had become a supporter, had the temerity to criticize his play, Ronald called him “the enemy of the people,” calling the story “fake news,” and suggested tightening libel laws in order to make easier to sue sports writers.
When the head cheerleader turned him down for a date, he tweeted that she “wasn’t his type” and that she had begged him for a date.
The more boasts Ronald made, the more people turned out for the games, curious to see what the outrageous quarterback would do next. Fumbles, interceptions and blown plays failed to curb his grandiose assertions of awe-inspiring performances. In fact, the worse his performance, the more frequent his tweets became and the more outlandish were his claims of superior dominance on the field.
Curious fans were pouring into the stadium, which was good for the program’s finances, but Ronald had insisted on several sets of new uniforms for the team in various color schemes, new lighting and artificial turf for the football field, a modernized weight room (which he never frequented), and an upgraded dressing room complete with tanning booth, all of which created ever-larger budget deficits.
All Ronald touted and the only thing his support base understood, however, was that the program had more income now that he was on the team. Never mind that there was an overall deficit, or that the team’s record was worse than it had been in years and that other teams literally laughed as they rolled over Allendale, which now had no offensive line to protect Ronald. He ridiculed his defense which he said was incapable of stopping opponents’ drives. He distrusted the team’s scouts, many of whom had quit or been fired—because of Ronald’s tantrums—so there was no way for Allendale to prepare game plans for opponents.
When the school came under investigation for his insistence on withholding funds from the decoration committee unless the student council president promised to dig up dirt on his rival for homecoming king, Ronald called the probe a “witch hunt” and “a hoax,” and blamed his fellow players and the sports editor—and the lunchroom supervisor. He claimed he “barely knew” the student council president and had only met him “once or twice.”
Meanwhile, the 40 percent never wavered in their fealty to Ronald and they were already talking excitedly about his return next year.
Tom,
I’m trying to envision Louisiana/world without your intuitiveness, “due North” direction, cut through the BS approach. I cannot so you are not allowed to retire or die!
So, this is about Obama or what? 🙂
Seriously, good allegory. Do more of these.
I wonder if the supporters are genius enough to understand the allegory. AS is right, you’re not allowed to die.
I read this…and, wept!
Tom, this is priceless!!!!!!
Please submit this as Op-Ed or Guest Column to national press. Great analogy.
Tom, I have an off-topic question. I noticed two Facebook “friends”, both senior ladies and faithful Southern Baptists posting pictures of Melania Trump with the lament that she is so mistreated and the most beautiful First Lady, ever both inside and out. No details about why this would be true. The confusion for me is that I know what both of these ladies would say about anyone else living the life of Melania….she would be declared “trailer trash”, “porch climber” and not one to associate with. I am not advocating that Melania be attacked as such – but, to ignore her past and the failures of her First Lady projects and her obvious disdain for Donald, seems mind bending….why? What is there about Trumpism that would cause these ladies to completely go against their culture and nature to defend someone they would otherwise castigate? Completely baffles me.
Because Franklin Graham, Jerry Falwell, Jr., Jim BaKKKer and Rush Limburger say so. Seriously, it’s because these people absolutely refuse to think for themselves. They’d rather have someone in authority tell them what to think—like the Stepford wives. Trump says “Fake News,” and immediately his obedient followers take up the chant “Fake News!” without questioning whether the news is actually fake or accurate. It’s called a cult. There is a lady in my church—nice and sweet as she can be—but who absolutely refuses to listen to any—ANY—criticism of Trump or any other Republican. But she lowers the boom on any and all Democrats. It’s almost like the Stockholm syndrome.
I guess Stepford wives have always been here in my culture. I could write a book about this in non-political aspects. And, one of these ladies still wears a faded, worn Rush Lumbaugh T-shirt…so, I guess FOX,, conservative talk radio and perhaps even fellow church ladies contribute to this really scary cult. Thanks for your insight.
Priceless!
Priceless.
When you finally realize that you let your bias cloud your judgment will you admit it? My guess is no.
Your red pill is coming. Probably followed by a period of silence.
Has it ever occurred to you that you might want to look in the mirror of your own heart and that your own pill may be on order.
Fairness, you misjudge Tom. That would give him 4 more years to keep pumping out his posts. If Trump loses, he’ll probably retire a happy, contented man.