Tuesday, January 30, 2007

News out of the Rockies

I posted this over on my blog, but I think the east coast reader needs to know about a County Mayor (that would be like a County Commissioner only with a cooler title) named Peter Corroon that told a certain Major League Soccer team that he would use county tax funds to help pay for the team's infrastructure around their stadium and now has gone back on his promise. This should be of interest to the East Coast reader because the owner of the MLS team is none other than the former President of the New York Knicks, David Checketts. This just goes to show that the East Coast stereotype of Utahns being inbred backwater yokels is pretty dead-on accurate. You see in Utah, we have two professional sports, the Utah Jazz and a Major League Soccer team called Real Salt Lake that has been in existence for just under three years and that will probably end up moving back east to somewhere like Hartford, CT or Providence, RI where there are actually some Brazilian and Portuguese communities that might support soccer.

The point is, I really don't care if you like soccer or not; when a politician makes a promise, he/she should keep his/her promise. Follows is my original post:

Peter Corroon really chaps my hide


Can I just say, I hate Peter Corroon more than any other politician in the world right now? That would include Kim Jong "mentally" Ill and that idiot in Iran. Here's a post about it from KSL's site:

"[Stadiums] are a revenue source for the community that surrounds them. The E-Center is used for events other than hockey and it brings a good amount of money into West Valley. That's why West Valley supports it. Art centers and planetariums encourage learning, learning encourages invention, invention encourages business, business encourages tax revenue. Everything is about economics. Why did you get married? Love? I don't think so. Because two people working is more economical than one and there's a tax break for married couples. Why are we fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan? Because we were attacked by terrorists on 9-11-01? Yes. And how did that effect us financially as a nation? It was one of the worst times in our economic history since the 1930s. By controlling the regions where the terrorists come out of, we also control their ability to attack us and affect our economy.

People here seem to think that soccer wont bring in money because soccer has never been popular or because they don't like it. Soccer is growing and will continue to grow. David Beckham is more well known than Michael Jordan and he now plays in our 2nd largest city, Los Angeles. Ronaldo, who plays for Real Madrid and Brazil's national team has expressed interest in playing in New York for the Red Bulls. Did Michael Jordan sell tickets for the NBA and close TV deals and make advertising revenue? [HECK] YEAH! Will Beckham and Ronaldo do the same? Again, [HECK] YEAH!

One of my art teachers at UVSC, Perry Stewart said there are two ways of looking at something, you can either look directly at the object, or look past the object. It's when you learn to look past the object that your best art comes out. I think this analogy applies here, because people are focusing on what soccer has been, not what it will become. Look through the raindrops on your windshield and you will see the road ahead. Look past the money that is being used to fund the infrastructure and see the revenue that soccer Super-Stars and the world economy will bring to Utah.

Of course that's my opinion, I could be wrong."

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