Today’s post was shared by Gelman on Workplace Injuries and comes from www.nytimes.com
It is hard to image that any other Industry that denies its employees workers’’s compensation benefits for known work-connected injuries would be bragging about a mere 13% reduction in head injuries. That is what the NFL is doing this week in advance of it’s annual mayhem ritual called the Super Bowl. Sports entertainment is just big business. A major distraction to the routine of boring and tedious daily activities the NFL has found an addictive niche market, feed by high TV rating (ESPN) and fueled by gambling. A common denominator of public distraction. The pawns in the system are those young “student-athletes” who take a risk as unpaid talent to carry on the dream for riches and fame as cheap (free) talent for the cause of school spirit and the hope of landing an NFL contract. The tragic risks exist even at that level of are more than obvious as I saw a Rutgers player crack his neck on the MetLife Stadium field in the Rutgers v Army game a couple of years ago. Todays post is shared from the nytime.com/. As the professional sports conglomerates spread their political influence from state house to state house demolishing the basic tenants of workers’’ compensation.They continue their effort to bar injured players from seeking basic workers’’ compensation benefits for known occupational risks,.They are now bragging about a mere 13% reduction. What about the other 87% of the the injured players they can go uncompensated? The… |