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Indybay Feature

Super Bowl 50: Super Militarization and Super Inequality

by Sharat G. Lin
The most expensive single sports game on Earth kicked off under unprecedented militarization of the police and the highest levels of inequality since the Great Depression.
sb-01.jpg
As the biggest sporting game in the United States, thousands of law enforcement and security personnel from nearly every conceivable agency have converged on Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California for Super Bowl 50. But the outfits, weapons, vehicles, and communications equipment are increasingly those of the military.

Santa Clara Police were seen dressed in military camouflage and army helmets as if prepared for urban warfare. They were riding around in new all-terrain vehicles purchased especially for the Super Bowl. Santa Clara County Sheriff's deputies wore new green uniforms. A dozen bomb squad units, including units from other counties, were gathered near Levi's Stadium.

Army humvees were everywhere -- guarding rear access to Levi's Stadium and its parking structure and patrolling the streets. Military police were present with M-16 submachine guns. Army helicopters flew overhead with soldiers ready to jump on a moment's notice.

Federal law enforcement agencies had set up temporary communications towers in the vicinity of Levi's Stadium, and a command center nearby.

While a major police presence is not surprising considering the magnitude of the crowds and the intense national visibility of Super Bowl 50, one wonders against whom the police, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Pentagon are apparently preparing for urban warfare?

The 50th Super Bowl in Levi's Stadium is the easily the single most expensive event to come to Silicon Valley. With an economic impact conservatively estimated at over a billion dollars and game tickets reselling for $4800, Super Bowl 50 stands in contrast to the record numbers of homeless people in the San Francisco Bay Area, unprecedented student debt, continuing cutbacks in public education, and rising socio-economic inequality.

"Super inequality" was the target of protests near Levi's Stadium and in downtown San José, where demonstrators chanted that "the Super Bowl's pockets are lined with gold." Marching around Super Bowl festivities in Plaza de César Chávez, they called for some of the money to be used to solve the homeless crisis and to address poverty and urgent social issues.
§Military helicopter
by Sharat G. Lin
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Military helicopter with soldiers ready to jump flies over Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara on Friday, February 5, 2016.
§Protest against "super inequality"
by Sharat G. Lin
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Protest against "super inequality" in Plaza de César Chávez in San José on Saturday, February 6, 2016.
§Protest against "super inequality"
by Sharat G. Lin
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Protest against "super inequality" when contrasting the hundreds of millions of dollars in revenues of the National Football League with the rising homeless population in Silicon Valley.
§Santa Clara Police
by Sharat G. Lin
sb-05.jpg
Santa Clara Police wearing new military camouflage uniforms and army helmets.
§Santa Clara Police
by Sharat G. Lin
sb-06.jpg
Santa Clara Police riding in a new all-terrain vehicle acquired especially for the Super Bowl.
§Military police
by Sharat G. Lin
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Military police carrying M-16 rifle at roadblock before Levi's Stadium.
§Army humvee
by Sharat G. Lin
sb-08.jpg
Army humvee guarding access a temporary communications tower and to the parking structure of Levi's Stadium.
§Preparations for Super Bowl 50
by Sharat G. Lin
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Workers preparing Levi's Stadium for Super Bowl 50.
§Bomb squad units
by Sharat G. Lin
sb-10.jpg
Bomb squad units gathered at Levi's Stadium before the big game. The largest tent in Silicon Valley stands behind.
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From:
The Super Bowl Promotes War. NFL to Publicly Display Love for Soldiers and Weaponry by David Swanson, 2/7/16 at
http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-super-bowl-promotes-war-nfl-to-publicly-display-love-for-soldiers-and-weaponry/5506284
The U.S. military has been dumping millions of our dollars, part of a recruitment and advertising budget that’s in the billions, into paying the NFL to publicly display love for soldiers and weaponry.
Those on whom the military’s advertising succeeds will not typically die from friendly fire. Nor will they die from enemy fire.
The number one killer of members of the U.S. military, reported yet again for another year this week, is suicide. And that’s not even counting later suicides by veterans.
If you get past the commercials, there’s the problem of the stadium for Super Bowl 50, unlike most stadiums for most sports events, being conspicuously “protected” by the military and militarized police, including with military helicopters and jets that will shoot down any drones and “intercept” any planes. Ruining the pretense that this is actually for the purpose of protecting anyone, military jets will show off by flying over the stadium, as in past years, when they have even done it over stadiums covered by domes.

The NFL doesn’t just want the military’s (our) money. It wants the patriotism, the nationalism, the fervent blind loyalty, the unthinking passion, the personal identification, a love for the players to match love of troops — and with similar willingness to throw them under a bus.

The military doesn’t just want the sheer numbers of viewers attracted to the Super Bowl. It wants wars imagined as sporting events between teams, rather than horrific crimes perpetrated on people in their homes and villages.
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