Tiger Woods deserves scrutiny, but not for his love life

December 4, 2009
Issue 

During the Bill Clinton impeachment idiocy of 1998, many on the left said if Clinton were removed from office, let it be for gutting welfare or for imposing sanctions on Iraq, and not l'affair Lewinsky.

Today, Tiger Woods, the most famous, wealthy and PR conscious athlete on Earth, finally finds himself subject to scrutiny. But, similar to Clinton's scandal, it has more to do with his personal life than issues of substance.

The media has staked-out his Isleworth home for round-the-clock coverage of a bizarre "car accident" involving his wife, a fire hydrant and a golf club in late November.

The questions being posed are as breathless as they are weightless: "Were Tiger's facial lacerations the result of the car crash or an attack from his wife Elin?" "Is this about the rumored 'other woman' in New York City?" "Did Elin Woods smash the rear of his car with a golf club to rescue Tiger or was she smashing up the car as he pulled away?"

One last question: who the hell cares?

Granted, there is a "man bites dog" aspect to this story. In Woods' roughly 14 years in the public eye, he has never even been caught littering. His image has been cemented as a man of ungodly intensity.

This squeaky-clean reputation has helped Woods become the richest athlete in history, the first billion-dollar man.

His career course earnings are US$92 million. Only when you factor in advertisements, corporate appearances and other off-course aspects of "Tiger Inc" does Woods reach billionaire status.

As the saying goes, behind every great fortune is a great crime.

Following his car "accident" Woods' agent said it was unclear whether he would attend his foundation's Chevron World Challenge Golf Tournament. In 2008, Chevron entered a five-year relationship with Tiger Woods' foundation under the guise of philanthropy.

But if Woods had a shred of social conscience, this partnership would never have existed.

Lawsuits have been issued against Chevron for dumping toxic waste all over the planet. Alaska, Canada, Brazil, Angola and California have all accused Chevron of dumping.

Even worse, Chevron has a partnership with Burma's ruling military junta on the country's Yadana gas pipeline project, the single greatest source of revenue for the military, estimated at nearly $5 billion since the year 2000.

Ka Hsaw Wa, co-founder and executive director of EarthRights International, wrote in an open letter to Woods: "I myself have spoken to victims of forced labor, rape, and torture on Chevron's pipeline — if you heard what they said to me, you too would understand how their tragic stories stand in stark contrast to Chevron's rhetoric about helping communities."

Chevron is underwriting a dictatorship but Woods apparently sees it as an upstanding corporate partner.

Then there is Dubai, the site of the first Tiger Woods-designed golf course.

Located at the southern coast of the Persian Gulf, Dubai has been a symbol of both economic excess, and most recently, economic collapse. It has been called an "adult Disneyland" — complete with indoor ski resorts and unspeakable human rights violations.

Johann Hari wrote in the British Independent in April that Dubai is a city that has been built over the last 30 years by slave labor.

Paid foreign labourers work in more than 100°F heat for less than $3 a day. Dubai also has a reputation as ground zero of the global sex trade.

The Tiger Woods Golf Course cost $100 million and Woods said nary a word about his benefactor's business practices. This is business as usual for Woods, who would sooner swallow a five-iron than take anything resembling a political stand.

Now that Woods appears to have been involved in a domestic dispute, the media is wondering if there is "another Tiger". They are desperate to pillory the man for his personal problems.

It would be more appropriate if they took this opportunity to scrutinise him for the right reasons. Woods has every right to keep his personal problems personal.

But when he makes deals that benefit dictatorships and unaccountable corporations, all in the name of his billion-dollar brand, he deserves no privacy.

[Reprinted from Dave Zirin's website, Edge of Sports.]

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