An Internet hub with domestic and international news, analysis, original reporting, and popular features from the left, center, indies, centrists, moderates, and right

The Courage of Michael Vick

by Walter and Rosemary Brasch

The Philadelphia Eagles honored reserve quarterback and admitted dog-killer Michael Vick with an award for courage. Yes, you read that right. “Michael Vick” and “courage” are in the same sentence.

Each of the 32 NFL teams annually honors one of its own with an Ed Block award, named for the Baltimore Colts head trainer who was an advocate for improving the lives of neglected and abused children; the Foundation says it celebrates “players of inspiration in the NFL.” Unfortunately, there is no stipulation that football players who abuse animals are ineligible receivers.

Eagles Quarterback Donovan McNabb told the Philadelphia Inquirer the award was “well deserved.” Vick, his team, and what appears to be a loyal foundation of fans who believe Vick will help lead the Eagles into a SuperBowl, all believe the man who ran Bad Newz Kennels has “seen the light,” has reformed, and is now a model citizen.

However, Vick’s own words show the humility and humbleness that he should have are still missing from his egocentric world of sweating multi-millionaires.

“It means a great deal to me,” Vick told the media, gloating that he “was voted unanimously by my teammates. They know what I’ve been through. I’ve been through a lot. It’s been great to come back and have an opportunity to play and be with a great group of guys. I’m just ecstatic about that, and I enjoy every day.” He further justified the honor by explaining, “I’ve overcome a lot, more than probably one single individual can handle or bear.” Elaborating, he declared, “You ask certain people to walk through my shoes, they probably couldn’t do. Probably 95 percent of the people in this world because nobody had to endure what I’ve been through, situations I’ve been put in, situations I put myself in and decisions I have made, whether they have been good or bad.” He said, “There’s always consequences behind certain things and repercussions behind them, too. And then you have to wake up every day and face the world, whether they perceive you in the right perspective, it’s a totally different outlook on you. You have to be strong, believe in yourself, be optimistic. That’s what I’ve been able to do. That’s what I display.” Not once in his statements to the media did Michael Vick apologize for what he did, or for the deals he cut in order to be restored to the status of a millionaire athlete. Everything he said was focused upon his own “courage,” with “I” being the prevalent word.

Perhaps Michael Vick isn’t aware that courage is not being so vacuous as to believe it was acceptable to breed and arrange for dogs to fight to the death, to allow equally malevolent “fans” to bet on the matches, and by the cruelest means possible to kill dogs who didn’t perform as well as he thought they should. Going to prison for 18 months, losing two seasons of multimillion dollar income, having to work out to get into fighting condition, and then earning about $1.6 in his first year back into the NFL, with a second year option for about $5 million, isn’t courage.

In case Michael Vick doesn’t know what courage is, here are just a few examples. There are thousands of others.

Courage is the soldier who is on 100 percent disability from combat wounds who is now working almost every hour of every day with physical therapists, social workers, and other medical personnel to try to regain even the most remote possibility of being able to walk again.

Courage is the firefighters who risk their lives to rescue people and their pets from burning buildings.

Courage is law enforcement personnel who put their lives on the line to serve and protect the people.

Courage is the “whistle blower” who risks a job and family stability to point out greed and corruption within a business, educational institution, or governmental agency.

Courage is the lone dissenter who fights for social and economic justice in a society that is determined to continue the “me generation.”

Courage is the recent graduate who delays entry into the job market, the mid-career executive who gives up the fast track, or the senior citizen who decides there is more to life than retirement, and volunteers for AmeriCorps, the Peace Corps, or any of hundreds of non-profit organizations that have taken on the burden of helping those who society has made invisible.

Courage is the parents who work two low-income service jobs, support their families, and still donate time and money to charities that help those less fortunate than they.

Courage is the family who last year had a home and job, and this year has neither but survives day to day.

Courage is the animal rights advocates who risk their lives to fight against governments that allow the killing of whales, bears, seals, wolves, and hundreds of other animals; and to humane society staff and innumerable volunteers who rescue abandoned and abused animals, and who work with them to try to give them a better life.

But most important, courage is all the people who know no matter what obstacles they overcome today, tomorrow will present the same challenges, and that they will never have any hope to be a millionaire or to receive an award for surviving against tremendous odds.

In his comments after being notified of the award, Michael Vick proved himself to be an unworthy spokesman for anything or anyone other than himself.

[Dr. Walter Brasch is an award-winning social issues columnist, former newspaper investigative reporter and editor, and journalism professor. His latest book is Sinking the Ship of State: The Presidency of George W. Bush. Rosemary Brasch is a former secretary, Red Cross national disaster family services specialist, labor activist, and university instructor of labor



8 Responses to “The Courage of Michael Vick”

  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by alejandroz, TMV. TMV said: The Courage of Michael Vick: by Walter and Rosemary Brasch The Philadelphia Eagles honored reserve quarterback and… http://bit.ly/8NkrF6 [...]

  2. T-Steel says:

    I'm sorry Walter and Rosemary Brasch. Michael Vick is an inspiration to his team and others simply because he served his time, did apologize for what he did, endured scorn, earned the respect of his team mates, and is having a city gradually warm up to him. This isn't about the awesome courage of a soldier or the steady courage of good parents. This is an award that is internal to the Philadelphia Eagles. In that regard, his award is well-deserved.

    I'm sick of people always wanting people to apologize every time speak when they have done something wrong. Within his life, this is a big deal for Vick. So he can use “I”. And what he said is HARDLY controversial. Enough with this.

    I have a best friend who was a gang member. He served 10 years in prison and yes, he has killed and injured other gang members. A killer of humans who is now a 7th degree black belt in Hapkido, teaches it to students, married with kids, and on the PTA. Much worse than Vick and he was given a similar type of award by the church he attends. And his speech was laden with well-deserved “I's” for rising above his wrongdoings. 'Nuff said.

  3. mnpokermvp says:

    T-Steel, I completely agree with you…and this is coming from a former soldier. Soldiers, policemen, firemen are all courageous people but this man did do what a lot people couldn't do and that is face the public after being disgraced. I'm sick of the ultra-left getting so upset with this man. Let it go, we have bigger issues to worry about than Michael Vick. At least he is trying to make himself a better person, unlike a lot of people that think they are good people and are really not.

  4. horsegirl1 says:

    Disgusting, absolutely disgusting…michael vick and COURAGE should not be allowed to mentioned together. This is an excellent article!!!! All the people who disagree with what you wrote are very narrow-minded and have tunnel vision when it comes to sports. What he did speaks abot character, morals and values, NONE of which m vick has or had never been taught when he was a child, and i'm sure he will instill the same values in his children, what a shame. I hope every animal rights group protests this award, the EAGLES should be ashamed of themselves, promoting this man as if he's a saviour. I am sick, sick and tired of the media coverage they have given vick…he should be working in a McDonalds right now, not playing professional sports..and he's had more than a 2nd chance, that was after he killed the 2nd dog. He'll get his one day, it's called Karma..what goes around comes around.

  5. JSpencer says:

    Many of us have faced adversity, struggled with internal demons, fought to make a life, and have done it without feeling the need to kill dogs, people – or even cheat on wives for that matter. And we've done it without the benefit of riches, fame, or great talent. Treating Vick as some kind of hero is just another chapter in America's embarrassing celebration of low standards. Give me a break. I think more highly of some average shmuck who goes to work every day at some unglamourous grind of a job, but keeps doing it so he can feed the family he loves and put a roof over their heads. There's your real hero.

  6. T-Steel says:

    As I said before JSpencer, the award was given by the team to him. Not the State of Pennsylvania. Not the White House. This isn't about treating him as a hero. Far from it. The Philadelphia Eagles gave him a courage award. Team to Team-mate. No more, no less. I would be agreeing with you and The Braschs' if someone like President Obama gave him a courage award. But his employer gave him the award and within that framework, I am perfectly fine with it.

  7. JSpencer says:

    Fair enough T, just throwing in my 2 cents worth of perspective.

  8. EnnIsFor says:

    The Ed Block Foundation that gives the award is a 501c3 organization in the State of Maryland. So, in essence, the State of Maryland – which is my community – is giving him the award. And I am not happy about it.

    Michael Vick is getting his life back together after showing an incredible LACK of character and courage; we are now rewarding him for trying to redress those wrongs. It's a slap in the face to the people who truly deserve this award – like Richard Collier of Jacksonville – who was paralyzed in a shooting and had a leg amputated but still volunteers his time to talk to kids about personal responsibility and overcoming disability. Vick shouldn't even be mentioned in the same sentence…..

© 2003-2011 The Moderate Voice | Site design by Elegant Themes | Site customization, hosting, and security by Mode Equity