There’s a great story in the world of boxing which takes place sometime in 2003. It involved a physical altercation between Mike Tyson, who was at the time one of the most feared boxers on the planet and Don King, the most famous boxing promoter.
The story is simple. Mike Tyson was at the time, in
heavy debt. He was financially challenged at the time and when Mr. King called
him to talk about some fights, which meant more money, it seemed exciting.
However, after doing some cocaine, Mr. Tyson has the realization that Mr. King
is screwing him, using money “stolen” from Mr. Tyson to treat Mr. Tyson to luxurious
ride on the plane. The story as told by Mr. Tyson can be found below:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IrmZOWrql7A
In a way, the relationship between Mr. King and Mr.
Tyson is the parallel of the relationship between ordinary folk and the “elite.”
As dominant a force that Mr. Tyson way, the real power in the world of boxing
was Mr. King. In fairness to Don King, he did make fighters like Mike Tyson very
rich. However, he also exploited them. They had to fight who he told them to
fight and more importantly, he had a talent for shortchanging them. One of the
saddest examples was in Mr. King’s relationship with Tim Witherspoon, who two
heavy weight champions before Mike Tyson. Mr. Witherspoon was promised and won
large purses. However, Mr. King had tied him up in so many contracts that
obliged him to give most of his purse back to Mr. King.
In a way, you can’t begrudge Don King his money. He’s
the guy who takes the risk and comes up with the audacious fights and promotes
them to the paying public – just think “Rumble in the Jungle” and “Thrilla in
Manilla.” He was the one who brought these classics and made them happen.
If you think of Mr. King as being like the start up
founder that proves successful, its hard to begrudge him making more money than
the workers. He was the one who came up with the idea and made it happen. He’s
the one who took the risk and so should be rewarded for the success because he
could have easily bore the brunt of failure.
However, in where Mr. King’s relationship with all his
fighters’ turned sour was that he wasn’t just making money from promoting
boxing matches. He was exploiting them by making them sign all their rights
over to him and using his power over the regulators to ensure that they had to
do whatever he told them to do. Take his relationship with Mr. Witherspoon as
an example. Mr. King arranged for a fight with British boxer, Frank Bruno,
which Mr. Witherspoon won. Whilst Mr. Witherspoon was supposed to have
collected in excess of a million dollars, he only received $90,000 because Don
King had charged him for all sorts of fees, whereas Mr. Bruno who wasn’t
promoted by Don King earned ten times the amount.
So, here’s the point. Whilst nobody denies the “elite”
a larger share of the pie, especially if they had a role in creating the said
pie, there is a resentment that builds up when the “elite” earn their status by
screwing over the ordinary workers or the guys doing the actual work.
In the case of boxing its obvious who is doing the
work. It’ the boxers whom people are paying to see. Unfortunately, this isn’t
limited to boxing. Take construction as an example. If you look at Singapore’s
construction industry as an example, you’ll realise that for many companies,
the real money in the construction industry isn’t in building things. It’s in
labour exploitation, where you pay third world wages to the construction
workers but then charging for things like accommodation and selling them
insurance policies. In the meantime, you justify it by saying that you’re
paying them more than what they’d dream of back home in the same way that Mr.
Don King would always argue that he was making fighters like Mohammad Ali, Larry
Holmes and Mike Tyson very rich.
All this is well, as long as the ordinary folk are
distracted. However, as in the case of Mr. Tyson’s epiphany moment, the
ordinary folk, do, from time to time wake up and do their sums. Its at this
moment, where the power elite that its in their interest to share a little more
of the pie or lessen the abuses as the ordinary workers have a way of hitting
back if they feel they’re being screwed over in the same way that Mr. Tyson
lashed out when he realized he was being screwed over.
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