If you ask anyone why they go to sports games, the excitement of watching the officials is the last answer you'd expect. Officials don't score touchdowns or goals. They don't pull off double plays or miraculous catches. They merely enforce the rules.
Of all the aspects of a sport, the rules are the most boring and, yet, the most critical.
The true beauty of watching sports is seeing who can perform the best while honoring the rules. No serious fan wants to watch a football game where the defense can always rush before the snap or a basketball game where players don't have to dribble.
Rules may not create the excitement of a sport, but they do protect it. That is why we want our umpires and referees to do one thing and one thing only: properly enforce the rules.
This can be difficult to appreciate. In the last seconds of a championship game when a close call will hand our team a victory or loss, it is the victory or loss that will dictate our response, not whether the call was actually correct. As understandable as this is, we all know the integrity of the sport depends on the latter.
When we bring heated conflicts to the Supreme Court, its final decision provokes a similar response. We deeply want the outcome we believe is right. We want our side to win.
For example, on the morning the Hobby Lobby decision was released in 2014, Planned Parenthood CEO Cecile Richards immediately voiced her criticism: "This is a deeply disappointing and troubling ruling that will prevent some women, especially those working hourly-wage jobs and struggling to make ends meet, from getting birth control."
The court's decision on Obamacare in 2015 triggered similar knee-jerk reactions from GOP candidates, including Sen. Rand Paul, who said, "This decision turns both the rule of law and common sense on its head. Obamacare raises taxes, harms patients and doctors, and is the wrong fix for America's health care system."