After suffering through two years of unbelievably biased officiating ending the Celtics' season (37-17 in free throws in Game 7 2010, 38-20 in free throws in Game 5 2011), it became blatantly obvious not only that the NBA is rigged, but that the game has changed to adapt to the David Stern marketing rules - i.e., let's make sure that whichever team guarantees the most television dollars will win. Put simply, the game has devolved into "superstars" creating contact (which used to be an offensive foul), getting bailed out by the refs, followed by an incessant march to the free throw line. Sheer strength and marketability have replaced grace, speed and ingenuity in the game of basketball as a result. True teams like the Celtics who win through hard work and communication on defense and ball movement on offense lose out to ugly isolation teams with players like Kobe, Wade and LeBron. Stern has basically sacrificed the long-term health of basketball for short term profits. Like all government subsidy, manipulation of the freedom to create through central control punishes those who work hard in favor of those who are well-connected. NBA referees, more than any other professional sport, control the outcome of the game.
That said, I have a radical, although I think ingenious suggestion. Just like in real life, the solution is freedom - GET RID OF THE REFEREES. Give the players the responsibility to call their own fouls and own violations on the other team. Ask them to be men and be honest for the love of the game. To prevent the game from being bogged down by too many foul calls (as if that doesn't already happen), give the opposing team the ability to contest a call. If a contest is made, the offensive team gets the ball back with 14 seconds on the clock. No arguments. In the last two minutes of a half, you get only 2 contests and 2 fouls each, which would eliminate teams from fouling incessantly. Basically you'd have to earn your points. So the game gets more physical. I think that's great. Good teams would figure out how to adjust, which would likely lead to faster passing, more breaks, and less arguing with or whining to officials. This type of system works very well with sports like Ultimate Frisbee, which, even at elite levels of world competition, has minimal outside help in calling the game. They have observers to assist with contested calls, but that's it. Everything else is based on honesty, responsibility and pride - things sports are supposed to teach us about.
The game can still have officials to do jump balls, mediate free throws, make out-of-bounds calls, judge whether a foul was flagrant, manage the clock and time outs. However, that's it. No more crying (well, except when the Heat lose), and no more ugly isolation ball that is the equivalent of athletic fascism.
Who is with me?!