Penn State protects child rapist that was former famous D-Coordinator

Page 66 - Seeking answers? Join the AnandTech community: where nearly half-a-million members share solutions and discuss the latest tech.

IndyColtsFan

Lifer
Sep 22, 2007
33,655
688
126
The same way anyone else enforces civil penalties when a contract is breached. Do we really need to go into that?

Or would you rather stop dodging my questions?

So you're advocating that the NCAA file lawsuits against anyone who violates their rules?

Found the answer to my questions yet? Or are you just going to regurgitate more links without any sort of commentary showing you understand?
 

waggy

No Lifer
Dec 14, 2000
68,143
10
81
The same way anyone else enforces civil penalties when a contract is breached. Do we really need to go into that?

Or would you rather stop dodging my questions?

so the option is to sue the students and such? LOL
 

sixone

Lifer
May 3, 2004
25,030
5
61
So you're advocating that the NCAA file lawsuits against anyone who violates their rules?

Found the answer to my questions yet? Or are you just going to regurgitate more links without any sort of commentary showing you understand?

Are you under the impression that lawsuits are the only option for settling contract disputes? Really?

Ready to stop dodging my questions?
 

Drako

Lifer
Jun 9, 2007
10,697
161
106
Wow, this thread really took a turn.

Why do people insist on responding to the troll?
 

RPD

Diamond Member
Jul 22, 2009
5,109
600
126
Did you really miss this in biology class? or did you just miss biology class?
I'm sorry, did you miss english class? How does adding or removing heat relate to the link you provided?

From your own link, which I know you didn't bother to read:
The dry water itself is easy enough to manufacture. The hydrophobic silica and water are blended together using a motor with a stirring rod and propeller that spins at 19,000 rpm for 90 seconds, which coats the water droplets completely.

So please logically explain how that process above adds or removes heat as it pretains to your "Not if you make it hot or cold enough" statement.
 

IndyColtsFan

Lifer
Sep 22, 2007
33,655
688
126
Are you under the impression that lawsuits are the only option for settling contract disputes? Really?

That's an interesting viewpoint, except for one small fact: coaches don't have contracts with the NCAA and the NCAA has NO say in their hiring or the terms of their hiring. I'd love to see you try to sue or force a "guilty" coach into arbitration with the NCAA over a "contract breach" when the coach has no contract with the NCAA.

Ready to stop dodging my questions?

You're the one dodging. Answer my questions.
 

sixone

Lifer
May 3, 2004
25,030
5
61
That's an interesting viewpoint, except for one small fact: coaches don't have contracts with the NCAA and the NCAA has NO say in their hiring or the terms of their hiring. I'd love to see you try to sue or force a "guilty" coach into arbitration with the NCAA over a "contract breach" when the coach has no contract with the NCAA.

You're the one dodging. Answer my questions.

If you hadn't spent so much time dodging my question, you might actually remember what it was. That's not what I asked you.
 

IndyColtsFan

Lifer
Sep 22, 2007
33,655
688
126
If you hadn't spent so much time dodging my question, you might actually remember what it was. That's not what I asked you.

I asked my question long before your "question" and yet you still haven't answered. Answer it. Your dodging is ridiculous and your attempt at deflection won't work.
 

waggy

No Lifer
Dec 14, 2000
68,143
10
81
Six sees stand-offs like this as a victory condition. Even though you asked first, she won't allow you to control the flow of discussion; this is why she flips it around on you and tries to force you to answer her question instead. Failing on facts and logic, her only recourse is to control the discussion itself. Answering your question, to her, is a sign of weakness.

It shows you how desperate she is to find a sliver of "win" in threads like these. It really is pathetic.

/this

no matter how badly she is makeing herself look she will continue. she NEEDS the last word in. witch is why her arguments get so fucked it you have to question what if any head trauma she has suffered.
 

IndyColtsFan

Lifer
Sep 22, 2007
33,655
688
126
Six sees stand-offs like this as a victory condition. Even though you asked first, she won't allow you to control the flow of discussion; this is why she flips it around on you and tries to force you to answer her question instead. Failing on facts and logic, her only recourse is to control the discussion itself. Answering your question, to her, is a sign of weakness.

It shows you how desperate she is to find a sliver of "win" in threads like these. It really is pathetic.

The comical thing is that I already answered her question and she isn't smart enough to see it. Next, she'll claim she "answered" mine when she gave me a link to wikipedia for the entire NCAA entry. So I guess I'm ok by answering "Here is the answer to your questions."
 

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
111,983
31,539
146
so this is what happens when she gets run out of L&R for her atrocious relationship "advice?"

everyone else is stuck with her?
 

IndyColtsFan

Lifer
Sep 22, 2007
33,655
688
126

So you can't even quote your own question that I "didn't answer"? Your assinine ramblings about "how the NCAA operates" was to quote posters who said exactly the same thing I did. There is no question there. You're the one arguing with how it operates, not me. You quoting others after arguing with them and then stating that you understand how it operates is laughable.

LOL! Here is your question:


sixone said:
Then why isn't the NCAA amending its rules to impose civil penalties for those kinds of violations? Is it not in the schools' best interest to have the violators penalized instead of the schools?

Which I answered, because it is not possible for the NCAA to impose civil penalties. Therefore, the second question is moot.

Now answer mine.
 
Last edited:

sixone

Lifer
May 3, 2004
25,030
5
61
So please logically explain how that process above adds or removes heat as it pretains to your "Not if you make it hot or cold enough" statement.

It's commonly called "dry steam". You could google it, if you've never heard of it before.
 

RPD

Diamond Member
Jul 22, 2009
5,109
600
126
It's commonly called "dry steam". You could google it, if you've never heard of it before.
Forgive me, I'm confused. Are we talking about dry water or dry steam? Because your original retort was dry WATER. Your original witty remark was WATER isn't wet.

So steam is now water... Or is it steam?