surfsatwerk
Lifer
- Mar 6, 2008
- 10,110
- 5
- 81
Sure is a lot of QQ from you lupi.
I don't think you can read.
Sure is a lot of QQ from you lupi.
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- I have to admit, I expected NCAA president Mark Emmert to march out in military uniform, epaulets gleaming, and pronounce that he should be addressed as Generalissimo.
That press release Sunday, in which the NCAA announced that it would hand down punitive and corrective penalties to Penn State on Monday without its Committee on Infractions ever calling a meeting to order, sounded like the worst form of administrative justice. As anyone who has ever followed an infractions case knows, the NCAA may not use due process, but there is a process that evolves in due time. It can make the tortoise look like the hare -- ask USC. But the NCAA president is not a commissioner. He doesn't wield the imperial power of a Roger Goodell.
The announcement Sunday indicated that the NCAA would ignore its own rules -- not just the procedures but the entirety of the rulebook. Generalissimo Emmert had created his own shopping mall of justice -- a Banana Republic and a Gap. There was all the enforcement that came before Penn State, and there was Penn State.
You can read the hundreds of pages of the NCAA manual from now until the Nittany Lions run onto the field to play Ohio on Sept. 1, and you won't find a single rule that Penn State violated in this case. If that doesn't mean anything, why have a rulebook?
http://espn.go.com/college-football...ps-handing-penn-state-nittany-lions-sanctions
Let's say that at MIT, there was a similar coverup in the engineering department by some bigshot professor molesting kids. Janitors don't want to risk reporting him because he's such a big name and it's all swept under the rug for many years. It's a big scandal when this comes to light. The accrediting organization for engineering then decides to force the school to dramatically limit the number of engineering students it can accept and/or removes engineering accreditation from degrees given out during that time frame. Would that make any sense to you?
The Executive Committee and the Division I Board of Directors authorized the sanctions. I don't see how that can be construed as Emmert acting alone, regardless of arguments about the process and merit of the decision.
Since the NCAA is a voluntary organization if a sufficient amount of the membership decides there has been wrongdoing that has harmed the organization they can interpret their bylaws as they wish.
You can't educate the ignorant. It's folks like Lupi and the articles that he's linking is why the PSU football program should have been eliminated permanently.
Like you said, the NCAA is a voluntary organization and when you join, you agree to abide to it's charter. When you allow children to be molested in your football facility for years b/c football is more important than children's lives, there is a problem with the culture and that culture needs to be eliminated.
You can't educate the ignorant. It's folks like Lupi and the articles that he's linking is why the PSU football program should have been eliminated permanently.
Like you said, the NCAA is a voluntary organization and when you join, you agree to abide to it's charter. When you allow children to be molested in your football facility for years b/c football is more important than children's lives, there is a problem with the culture and that culture needs to be eliminated.
You think taking away scholarships, revoking wins, and postseason bowl bans are going to change the culture any more than the legal implications of what's happened here? The fact that Curley, Schultz, Paterno if he were alive, and others will be facing criminal charges? The innumerable civil lawsuits that are about to absolutely fuck Penn State for its criminal negligence? Those are the things that will change a culture.
Taking away scholarships and simply making it an inferior product on the field just doesn't even register on the same scale, and furthermore, punishes people who were peripheral to the actual perpetrators.
Of course, public opinion is with the NCAA, because of how sick and disgusting Sandusky's crimes were and the people who covered for him. Everyone is in this mindset of "heads must roll!" But the punishment doesn't seem to accomplish much in the way of ensuring this doesn't happen again. I've heard of people suggesting that the whole school should be shut down, which again is absolutely stupid.
You know where you are wrong? The fact that you are calling what the NCAA is doing a punishment. It's actually meant to be the first steps to getting the institution back on track and focused on what matters. Those that call it a punishment still put football first and forget the these universities exist to educate.
Thank god we have the NCAA to teach Penn State what matters. So covering up and allowing the rape of children is worse than letting your players trade autographs for tattoos and better than setting up a system where boosters are paying your players.
Thank you NCAA for teaching Penn State and us all.
Can we start telling jokes? Or should we wait 13 years?
It's pretty disgusting to see people still defend Pedo State and pretending that the current College Football culture is fine. It's a sad state in current society where people continue to point fingers else where when the whole system has been corrupt. Punishment dealt to PSU was perfectly in line with what was needed, and a wake up call to everyone that Football > Everything Else is wrong.
It's pretty disgusting to see people still defend Pedo State and pretending that the current College Football culture is fine. It's a sad state in current society where people continue to point fingers else where when the whole system has been corrupt. Punishment dealt to PSU was perfectly in line with what was needed, and a wake up call to everyone that Football > Everything Else is wrong.
It's pretty disgusting to see people still defend Pedo State and pretending that the current College Football culture is fine. It's a sad state in current society where people continue to point fingers else where when the whole system has been corrupt. Punishment dealt to PSU was perfectly in line with what was needed, and a wake up call to everyone that Football > Everything Else is wrong.
[snip]
And so, Emmert made sure his organization responded accordingly -- even if that meant revoking the traditional due process afforded every other school that's ever been punished by the NCAA; invoking a nebulous, generalized bylaw about promoting integrity that could easily apply to hundreds of lawbreaking players, coaches and staffers across the country every year; and creating a precedent for dictatorial-like intervention that must now be considered every time a scandal of any proportion arises in college athletics.
Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/20...state-ncaa-sanctions/index.html#ixzz21adkioFV
At some schools, athletics are MORE important than education.
There's nothing wrong with that. It's just the world we live in today.
Who's to say being well educated is more valuable than being an elite athlete?
Not everyone CAN be well educated. They are given physical gifts, not intellectual ones.
You can argue that certain degrees are actually a drain on society.