zinfamous
No Lifer
- Jul 12, 2006
- 111,992
- 31,550
- 146
I'm just pointing out the hyprocrocy of all those who claim that this is a PSU problem and a problem that resulted from PSU culture.
In reality this is a problem with human nature and the culture of our entire society. To think, like many of the people in this thread, that by eliminating Penn State football that this problem will somehow dissapear is ridiculous.
You aren't going to solve child abuse by punishing students, players, and residents who had nothing to do with them problem. Even some of the victims have come out and said they think it's stupid.
People in power will always try to maintain that power by any means necessary. That has been and always will be human nature. This could have happened at any University, charity, organization, company, church, etc., anywhere in the world. Thinking anything different is a dangerous path and just shows how little you know and/or care about child abuse.
No one is arguing that the larger problem will disappear. The reason for the NCAA action is to send a message to other programs what will happen if their program engages in such rampant abuse. The goal is to ensure that any such criminals that are discovered anywhere else, within the college sports world, are dealt with properly.
The NCAA is not sanctioning PSU on the actions of Sandusky, but on the cover-up, which speaks to the massive corruption and improper power structure of PSU--the center of which is the football program. This is plain, and the NCAA has every authority to do this.
Any so-called analyst that can't differentiate the two crimes committed by the personnel at PSU clearly have their heads up their asses.
But I think it is a larger problem with human nature and particular cultures like this. It's a punch in the jaw--or rather it should be--to those of us that place such unreasonably high value in things that matter so little. The culture at and around PSU didn't get this then, and those that hover around this football program still don't seem to get it--and neither does the larger sports world if lupi's links are to be taken as an accurate representation of what these sports journalists actually think.
call PSU a scapegoat for all such similar evils if you want, call them a martyr. Whatever you call them, I think many recognize them now as a necessary example of many of our misguided priorities. The sports world is small and insular anyway. As appropriate and necessary were the NCAA's actions regarding PSU, I believe they recognized--not necessarily through pressure--that the majority of this country doesn't really give a flip about this world. The NCAA is still recognized as the governing body, and to not act would be a much larger, more meaningful public indictment on not only the NCAA, but the sports culture as a whole.
If Congress can choose to go after baseball for steroid abuse...imagine what would happen if the body governing all of college sports chose to further sweep these massive crimes under the rug.
