Good news for the NFL. (and they could use it)
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/200...x.html?cnn=yes
Good news for the NFL. (and they could use it)
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/200...x.html?cnn=yes
I've Been Boo'd
I've been Frosted
Today is the oldest you've ever been, and the youngest you'll ever be again.
Eleanor Roosevelt
Great. Bar someone from being a team owner because of what they've SAID?
It's a red letter day for free speech.
Most of what Sharpton and Jackson were accusing Limbaugh of saying was falsely attributed to him, and the one comment he made that keeps getting dragged up (his comment about McNabb) took three days before anyone said anything about it. Three days after the fact, it was whipped into a frenzy. When he actually made the comment, his two coworkers said nothing about it, and continued their conversation as if nothing untoward had been said.
The NFL is a private group, and as such can set their rules for ownership as they see fit, but what would happen if they barred Cynthia McKinney from ownership or her past statements? There would be a firestorm almost instantly.
The one eyed man in the kingdom of the blind wasn't king, he was stoned for seeing light.
Has anyone else ever been refused in buying a NFL team?
Convicted drug abuser?
And is this REALLY free speech having a red letter day. He spoke. No one stop him. He has not been arrested.
If someone comes in to the boss' office and says "boss - you are a $@%#%$%." And the boss fires him as a result, would that be a red letter day for free speech?
Of course not. You can say what you want. Call the boss anything you want. But don't whine then about "free speech" because you don't like the reaction you get!
Same thing. He said what he wanted to say. Now go be a big boy (pun intended) and accept the outcome!
(and all the free publicity!!)
Take one league, complete with convicted felons, both players and coaches.
Now take Mr. Goodell's statement about not wanting to bring controversy to the league.....
You don't want controversy? Then get Ray Lewis (oops, Ray wasn't convicted, one of his posse took the fall for him), Michael Vick, and the other 30 some odd active players who are convicted felons off the damned field, boot the convicted felons from the Hall of Fame in Canton, then I'll believe you.
Last edited by Lady's Human; 10-14-2009 at 10:49 PM.
The one eyed man in the kingdom of the blind wasn't king, he was stoned for seeing light.
I think LH covered it nicely.
However in a private transfer the seller can object to one of the buyers and not sell.
Double standards are afoot!
I could not care less about controversy. Or football. Don't even know or want to know who these guys are. I have enough trouble keeping the illegal drug user radio heads straight from the sexual harasser radio heads.
I am interested in the Red Letter Day for free speech you spoke of.
Druggie Limbaugh likes it when people admire him for his "freedom of speech" but cries when people don't like him for his "freedom of speech."
What a baby.
Freedom of speech does not mean people have to like you, does it? So some people don't like him because of what he says. That doesn't strike me as an abridgement of his free speech rights.
I have no idea whether Rush Limbaugh has said anything one way or the other about the ownership group cutting him.
The whole reason Mr. Goodell gave for not wanting Mr. Limbaugh as an owner was the controversy he would bring to the league.
That statement is absolutely priceless coming from someone who has allowed convicted felons on the field.
I find it particularly amusing that Al Sharpton (Tawana Brawley, anyone?), who has made just as many controversial statements as Rush Limbaugh, is opposed to Limbaugh as an NFL owner because of the statements he has made....which, when they were made, caused nary a ripple, and only became an issue days later. Despite the spin in the media, it wasn't a racist statement.
The one eyed man in the kingdom of the blind wasn't king, he was stoned for seeing light.
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