Is it? He was basically told that you can't discuss Jesus or being Christian in the media or in the locker room. You can see him dancing around the topic everytime he's interviewed...trying to qualify his statements and keep from making the same mistake. Jesus is always on the tip of the tongue for men like Ernest.
I know men like Ernest, Christian devotion is different in the South and Midwest. Asking a man like him to keep his faith bottled up is the ultimate slap in the face and everytime he hides his true thoughts he feels that he is disrespecting God. Want to know what his personal and family issues were? His convictions to his God. Christians in the South do not keep their religion to themselves. For men like Ernest God is a part of EVERYTHING. For him, everything he has is thanks to his God so for someone to tell him that he can't openly speak about God at work is inconceivable to him.
Culturally CT was not a fit for him. This never would have happened in the South. He needs to be in South or Midwest or at a religious private institution.
New England is not tolerant when it comes to religion or those who profess Jesus. I see it an awful lot in the northeast and do not see it when I travel down south. Just two different worlds.
There is a difference though. One is a UCONN alumni and Jim Calhoun's personal choose to succeed him. The other has zero connections with UCONN and had a few UCONN alumni complained to the university and the local newspapers.
Time to get back to football guys... UCONN Football....
The intolerance in the South of not only those who are not religious, but those of a "different" sect of Christianity, is exponentially greater than the perceived intolerance of people of faith in the Northeast.
This story is front page on FoxNews.
Regardless of constitution/faith (blah, blah and say what you will about FoxNews), bad press is bad press. Not laying blame, but there is no silver lining so far.
and this is one of the reasons you keep religion out of the work place, it's impossible to discuss religion without politics creeping into it. Fake News and their minions can go _________ themselves. Look how this subject has brought us all together, in Jesus' name, Amen.
and the right wingers who are mad at Herbst should root for a different school, she did the right thing.
This is quintessential "Northeastern Tolerance".
exactly, no tolerance for religious discussion while on the clock. Now get back to work.
This story is front page on FoxNews.
Regardless of constitution/faith (blah, blah and say what you will about FoxNews), bad press is bad press. Not laying blame, but there is no silver lining so far.
and this is one of the reasons you keep religion out of the work place, it's impossible to discuss religion without politics creeping into it. Fake News and their minions can go _________ themselves. Look how this subject has brought us all together, in Jesus' name, Amen.
and the right wingers who are mad at Herbst should root for a different school, she did the right thing.
Diaco said that issue had been dealt with swiftly and that Jones' resignation was unrelated to the issue.
"The university administration and the department were extremely supportive and provided education to me [that] I passed along to the staff about speaking on behalf of the university as a university representative," Diaco said. "The fact of the matter is life happens. And things arise in people's lives that need attention and this is entirely, 100 percent coincidental."
Well, I tried nicely to provide a simple, unbiased, non-inflammatory little update post... and you promptly ram it violently up your own arse with vitriolic flourish.
I've intentionally stayed completely out of this foolishness, but seriously, how do you not see the raging hypocrisy in your post? And that goes for the people on the other side of the fence as well.
Nevermind, I'm checking back out of this cesspool.
No way he got canned for just the original comments alone.
Right, let's stop beating around the bush. The reason why this issue stings so bad is that it reflects poorly on coach, it's his first big misstep. He shouldn't have brought this guy into the program and his doing so puts his judgement into question. Jones was fired by his alma mater, a school right smack dab in the middle of the Bible Belt for crying out loud. The moral being that maybe you want Jesus in the huddle, but you better keep your hands out of the till. Fired for malfeasance and contumacious conduct. I had never heard the word contumacious before. As a matter of fact, when you enter "malfeasance and contumacious conduct" into Google the first thing you get is a definition of contumacious. The 2nd entry is a legal brief titled "Jones v. Alcorn State University" which should be mandatory reading for this board.
BTW, contumacious means " openly insubordinate and willfully obstinate--exhibiting stubborn rebelliousness". I wonder if after his Diaco had his talk with Jones, Jones responded with some contumacious conduct which necessitated his resignation. No way he got canned for just the original comments alone.
Leave the explanation for the resignation at social religious cultural stuff that is nonsense really, rather than the possibility that a guy was hired and post hire, a history of stuff like establishing illegal $10k+ slush fund accounts for recruiting and donor concession and other stuff like that was discovered.
The man is a devout christian and the University and State asked him to keep that information to himself while he was at work.
Only in Connecticut. This man would have helped us tremendously in recruiting young christian men from the South. But we don't want to offend some soccer mom in Hartford. Unbelievable.
Wonder who they will hire to replace him.
So you're all in that he got canned/fired as opposed to he resigned on his own accord for a personal reason?
Similarly, Jefferson, Governor of Virginia, President, Ambassador, author of the Declaration of Independence held the following view: "it does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg. .." and it was Jefferson who coined the phrase "a wall of separation between Church and State" in his letter to the Danbury Baptists. The founders were a decidedly mixed in their religious outlook. Samuel Adams was a strict Calvinist.New England Congregationalist. Franklin had views which were difficult to was a diest, although John Adams once said the Catholics thought him a Catholic, Presbytarians a Prysbertarian, the Church of England claimed him as one of their own..." At one point he wrote ""I think opinions should be judged by their influences and effects; and if a man holds none that tend to make him less virtuous or more vicious, it may be concluded that he holds none that are dangerous, which I hope is the case with me." Later in life he returned to organized religion but not any particular one. He was a supporter of organized religion in general but not any one in particular. Thomas Paine, on the other hand, writer of the highly influential Common Sense, was a deist and a freethinker who was strongly opposed to any form of organized religion. Washington believed that all religious beliefs were beneficial to a society. He himself was an Anglican, but as Commander of the Colonial Army he forbade Guy Fawkes day celebrations among his troops which were anti-Catholic in color, and during the invasion of Canada he ordered his commanders to treat the French Catholics with respect, partly to generate support for the rebellion, its true. For what its worth, General Arnold ignored those orders. He rarely attended church services, though during his presidency he was once reportedly criticized from the pulpit for regularly leaving early when he did. Charles Carroll, a leader of the Maryland delegation was a Catholic. His younger brother John was the first American Catholic bishop.Wrong again, bill. James Madison, Father of the Constitution, was a devout man. But his insistence of a strict seperation of church and state was such that he wanted the post offices open on Sunday. The fathers knew that injecting faith over reason in Government is a recipe for disaster.
Right... a football coach deciding maybe he'd rather coach at a university that explicitly endorses religion instead of a university that asks people in positions of authority to not use their authority to proselytize to students, is the exact same thing as the Romans driving giant nails in the hands and feet of the Son of God.2,000 years ago government officials didn't like what Jesus was saying so they crucified him. Not much has changed.
This is why I love the Boneyard - new vocabulary all the time. I admit it - I had to look it up!"contumacious "