Back in the day there was a construction job going on across from our dorm, we all needed shelves so we borrowed a number of cement blocks to hold up boards. Joe should not be kicked off team over this. Young people do careless and stupid things. If it was a teammates wallet that raises other issues that will be hard to overcome. Lack of common sense the first among them.
Different then taking a wallet and fraudulently using a credit card, in my opinion.Back in the day there was a construction job going on across from our dorm, we all needed shelves so we borrowed a number of cement blocks to hold up boards. Joe should not be kicked off team over this. Young people do careless and stupid things. If it was a teammates wallet that raises other issues that will be hard to overcome. Lack of common sense the first among them.
Different than taking a wallet and fraudulently using a credit card, in my opinion.Back in the day there was a construction job going on across from our dorm, we all needed shelves so we borrowed a number of cement blocks to hold up boards. Joe should not be kicked off team over this. Young people do careless and stupid things. If it was a teammates wallet that raises other issues that will be hard to overcome. Lack of common sense the first among them.
If the allegation is true, Joe not only did something wrong, he did something dumb.
Having read above, i would say its likely that if theres nothing else, he will probably be back in a few weeks.
But thats a big IF
If that was a teammate's wallet I doubt this would be in the press and I would imagine Mr. Williams would be one battered pup and probably off the team.
Not quite 18. He'll be 20 in a couple weeks. Not a kid.
College kids do all sorts of idiotic stuff.
DID YOU ORDER THE CODE RED!!!!!?!?!?Exactly! A like situation never happened to me during my time as a, so called, athlete. In the Army, I had to deal with one case where a barracks thief was caught red-handed. Without going into detail, my Platoon Sergeant and the Company First Sergeant talked me into allowing them to handle the situation using something the old-timers called "NCO justice." NCO Justice was later explained to me as a less formal, but more effective punishment, than alternative forms defined in the "UCMJ."
Yeah they do. So did I. We can debate whether this particular offense by Joe Williams deserves a more or less severe punishment (and for sure there are degrees of criminal behavior) but it's a much broader issue than merely the football team. It was late last night when I saw the thread and I'd spent the day deep in central Kentucky on business in an office that was an homage to the Wildcats, so I may have been a bit woozy and over the top!
See below View attachment 3443
I'm not excusing the comment, just offering a different perspective.
The firefighter has a union, apparently his union contract allows him to be suspended for this behavior. If he doesn't like that, he doesn't have to be a firefighter.
Also, fair or not, public employees are held to a higher standard because the public is paying their salaries. If we don't like the behavior of employees at a company, we can spend our money at their competition. We don't have that choice when it comes to public employees. If we don't like the board of ed/school system in the town we live in we can send our kids to private/parochial schools, but we're still paying for those teachers/administrators, etc.
DID YOU ORDER THE CODE RED!!!!!?!?!?