This piece by Joe Posansky says everything I have tried to say for the last few days . . . He speaks of all of the emotions, the rage, and the runaway train this has become. . . . When all the facts are known there will be plenty of time to condemn the right people . . .
http://joeposnanski.si.com/2011/11/10/the-end-of-paterno/
Posansky himself reaches the following conclusions about Paterno:
So, two points to get out of the way:
1. I think Joe Paterno had the responsibility as a leader and a man to stop the horrific rapes allegedly committed by Jerry Sandusky, and I believe he will have regrets about this for the rest of his life.
2. Because of this, Joe Paterno could no longer coach at Penn State University.
He reaches these conclusions without waiting until that magic moment when "all the facts are known" and there is "plenty of time to condemn the right people."
JoePa is one of the right people, and Posansky says so just as a "point to get out of the way." He also gets out of the way how much he feels for the victims and their families ("All that matters are the victims") before amply demonstrating that that's not all that matters.
In fact the main point of his blog, his reason for writing this piece, is obviously that he's at least as upset, and apparently more so, about the horrible things being said by somebody or another about Paterno:
there has been a desperate race among commentators and others to prove that they are MORE against child molesting than anyone else. That makes me sick.
Screw you JoeP II, resident biographer of JoeP I. You paint a picture of people dancing on JoePa's grave, calling him an inhuman monster, failing to stand up for him when they should, etc. etc. So attack the attackers, decimate the straw men, stand up for your "client"/book subject. Scream and howl at the carrion crows you see dropping bird doo on the statue you're building.
But to borrow a phrase, there will be plenty of time for you to condemn them when all of the facts are known and they're proven wrong. You reached the two important conclusions for now, insofar as the story concerns the subject of your pending book (and it concerns a lot more) as quoted earlier, and you reached them without the further and lengthy factual development to come.
1. Joe Pa had the responsibility and ability to stop a series of horrific rapes and he didn't do so.
2. Because of that he had to go.
No one here is saying more than that. No one here is calling Joe Pa a monster.
And no one here has to wait before forming some conclusions, just as you've formed some. They're always tentative conclusions anyway, pending further investigation, but form them we may.
You say Joe Pa isn't charged with a crime. One of my tentative conclusions is that he's escaping indictment only by grace of an overly narrow Pennsylvania reporting statute that covers administrators (such as those PSU administrators targeted by the grand jury in this case) and teachers, but not coaches (who ought
a fortiori to be covered for good reasons, including the existence of locker rooms and showers). I feel certain the Pennsylvania legislature will amend this statute to broaden and strengthen it -- as a direct result of this case. And that's all to the good.