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A little overbroad, don't you think?
Unless, of course, you judge their actions in hindsight. But Nelson would never do that.
I've never known him for either of these.
A little overbroad, don't you think?
Unless, of course, you judge their actions in hindsight. But Nelson would never do that.
and it is disgraceful and disgusting. Seems everyone, from Paterno to the University President knew what Sandusky was up to and went out of their way to hide the facts in order to protectthe program. My opinion is that Penn State should take the dramatic step and shut the program down for a year and rebuild from the ground up. Say to the world that we are not going to tolerate this any more. Our football program is NOT more important than anything else. Of course they won't do that. But they should. andif they don't the NCAA should do it for them.
What kills me is UCONN Basketball gets banned for a friggin year from tourney play over a stupd friggin APR graduation rate issue... smh... Totally disappointed in the powers that be that supposedly run NCAA athletics... Totally reeediculous...
I think this goes to the lack of institutional control/death penalty issue that has been debated to death here. The school did a risk/benefit analysis and decided that the benefit of maintaining the illusion of institutional integrity outweighed the risk of sanctions if caught. It is hard to change the risk portion of this analysis as some people will hope that they won't be caught. So if you want to change the analysis, you have to change the severity of sanctions. Make sure that PSU and every institution in the country will opt for the embarassment of disclosure of the activity rather than risk severe sanction.
The failure to severely sanction the program confirms that their analysis of the risk was accurate. Why change "policies/proceedures" if the cost of taking no action is no different than the cost of self reporting? This is a watershed moment. PSU needs to become an example of what happens to an institution where the reputation of the institution becomes more important than welfare of innocents. I, for one, don't feel the least bit sorry for them.
Considering that a worldwide institution was involved in the same thing to an exponential degree, never really came clean and just waited out the storm coming back more arrogent and full of it than ever; I predict that Penn State will follow the same model. Payout a few bucks and pretend it never happened. In a few years, Penn State also will take massive umbridge when ever it is brought up. It will work, too.
This is no different than the Catholic Church scandal. Exactly the same line of thinking, that protecting the "institution" is more important than protecting 1 or a rleative few, children. It is a mindset, and one that is broken only with great difficulty...
Checking out for awhile folks. This subject matter is just too depressing and sad. Looking forward to some football, It's coming soon.
Rule changes, procedures are a given, it's not enough. It wasn't enough for penn state to acknowledge the existence of any of the children Sandusky was involved with until AFTER he was arrested. RUle changes are not enough.
Paragraphs 1-3, page 4.
http://www.courant.com/sports/mc-penn-state-freeh-report-freehstatement,0,5580355.htmlstory
I suppose you might try to tell me that it was Curley that convinced Paterno not to go to the authorities, and not the other way around?
Before you try to do that, read the actual 267 page report.
Good call!!!I'll set the over/under on your next post on this topic at 6.5 minutes.
A little overbroad, don't you think? There are a handful of people who actually "knew" something because they were close enough to the facts and the evidence. There were probably hundreds of people who had "heard something" that they found difficult to believe and didn't have enough evidence on to do something about. You do not really want everyone who hears a fifth hand rumor about something to call the police. The number of wild goose chases you would cause would far outweigh the crimes you would prevent.
Unless, of course, you judge their actions in hindsight. But Nelson would never do that.
Good call!!!
Next time just show some class and say I was right.
None of this is the least bit surprising. This was apparent to me the second day the scandal broke when I saw a synopsis of an interview of Greg Schiano on WFAN and Schiano refused to answer any questions about the Penn State scandal. That meant Schiano knew, which meant everyone involved in the program knew, which meant many AD's and President's around the country knew.
I don't think they should stop at Penn State. I think every AD in the country should be deposed and answer whether they knew or had heard rumors about what was happening at Penn State. Everyone had to know. How does the top defensive coordinator in the country not even get a sniff at a head coaching job unless EVERYONE knew?
personally i'd be more satisfied with some of these people serving jail time than to see PSU pay out $10m. i'm not saying the victims don't deserve some money, but if PSU pays cash out of their endowment and the school officials that enabled this escape any personal punishment it will be very sad indeed. these types of cover ups will never cease until individuals are held accountable
Carl, I thi
Carl, I think it's naive to think that anything that happens to football is going to change that risk assessment. There's no correlation between them. Universities are always liable for lawsuits for a variety of reasons. Regulations are crucial in this regard, unless you somehow believe that things will change so drastically that all allegations of abuse are reported.
Let me make this clear: when the new rules changes were made at my school, the changes were in regard to child abuse. But if you think there will be new regulations dealing with all forms of criminality and of potential threats/assault being dealt with through the police, I would highly doubt it. I've been through this before a number of times making reports about students, and on one occasion a faculty member. We once had a student that bragged of putting Hutus to death (he was a Tutsi) and threatened fellow students with the same. In other words, there is indeed always a risk assessment that gets made by someone either in administration or human resources. Those that work at corporations know well of what I'm talking about. Only in the case of child abuse have the regulations changed.
I can care less what happens to the football program. My point is, the same risk assessments will be made in the future in cases of abuse or potential abuse. In this particular case, the PSU coach and administrators were so far off the ball that their actions beg belief. But nonetheless, we're not moving into a world where employees (like Sandusky) have no rights.
I'm in no mood to engage in a conversation like this right now. You know what I want upstater? I want to hear, see, read, one....just ONE....penn state fan, loyalist, say clearly that their institution is gravely flawed, needs to be severely sanctioned,absolutely, without doubt, an example - so that nothing like this can ever happen again - not just at penn state, but anywhere.
All I get,and I've talked to a lot today.....is well.....just like you.
That sounds about right, the CC is a good comparison. As for cover ups like this, they will always happen so long ad self-preservation is a dominant part of the human psyche.
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the problem is that self preservation has been served by covering this stuff up. if Curley knew he'd go to prison for covering it up he might act differently. the same with the Catholics. until some of the authorities that participated in the cover up are held accountable nothing will change. and by accountable i don't mean taking money from an organization's pocket, but putting people in jail. if PSU has to pay out 100 million dollars, it doesn't hurt Curley one bit. throw him in prison and it'd be a different story.