Darth Rotor
Salted Sith Cynic
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2006
- Messages
- 38,527
http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/9854202/Owens-says-NFL-should-reinstate-Vick
I agree with Terrel Owens, a sign that the Apocalypse is upon us.
Here's the deal. Michael Vick is being unfairly persecuted by the NFL, who are afraid of angry animal lovers. He was severely punished for his nasty crime: running a dog fighting ring. Even wrongful death suits often don't amount to damages at this scale for the defendant.
Who are these vicious persons, who love animals and who are willing to continue to wreck the life of a man due to their emotional reaction to his crime, for which he has been punished. What adamantine hearts on display among these allegedly warm hearted, pet loving people.
Even as Vick's sentence was coming to an end, I kept catching news pieces of efforts to influence the NFL commissioner that Vick is not suitable as a NFL player. His significant talent notwithstanding, they are prepared to pursue a character assassination campaign against him to preclude his being employed in his specialty.
Mr Vick not only went to prison, and has paid his proper societal debt as determined by our courts, but he lost (by paying back bonuses, losing salary, and losing his endorsement contracts) something like 40 million dollars.
Let's put this in perspective. If I were to run a dog fighting ring out of my home, got caught, and went to court, to apply 40 million worth of penalty to me you would have to:
Confiscate the entirety of my cash and net worth, and that of my immediate family, and my extended family, and my in laws, and then ... hell, that would barely scratch the surface. We'd need to start in on confiscating the assets of a few hundred of my friends and associates here on the JREF forums.
Vick has done his time, and beyond that paid a steep price for his crime, which is a balance, and possibly out of proportion, to the grisly acts for which he was convicted. Compare that to the punishment for the jerkoff who nearly beat Reginald Denny to death.
Redemption and a chance to make good is part of what our corrections and justice system attempts to achieve. Tossing a con into a screaming lynch mob can be prevented, and the NFL commissioner is in a perfect position to tell the torches and pitchforks clowns to back off.
I doubt he has the balls.
Dear NFL commissioner, PETA, and pet loving persons of America:
Give the man a break, and a chance to show that he is more than just a caricature of a man, painted as your evil cartoon villain, once a dog ring operator, forever a demon. Lay off with the T-shirts and the hate mail campaigns, and be open to his efforts to reform himself.
As TO put it:
(Once again, expect the rapture, I'd not have predicted that agreement. )
DR
I agree with Terrel Owens, a sign that the Apocalypse is upon us.
Here's the deal. Michael Vick is being unfairly persecuted by the NFL, who are afraid of angry animal lovers. He was severely punished for his nasty crime: running a dog fighting ring. Even wrongful death suits often don't amount to damages at this scale for the defendant.
Who are these vicious persons, who love animals and who are willing to continue to wreck the life of a man due to their emotional reaction to his crime, for which he has been punished. What adamantine hearts on display among these allegedly warm hearted, pet loving people.
Even as Vick's sentence was coming to an end, I kept catching news pieces of efforts to influence the NFL commissioner that Vick is not suitable as a NFL player. His significant talent notwithstanding, they are prepared to pursue a character assassination campaign against him to preclude his being employed in his specialty.
Mr Vick not only went to prison, and has paid his proper societal debt as determined by our courts, but he lost (by paying back bonuses, losing salary, and losing his endorsement contracts) something like 40 million dollars.
Let's put this in perspective. If I were to run a dog fighting ring out of my home, got caught, and went to court, to apply 40 million worth of penalty to me you would have to:
Confiscate the entirety of my cash and net worth, and that of my immediate family, and my extended family, and my in laws, and then ... hell, that would barely scratch the surface. We'd need to start in on confiscating the assets of a few hundred of my friends and associates here on the JREF forums.
Vick has done his time, and beyond that paid a steep price for his crime, which is a balance, and possibly out of proportion, to the grisly acts for which he was convicted. Compare that to the punishment for the jerkoff who nearly beat Reginald Denny to death.
Redemption and a chance to make good is part of what our corrections and justice system attempts to achieve. Tossing a con into a screaming lynch mob can be prevented, and the NFL commissioner is in a perfect position to tell the torches and pitchforks clowns to back off.
I doubt he has the balls.
Dear NFL commissioner, PETA, and pet loving persons of America:
Give the man a break, and a chance to show that he is more than just a caricature of a man, painted as your evil cartoon villain, once a dog ring operator, forever a demon. Lay off with the T-shirts and the hate mail campaigns, and be open to his efforts to reform himself.
As TO put it:
While suffer may not be the term I'd have chosen, paid his penalty is what he did, the inanity of "start your comeback with a 4 game suspension" is where I and TO agree."It's almost like kicking a dead horse in the ground. ... The guy's already suffered so much. And to add a four-game suspension on a two-year prison sentence, that's ridiculous"
(Once again, expect the rapture, I'd not have predicted that agreement. )
DR
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