Ppl were saying the Jaylon Tyson appeal would come at the end of the week. Anyone have any updates about that?
Sure, there is nothing racist about an old white male coach telling an African American player to be his "slave."Oakbear said:
" ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives"
mostly ridiculous diatribe ??
can you show why it is racist or are you one of those that when you have no arguments just throw out insults
too bad there are rules that ruin lives/sports ... anarchy would be so much better (sadly there are those that believe that anarchy would be better)
What a stupid postsouthseasbear said:Sure, there is nothing racist about an old white male coach telling an African American player to be his "slave."Oakbear said:
" ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives"
mostly ridiculous diatribe ??
can you show why it is racist or are you one of those that when you have no arguments just throw out insults
too bad there are rules that ruin lives/sports ... anarchy would be so much better (sadly there are those that believe that anarchy would be better)
Oh good, you're self aware!Oakbear said:What a stupid postsouthseasbear said:Sure, there is nothing racist about an old white male coach telling an African American player to be his "slave."Oakbear said:
" ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives"
mostly ridiculous diatribe ??
can you show why it is racist or are you one of those that when you have no arguments just throw out insults
too bad there are rules that ruin lives/sports ... anarchy would be so much better (sadly there are those that believe that anarchy would be better)
are you one of those that when you have no arguments just throw out insultsOakbear said:What a stupid postsouthseasbear said:Sure, there is nothing racist about an old white male coach telling an African American player to be his "slave."Oakbear said:
" ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives"
mostly ridiculous diatribe ??
can you show why it is racist or are you one of those that when you have no arguments just throw out insults
too bad there are rules that ruin lives/sports ... anarchy would be so much better (sadly there are those that believe that anarchy would be better)
bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
He APPLIED for the waiver due to what was clearly a pretty racist or at least racially insensitve atmosphere at TT. It fits well within the NCAA guideline of allowing a second transfer for the mental health of the player. The fact that it wasn't either granted outright or at the very least rapidly overturned on appeal smakes of whiteness that doesn't get it.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
JimSox said:
His cousin was in the stands near me tonight and she told me they haven't heard anything yet but hope to by next weekend.
He said that was his guess not a guarantee.oskidunker said:JimSox said:
His cousin was in the stands near me tonight and she told me they haven't heard anything yet but hope to by next weekend.
Madsen says by Friday at the latest
It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
Insensitive would make sense. Saying the NCAA is racist because they did not grant the waiver does not make sense, unless you or someone could provide information that indicates otherwise. That is all I am asking for.BearlyCareAnymore said:It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
I think if "racist" is too charged a word to use for you, we should be able to agree that the decision is racially insensitive. They should not be requiring a player stay at a school where that happened to him.
If some coach calls a white player a slave owner and that player gets a waiver approved then denying Tyson's would be racist. That probably won't come up but I personally think a denial would go beyond insensitive anyway.oski003 said:Insensitive would make sense. Saying the NCAA is racist because they did not grant the waiver does not make sense, unless you or someone could provide information that indicates otherwise. That is all I am asking for.BearlyCareAnymore said:It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
I think if "racist" is too charged a word to use for you, we should be able to agree that the decision is racially insensitive. They should not be requiring a player stay at a school where that happened to him.
stu said:If some coach calls a white player a slave owner and that player gets a waiver approved then denying Tyson's would be racist. That probably won't come up but I personally think a denial would go beyond insensitive anyway.oski003 said:Insensitive would make sense. Saying the NCAA is racist because they did not grant the waiver does not make sense, unless you or someone could provide information that indicates otherwise. That is all I am asking for.BearlyCareAnymore said:It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
I think if "racist" is too charged a word to use for you, we should be able to agree that the decision is racially insensitive. They should not be requiring a player stay at a school where that happened to him.
A coach calling a white player a "slave owner" is the closest thing to a coach calling a black player a "slave" I could think of. Not equivalent as the latter is worse but I'm neither a social scientist nor a writer. Maybe I should have stayed out of this discussion.oski003 said:stu said:If some coach calls a white player a slave owner and that player gets a waiver approved then denying Tyson's would be racist. That probably won't come up but I personally think a denial would go beyond insensitive anyway.oski003 said:Insensitive would make sense. Saying the NCAA is racist because they did not grant the waiver does not make sense, unless you or someone could provide information that indicates otherwise. That is all I am asking for.BearlyCareAnymore said:It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
I think if "racist" is too charged a word to use for you, we should be able to agree that the decision is racially insensitive. They should not be requiring a player stay at a school where that happened to him.
I don't understand your first sentence. Please clarify.
stu said:A coach calling a white player a "slave owner" is the closest thing to a coach calling a black player a "slave" I could think of. Not equivalent as the latter is worse but I'm neither a social scientist nor a writer. Maybe I should have stayed out of this discussion.oski003 said:stu said:If some coach calls a white player a slave owner and that player gets a waiver approved then denying Tyson's would be racist. That probably won't come up but I personally think a denial would go beyond insensitive anyway.oski003 said:Insensitive would make sense. Saying the NCAA is racist because they did not grant the waiver does not make sense, unless you or someone could provide information that indicates otherwise. That is all I am asking for.BearlyCareAnymore said:It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
I think if "racist" is too charged a word to use for you, we should be able to agree that the decision is racially insensitive. They should not be requiring a player stay at a school where that happened to him.
I don't understand your first sentence. Please clarify.
No, better here than Philadelphia.stu said:
I'd rather be in Philadelphia.
Well, personally, I think forcing a kid back into a program where that level of racism took place would be a decision that is racist as hell. It would make them complicit in the mistreatment and is a level of ignorance and insensitivity toward the plight of an individual Black player that I'm going to call it. You gotta be racist to make that decision.oski003 said:Insensitive would make sense. Saying the NCAA is racist because they did not grant the waiver does not make sense, unless you or someone could provide information that indicates otherwise. That is all I am asking for.BearlyCareAnymore said:It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
I think if "racist" is too charged a word to use for you, we should be able to agree that the decision is racially insensitive. They should not be requiring a player stay at a school where that happened to him.
BearlyCareAnymore said:Well, personally, I think forcing a kid back into a program where that level of racism took place would be a decision that is racist as hell. It would make them complicit in the mistreatment and is a level of ignorance and insensitivity toward the plight of an individual Black player that I'm going to call it. You gotta be racist to make that decision.oski003 said:Insensitive would make sense. Saying the NCAA is racist because they did not grant the waiver does not make sense, unless you or someone could provide information that indicates otherwise. That is all I am asking for.BearlyCareAnymore said:It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
I think if "racist" is too charged a word to use for you, we should be able to agree that the decision is racially insensitive. They should not be requiring a player stay at a school where that happened to him.
But, I'm aware that other people may have different definitions of racist and how that can be a loaded term for them so I offered up "racially insensitive" to get through the point because I think we should all be able to agree that such a decision would be egregious and that clearly the racial component is largely what makes it egregious.
I'm essentially doing the same thing I do when a minority claims minorities can't be racist based on a definition they have adopted and I'll just say, fine, can we agree on "prejudiced asshat".
It's all semantics
nah, too windy... said:
..I'd also consider Vancouver BC, Wellington NZ, and Auckland NZ.
oski003 said:stu said:A coach calling a white player a "slave owner" is the closest thing to a coach calling a black player a "slave" I could think of. Not equivalent as the latter is worse but I'm neither a social scientist nor a writer. Maybe I should have stayed out of this discussion.oski003 said:stu said:If some coach calls a white player a slave owner and that player gets a waiver approved then denying Tyson's would be racist. That probably won't come up but I personally think a denial would go beyond insensitive anyway.oski003 said:Insensitive would make sense. Saying the NCAA is racist because they did not grant the waiver does not make sense, unless you or someone could provide information that indicates otherwise. That is all I am asking for.BearlyCareAnymore said:It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
I think if "racist" is too charged a word to use for you, we should be able to agree that the decision is racially insensitive. They should not be requiring a player stay at a school where that happened to him.
I don't understand your first sentence. Please clarify.
I agree that Tyson played in a racist environment. I just don't believe that we've seen any evidence of the NCAA initially denying his second transfer waiver as being motivated by racism, as was alleged above.
Wellington has a reputation for being windy but I've stayed there 6 times and never noticed it. But one day while I was crossing the bridge to Waitangi (way up north) I almost got blown to Australia.smh said:nah, too windy... said:
..I'd also consider Vancouver BC, Wellington NZ, and Auckland NZ.
oski003 said:BearlyCareAnymore said:Well, personally, I think forcing a kid back into a program where that level of racism took place would be a decision that is racist as hell. It would make them complicit in the mistreatment and is a level of ignorance and insensitivity toward the plight of an individual Black player that I'm going to call it. You gotta be racist to make that decision.oski003 said:Insensitive would make sense. Saying the NCAA is racist because they did not grant the waiver does not make sense, unless you or someone could provide information that indicates otherwise. That is all I am asking for.BearlyCareAnymore said:It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
I think if "racist" is too charged a word to use for you, we should be able to agree that the decision is racially insensitive. They should not be requiring a player stay at a school where that happened to him.
But, I'm aware that other people may have different definitions of racist and how that can be a loaded term for them so I offered up "racially insensitive" to get through the point because I think we should all be able to agree that such a decision would be egregious and that clearly the racial component is largely what makes it egregious.
I'm essentially doing the same thing I do when a minority claims minorities can't be racist based on a definition they have adopted and I'll just say, fine, can we agree on "prejudiced asshat".
It's all semantics
Nobody is forcing him to stay there. Also, if someone initially denied an athlete a second transfer not sit out waiver (while denying every other request) at USC where athletes were sexually assaulted by staff, would that make them pro-rape?
Exactly.calumnus said:oski003 said:BearlyCareAnymore said:Well, personally, I think forcing a kid back into a program where that level of racism took place would be a decision that is racist as hell. It would make them complicit in the mistreatment and is a level of ignorance and insensitivity toward the plight of an individual Black player that I'm going to call it. You gotta be racist to make that decision.oski003 said:Insensitive would make sense. Saying the NCAA is racist because they did not grant the waiver does not make sense, unless you or someone could provide information that indicates otherwise. That is all I am asking for.BearlyCareAnymore said:It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
I think if "racist" is too charged a word to use for you, we should be able to agree that the decision is racially insensitive. They should not be requiring a player stay at a school where that happened to him.
But, I'm aware that other people may have different definitions of racist and how that can be a loaded term for them so I offered up "racially insensitive" to get through the point because I think we should all be able to agree that such a decision would be egregious and that clearly the racial component is largely what makes it egregious.
I'm essentially doing the same thing I do when a minority claims minorities can't be racist based on a definition they have adopted and I'll just say, fine, can we agree on "prejudiced asshat".
It's all semantics
Nobody is forcing him to stay there. Also, if someone initially denied an athlete a second transfer not sit out waiver (while denying every other request) at USC where athletes were sexually assaulted by staff, would that make them pro-rape?
Supporting victims of rape who report it and punishing rapists is anti-rape. Agreed?
If you instead punished the victim who reported without punishing the perpetrator it would be a "pro-rape" policy.
If they deny his appeal they are punishing him for leaving. Yeah, he can leave and be forced to sit out a year.oski003 said:BearlyCareAnymore said:Well, personally, I think forcing a kid back into a program where that level of racism took place would be a decision that is racist as hell. It would make them complicit in the mistreatment and is a level of ignorance and insensitivity toward the plight of an individual Black player that I'm going to call it. You gotta be racist to make that decision.oski003 said:Insensitive would make sense. Saying the NCAA is racist because they did not grant the waiver does not make sense, unless you or someone could provide information that indicates otherwise. That is all I am asking for.BearlyCareAnymore said:It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
I think if "racist" is too charged a word to use for you, we should be able to agree that the decision is racially insensitive. They should not be requiring a player stay at a school where that happened to him.
But, I'm aware that other people may have different definitions of racist and how that can be a loaded term for them so I offered up "racially insensitive" to get through the point because I think we should all be able to agree that such a decision would be egregious and that clearly the racial component is largely what makes it egregious.
I'm essentially doing the same thing I do when a minority claims minorities can't be racist based on a definition they have adopted and I'll just say, fine, can we agree on "prejudiced asshat".
It's all semantics
Nobody is forcing him to stay there. Also, if someone initially denied an athlete a second transfer not sit out waiver (while denying every other request) at USC where athletes were sexually assaulted by staff, would that make them pro-rape?
And here's another analogy for you. If I set fire to your house, I'm not forcing you to stay there. If you burn up, that is your fault, not mine.oski003 said:BearlyCareAnymore said:Well, personally, I think forcing a kid back into a program where that level of racism took place would be a decision that is racist as hell. It would make them complicit in the mistreatment and is a level of ignorance and insensitivity toward the plight of an individual Black player that I'm going to call it. You gotta be racist to make that decision.oski003 said:Insensitive would make sense. Saying the NCAA is racist because they did not grant the waiver does not make sense, unless you or someone could provide information that indicates otherwise. That is all I am asking for.BearlyCareAnymore said:It is acknowledged fact by everyone, including the coach, that the coach told the players they are the slaves and he is their master and that the coach spat on a player and told the player he can spit on him any time he wants to. It appears that the appeal is saying that he was directly targeted for the slaves/masters comment.oski003 said:bearsandgiants said:
I hope the NCAA gets absolutely railed by the media and the public after this one. ****ing ridiculous, racist pieces of ****, ruining sports and ruining lives. **** them all to hell, even if this is resolved before the opening tip, all of them will burn in hell for this.
Do you have a link to evidence that denying the waiver was motivated by racism? I am a little out of the loop here it seems.
I think if "racist" is too charged a word to use for you, we should be able to agree that the decision is racially insensitive. They should not be requiring a player stay at a school where that happened to him.
But, I'm aware that other people may have different definitions of racist and how that can be a loaded term for them so I offered up "racially insensitive" to get through the point because I think we should all be able to agree that such a decision would be egregious and that clearly the racial component is largely what makes it egregious.
I'm essentially doing the same thing I do when a minority claims minorities can't be racist based on a definition they have adopted and I'll just say, fine, can we agree on "prejudiced asshat".
It's all semantics
Nobody is forcing him to stay there. Also, if someone initially denied an athlete a second transfer not sit out waiver (while denying every other request) at USC where athletes were sexually assaulted by staff, would that make them pro-rape?
once upon a time my better half's 3 foot braid flew 90 degrees sideways, standing at a overlook thereabouts. so, yeah, weather varies. good luck stu.stu said:
Wellington has a reputation for being windy but I've stayed there 6 times and never noticed it. But one day while I was crossing the bridge to Waitangi (way up north) I almost got blown to Australia.