Eaglehawk wrote:EDIT: Ridiculous rule in the first place. How to you enforce this and not enforce other words, F, and Chit, and Son of a B, you muther F, as well as Ahole, ...
You gonna let those slide while sticking it to people who use the N word? I don't get it.
So when Lynch tells MRob, "good job blocking my nigga", some ref is going to blow a whisitle in Lynch's ear and penalize the team 15 yards? This will never get out of the owners meeting in one piece. This is DOA.
RiverDog wrote:
I don't agree with using penalties during the game to regulate foul language. There's too many penalties to begin with and refs have enough responsibilities as it is. But I do think that fines are appropriate.
This is the type of behavior that leads to the situation in the Dolphins locker room. I'm sure someone going to ridicule the following suggestion, but are we going to wait until some guy that was subjected to the type of abuse Jonathan Martin was gets pushed over the edge and retaliates by spraying a locker room with bullets before something is done to discourage this type of atmosphere?
Eaglehawk wrote:On second thought River, the laws are already on the books against harassment and hostile work environments where most of the NFL players would be able to take advantage of this. HR should swoop in and educate the players about their code of conduct and performance and maintain a professional atmosphere in the organization.
I will tell you one thing that is always true, the teammates always follow their leaders, and upper management. This is probably why you saw Miami's OL coach fired this week. He allowed the negative atmosphere to fester. Bad attitudes flow from the top down in MOST cases.
Hawktawk wrote:Eaglehawk wrote:On second thought River, the laws are already on the books against harassment and hostile work environments where most of the NFL players would be able to take advantage of this. HR should swoop in and educate the players about their code of conduct and performance and maintain a professional atmosphere in the organization.
I will tell you one thing that is always true, the teammates always follow their leaders, and upper management. This is probably why you saw Miami's OL coach fired this week. He allowed the negative atmosphere to fester. Bad attitudes flow from the top down in MOST cases.
The Dolphins purge was a sham to insulate the Owner and HC Philbin from culpability. It happens in business and politics all the time. Fire some underlings to save your own bacon.If the frigging head coach doesn't know whats going on with his team he should be fired for that.And Richie Incognito was and is the face of the *scandal* never mind there were apparently 3 linemen including Mike Pouncey involved. And Martin quit the team but the other teammate who was supposedly treated to this horrible behavior stated he had not felt like it was being done in anything more than a humorous nature and it did not bother him. The whole Dolphins thing was a joke, a league wide collective hand wringing over a weak minded puss who was unfit for a job in the NFL,coupled with Goody two shoes desire to socially engineer the game to a point of being unrecognizable. Now we are going to penalize swearing!!!!!!!!! Oh brother the zebras are already legislated to the point of incompetence and now they have to make the call on politeness.Next it will be trash talking, staring, hand clapping, welcome to the sterilization of the no fun league.
Hawktawk wrote:Eaglehawk wrote:On second thought River, the laws are already on the books against harassment and hostile work environments where most of the NFL players would be able to take advantage of this. HR should swoop in and educate the players about their code of conduct and performance and maintain a professional atmosphere in the organization.
I will tell you one thing that is always true, the teammates always follow their leaders, and upper management. This is probably why you saw Miami's OL coach fired this week. He allowed the negative atmosphere to fester. Bad attitudes flow from the top down in MOST cases.
The Dolphins purge was a sham to insulate the Owner and HC Philbin from culpability. It happens in business and politics all the time. Fire some underlings to save your own bacon.If the frigging head coach doesn't know whats going on with his team he should be fired for that.And Richie Incognito was and is the face of the *scandal* never mind there were apparently 3 linemen including Mike Pouncey involved. And Martin quit the team but the other teammate who was supposedly treated to this horrible behavior stated he had not felt like it was being done in anything more than a humorous nature and it did not bother him. The whole Dolphins thing was a joke, a league wide collective hand wringing over a weak minded puss who was unfit for a job in the NFL, coupled with Goody two shoes desire to socially engineer the game to a point of being unrecognizable. Now we are going to penalize swearing!!!!!!!!! Oh brother the zebras are already legislated to the point of incompetence and now they have to make the call on politeness.Next it will be trash talking, staring, hand clapping, welcome to the sterilization of the no fun league.
RiverDog wrote:Eaglehawk wrote:EDIT: Ridiculous rule in the first place. How to you enforce this and not enforce other words, F, and Chit, and Son of a B, you muther F, as well as Ahole, ...
You gonna let those slide while sticking it to people who use the N word? I don't get it.
So when Lynch tells MRob, "good job blocking my nigga", some ref is going to blow a whisitle in Lynch's ear and penalize the team 15 yards? This will never get out of the owners meeting in one piece. This is DOA.
I don't agree with using penalties during the game to regulate foul language. There's too many penalties to begin with and refs have enough responsibilities as it is. But I do think that fines are appropriate.
This is the type of behavior that leads to the situation in the Dolphins locker room. I'm sure someone going to ridicule the following suggestion, but are we going to wait until some guy that was subjected to the type of abuse Jonathan Martin was gets pushed over the edge and retaliates by spraying a locker room with bullets before something is done to discourage this type of atmosphere?
Hawktown wrote:words should be taken as just that, words. You can't ban words, you'll already get busted for telling someone off or speaking your mind in the wrong place at the wrong time! That is just wrong to begin with. If someone shoots some place up, then they have problems to begin with and it would happen regardless somewhere with that person. unfortunately no one can stop them most of the time. 4 letter words are harmless and i am sorry if you don't like them but i have no problem with hearing them.
RiverDog wrote:Hawktown wrote:words should be taken as just that, words. You can't ban words, you'll already get busted for telling someone off or speaking your mind in the wrong place at the wrong time! That is just wrong to begin with. If someone shoots some place up, then they have problems to begin with and it would happen regardless somewhere with that person. unfortunately no one can stop them most of the time. 4 letter words are harmless and i am sorry if you don't like them but i have no problem with hearing them.
You might not have a problem with them, but someone else might, and when you're in a public place, there damn sure are words that you are barred from saying at volumes loud enough that a casual bystander can hear.
c_hawkbob wrote:I agree with you a lot Monkey, but I disagree with you a lot too (which is actually a healthy thing I reckon) ... words can be extremely harmful, especially to or around young people (I say young people because I don't mean just children).
monkey wrote:RiverDog wrote:Hawktown wrote:words should be taken as just that, words. You can't ban words, you'll already get busted for telling someone off or speaking your mind in the wrong place at the wrong time! That is just wrong to begin with. If someone shoots some place up, then they have problems to begin with and it would happen regardless somewhere with that person. unfortunately no one can stop them most of the time. 4 letter words are harmless and i am sorry if you don't like them but i have no problem with hearing them.
You might not have a problem with them, but someone else might, and when you're in a public place, there damn sure are words that you are barred from saying at volumes loud enough that a casual bystander can hear.
Unless you are talking about "yelling fire in a crowded theater" (which there are laws against because of SAFETY), then I just couldn't possibly disagree more strongly.
Neither can my first amendment rights.
Words ARE harmless, if they offend you, that is YOUR problem.
Politeness would have us avoid using words that are offensive, rude, lewd etc... and personally I LIKE politeness, and try to follow the rules of polite society. I think that politeness is hugely undervalued in society, BUT, societal politeness in no way shape or form trumps my first amendment rights.
RiverDog wrote:Your rights end where my nose (or in this case, my ears) begins.
And I absolutely disagree with your assentation that words are harmless. Just ask any woman (or man, for that matter) that has been verbally abused.
NorthHawk wrote:It almost sounds like you are blaming the victim.
Everyone reacts differently to whatever stimulus is presented.
In this case, some fight it off and progress, others absorb it until it becomes too much for them, some flee the situation, and more.
Some just aren't strong enough to make the change when confronted with any strong challenge.
kalibane wrote:You'd think by now that we have figured this out by now. Personally speaking I don't care about language much. I think "foul" language is actually very useful at times when you're trying to convey a particular idea, emotion or thought in a succinct matter. But we don't live in my own personal world.
Freedom of Speech is the freedom to speak your mind without fear of government sanctions. It is does not mean you can say whatever you want, whenever you want to whomever you want without consequence. So sure you can say any filthy thing your heart desires but if you say it to the wrong person under the wrong circumstances I'm not going to feel sorry for you for a second if you get your ass whooped, fired or thrown out of an establishment that frowns on use of such language. I think that maybe in some areas people have errored too far on the side of caution at times but we all know what's expected.
I think trying to legislate this on the football field (or any sporting arena) is kind of ridiculous and I'm not sure how they're going to enforce it. I don't gather refs are going to be any more willing to potentially swing a game for something like this than they were when they tried to institute a crowd noise rule (and that was only 5 yards). But I don't even think this is about being PC. I think this probably has more to do with the growing popularity of having players micced for games.
RiverDog wrote:You're absolutely correct about not being able to say anything you want whenever and wherever you want, which is what I'm hearing from monkey.
monkey wrote:
And of course, my right to say what I want does NOT protect me from the possible consequences of saying hurtful things to people either.
If I go around at my place of employment, saying things that are crude, vulgar, mean, etc... I might end up losing my job.
Obviously, workplace environment is exactly the topic at hand, and so there are workplace freedom of speech nuances that are involved.
I guess what I am saying is, I don't completely disagree with you Riverdog, just partly.
monkey wrote:RiverDog wrote:You're absolutely correct about not being able to say anything you want whenever and wherever you want, which is what I'm hearing from monkey.
It is???monkey wrote:
And of course, my right to say what I want does NOT protect me from the possible consequences of saying hurtful things to people either.
If I go around at my place of employment, saying things that are crude, vulgar, mean, etc... I might end up losing my job.
Obviously, workplace environment is exactly the topic at hand, and so there are workplace freedom of speech nuances that are involved.
I guess what I am saying is, I don't completely disagree with you Riverdog, just partly.
As for where my rights end, if we are talking about my freedom of speech, it generally ends where your safety is concerned.
burrrton wrote:As for where my rights end, if we are talking about my freedom of speech, it generally ends where your safety is concerned.
Monkey is right.
The NFL can penalize whoever they want for whatever they want, but the general discussion about "free speech" begins and ends with this quote.
I won't use the N-word, ever, regardless of whether AAs use it among themselves, because I know what its history indicates and I've never met one of them who liked hearing me say it. That's enough for me.
But free speech in this country isn't limited to what *doesn't* offend you, and in fact it was created precisely to protect that which *does* offend you.
You don't like what someone said? Call them every name in the book. But don't expect the rule of law to bail you out.
I wish more people remembered and respected that these days.
[edit]
Eh, I skipped a lot of the discussion. If we're talking about what your boss will or will not accept, that's a different discussion than I'm having (perhaps with myself).
RiverDog wrote:burrrton wrote:As for where my rights end, if we are talking about my freedom of speech, it generally ends where your safety is concerned.
Monkey is right.
The NFL can penalize whoever they want for whatever they want, but the general discussion about "free speech" begins and ends with this quote.
I won't use the N-word, ever, regardless of whether AAs use it among themselves, because I know what its history indicates and I've never met one of them who liked hearing me say it. That's enough for me.
But free speech in this country isn't limited to what *doesn't* offend you, and in fact it was created precisely to protect that which *does* offend you.
You don't like what someone said? Call them every name in the book. But don't expect the rule of law to bail you out.
I wish more people remembered and respected that these days.
[edit]
Eh, I skipped a lot of the discussion. If we're talking about what your boss will or will not accept, that's a different discussion than I'm having (perhaps with myself).
LOL! Yea, we lost you a few posts ago. My last comment was more work place specific. When you think about it, we're very limited as to the topics we are allowed to discuss at the work place.
RiverDog wrote:burrrton wrote:As for where my rights end, if we are talking about my freedom of speech, it generally ends where your safety is concerned.
Monkey is right.
The NFL can penalize whoever they want for whatever they want, but the general discussion about "free speech" begins and ends with this quote.
I won't use the N-word, ever, regardless of whether AAs use it among themselves, because I know what its history indicates and I've never met one of them who liked hearing me say it. That's enough for me.
But free speech in this country isn't limited to what *doesn't* offend you, and in fact it was created precisely to protect that which *does* offend you.
You don't like what someone said? Call them every name in the book. But don't expect the rule of law to bail you out.
I wish more people remembered and respected that these days.
[edit]
Eh, I skipped a lot of the discussion. If we're talking about what your boss will or will not accept, that's a different discussion than I'm having (perhaps with myself).
LOL! Yea, we lost you a few posts ago. My last comment was more work place specific. When you think about it, we're very limited as to the topics we are allowed to discuss at the work place.
Eaglehawk wrote:You better outlaw all of the cuss words then. Because if you outlaw this word, you will have to outlaw the rest.
Not easy to do with such a violent sport. And when you have young men involved that have a hard time thinking about consequences of stuff as it is.
And of course, free speech is not "free" in that it can be regulated(permits required sometimes to protest etc.) both legislatively and privately.
That being said, the First Amendment is a cornerstone of our country. Too bad to see it being eroded daily.
RiverDog wrote:Eaglehawk wrote:You better outlaw all of the cuss words then. Because if you outlaw this word, you will have to outlaw the rest.
Not easy to do with such a violent sport. And when you have young men involved that have a hard time thinking about consequences of stuff as it is.
And of course, free speech is not "free" in that it can be regulated(permits required sometimes to protest etc.) both legislatively and privately.
That being said, the First Amendment is a cornerstone of our country. Too bad to see it being eroded daily.
The permits that are required for demonstrations has to do with public safety and doesn't restrict what a person or group of persons can say. They allow for a plan to keep traffic flowing and to insure that emergency services are not interrupted. You would appreciate that if your mother suffered a heart attack and the ambulance couldn't get to her in time because access was being blocked by an unauthorized demonstration.
The intent of the framers of the Constitution with regard to the first amendment was political in nature. The concern was limiting people from speaking out against their government. First amendment issues includes things like campaign financing and equal time for the opposition party after the President's State of the Union address. If the league does adapt this initiative, I don't see the First Amendment as having been trampled on.
Eaglehawk wrote:RiverDog wrote:Eaglehawk wrote:You better outlaw all of the cuss words then. Because if you outlaw this word, you will have to outlaw the rest.
Not easy to do with such a violent sport. And when you have young men involved that have a hard time thinking about consequences of stuff as it is.
And of course, free speech is not "free" in that it can be regulated(permits required sometimes to protest etc.) both legislatively and privately.
That being said, the First Amendment is a cornerstone of our country. Too bad to see it being eroded daily.
The permits that are required for demonstrations has to do with public safety and doesn't restrict what a person or group of persons can say. They allow for a plan to keep traffic flowing and to insure that emergency services are not interrupted. You would appreciate that if your mother suffered a heart attack and the ambulance couldn't get to her in time because access was being blocked by an unauthorized demonstration.
The intent of the framers of the Constitution with regard to the first amendment was political in nature. The concern was limiting people from speaking out against their government. First amendment issues includes things like campaign financing and equal time for the opposition party after the President's State of the Union address. If the league does adapt this initiative, I don't see the First Amendment as having been trampled on.
River, actually permits, and city governments can restrict what you can say. Obscene speech for example, is not protected by the First Amendment. Offensive speech is. Huge difference.
And yes, the NFL has the right to regulate whatever the hell it wants since its a private entity, I just don't see how practically this works. And I don't want people to be polarized even more in this country than what they already are. White guys will not be saying this word, black guys will. And it will not be meant in a racial way so how will this help things? This ruling will not help things River, while I know that both you and I want the same thing, I don't see how they can cleanly implement this. What do you think will happen in the scenario I just mentioned?
RiverDog wrote:
OK, I'll grant you the point that obscene speech is not protected by #1. My point was that the reason groups must have permits granted prior to a demonstration has to do with public safety concerns, not the general content of the speech itself. It seemed to me that you had indicated that it was the speech itself that was being regulated.
I've never liked the hypocrisy of blacks being OK with a 'brother' saying the N word yet are supremely insulted when a white uses it. Perhaps if the NFL bans it, they can start a trend of everyone rejecting the use of the term instead of it being one whose appropriate use is determined by the color of your skin. If blacks don't like the term being used by whites, they will never rid themselves of it by accepting its use amongst themselves. The word will continue to live.
I don't know how the league is going to evenly implement this policy. Like I said before, I object to referees being the judge and would rather see fines be levied based on audio recordings. We have too damn many penalties now and refs have too much on their platter. But I approve of the concept.
Eaglehawk wrote:RiverDog wrote:
OK, I'll grant you the point that obscene speech is not protected by #1. My point was that the reason groups must have permits granted prior to a demonstration has to do with public safety concerns, not the general content of the speech itself. It seemed to me that you had indicated that it was the speech itself that was being regulated.
I've never liked the hypocrisy of blacks being OK with a 'brother' saying the N word yet are supremely insulted when a white uses it. Perhaps if the NFL bans it, they can start a trend of everyone rejecting the use of the term instead of it being one whose appropriate use is determined by the color of your skin. If blacks don't like the term being used by whites, they will never rid themselves of it by accepting its use amongst themselves. The word will continue to live.
I don't know how the league is going to evenly implement this policy. Like I said before, I object to referees being the judge and would rather see fines be levied based on audio recordings. We have too damn many penalties now and refs have too much on their platter. But I approve of the concept.
Yup, Riv, I was just talking about how governments can regulate free speech nothing more nothing less. There is no absolute freedom to our First Amendment rights.
But its a strong right. It allows you to disagree with someone publicly and openly, and allows the other person to answer back. My issue about our FA rights deals with how our gvt has been illegally taping journalists, intimidating news reporter sources, and generally creating a chilling effect on people's ability to be a whistleblower on the federal level because of fear of retribution. That is just me though. I am sure most of the people on here save a few probably don't even know what I am talking about.
And yes I agree 100 percent with your statement Riv about the hypocrisy of blacks in this area. Again you have to start with the rappers and pop culture. That's where this comes from. And also the understanding of the fact that the N word is not spelled with a er at the end but with an a. So the brothers feel its not even the same word. See what I am saying? And that is where I am coming from. Are we talking about the er ending or the "nigga" term which is what the brothers throw around all the time? Which word will be banned? I have no idea. If they ban the "er" word then it's okay. I still don't think it will work but at least I would understand. That is the word they use down South and unfortunately many other states including the West, East and North. But the other term? Now you are banning two words, not one. If you want to implement this word, firstly, make up your mind. This topic Riv, is as confusing as hell.
You, River, don't even know how they will implement this. And because I can't see how they will do it either I say don't even try it! And yeah, we both agree as to the theory(or concept as you call it)(we don't want people calling others the N word (er ending) on the field, but the implementation is the monkeys wrench. There is no way the refs get into this without the risk of some of them getting death threats. Which is why I disagree with the entire idea.This is football, I don't want to be reminded of race when I watch a football game River. This is one of those ideas that sounds good on paper but in practice will absolutely NOT WORK.
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