I would not want to be in Ray Rice's shoes right now.
Obviously having an incident in your recent past where you knocked out a woman cold with
a punch in the face is not good. No
matter how much therapy, Jesus, and anger management Rice
manages to cobble together, he will always be "that wife beater
dude". Making matters worse for
him, the imagined worst case scenario that people conjured up in their heads thinking of
"guy punches woman" can't possibly be as bad as that video tape. It's about as bad a personal and public
relations situation possible. Ray Rice lost
his profession, his endorsement revenue, and is being shown non-stop on every
media outlet available at his worst possible moment. That's bad.
However, what is even worse is that he has now become the lightning rod
for domestic violence as a societal issue.
Every special interest organization with striking distance of this
incident wants to use it as a soapbox to further their agenda. People who don’t even know who Ray Rice was a
week ago now have him as public enemy #1.
I
don’t feel bad for him, but boy did his life take a bad turn after that trip to
Atlantic City.
This thing is now like a snowball out of control. It’s not about Rice knocking out that poor
woman anymore. It is now about
organizations seizing the moment to further their agendas. For
example, I saw a quote from Terry O’Neil, the president of the National
Organization of Women stating, “"The NFL has lost its way. It doesn't have
a Ray Rice problem; it has a violence against women problem. The
only workable solution is for Roger Goodell to resign and for his successor to
appoint an independent investigator with full authority to gather factual data
about domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault and stalking within
the NFL community and to recommend real and lasting reforms." Is it just me that finds that conclusion a
bit extreme? Maybe I am out of touch,
but I do not perceive that the NFL is “pro-violence on women”.
I do find it amazing when the general public is appalled
when very violent men that are provided great reward and a sense of entitlement
for hurting other people demonstrate off the field that they are very violent
and entitled men. "Hey, that
linebacker that we love watching injure people in slow motion on Sundays just
went to a nightclub and beat the crap out of someone!" No.
You don't say. That's odd. I wonder why he behaved violently? That is so out of character. To try and compare this tiny percentage of
the population with the general population is crazy. This is a very different collection of cats
that live in a world that has nothing to do with the world the rest of us live
in. While that doesn’t excuse their
violent behavior, especially in the case of domestic abuse, to think that this
behavior is a shock to anyone is ridiculous.
Some of these guys are unhinged. It's why we watch them.
To suggest that the NFL somehow become a societal judge for
the behavior of their employees is absurd.
That's what the courts are for. A football league that is primarily concerned with providing sports
entertainment at great profit cannot be expected to cure the ills of
society. They can be expected to reflect
the ills of society, not cure them. The
NFL just wants to sell TV rights and tickets, as well they should. I don’t need those assholes telling me what
to do, just like I don’t need the government telling me what to do. Everyone knows it is unacceptable to knock a woman out
cold with a punch in the face. The NFL
doesn’t want that. It’s bad
business. However, it shouldn’t be up to the NFL
to be the final world on the severity of domestic violence in America. For example, Ray Rice is facing no criminal
charges. Hell, his wife even forgave him and married him. So why should the NFL be expected to inflict
a harsher penalty than the actual legal system?
While the Ravens themselves cut him loose,
let's not start thinking they are swell guys in this. Ray Lewis was involved in a murder while with
the team years ago and yet the future Hall of Famer didn't miss a game. Rice, an almost used up running back still
owed millions? Sorry Ray Rice, hit the
bricks... Your behavior is
shocking. And can you polish the Ray
Lewis statute in front of the stadium while you go? The NFL has always been about winning games
while pretending to care about social issues if it was in their best
interests.
Roger Goodell will probably survive this firestorm. His employers, the NFL owners, don’t want him
to go anywhere. These are some of the most
powerful business owners in the country who have an army of public relations
teams and legal shock troops that will quell this situation by next week. Some sort of token foundation will be set
up. Speeches will be made. Public service announcements will be
created. Whatever needs to happen to
keep the money machine rolling will happen, frankly as it should. The NFL is a business, and nothing more. However, if I’m Ray Rice, I head for a cave
in Mexico somewhere. These guys are
going to need a sacrificial lamb to placate the mob and it sure is looking like he's The Guy. He needs to start over, change his name, find that beach at the end of Shawshank and start work sanding a shitty boat.
Um, as a woman who was raised by a strong, southern woman to believe that she was an equal to every other human, I'm not feeling good with this big to-do about hitting a woman being so much worse a crime than hitting a person. Forty years of equality srides wiped out and we're once again "delicate fucking flowers" to be treated differently by the hmficotw men. I'm not a butch lesbian man hater, I'm a middle-aged, middle class, married white woman and I'm your equal mother fuckers. Treat me as such.
ReplyDelete^^^vfh159... "Meow"
ReplyDeleteI would not want to be in Ray Rice's shoes right now. Obviously having an incident in your recent past where you knocked out a woman cold ... irayrice.blogspot.com
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