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I think he's done in the NFL
Published on August 21, 2007 By Dan Greene In Sports & Leisure
VIDEO FROM CNN
"http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/law/08/20/vick/index.html#cnnSTCVideo"

I love how this video categorizes the story as "Vick" the victim, of the justice system, because there was a group of other defendants who took plea deals, in order to testify against him, and get lesser sentences. Of course you would expect that people with integrity, don't testify against others, i.e. bear false witness, and so I'm left to conclude that Michael Vick is indeed guilty of the crime as he has pled guilty too. That means for certain some jail time, and probably a suspension from the NFL. Personally I was defending "Vick" to my co-workers when this story broke, they wanted him out and out for good at the time, and now that he has pled guilty I tend to agree. I think if Vick serves his time, and explains what really happened, which he hasn't really done thus far, that may change.

I think because he has not been truthful to the organization they shouldn't feel the need to come out and try to help this guy. The team, I'm sure, want to move on, the NFL, clearly wants no part of this, and neither does America.

What he stands accused of is, drowning and hanging dogs that "didn't perform well". I'll make a short but painful connection on that point. These dogs got "cut" and people outside the NFL or professional sports might not fully understand the gravity of the meaning of competition for these guys. Obviously Vick is highly competitive, like many other professional players, a lot of that mystic we give these professionals, the kiss ass in the media, the coach/GM praise for good performance on the field, the huge salaries, unfortunately in this case it spilled over into other areas of his life in a very negative way. In an inexcusable way at that.

Michael Vick is a victim but not of the justice system, he's a victim of star power, and not knowing when it's acceptable to lose. If that be the only redeemable reason to bring him back onto an NFL football field in the future so be it. I happen to think that he needs to make sure he gets perspective in his life first.

If you need a happier story, right on the right side of the screen are two cool stories, one of a (Rottweiler nursing a kitty so cute) and another of a guy who dug his dog out of a drainage ditch. He was really happy to rescue his dog. That's the kinda perspective I think people need to take to heart.

"I got my dog! I got my dog" Fucking heartwarming

Comments (Page 1)
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on Aug 21, 2007
"Michael Vick is a victim but not of the justice system, he's a victim of star power, and not knowing when it's acceptable to lose."

I'm going to have to disagree with you there. Michael Vick is a perpetrator, not a victim of anything.
on Aug 21, 2007
I don't know what the penalty is for running a dog fighting ring, and torturing and killing the dogs that don't do so well... but if he is pleading guilty to that... whatever the sentence is, Cry Havoc and Let Loose the Dogs of Justice!
on Aug 21, 2007

I'm going to have to disagree with you there. Michael Vick is a perpetrator, not a victim of anything.

I like that.  I can see both sides, but the Dan Greene side is the side of no responsibility.  The jythier side is "suck  it up like a man".  Unfortunately, most of today's society goes with the former.

He will be back.  Given the situation in the NFL, he will be playing for the Raiders in 09.  But until he does a Mea culpa, he will not have any respect from me.

on Aug 21, 2007

I'll disagree with Dr Guy about when and where Vick pops back up (in the NFL) again.  I don't see him going to da' Raiders at all.  Not their style of QB, at least not while Al Davis controls things there.

He could come back as a running back I guess, as he has never proven himself to be that talented as a passer.  As a gimmicky RB sure.  'Slash' style (if people remember Kordell Stewart with the Steelers).

Most likely he comes back as a backup QB for some desperate team, or he gets a chance to play RB for an equally desperate team that doesn't mind designing some plays for him.  If some team tries that, assuming he gets out enough apologies to earn his chance at forgiveness, he may make a decent comeback.   As a backup QB he's not that valuable though, and likely won't see any sort of 'big money.'  If he somehow won a job by default, I still don't think he's all that valuable as a passer, which goes back to the idea that he remakes himself as a running back.  He's still fairly young, has good legs, and if he keeps himself in shape, could be useful in such a role.  If he pulls a Mike Tyson and leaves jail out of shape and without real desire to play, then he's done.

on Aug 21, 2007

I'll disagree with Dr Guy about when and where Vick pops back up (in the NFL) again.

Yea?  And so's yours!

on Aug 22, 2007
Tough crowd in here, don't let me sit with the crowd that is defending Vick. I am not a fan of his, but I give him some credit for both pleading guilty and facing the music for his crimes. If he is not guilty as he once stated to the effect he should be fighting this. It was not me but CNN that is making him out to be a victim.

When I say he is a victim of his star status, its because people without that status have the conscience complex that might prevent them from exercising animal killings for weak dog performance, or participating in this competition of my dog can kill your dog.

I sure as hell am not defending his actions. He should pay and is going to pay. His choice to be involved with this to any degree is despicable, deplorable, and undeniable as evidenced by the charges against him.

"the Dan Greene side is the side of no responsibility."

I see what you are saying Dr. but, Give Vick the credit for pleading guilty. He didn't try to fight this, knowing he is guilty, he didn't dodge responsibility. Granted he shouldn't have been involved at all, and nobody made the decision to participate in this in any way but Vick.

But whether you are willing to admit it or not there is a star status issue here that prevents people from making decisions correctly. Maybe victim is the wrong word to use, maybe product is better meaning wise. I don't know how to better articulate it. Certainly he is no victim of the justice system.

on Aug 22, 2007
Star status does NOT impair decision making. Star status simply gives people access to things they would not have access to as a non-star, and a limelight to have all their sins thrown in the face of the world.

As for Vick, I think most people with star status know better than to do what he did. I think he did, too. Him owning up to it is a step in the right direction, for sure. It also shows that he knows he's not above the law with that star status, which is another thing stars have access to that the normal person doesn't.
on Aug 22, 2007
I see what you are saying Dr. but, Give Vick the credit for pleading guilty. He didn't try to fight this,


Only after his co-defendants copped pleas. He was going to fight it out, unilt his lawyers said the game was over.

As for being a prisoner of his own fame, i can see that. Not being anyone of any note, I dont expect I will ever experience it, so I cant say "I know how it is".

And yes, it is the media that is making him out the victim, not you. I just used your name as stating that viewpoint. I did not mean to imply that you were the author of it.
on Aug 22, 2007
"And yes, it is the media that is making him out the victim, not you. I just used your name as stating that viewpoint. I did not mean to imply that you were the author of it."

Thanks, cause I think he deserves exactly what he's going to get out of this.

"Star status does NOT impair decision making."

B.S. It's an accumulation thing, and also all in how you deal with it, consider the MTV channel. Does star status impair the decision making of the people on it, to say some of the outrageous stuff they do? How about any television production that is "reality based". Of course it impairs decision making. It is again all in how you deal with the status. Being a leader or role model or thug because you can.
on Aug 23, 2007
Strange, I largely agree with you Whip when you say you don't have a problem with celebrities being made examples of. I also don't know of anyone who would assert a problem with celebrities being made examples of though.

The facts are that Vick is being charged with this, because he is involved not because he is a star and others say he did it.

You need to read what I write more carefully if you intend to comment intelligently because your comment here doesn't represent what I said accurately at all.

"you guys can prattle on all you want about the competitiveness of NFL members, and how no one else could possibly understand,"

What I said.
"people outside the NFL or professional sports might not fully understand the gravity of the meaning of competition for these guys."

The key difference is people might or might not, understand the meaning.

There are a few really disturbing factors in sports that would never be accepted in "the real world".

Not this year but last year or the year before, there was a player at the combine, who drank so much water, to up his weight at the weigh-in, that he accidentally urinated up on the stage during the weigh-in. People who are not under serious performance pressure do not do irrational things in order for the edge.

Players in Baseball, a large percentage, perhaps a majority, before effective measure were put into place, were drugging for "performance enhancement". People know and knew of this, yet ticket sales were up all during the years since the strikes.

Enter, Michael Vick, before this dogfighting scandal, a huge star in the NFL, and unfortunately, under huge performance pressure, and subject to instant recognition and star status everywhere, expected to be at the top of his game all the time, by the fans. The stars of professional sports, know what happens to players who don't perform, they get cut. From the perspective of some of the guys at the top, they look down at some of the guys they knew, see them living a day job that isn't the fantasy life of a career sports pro, in essence these players who dream their whole life of being a sports star, never get it to happen. They are discarded by society. Of course most make it, adjust, find new meaning and adventures but would you ask Tiger Woods, if Golf shut down if he would be devastated or could just walk away, or John Madden. If the NFL just shut down, or Madden couldn't be part of it anymore, would there be purpose for the competitive nature which dominates a sports super star. The mentality is no.

I'm not justifying or advocating it, I'm saying this mentality exists, and is supported and propped up every time we elevate anybody to a status above our own.

Mike Vick isn't a victim of sports but he is a product of it. He is a product of the star status and constant performance pressure. There are good and bad aspects to anything in life and we are peering into the bad of professional sports.

Now you tell me, how Michael Vick, in control and dominance of these dogs could not choose to cut them just as he would be cut if he didn't perform. I think the connection is easier than you think to make.

I certainly do not agree with Vick, dogfighting, (excluding aerial combat maneuvering in the simulator ) or elevated sports status of players, but it is a reality.
on Aug 23, 2007
I have to hand it to you Whip, You are really good at kicking a person when they are down.

Strings of hate spew like...
"semi-retarded, vicious, greedy and violent ghetto negro"

Was that your 40+ year old cuteness again or you gonna try to pass that off as the random insult generator working on overdrive for you again?

Why don't you leave race out of it Whip?

That is beyond kicking a person when they are down and the fact that Vick is black, and the other defendants are two means NOTHING!

You go onto support your claim that Vick is a ghetto negro, and that...

"They're a dime a dozen in any inner city"

Really, Vick is from Newport News Virginia. A bustling city of under 200,000, hardly inner city. Wanna know what Newport News is really like?

"Newport News, known traditionally as a blue-collar industrial city, is currently undergoing dramatic changes to accommodate its growing affluence and relative significance as a major metropolitan nexus in the Hampton Roads region. The city's traditional downtown, located on the James River waterfront, is home to, almost exclusively, Northrop Grumman Newport News shipyard and municipal offices. While the downtown area has generally remained the only true area of the city that offered genuine urban layout, that is changing with the introduction of a number of successful New Urbanism projects in the city such as Port Warwick, named after the fictional city in William Styron's novel, Lie Down in Darkness. Port Warwick includes housing for everyone from the retired community to off campus housing for Christopher Newport University students. Also included are several high-end restaurants and upscale shopping."

It's a lot like Appleton except they build a lot of ships for the navy. Hardly the ghetto or inner city you seem to claim all violent ghetto negros come from.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newport_News%2C_Virginia#Demographics

You go onto say "dogfighting is pervasive in Virginia" and it probably is, so I guess white people participate too. Race doesn't belong in the argument, yet you bring it up.

As for violent, I can't find anything in Vick's history aside from the dogfighting to support your claim that he is violent. Of course dogfighting involves violence but so does football, and so does boxing. I'm not justifying the violence of dogfighting but I was expecting something a little more damning, like assault or rape charges, or something more shall we put it into terms you would use, "thugish".

There is no question that there is a problem in sports with people who do unethical and/or illegal things, because they can or think they can get away with it because of their star status. But its a prevalence which crosses racial boundaries. You should remember that. Criticism based on a persons actions is fair, based on who they are is not.

However you can say and believe whatever you want. Your hateful ranting here, there, everywhere, gives you away quite clearly though. You have an issue with people who aren't white. That's really too bad and you should consider working to change that.
on Aug 23, 2007
"perpetuated by the above mentioned ghetto-dwellers and inbred, tobacco chewing hicks as well."

Little-whip can speak for herself, but I saw her hateful spew as against Vick specifically(who is, in fact, black, right?) and then dogfighters in general(of any creed and color, including tobacco chewing hicks, which I took to mean the white guys).
on Aug 23, 2007
Did you also see it when she talked about how "Black people have it coming" in her response on the racist rant Michael Richards delivered that was caught on a cell phone and broad casted to the universe. Did you read her thoughts on how it is typical of black people always cause a disruption of public life.

How about when she uses the "N" word?

Yeah I guess you are right, she has an equal opportunity streak of hate spew but really does it add anything positive to the world? Certainly I don't think so.

I think it would be a different story if she was as careful with the facts, as she is ready willing and able to deliver a potent below the belt shot at people for who they are rather then the content of their character or their actions.

How about the Muslim Imams from Phoenix who were American citizens and deplaned for "suspicious" behavior. Hint hint, "terrorists" don't stick out, they blend in, until you hear the bomb blow up. But that doesn't matter if you aren't white, and you pray, and you read a Koran, have a few political views on the conviction of Saddam for crimes of war. I guess American citizens except disruptive Imams are allowed to exist in society above the white line and the rest of the minorities should just get out, do I have it about right Whip?

Yeah, no racial prejudice or hatred there.
on Aug 24, 2007
"links would be appreciated too, in regards to your allegations against me"

Which allegations against you are you unfamiliar with the facts on?
I don't need to quote you from the past, people can read for themselves what you have written here and make a judgment.

Let the record show you chose to blacklist me, so if you want links, you spend the time researching the conversation we had before you blacklisted me. You are also writing on my blog here not yours. If you don't like my viewpoint, or opinion, you are welcome to take your comments elsewhere or keep them to yourself. You can flame all your want on your blog, without fear of hearing what I have to say, because I cannot post there, because you have chosen to censor me rather then debate ideas.

Why don't you face the issue you yourself have drawn attention to, your problem with race?

"quit making excuses for Vicks, it's disgusting."

I'm not making excuses, I don't condone or accept his conduct. I do however aim to explain it away as more than...

"semi-retarded, vicious, greedy and violent ghetto negro who knew how to play ball. They're a dime a dozen in any inner city,".

When I said Vick is a victim that is incorrect, he's a product of a society that aids in elevating certain people above and beyond the general population. If you deny that to be true which maybe you don't but if you do, why acknowledge the "celebrity" of Lindsey Lohan in your response?

People make mistakes, Vick has confessed that this was a mistake, must we now judge him as a "semi-retarded, vicious, greedy and violent ghetto negro who knew how to play ball." for the rest of his life?

He is pleading guilty, accepting responsibility for this crimes, he has already paid a price in the form of lost sponsorships, he will probably serve jail time for his actions, and he may have a career terminated. Once he has done his time and paid his debt to society and made amends I will choose to look at him as another human being just like I did before he was charged.

You can choose to do that or continue to hold the opinion that he is a "semi-retarded, vicious, greedy and violent ghetto negro who knew how to play ball." and that "They're a dime a dozen in any inner city,".

Your words speak for themselves.
on Aug 24, 2007
"quit your whining already. It's unmanly and unattractive."

I'm sorry your blacklist feature is broken. I wasn't whining, just stating fact. I'm not here to impress you or attract you, or make you think I am more manly. I have no more need to prove value to you than I do to the dark side of the moon. I am here to practice tightening up my writing, and offer interesting conversation, opinions and to learn about things I do not know enough of.

"Would it make you feel better if I described Vicks as a "semi-retarded, vicious, greedy, and violent ghetto escapee who knew how to play ball?" I mean, in your world it's a sin to even notice race, and a bigger sin to mention it!"

I guess if the statement was mostly factual sure. Vick isn't from a ghetto anymore than I am from a ghetto. He isn't any more greedy than the next man or woman. All NFL football players with talent have been able to take advantage of mega money sponsorships and contracts. When people want you to just smile for the cameras and pay you millions, thats not individual greed. it's corporate greed. Granted he didn't say no, but would you or I?


Getting back to the topic you keep avoiding...

You did choose to use racial slurs right? You did advocate that we deny American citizens the right to travel on airplanes if they are Muslim. You did make statements to the effect that black people bring upon themselves racial discrimination. You did suggest we should kill anyone we want in Iraq regardless of whether they are terrorist or not. When I called you on some of these things you didn't want to deal with it. You did choose to censor, right or am I wrong about that?

You seem either to forget this, or think it unimportant. If you have a point to make, you are welcome to post. I don't write on here often, when I do its largely whim, not need. However I really don't appreciate racist dogma and you telling me I have a double standard without specifying what it is.

Do as you please Whip, you always have, you always will. The one article I wrote that I expected a word or two on from you, was ignored by you. Since then I haven't followed anything you write. I'm not embarrassed to say it is because I consider you, as a source to not have the credibility or integrity, worthy of consideration.

You have it within you to change my view on what you write by backing up your words with facts, treating others as equals rather than textual punching bags, leaving racial slurs out of the conversation, not engaging in personal attacks, and sticking to the issue in the threads original post when applicable.

Based on the fact that you have posted nearly three times as often as anybody else, and that it is pretty clear you really don't care about this issue at all, I am left to conclude that all you want is to stir the pot with me.

That's fine, but lets have a conversation of some substance and not one of stereotyping, prejudice, and racist characterization of a person rather than their actions.

If thats ok with you Whip?

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