About Me

Name: halthouse1
Email: exetertraining@aol.com Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

Blog Roll

 
[Click to edit me]

Steve McNair Eulogized As A Hero: Is That Correct?

The Political and Financial Markets Commentator

SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2009

Steve McNair Eulogized As A Hero: Is That Correct?

Steve McNair Is Called A "Hero" and a "Legend" At Funeral

Bishop Joseph Walker III said during the funeral service the following:

"...Next time you write about Steve McNair, drop your stone. Next time you text somebody, drop your stone. The next time you Twitter, drop your stone."

This is a quote from the New Testament in which Jesus said that "Ye without sin, cast the first stone".

Is this possible or even advisable? Should some greater good come from this needless and senseless murder?

Steve McNair was an NFL quarterback, a good NFL quarterback. He did not deserve to die at the hands of a crazed and apparently depressed woman. 5,000 people including other NFL stars came out to pay their respects and speak of McNair the man, athlete and teammate. His mother said that the death was the work of the devil.

Was it the work of the devil, or the devil within? This fatal attraction murder was the result of a man having an extramarital affair. Those are the facts, but not really the facts that are being focused on. Should they be, or in death should we only dwell on the good, and not dwell on trying to bring some good from a tragic event?

Steve McNair & Sahel Kazemi

Athletes As Role Model

Nobody requires an athlete to take the responsibility of living life in such a way as to be a role model to children, adolescents and even adults as to the way that life should be lived. Athletes, maybe even more than "regular" people, grow up and live with a certain sense of entitlement as to how the "game" of life is to be played. With all of the temptation that surrounds them, particularly as a professional athlete, it would seem that perhaps they need to be even stronger than the average Joe. An athlete like a Tim Tebow seems to be much more exception than rule.

Right or wrong, the fact is that our kids grow up to idolize athletes. They are our heroes and we grow up dreaming that someday we may be a professional and get to live the life that on T.V. and in the press is portrayed as pretty damn good. In the days when I was growing up we really didn't know much about the things that went on off of the field. We just wanted to be Bart Starr and play for the Green Bay Packers. We, or at least I, didn't know about what they used to call the "drinking and carousing".

Today, in the age of TMZ, the private lives of our athletes are now very public. Every nick, scratch and indiscretion is laid out for all to see the minute it happens. Our children watch these things and interpret them in their own way. 

Some will see this event only for the fact that a man was needlessly murdered. Others may also see it as a tragic murder, but also take from it that Steve McNair was having an affair, the fact of which has been glossed over, almost making the act of marital indiscretion a non-event and perhaps even okay. Other may see it as the cause and effect that it was.

Bottom Line

In a world where the moral fabric in business, politics and personal behavior seems to be deteriorating at a rapid pace, a larger lesson needs to be taken from this tragic death. In death, mistakes in life are sometimes forgotten, and those who mourn focus only on the good. We as a society cannot allow this to happen. 

A better understanding of right and wrong needs to be resurrected and reinforced. This starts, if the discussion comes up, with an explanation of the sanctity of marriage. That when you take a vow, you keep that vow! Sphere: Related Content
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (2) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Jim Calhoun of UConn: Deniable Accountability?

Market Update: GM's Wagoner To Resign In the better late than never department, an executive that helped put his company in the position that it finds itself in today has to step down in order for that firm, GM, to receive more bailout money. Chief Executive Rick Wagoner is stepping down at the request of the Obama administration. President Obama, fresh from his appearance on Leno and ESPN as well as countless other face time opportunities will be back on tomorrow discussing his plans for the automobile industry. The NCAA Rulebook Is Long (between 439 and 508 pages depending on who you ask), The Rules Are Simple. Or Are They? College coaches report to many bosses including the AD, alumni, boosters as well as the NCAA. The first 3 on the list want you to win, win often and to what it takes to achieve that result (while bending the rules as far as they can go without breaking, and if they break to do so without getting caught), while the 4th wants you to try and win within a rules structure that attempts to level the playing field for all schools. The NCAA has not accomplished that yet. Some of the rules fall into a shade of grey, while others are fairly straight forward. Some can be manipulated and loopholes found, while others are just a matter of counting phone, email and text message contacts made to a potential recruit during a given time frame. Some of the ways around the limitations of the recruiting process are special camps for top recruits, or maybe an AAU coach coincidentally ending up at the same school that ends up with a coveted player. Rules were made to be broken is a saying that is at least as old as I am, but in the case of the alleged violations by UConn, it all seems fairly cut and dried. Jim Calhoun is trying to hide behind the fact the the rulebook is a long document. In the parlance of coaching, what is a more important book to know inside and out. It is a somewhat convoluted story involving a recruit (Nate Miles) coaches (Jim Calhoun) , assistant coaches (Tom Moore), agents (Josh Nochimson – Former UConn student manager turned professional sports agent), phone calls and text messages. ..."The University of Connecticut violated NCAA rules in the recruitment of former guard Nate Miles, a six-month investigation by Yahoo! Sports has found. Miles was provided with lodging, transportation, restaurant meals and representation by Josh Nochimson – a professional sports agent and former UConn student manager – between 2006 and 2008, according to multiple sources. As a representative of UConn’s athletic interests, Nochimson was prohibited by NCAA rules from having contact with Miles and from providing him with anything of value. A UConn assistant coach said he made Nochimson aware of the Huskies’ recruitment of Miles. Later, the assistant coach said he knew that Nochimson and Miles had talked. The relationship and UConn’s knowledge of the situation are potential major NCAA violations. The findings are part of Yahoo! Sports’ ongoing look into the changing role of agents and their impact on college basketball. Agents aren’t just recruiting players from college programs, they are recruiting players for them, according to an NCAA official. The UConn basketball staff was in constant contact with Nochimson during a nearly two-year period up to and after Miles’ recruitment. Five different UConn coaches traded at least 1,565 phone and text communications with Nochimson, including 16 from head coach Jim Calhoun. Yahoo! Sports obtained the records through the Freedom of Information Act. The documents were requested in October and received two weeks ago. Many of UConn’s communications with Nochimson were clustered with calls and texts to Miles or his inner circle."...(Rivals.com) One thing is certain, the head coach either knew what was going on or should have known, and standing behind the length of the rulebook is crap. This has the potential to cost UConn plenty. Many programs bend the rules and some break them, and it is usually a source other than the NCAA that figures it out, much like the way that the ratings agencies on Wall Street are usually the last to know. The bottom line is that cheating is rampant, and college sports is merely a metaphor for what goes on in the rest of society. Whether or not UConn goes on probation really does not have an impact on the world outside of the alumni and Storrs. If some semblance of morality does not find its way back into the fabric of the humanity, then the decline is destined to continue.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive
« Previous1Next »