My opinion on the Evil Sandusky
Flowers
2012/06/19 13:47:39
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12 votes
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2 votes
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Usually, I try and make questions that include both sides of this story. I pride myself in being fair and moderate so that I can see a 360 degree view of what is going on. This, is an exception.
If you want to defend him, defend the actions of the worthless college and all the worthless advisers who turned a blind eye to his deplorable actions I PROMISE I won't demean you for your opinion. But, I feel I must get my feelings out. Share if you like.
Sandusky deserves a trial, but he DOESN'T deserve a jail cell. He should NOT be given special treatment, or the chance to fill his lungs with oxygen. They should execute him, painfully if possible. If no one else wants to, I would be more than happy to pull the trigger. This is why:
He took advantage of children, used his position
of power to get away with horrible, disgusting crimes, and *shudders*
adopted 6 children as well as fostered others, all while being at a prestigious
college that looked the other way while he was ruining these childrens'
lives. Everyone on the board of that despicable college in the 90's to
the present should be fired and kept from working at any other college.
Period. They are all responsible for the irreversible damage they
caused. Frankly, I think the entire college should be closed down. How DARE they put the profits of a football program above the well being of children??
I also feel Joe Paterno was just as responsible. If he actually cared about
those children like he claimed for so many years, he would have gone to the police. He
would have AT THE VERY LEAST made a recorded video statement to be shown
after his death. His was selfish to not have done this.
The people I feel the worst for? All of those children, ones who
have been identified and the ones who are still too scared to come
forward, who felt like absolutely NO ONE cared about their well being,
how they must have felt no one cared about who was hurting them
physically and mentally. That is the saddest part of this whole thing.
If you want to defend him, defend the actions of the worthless college and all the worthless advisers who turned a blind eye to his deplorable actions I PROMISE I won't demean you for your opinion. But, I feel I must get my feelings out. Share if you like.
Sandusky deserves a trial, but he DOESN'T deserve a jail cell. He should NOT be given special treatment, or the chance to fill his lungs with oxygen. They should execute him, painfully if possible. If no one else wants to, I would be more than happy to pull the trigger. This is why:
He took advantage of children, used his position
of power to get away with horrible, disgusting crimes, and *shudders*
adopted 6 children as well as fostered others, all while being at a prestigious
college that looked the other way while he was ruining these childrens'
lives. Everyone on the board of that despicable college in the 90's to
the present should be fired and kept from working at any other college.
Period. They are all responsible for the irreversible damage they
caused. Frankly, I think the entire college should be closed down. How DARE they put the profits of a football program above the well being of children??
I also feel Joe Paterno was just as responsible. If he actually cared about
those children like he claimed for so many years, he would have gone to the police. He
would have AT THE VERY LEAST made a recorded video statement to be shown
after his death. His was selfish to not have done this.
The people I feel the worst for? All of those children, ones who
have been identified and the ones who are still too scared to come
forward, who felt like absolutely NO ONE cared about their well being,
how they must have felt no one cared about who was hurting them
physically and mentally. That is the saddest part of this whole thing.
Top Opinion
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Dave0626 2012/06/19 16:33:08I agree with you because...+4Paterno upon witnessing the shower incident, if Sandusky did not see him, should have immediately called cops and other school staff to witness what was going on in the showers. And all of this could have ended in 2001. Even if Sandusky did see him, Paterno still should have acted like a human being on behalf of the boy victim!






















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could you share this around if you could please thank you
I disagree with you on a very basic point as to the culpability of Penn State and its employees. Which is not to say I don't agree w/ you in part - I very much do. The failure of the University and its employees to take effective follow up action and find out why referrals they made to others did not result in anything that looked like appropriate punishment is inexcusable. Even if someone making the referral didn't think Sandusky was guilty, it seems to me that loyalty to the PSU program would have compelled an individual to follow up so as to be adequately informed as to why Sandusky was innocent - or was whatever he was. No one did and shame on them all, although I am reluctant to place any great degree of blame on Mike McQuaery, the assistant coach who saw Sandusky in the showers with an apparent minor, who reported the incident to Paterno but did not follow up on his report.
The basic point on which I disagree with you is the implication arising out of your comment "how dare they put the profits of the football program above the well being o...
I disagree with you on a very basic point as to the culpability of Penn State and its employees. Which is not to say I don't agree w/ you in part - I very much do. The failure of the University and its employees to take effective follow up action and find out why referrals they made to others did not result in anything that looked like appropriate punishment is inexcusable. Even if someone making the referral didn't think Sandusky was guilty, it seems to me that loyalty to the PSU program would have compelled an individual to follow up so as to be adequately informed as to why Sandusky was innocent - or was whatever he was. No one did and shame on them all, although I am reluctant to place any great degree of blame on Mike McQuaery, the assistant coach who saw Sandusky in the showers with an apparent minor, who reported the incident to Paterno but did not follow up on his report.
The basic point on which I disagree with you is the implication arising out of your comment "how dare they put the profits of the football program above the well being of children" to the effect that there was some type of orchestrated cover-up. I find very little to support that implication. To me this was a case of incompetence - massive, inexcusable, mind-numbing incompetence, to be sure, but only that - not malevolence. These were men not accustomed to dealing with the seamier side of life, and their reaction to it, unfortunately, was to push it out of their well-manicured picket-fence environment, rather than exterminate it. The basis for my thinking? There is no affirmative act of cover-up to point at that I see; all these people were well aware that letting Sandusky continue to abuse boys, if that's what he was doing, was going to be exactly the type of problem it has turned out to be. They weren't against terminating the problem, it's just that no one person ever thought it was his job to do so. There was never a moment of "OMG, we have a problem that we have to sweep under the rug.", that's a coverup, the problem was that everyone did what minimal thing they had to do to keep their own yard clean, but noone ever took up the far more important job of assessing the filth in the community - or even asked why no one else was doing so. As I said, massive incompetence, but not the type of affirmative coverup that characterized such scandals as the Catholic Church and its sexually abusive priests, where the coverup, at least at certain Diocesan levels, is undeniable.
This scandal is as big as it is only because it went on as long as it did. After all is said and done, kids of the age that it appears Sandusky abused have little to do with what Penn State was about. If Sandusky had been dealt with in the first couple of years after allegations about him were made, probably even in the first four or five years, it would have been a scandal, but it would have been one of lurid sensationalism, it didn't affect what PSU did, like, say, a betting scandal would have. Sandusky would have been the only casualty.
I have no doubt that as the scandal later broke, anyone touching it had the sense of having a tiger by the tail, but even as late as maybe 2008, this story, had it broken as a result of PSU's self policing, would have been one that the college likely could have spun to its credit - and the guy who shepherded it through the process likely would have been rewarded for it. I haven't followed this story closely for some time now, but, as I recollect, there was never any evidence that the various actors hid stuff. All of them felt they'd done their jo...
This scandal is as big as it is only because it went on as long as it did. After all is said and done, kids of the age that it appears Sandusky abused have little to do with what Penn State was about. If Sandusky had been dealt with in the first couple of years after allegations about him were made, probably even in the first four or five years, it would have been a scandal, but it would have been one of lurid sensationalism, it didn't affect what PSU did, like, say, a betting scandal would have. Sandusky would have been the only casualty.
I have no doubt that as the scandal later broke, anyone touching it had the sense of having a tiger by the tail, but even as late as maybe 2008, this story, had it broken as a result of PSU's self policing, would have been one that the college likely could have spun to its credit - and the guy who shepherded it through the process likely would have been rewarded for it. I haven't followed this story closely for some time now, but, as I recollect, there was never any evidence that the various actors hid stuff. All of them felt they'd done their job, and it only began to dawn on them as the story grew that the "crime" here was one of omission, not commission, it was the narrowness with which PSU staffers approached any task that didn't have to do with football. Had any one of these guys perceived the damage Sandusky was going to do to PSU football, any one of them might have secretly shot him; the problem here was not that money asserted itself in its all-too-common role as the underminer of virtue, it's that the danger to the money machine that was PSU football was not perceived by those who, had they perceived the enormity of the threat - which they failed to do because of their parochial approach to their jobs - they would have acted, if nothing else, out of a monetary motive.
Also, prosecution is only going to show the victims who they feel are the strongest witnesses. and charge him for as many counts as they can prove beyond a doubt. Even now, there could be (could be) a dozen more cases the prosecution knows about but won't release info on because they aren't "good witnesses" That sort of thing has been going on for a VERY long time (unfortunately, i know of one case specifically) and while it's not justice, it's the way our corrupt system works.