I am a USC football fan, when they win. I'm glad to see anyone beat Ohio State or any school in Florids. I also happen to think that the NCAA has very little integrity. College football is big business and the kids should get their share, but they don't. When the NCAA jumps on the case of this or that star athlete getting money, they are ridiculously hypocritical. Any first year law student could figure out a more equitable business plan that pays student athletes in trust. This dilemma has been to me the most interesting thing about college football.
Now that we've got outrageous criminal negligence institutionally protected at Penn St., there is now something much more compelling to think about. Now that Bishop Paterno has been defrocked, why not go after the Pope?
Some time in the past year, there was some flack about the ex USC player who bought a car for his parents, and for this and other trivial reasons, USC has been eliminated from various parts of competition. Child's play.
There is, at this time, in consideration of the allegations, no reason not to consider the most harsh punishment in the history of the NCAA In the cards for Penn State.
The witch hunt should not stop. Statistically speaking, I find it difficult to believe that US colleges are significantly different with regard to such abuses than the population at large, or the Catjolic Church.
Think about it.
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