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Clearly you missed the point. The woman is not more responsible (than the dog) because she may have chosen to spend time around her attacker. What is the point in saying that a woman consented to being around her attacker before being attacked? It is irrelevant. If the dogs chose to be around Vick or the others would that make what they (Vick & Friends) did any less criminal or vicious? No. Clearly you missed the SARCASM in my comment about the dogs leaving. Yeah, dipsh*t, funny. Quote:
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Talk about ironic
PETA Killed 95 Percent of Adoptable Pets in its Care During 2008
Hypocritical Animal Rights Group’s 2008 Disclosures Bring Pet Death Toll To 21,339 http://www.consumerfreedom.com/press...fm/release/258 And in VA no less. Shame. |
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I hate to say this but, I feel as though I need to write a disclaimer about being a minority everytime I have an opinion about racial relations. It seems as though everytime a white person expresses an opinion about race, he or she becomes a racist. I have to admit, I do like these discussions on GC because I get to see the views of all my fellow Greeks on here. Even if you don't agree with my point of view, I accept that. |
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We are not comparing apples to oranges when saying there are NFL players who have committed more heinous crimes against PEOPLE who are still allowed to play and have gotten lesser punishments. Based on this fact Vick should not be villified and should be allowed to play. Fighting dogs is not as bad as driving drunk and killing a person. If that crime does not require getting kicked out then fighting dogs should not either. |
Yes, it is comparing apples to oranges. Honestly honey, I don't think you understand what that phrase means.
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Did the dude "choose" to be hit by a drunk driver? By the logic you're leaning on, this becomes an apples-to-apples comparison, one in which Vick compares quite favorably to Stallworth, Little etc. It's only a dumb business decision for the Eagles if it affects the bottom line - and "pain in the ass" or "PR nightmare" conjecture doesn't really indicate an automatic loss on the bottom line. However, winning a division, conference or (heaven forbid) Super Bowl title generally creates more than enough revenue to offset, well, anything - I'm not convinced this is even all that big of a deal from the Eagles' perspective. They can always walk away, and it's likely a one-year issue anyway. I don't see the risk/reward axis tilted as much as everyone else seems to. |
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It's a pretty low-risk for the Eagles; they're only tied to Vick for a year, it's at a reasonable cost, and it gives them time to decide if Vick (not Kolb) is their quarterback of the future. They can also see if his accuracy issues were a product of his lack of receiving help in Atlanta, or whether it's just his own issue. On Vick's punishment - again, I think the prison sentence was reasonable, and I don't have a huge problem with a suspension to start the season (although I would have been more comfortable with 2-4 games). Ideally, I agree that someone like Stallworth or Little should get longer prison sentences and longer suspensions than Vick; what they did was a lot higher on the moral/criminal scale. But, I have a couple of problems with some of the comparisons being used here. 1) Little's crimes happened while there was a different commissioner in office. I would imagine that he would have gotten a similar suspension to Stallworth if it happened when Goodell was commissioner. If you want to say that Stallworth's suspension should have been longer/shorter in comparison to Vick's I could understand that thought a bit more. 2) I see the point with comparing Vick's sentence to Little and Stallworth, but I come out of the comparison a bit differently. Just because Little and Stallworth should have gotten harsher sentences (which they probably should have) doesn't really mean anything as far as Vick's sentence. In comparing the three cases, I think the "system" got it correct in Vick's case, and got it completely incorrect in Little and Stallworth's cases. |
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ETA: Whites have a tendency to feel more empowered in the presence of the police and other "authority" figures. Blacks are often afraid of the police and have been taught to stay under the radar to avoid the attention of the police. You saw what happened in that video where the Black people were shocked but still keeping their distance and even trying to get away from the scene. The one person who stepped in was her daughter who ended up being held by the police, I believe. |
I think people need to get over what Vick did, especially since animal cruelty in other forms is widely accepted and called "training for a derby" or "getting pigs prepared for slaughter."
PETA are a bunch of loonies but they aren't the ones fighting this fight from what I see. Since race was worked into this thread I do believe that, of the people who are holding this grievance against Vick, whites seem to be the ones who care about this. (I won't bother translating that to those of you who are thinking "well, I'm white and I don't care" or "not all whites care"---DUH). I have yet to see a nonwhite person who still gives a damn in person or in the media. |
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I think a number of things are at play. All of them are correlates of race.
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I meant that RU OX should have quoted als. He quoted me in his "Oh, come on!" post. |
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Don't worry about that guy's remarks. I started to respond to him and then decided against it. I live in a beautiful suburban neighborhood just outside of Philly (didn't say I lived there currently but it's still "my" city) although there are beautiful areas in Philly also, as is the case in most big cities. He doesn't know what he's talking about and I don't care to educate him...waste of my time.
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Here's a case here in NYC where a 17 year-old will spend a year in prison for animal cruelty. People are comparing it to the Vick case, but I'm not really sure why:
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_c..._kitten_i.html |
Poor Tiger Lily. :(
Sure, it's exactly like the Vick case...they are both Black. Yeah, that's it. She probably has mental issues and may be on her way to being a sociopath. She burglarized and trashed a home with her 14 year old friend. Then she put a kitten in a 500 degree oven as a "joke" and yelled "it's dead bitch" in a courtroom. I hope she gets intervention during and after her sentence. |
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I'm surprised she didn't get more, since it was a parole violation. Two years ago, she stole a Yorkie at gunpoint. She's got a host of problems and she'll need help for a long time. |
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It's one thing to set up a dog fighting business (which is bad enough). It's another thing entirely to kill an animal for fun, which we know is a way that serial killers start out. The former is bad judgment, the latter is bad wiring that I believe is not fixable. |
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