ehhh wrong but I am not surprised you tried to create a victim to justify your opinion.
I like smart people. In fact intelligence IMHO is sexy. Princeton's reputation is negotiable depending on whom you are asking so you can only speak for yourself.
So, to be specific, I am talking about our former Head coach Garrett and not some imaginery victim conjured up to make your paragraphs look nice.
"Prejudice"
Stay focused...it appears you've "educated" your self into imbecility or you have a "reputation school" me smart complex....
hehe... said the guy who thought it important to introduce
Princeton into the conversation in the first place.
And yeah, um... you'll find that I'm not one to make comments about others' intelligence or any other such personal shots because I consider that to be what people do when they don't actually have any substance to offer... otherwise, they would choose substance, instead of deciding their best option is to deflect away from the actual meat of the given discussion, and into an attempt at starting up an insult contest.
Are you prejudiced in any other way? I wouldn't pretend to know, and hey, it's not like we
all don't have our biases in life, some reasonable, some not so much, but hopefully mainly in ways that aren't unduly disrespectful to a group of people. Heck, I'll even allow for the possibility that everything you just said, and that your previous post to which I responded was just a one-off, flippant, momentary irrational attempt at coloring Garrett... who
just happens to be an Ivy League school guy... as thinking too highly of himself and citing his Princeton education...
just that... as evidence of that.
But even granting that possibility, the point remains that when people cite another person's perceived high-level educational attainment as legitimate reason for criticizing that person, it's often a reflection of their own automatic reaction to people who crushed it in their school years... and it's not a good look, any more than it would be a good look to have an automatic reaction to people who didn't.
So, Garrett can use his Princeton connection to get a job but when I do an Autopsy on his coaching demise after he's not resigned I am colored prejudice
Um. Now,
that's not only a
word salad, that's quite the tossed
thought salad. Seems you may have missed that the comment you referenced was talking about a whole other aspect, but you were still stuck on the previous one and worse, seem to think that it's somehow odd that a person's college success might be something employers, even in football, might be interested to take into consideration. Now, that's rich... hehe.