Hos, when ah read your post ah felt like standing up and applauding. But i had to wipe first.
So now, standing in the eye-hand coordination rehab room I will.
Bravo. I found myself nodding at your every point. Almost.
However, Hos, something to consider. If we assept the notion that there might be entitlement (and I strongly think there is), we must remember that the sense of entitlement began long before these barely-educated athletes ever saw an NFL training field.
These athletes have had a sense of entitlement since the eighth grade when coaches told them they had a great future in high school and were allowed to take home economics or art classes instead and "mass communications" in collige. Early on, the high school boosters gave them summer jobs and then years later, these athletes got cars from dealership for a quarter on the dollar. Then the budding stars in collige were taken on weekend getaways with smiling blonde hostesses and told they were the best thing ever to happen to their colliges.
So entitlement happened early. Ah think by the time these athletes got to the NFL, the sense of entitlement was second nature and not something that can be erased by talk of "It's a team effort" or "We're in this together" in the NFL.