LittleBoyBlue
Redvolution
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One was paid off
One wasn't... Couldn't be...
I don't get the thread?
One wasn't... Couldn't be...
I don't get the thread?
A pass? Hardy was indicted, convicted, appealed, exonerated. He was fully vetted by the legal system... that's not being given a pass. In a country with principles, folks get a second chance... especially when the law says you did nothing wrong on your first chance. So now this man has a right to work in his chosen profession. Why do some in that profession shun him? Because they have and agenda. Public perception of Hardy differs from the reality of Hardy and so those with the agenda substitute reality with the perception and label Hardy a woman beater despite the law saying otherwise. Those that bow to an agenda lost out on Hardy. The Cowboys were smart enough to given Hardy the second chance he deserves rather than bowing to the agenda.
One was paid off
One wasn't... Couldn't be...
I don't get the thread?
One was paid off
One wasn't... Couldn't be...
I don't get the thread?
I just pulled all the comments out of the other Pats thread. Thread title really makes no difference to me if you have another in mind. lol
The three strikes law doesn't apply to the situation I'm talking about. The three strike law applies to actual convictions. I'm talking about information about prior criminal cases being introduced in an active, ongoing criminal case.
From my understanding, a defendant has a right to a fair trial, which prohibits the state from bringing up prior criminal cases that could prejudice the jury against the defendant.
The law didn't say he wasn't a woman beater. The law said the first time he was guilty. The law said the second time there's not enough evidence to bring him to trial, particularly because the key witness was paid in a settlement and couldn't be found to participate in the second trial.
And if the agenda is to call attention to professional football players beating women then it's a good agenda.
The previous agenda was for the league to turn its collective head and say, like so many on this forum say, "Beating? What beating?"
What I find interesting in the Brady case, is that league considered Spygate in rendering its decision in Deflategate.
Yet, I've read in this forum many Cowboys fans talk about the law and how the law/legal standards should govern what the league does with respect to Hardy.
Well, if that was the case, then Brady shouldn't have been suspended and the Patriots shouldn't have gotten fined or a draft pick taken away - a penalty which was based in large part based on the Patriots' history of cheating.
In a legal case (I'm working from memory so resident lawyers please check me), prior arrests or convictions aren't admissible in a case involving a particular charge. So if the league had applied a legal standard - like so many Cowboys fans argued should be done for Hardy - then the Patriots' past conduct should not have factored into their current punishment.
Yet, I don't hear too many fans on this forum complaining that the league shouldn't have taken into account the Patriots' past transgressions.
Funny how that works.
If I understand your point correctly, I think you're misapplying it. It is my understanding that the league found NE guilty in deflategate independent of anything to do with Spygate, but then used Spygate in applying punishment ( in other words, you're a repeat offender, so the punishment is more severe)...civilian courts do this all the time. I'm not trying to argue the merits of anyone's opinion or the league's findings, only putting out there what I believe the league did in regards to finding guilt and applying punishment. If I misinterpreted something you said, my apologies.
The law didn't say he wasn't a woman beater. The law said the first time he was guilty. The law said the second time there's not enough evidence to bring him to trial, particularly because the key witness was paid in a settlement and couldn't be found to participate in the second trial."
Not factual. Try again.
What I find interesting in the Brady case, is that league considered Spygate in rendering its decision in Deflategate.
Yet, I've read in this forum many Cowboys fans talk about the law and how the law/legal standards should govern what the league does with respect to Hardy.
Well, if that was the case, then Brady shouldn't have been suspended and the Patriots shouldn't have gotten fined or a draft pick taken away - a penalty which was based in large part based on the Patriots' history of cheating.
In a legal case (I'm working from memory so resident lawyers please check me), prior arrests or convictions aren't admissible in a case involving a particular charge. So if the league had applied a legal standard - like so many Cowboys fans argued should be done for Hardy - then the Patriots' past conduct should not have factored into their current punishment.
Yet, I don't hear too many fans on this forum complaining that the league shouldn't have taken into account the Patriots' past transgressions.
Funny how that works.
I guess that is your opinion. 3 bodies have judged the evidence and found that Hardy beat his GF. Yet people continue to defend Hardy in that regard. That is text book biased to me.
What I find interesting in the Brady case, is that league considered Spygate in rendering its decision in Deflategate.
Yet, I've read in this forum many Cowboys fans talk about the law and how the law/legal standards should govern what the league does with respect to Hardy.
Well, if that was the case, then Brady shouldn't have been suspended and the Patriots shouldn't have gotten fined or a draft pick taken away - a penalty which was based in large part based on the Patriots' history of cheating.
In a legal case (I'm working from memory so resident lawyers please check me), prior arrests or convictions aren't admissible in a case involving a particular charge. So if the league had applied a legal standard - like so many Cowboys fans argued should be done for Hardy - then the Patriots' past conduct should not have factored into their current punishment.
Yet, I don't hear too many fans on this forum complaining that the league shouldn't have taken into account the Patriots' past transgressions.
Funny how that works.
A pass? Hardy was indicted, convicted, appealed, exonerated. He was fully vetted by the legal system... that's not being given a pass. In a country with principles, folks get a second chance... especially when the law says you did nothing wrong on your first chance. So now this man has a right to work in his chosen profession. Why do some in that profession shun him? Because they have and agenda. Public perception of Hardy differs from the reality of Hardy and so those with the agenda substitute reality with the perception and label Hardy a woman beater despite the law saying otherwise. Those that bow to an agenda lost out on Hardy. The Cowboys were smart enough to given Hardy the second chance he deserves rather than bowing to the agenda.
So Soooo, is all this to say some people should find another team because they don't agree with Jerry's picking up questionable players or just to whine and moan, and a holier than thou thread?
Whenever someone claims another poster is "the most misinformed" or applies any other superlative, I have to conclude:
1. They either haven't been exposed to much or
2. They're exaggerating
No, I'm not misinformed. In fact, my life experiences help me to understand this issue from a perspective many of you can't. I was both in an abusive situation - and I never hit the young lady back - and I've had female friends who have been in abusive situations. And it's insulting when you claim that a neighbor making a 911 call couldn't distinguish between a woman beating herself from a woman getting her butt whipped by her boyfriend.
If you've ever heard a woman getting beaten in a domestic situation, there's no doubt in your mind who is the victim and who is the perpetrator.
Me misinformed? Pulease.