wakephan09
fuck duke
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2011
- Messages
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Didn't realize App's stadium had a track around it. That sucks.
What is that behind the MOUNTAINEERS endzone? More track & field surface?
For jumps! and vaults.
Didn't realize App's stadium had a track around it. That sucks.
What is that behind the MOUNTAINEERS endzone? More track & field surface?
100% serious.
I know it's not fair, but the reality is if I were scouting or recruiting him I'd absolutely ask questions about whether he shares his father's racist beliefs. I'd ask him how he'd handle it if teammates asked him about it.
Most likely unlike you, I've done scouting. Issues do come up.
This seems like a good place to post this (from this article):
Beginning this fall, UNC Charlotte will field a football team in Division I-AA, planning to move up to Division I in 2015. If the past is any guide, adding football to its campus will bring UNC Charlotte lots of media attention, plus cause cutbacks in the school's academic budget. Of the roughly 250 colleges and universities playing top-division football, all but 23 lost money on athletics. Sis boom bah!
If you want to attend home games of the Forty Niners' first football season, which includes dates against Chowan and Wesley of Delaware, you must purchase a personal seat license. A "gold tier" PSL for midfield seats is $2,500 up front, plus the cost of tickets -- NFL prices for an NFL stadium!
I wouldn't mind Lambert coming back to coach at Wake one day I think he would.
It was all public posted at the time. If anyone in the athletic did some homework before offering him, they could have found out about it.
I agree with Jay that a child isn't responsible to hold the beliefs of a parent. However, because a parent is such a strong influence on children, it would be absolutely incumbent on a coach or recruiter to ask the player if he shared views like this one:
"WFRULZ wrote: It has always been a Biblical Issue with me...........the Bible teaches against it in my opinion.
Obviously there were other races as we read about the first case of Adam's seed being polluted with Cain, a cursed murderer of his brother. Cain was purged from Eden and moved "east of Eden" (which would have been in and among the Mongolian people), to a non-Adamic land filled with non-Adamites.
He then produced the first "mongrel" offspring named Enoch. From the time of Adam and Eve to the time of Noah, race mixing became epidemic, and God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth. This sin of race mixing is so serious that God killed the offenders. However, there was one man and his family that found grace in the eyes of the Lord, who was perfect in his generations; in other words, he was racially pure. The result of all this race mixing was corruption and violence (Genesis 6:11). The narrative establishes a paramount theme that runs throughout the Bible: race mixing is not Christian. The word miscegenation comes to mind Liquid and Thunderbolt."
No sane coach would want a player who thinks like this in his locker room. The question must be asked.
I agree with Jay that a child isn't responsible to hold the beliefs of a parent. However, because a parent is such a strong influence on children, it would be absolutely incumbent on a coach or recruiter to ask the player if he shared views like this one:
"WFRULZ wrote: It has always been a Biblical Issue with me...........the Bible teaches against it in my opinion.
Obviously there were other races as we read about the first case of Adam's seed being polluted with Cain, a cursed murderer of his brother. Cain was purged from Eden and moved "east of Eden" (which would have been in and among the Mongolian people), to a non-Adamic land filled with non-Adamites.
He then produced the first "mongrel" offspring named Enoch. From the time of Adam and Eve to the time of Noah, race mixing became epidemic, and God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth. This sin of race mixing is so serious that God killed the offenders. However, there was one man and his family that found grace in the eyes of the Lord, who was perfect in his generations; in other words, he was racially pure. The result of all this race mixing was corruption and violence (Genesis 6:11). The narrative establishes a paramount theme that runs throughout the Bible: race mixing is not Christian. The word miscegenation comes to mind Liquid and Thunderbolt."
No sane coach would want a player who thinks like this in his locker room. The question must be asked.
So a player automatically believe everything their dad believes? Jesus RJ this is easy to comprehend
Reading Is Fundamental- here's what I said:
"I agree with Jay that a child isn't responsible to hold the beliefs of a parent. However, because a parent is such a strong influence on children, it would be absolutely incumbent on a coach or recruiter to ask the player if he shared views like this one."
I specifically stated that the child isn't responsible. But don't let my actual words get in the way.
I agree with Jay that a child isn't responsible to hold the beliefs of a parent. However, because a parent is such a strong influence on children, it would be absolutely incumbent on a coach or recruiter to ask the player if he shared views like this one:
"WFRULZ wrote: It has always been a Biblical Issue with me...........the Bible teaches against it in my opinion.
Obviously there were other races as we read about the first case of Adam's seed being polluted with Cain, a cursed murderer of his brother. Cain was purged from Eden and moved "east of Eden" (which would have been in and among the Mongolian people), to a non-Adamic land filled with non-Adamites.
He then produced the first "mongrel" offspring named Enoch. From the time of Adam and Eve to the time of Noah, race mixing became epidemic, and God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth. This sin of race mixing is so serious that God killed the offenders. However, there was one man and his family that found grace in the eyes of the Lord, who was perfect in his generations; in other words, he was racially pure. The result of all this race mixing was corruption and violence (Genesis 6:11). The narrative establishes a paramount theme that runs throughout the Bible: race mixing is not Christian. The word miscegenation comes to mind Liquid and Thunderbolt."
No sane coach would want a player who thinks like this in his locker room. The question must be asked.
Don't let the double standard in your post hit you on the way out