Dr. Awesome
Footballguy
Reports are the NCAA is going to come down with unprecedented sanctions. More details will come out tomorrow.
Considering the NCAA killed SMU's football program entirely I'm having a hard time imagining what 'unprecedented' means. The Death Penalty + other punishments aimed at the University itself?(CBS News) CBS News has learned that the NCAA will announce what a high-ranking association source called "unprecedented" penalties against both the Penn State University football team and the school.
The team has to wear pink jerseys. That's unprecedented. Unprecedented can really mean anything.Considering the NCAA killed SMU's football program entirely I'm having a hard time imagining what 'unprecedented' means. The Death Penalty + other punishments aimed at the University itself?(CBS News) CBS News has learned that the NCAA will announce what a high-ranking association source called "unprecedented" penalties against both the Penn State University football team and the school.
SMU football didn't stay dead.Considering the NCAA killed SMU's football program entirely I'm having a hard time imagining what 'unprecedented' means. The Death Penalty + other punishments aimed at the University itself?(CBS News) CBS News has learned that the NCAA will announce what a high-ranking association source called "unprecedented" penalties against both the Penn State University football team and the school.
Yeah, I'll hold my applause for the NCAA until I see what they actually do.The team has to wear pink jerseys. That's unprecedented. Unprecedented can really mean anything.Considering the NCAA killed SMU's football program entirely I'm having a hard time imagining what 'unprecedented' means. The Death Penalty + other punishments aimed at the University itself?(CBS News) CBS News has learned that the NCAA will announce what a high-ranking association source called "unprecedented" penalties against both the Penn State University football team and the school.
Predictions? I'm thinking that the program WON'T get the death penalty, but they'll get a TV ban/bowl ban/recruiting ban, maybe a loss of some scholarships, and they'll be ordered to donate a portion of ticket sales to child abuse charities.Reports are the NCAA is going to come down with unprecedented sanctions. More details will come out tomorrow.
People are just stupid. Would love to hear the NCAA clown show someone where a lacrosse coach, athletic director, or President attempted to coverup the murder at UVA. Apples and Oranges.The former chair said as an example the NCAA didn't get involved in the murder of Yeardley Love, a women's lacrosse player at Virginia, by her former boyfriend, a male lacrosse player at Virginia.
Actually, this is probably the right moment - they appear to have taken the death penalty off the table, and PSU is in no position to really challenge this from a PR perspective (not that they have shown much PR acumen in the past). PSU has no real defense to the charges - only a question of whether that falls within the purview of the NCAA. Of course PSU can choose to leave the NCAA if it does not like how it is treated...If I was the NCAA, I don't think I would pick this particular moment to throw due process and my normal procedures out the window. They're going out on a limb here by pursuing this issue at all. Making up procedure as they go along just makes that limb thinner.
All this demonstrates is that the NCAA knows it does not have the basis under its rules to sanction PSU. If it had a basis it would take its time, prove its case and bring the hammer down. All the NCAA has is public outrage and its hope that PSU takes its medicine.Have no fear, Penn State! Christo says you can fight this and you'll win!
Honestly how the eff would you know what the NCAA can penalize for? Honestly you come across as someone who just wants to argue whenever there is some sort of consensus on this board.All this demonstrates is that the NCAA knows it does not have the basis under its rules to sanction PSU. If it had a basis it would take its time, prove its case and bring the hammer down. All the NCAA has is public outrage and its hope that PSU takes its medicine.Have no fear, Penn State! Christo says you can fight this and you'll win!
I read its rules.Honestly how the eff would you know what the NCAA can penalize for?All this demonstrates is that the NCAA knows it does not have the basis under its rules to sanction PSU. If it had a basis it would take its time, prove its case and bring the hammer down. All the NCAA has is public outrage and its hope that PSU takes its medicine.Have no fear, Penn State! Christo says you can fight this and you'll win!
As I wrote before, they can pretty much do whatever they want in this situation, and there's not a chance in hell Penn State will challenge it, your arguments notwithstanding.I read its rules.Honestly how the eff would you know what the NCAA can penalize for?All this demonstrates is that the NCAA knows it does not have the basis under its rules to sanction PSU. If it had a basis it would take its time, prove its case and bring the hammer down. All the NCAA has is public outrage and its hope that PSU takes its medicine.Have no fear, Penn State! Christo says you can fight this and you'll win!
You keep saying this as if I didn't acknowledge the possibility in one of my very first posts on the subject.As I wrote before, they can pretty much do whatever they want in this situation, and there's not a chance in hell Penn State will challenge it, your arguments notwithstanding.I read its rules.Honestly how the eff would you know what the NCAA can penalize for?All this demonstrates is that the NCAA knows it does not have the basis under its rules to sanction PSU. If it had a basis it would take its time, prove its case and bring the hammer down. All the NCAA has is public outrage and its hope that PSU takes its medicine.Have no fear, Penn State! Christo says you can fight this and you'll win!
I'd say something like this is fair:2012 - TV Ban, Bowl ban, 15 scholarships lost, 80% of revenue to charity2013 - Bowl ban, 10 scholarships lost, 60 % of revenue to charity2014 - 5 scholarships lost, 40% of revenue to charity2015 - 20% of revenue to charityPredictions? I'm thinking that the program WON'T get the death penalty, but they'll get a TV ban/bowl ban/recruiting ban, maybe a loss of some scholarships, and they'll be ordered to donate a portion of ticket sales to child abuse charities.Reports are the NCAA is going to come down with unprecedented sanctions. More details will come out tomorrow.
That's way too harsh, IMONot sure how reliable this rumor is but 5 year bowl ban, 60 scholarships reduced. 3 year tv ban.... Not sure if this was gotten from message boards etc but I know the person who posted it where I read is very close to former Penn St. staff/coaches.
The revenue is irrelevant. PSU has two billion dollars in endowment to make up for that. That would be an extremely weak penalty, IMO. But I know you're interested in protecting the factory too.I'd say something like this is fair:2012 - TV Ban, Bowl ban, 15 scholarships lost, 80% of revenue to charity2013 - Bowl ban, 10 scholarships lost, 60 % of revenue to charity2014 - 5 scholarships lost, 40% of revenue to charity2015 - 20% of revenue to charityPredictions? I'm thinking that the program WON'T get the death penalty, but they'll get a TV ban/bowl ban/recruiting ban, maybe a loss of some scholarships, and they'll be ordered to donate a portion of ticket sales to child abuse charities.Reports are the NCAA is going to come down with unprecedented sanctions. More details will come out tomorrow.
PLEASE, that would be getting off easy. You should take that and run, that keeps your program in tact. I would personally make this a band-aid. Rip it off and move on. Years and years of sanction mean little to me, one year, shut down would be ok with me. I truly don't want to impair the program and muddy the water of a mixed message here with TV or bowl bans or any of that crap. That should be reserved for recruitment issues. To me, the penalty, to make it stick to make it something memorable and impact, would be to shut the show down. To show, not in a symbollic manner, but a very real one, that football is NOT bigger than people. One is fine, two would be nice, but One honestly works for me, and see ya in 2013. This is a different issue than standard violations and should be respected and treated as such.That's way too harsh, IMONot sure how reliable this rumor is but 5 year bowl ban, 60 scholarships reduced. 3 year tv ban.... Not sure if this was gotten from message boards etc but I know the person who posted it where I read is very close to former Penn St. staff/coaches.
After that charity will have to be cut off, before it sucks the lifeblood out of the vital football program.2012 - TV Ban, Bowl ban, 15 scholarships lost, 80% of revenue to charity2013 - Bowl ban, 10 scholarships lost, 60 % of revenue to charity2014 - 5 scholarships lost, 40% of revenue to charity2015 - 20% of revenue to charity
Some of the kids Sandusky raped victims will file lawsuits against Penn State, who failed to report things. That'll take years to go through. The kids were the victims here, not Penn State.I'll ask the same question I did on page 37 of this thread. Where will this end? If we give the entire athletic department the death penalty and vacate the last 100+ of Paterno's wins and donate the entire university endowment to victim's groups, will that be enough?
They got lucky with this movie shooting thing. It pushes this statue thing and the NCAA infractions down below the fold a bit.

People like you sadden me.After that charity will have to be cut off, before it sucks the lifeblood out of the vital football program.2012 - TV Ban, Bowl ban, 15 scholarships lost, 80% of revenue to charity2013 - Bowl ban, 10 scholarships lost, 60 % of revenue to charity2014 - 5 scholarships lost, 40% of revenue to charity2015 - 20% of revenue to charity
Thanks for making my point about a binary world view. Of course, there can only be one set of victims here. No one else! Carry on!Some of the kids Sandusky raped victims will file lawsuits against Penn State, who failed to report things. That'll take years to go through. The kids were the victims here, not Penn State.
Here's the best part, for people like fatness:Let’s not create new victims. Instead lets ask ourselves, “do I desire punishment for Penn State for my own personal satisfaction, or have I asked the victims what they want, and they told me it was.” If you truly want to do something in your moral outrage, yelling at the TV or via Twitter that “they” should take down a statue or give the death penalty to Penn State doesn’t hold a candle to putting your time and money where your mouth is, and helping actual victims through the innumerable charities available.
Yeah, what a fortunate turn of events that was.They got lucky with this movie shooting thing. It pushes this statue thing and the NCAA infractions down below the fold a bit.![]()
He's not worth it.Thanks for making my point about a binary world view. Of course, there can only be one set of victims here. No one else! Carry on!Some of the kids Sandusky raped victims will file lawsuits against Penn State, who failed to report things. That'll take years to go through. The kids were the victims here, not Penn State.
Penn State is not unique, but it is a prime example of what happens when football gets too big in any environment. I'm a bit torn tin cup, because I read your impassioned words and my instinct is to have sympathy for you, but at the same time, I'm somewhat shocked by this handwringing over football. A damn football team, and a damn coach, who's actions could not support his words of integrity and "doing things the right way", etc. What will be enough? An awareness and acknowledgement that a game is not bigger than people, and frankly, your attempt to act as a martyr in defense of a college football team show a continued tone deafness to the realities of what happened here and the fact that the very game that you're defending is in, lets hope, complete totality the reason why these crimes were covered up. Penn State could have very well taken its medicine last fall, and canceled those last 2 or 3 games, or whatever it was, AND the bowl game and this would have been a demonstration, to the world and community outside of your, that, ok, maybe these guys get it. And the fans and school WERE aware of how black a moment this was. I mean, really, thinking about now, how Paterno planned to coach in the wake of this happened, how he acted with an oblique defiance on his front lawn that night, and the fact the school was more outraged at his ouster than Sandusky, as far as meaningful public outrage. What will be enough? A shutdown. Keep your money, keep your attempts at self sanctions that are window dressing on keeping this thing going. Maybe a shutdown will offer a time for reflection and a clean slate that will let EVERYONE move forward. If this school goes on, its almost the worst thing that could happen to it, as this incident will never die.Take your punishment, come out anew and no one can say Penn State doesn't "get it". Because they would have gotten it.For those of you who are inclined to paint everyone and everything associated with Penn State with a broad brush, enjoy your binary "black-and-white" world view.For many of us, the last 265 or so days have been like a shadow world where we've seen our university shaken to its' foundation, our leaders (past and present) fail miserably, and a seemingly insatiable feeding frenzy/blood thirst shape a relatively one-dimensional narrative where external forces seem to trip over themselves in a twisted game of one-upmanship to find new ways to express both real and faux outrage. A cult? Really? The university fired Spanier & Paterno? Not enough! Sandusky is going to spend the rest of his life in jail? Not enough! The Freeh report confirms that leaders of the university exercised as poor judgment as can be reasonably imagined? Not enough. TAKE DOWN THE STATUE! RENAME THE LIBRARY! STOP SELLING PEACHY PATERNO! GIVE THEM THE DEATH PENALTY! VACATE WINS SINCE 1998! REMOVE THE LETTER "P" FROM THE ALPHABET SO NO ONE CAN EVER EVEN SPELL PATERNO EVER AGAIN!When (and where) does it end?As a PSU alumnus, I can tell you the football program is the least of my concerns here.This was an upspeakable tragedy. Jerry Sandusky is a monster, and if he breathes his last breath sooner rather than later it can't be soon enough for me. As a parent, it saddens me beyond the words I have to express it to think of what Sandusky's victims went through and the impact that has had and will continue to have over the rest of their lives.To the extent that Spanier, Shultz, and Curley were in a position to do something and failed, I hope they are brought to justice in both this world and the next.As for Paterno, his failing here is deep and (in my opinion) uncharacteristic.Do I think he knew about 1998? Yes. I believe he became aware of the investigation that led to no charges being filed against Sandusky.Do I think he should have exerted more influence to make sure something was done in 2001? Absolutely. All kinds of alarms should go off for a reasonable person at this point, especially with the knowledge that something similar had occurred just three years earlier.Do I buy that he "reported this to his superiors", and that was the extent of his moral responsibility? No.Do I think he purposely covered this up to protect his football program? No, I do not. I think it more likely that he thought that he could "control" this like he controlled everything else and that the sheer force of his will (directly or undirectly) could keep Sandusky in line. If this is true, it was a horrible and tragic assessment.So here we are now, 8+ months later. Paterno is dead. Sandusky is in jail. Curley & Shultz will soon have their own day in court. The statue is down, the hagiography muted. And the university now faces unprecedented sanctions, in the absence of (and likely with the university president having waived) anything resembling reasonable due process.The facts we already know are terrible. There are likely facts we do not yet know some of which will probably paint things in an even more negative light and some of which might serve to add nuance and context to some of what we think we already fully understand. At the least, Governor Corbett's involvement and actions as both AG and trustee are curious at best.I'll ask the same question I did on page 37 of this thread. Where will this end? If we give the entire athletic department the death penalty and vacate the last 100+ of Paterno's wins and donate the entire university endowment to victim's groups, will that be enough?
Here's the best part, for people like fatness:Let’s not create new victims. Instead lets ask ourselves, “do I desire punishment for Penn State for my own personal satisfaction, or have I asked the victims what they want, and they told me it was.” If you truly want to do something in your moral outrage, yelling at the TV or via Twitter that “they” should take down a statue or give the death penalty to Penn State doesn’t hold a candle to putting your time and money where your mouth is, and helping actual victims through the innumerable charities available.

Perhaps you missed the part of my original post bolded above?In any event, thank you for a thoughtful response. What's been interesting to me about this is that I really don't see "sides" to this. Everyone I've seen thinks Sandusky is evil on Earth. This is an emotionally charged situation, and that energy manifests in different ways for different people.Penn State is not unique, but it is a prime example of what happens when football gets too big in any environment. I'm a bit torn tin cup, because I read your impassioned words and my instinct is to have sympathy for you, but at the same time, I'm somewhat shocked by this handwringing over football. A damn football team, and a damn coach, who's actions could not support his words of integrity and "doing things the right way", etc. What will be enough? An awareness and acknowledgement that a game is not bigger than people, and frankly, your attempt to act as a martyr in defense of a college football team show a continued tone deafness to the realities of what happened here and the fact that the very game that you're defending is in, lets hope, complete totality the reason why these crimes were covered up.As a PSU alumnus, I can tell you the football program is the least of my concerns here.
Penn State could have very well taken its medicine last fall, and canceled those last 2 or 3 games, or whatever it was, AND the bowl game and this would have been a demonstration, to the world and community outside of your, that, ok, maybe these guys get it. And the fans and school WERE aware of how black a moment this was. I mean, really, thinking about now, how Paterno planned to coach in the wake of this happened, how he acted with an oblique defiance on his front lawn that night, and the fact the school was more outraged at his ouster than Sandusky, as far as meaningful public outrage.
What will be enough? A shutdown. Keep your money, keep your attempts at self sanctions that are window dressing on keeping this thing going. Maybe a shutdown will offer a time for reflection and a clean slate that will let EVERYONE move forward. If this school goes on, its almost the worst thing that could happen to it, as this incident will never die.
Take your punishment, come out anew and no one can say Penn State doesn't "get it". Because they would have gotten it.
Penn State isn't a victim.Thanks for making my point about a binary world view. Of course, there can only be one set of victims here. No one else! Carry on!Some of the kids Sandusky raped victims will file lawsuits against Penn State, who failed to report things. That'll take years to go through. The kids were the victims here, not Penn State.I'll ask the same question I did on page 37 of this thread. Where will this end? If we give the entire athletic department the death penalty and vacate the last 100+ of Paterno's wins and donate the entire university endowment to victim's groups, will that be enough?
Here's the best part, for people like fatness:Let’s not create new victims. Instead lets ask ourselves, “do I desire punishment for Penn State for my own personal satisfaction, or have I asked the victims what they want, and they told me it was.” If you truly want to do something in your moral outrage, yelling at the TV or via Twitter that “they” should take down a statue or give the death penalty to Penn State doesn’t hold a candle to putting your time and money where your mouth is, and helping actual victims through the innumerable charities available.
That's why he thinks Penn State football is being victimized?In my case I never asked for the extended family photos of my attacker to be brought down, there’s one that still hangs of my now deceased assailant in my mother’s hallway. I never told his family, who remains alive today what he did to me.
Of course they are. It's foolish to think that the vast majority of PSU staff, alumni and students aren't impacted by this. They're not near the same category as the abused children and their families but their lives are negatively impacted by this. To think that such a grievous activity can only impact the worst of the victims doesn't make a lick of sense.Penn State isn't a victim.Thanks for making my point about a binary world view. Of course, there can only be one set of victims here. No one else! Carry on!Some of the kids Sandusky raped victims will file lawsuits against Penn State, who failed to report things. That'll take years to go through. The kids were the victims here, not Penn State.I'll ask the same question I did on page 37 of this thread. Where will this end? If we give the entire athletic department the death penalty and vacate the last 100+ of Paterno's wins and donate the entire university endowment to victim's groups, will that be enough?
Here's his point ---- that Sandusky's victims need to confront the statue of Joe Paterno in order to achieve peace and wellness.
That's the most twisted reasoning I've seen yet for why the statue should remain up.The victims should be given that chance if they desire it. They should be able to stand tall, look the image of a man who helped create an environment for Jerry Sandusky to operate without consequence, hold their heads high and realize that they’ve “made it” too. Realize that justice is being served; that the bogeyman has been caged, never to be set free again, and that his enablers have died and/or are being removed from power.
With all due respect, I fully believe you THINK you mean that, but I think what you supported this thought with runs contrary to an opinion that football hasn't and doesn't rule the roost at Penn State.Perhaps you missed the part of my original post bolded above?In any event, thank you for a thoughtful response. What's been interesting to me about this is that I really don't see "sides" to this. Everyone I've seen thinks Sandusky is evil on Earth. This is an emotionally charged situation, and that energy manifests in different ways for different people.Penn State is not unique, but it is a prime example of what happens when football gets too big in any environment. I'm a bit torn tin cup, because I read your impassioned words and my instinct is to have sympathy for you, but at the same time, I'm somewhat shocked by this handwringing over football. A damn football team, and a damn coach, who's actions could not support his words of integrity and "doing things the right way", etc. What will be enough? An awareness and acknowledgement that a game is not bigger than people, and frankly, your attempt to act as a martyr in defense of a college football team show a continued tone deafness to the realities of what happened here and the fact that the very game that you're defending is in, lets hope, complete totality the reason why these crimes were covered up.As a PSU alumnus, I can tell you the football program is the least of my concerns here.
Penn State could have very well taken its medicine last fall, and canceled those last 2 or 3 games, or whatever it was, AND the bowl game and this would have been a demonstration, to the world and community outside of your, that, ok, maybe these guys get it. And the fans and school WERE aware of how black a moment this was. I mean, really, thinking about now, how Paterno planned to coach in the wake of this happened, how he acted with an oblique defiance on his front lawn that night, and the fact the school was more outraged at his ouster than Sandusky, as far as meaningful public outrage.
What will be enough? A shutdown. Keep your money, keep your attempts at self sanctions that are window dressing on keeping this thing going. Maybe a shutdown will offer a time for reflection and a clean slate that will let EVERYONE move forward. If this school goes on, its almost the worst thing that could happen to it, as this incident will never die.
Take your punishment, come out anew and no one can say Penn State doesn't "get it". Because they would have gotten it.
Peace.
No MY point was that people who are unrelated to the situation, are venting some personal moral outrage, and using the real victims as a shield to do it.I used an anecdote about my confrontation with an image of my attacker is empowering. I also very specifically typed out that I can't claim to speak for the victims, only empathize. Which is a position those using the victims to further their own outrage here would do well to adopt.Here's his point ---- that Sandusky's victims need to confront the statue of Joe Paterno in order to achieve peace and wellness.That's the most twisted reasoning I've seen yet for why the statue should remain up.The victims should be given that chance if they desire it. They should be able to stand tall, look the image of a man who helped create an environment for Jerry Sandusky to operate without consequence, hold their heads high and realize that they’ve “made it” too. Realize that justice is being served; that the bogeyman has been caged, never to be set free again, and that his enablers have died and/or are being removed from power.
I, for one, hope you are right and that whatever happens tomorrow begins/accelerates some meaningful healing process and provides a clear dividing line between the past and the future.Sadly, I fear it will not. And I don't know what will, if anything ever can.Where it stops is going to be ultimately what the NCAA rules upon. Rock bottom comes tomorrow, like it or not, so there is not much point wondering whats next, unless there is somehow another shoe to drop on the Sandusky front.
Thanks for coming in here to clarify your viewpoint.I posted your article only because of your unique perspective (though not one you asked to have).No MY point was that people who are unrelated to the situation, are venting some personal moral outrage, and using the real victims as a shield to do it.I used an anecdote about my confrontation with an image of my attacker is empowering. I also very specifically typed out that I can't claim to speak for the victims, only empathize. Which is a position those using the victims to further their own outrage here would do well to adopt.Here's his point ---- that Sandusky's victims need to confront the statue of Joe Paterno in order to achieve peace and wellness.That's the most twisted reasoning I've seen yet for why the statue should remain up.The victims should be given that chance if they desire it. They should be able to stand tall, look the image of a man who helped create an environment for Jerry Sandusky to operate without consequence, hold their heads high and realize that they've "made it" too. Realize that justice is being served; that the bogeyman has been caged, never to be set free again, and that his enablers have died and/or are being removed from power.
Here's what I'll see coming, if the penalty doesn't include the death penalty, there will be 3 days to a week of grousing, but after that, whats done is done. I think the statue going is a step in the right direction. People that would be or will be hung up on this, excepting and respecting a total cream puff pass given by the NCAA, are the outliers your can label as "haters". I think the majority will accept whatever comes tomorrow in conjunction with what happened today. It sounds like there will be no death penalty, which to me personally is unfortunate, for PSU as much as anyone. I had long supported PSU giving THEMSELVES the death penalty, even for a short time last year, but certainly for the 2012 season. Had they done that in March, this would not even be an issue now, and very likely, the Paterno statue would stand.I, for one, hope you are right and that whatever happens tomorrow begins/accelerates some meaningful healing process and provides a clear dividing line between the past and the future.Sadly, I fear it will not. And I don't know what will, if anything ever can.Where it stops is going to be ultimately what the NCAA rules upon. Rock bottom comes tomorrow, like it or not, so there is not much point wondering whats next, unless there is somehow another shoe to drop on the Sandusky front.
Ditto. Sorry to hear about what happened to you and thanks for sharing it with us.Thanks for coming in here to clarify your viewpoint.I posted your article only because of your unique perspective (though not one you asked to have).No MY point was that people who are unrelated to the situation, are venting some personal moral outrage, and using the real victims as a shield to do it.I used an anecdote about my confrontation with an image of my attacker is empowering. I also very specifically typed out that I can't claim to speak for the victims, only empathize. Which is a position those using the victims to further their own outrage here would do well to adopt.Here's his point ---- that Sandusky's victims need to confront the statue of Joe Paterno in order to achieve peace and wellness.That's the most twisted reasoning I've seen yet for why the statue should remain up.The victims should be given that chance if they desire it. They should be able to stand tall, look the image of a man who helped create an environment for Jerry Sandusky to operate without consequence, hold their heads high and realize that they've "made it" too. Realize that justice is being served; that the bogeyman has been caged, never to be set free again, and that his enablers have died and/or are being removed from power.
No problem, a friend pointed out that my story had been linked here, and I was curious. Thank you for the spport.Ditto. Sorry to hear about what happened to you and thanks for sharing it with us.Thanks for coming in here to clarify your viewpoint.I posted your article only because of your unique perspective (though not one you asked to have).No MY point was that people who are unrelated to the situation, are venting some personal moral outrage, and using the real victims as a shield to do it.I used an anecdote about my confrontation with an image of my attacker is empowering. I also very specifically typed out that I can't claim to speak for the victims, only empathize. Which is a position those using the victims to further their own outrage here would do well to adopt.Here's his point ---- that Sandusky's victims need to confront the statue of Joe Paterno in order to achieve peace and wellness.That's the most twisted reasoning I've seen yet for why the statue should remain up.The victims should be given that chance if they desire it. They should be able to stand tall, look the image of a man who helped create an environment for Jerry Sandusky to operate without consequence, hold their heads high and realize that they've "made it" too. Realize that justice is being served; that the bogeyman has been caged, never to be set free again, and that his enablers have died and/or are being removed from power.
One thing about what you call "haters": I do think there are a number of people out there who are much more angry and want destruction of Penn State more than the average person. It seems to me that a whole lot of them are fans of other huge football schools. I didn't understand that at all several months ago. I thought those type of people, more so than the average non-CFB fan, would feel horrible for the victims but understand the conflicted feeling of PSU fans/alumni since they too likely have seen things at their school (less serious than this of course) where football took priority over something else more important. But they haven't acted like that at all. They've acted even more angry than non-CFB folks. However I read/saw something about 3 weeks ago and wish I could remember where. It was someone asking that question (Why do fans of other teams seem so over the top angry), and someone said that human reaction to a "near miss" is generally to get angry and not to have empathy. Empathy comes later, if at all. And to be honest, I've seen that as a parent. I've had a child almost get seriously hurt due to stupidity and immediately screamed at her for it. Only later did I feel bad and say I was sorry. But I was so scared that it could have been a horrible thing, a "near miss" made me angry. So I think this explanation explains the reaction of a lot of those type of fans from huge schools. They know that something like this is (was) at least possible at their school with the football dominate culture. I don't think many schools had AS dominate a singular person in a long time though. Florida State 10 years ago is the only one I can think of. And I personally think that was the issue much more than the general football culture that made this possible more than it would have been at Alabama, USC, Ohio State, or where ever. But if nothing else, I think this will make all schools certain they have a correct decision structure in place. And that's a step in the right direction.Here's what I'll see coming, if the penalty doesn't include the death penalty, there will be 3 days to a week of grousing, but after that, whats done is done. I think the statue going is a step in the right direction. People that would be or will be hung up on this, excepting and respecting a total cream puff pass given by the NCAA, are the outliers your can label as "haters". I think the majority will accept whatever comes tomorrow in conjunction with what happened today. It sounds like there will be no death penalty, which to me personally is unfortunate, for PSU as much as anyone. I had long supported PSU giving THEMSELVES the death penalty, even for a short time last year, but certainly for the 2012 season. Had they done that in March, this would not even be an issue now, and very likely, the Paterno statue would stand.I, for one, hope you are right and that whatever happens tomorrow begins/accelerates some meaningful healing process and provides a clear dividing line between the past and the future.Sadly, I fear it will not. And I don't know what will, if anything ever can.Where it stops is going to be ultimately what the NCAA rules upon. Rock bottom comes tomorrow, like it or not, so there is not much point wondering whats next, unless there is somehow another shoe to drop on the Sandusky front.