'Christo said:
'fatness said:
The only person from Penn State who's been convicted and is in jail is Jerry Sandusky. A couple others are charged. Maybe they'll be found not guilty, or guilty. Maybe they'll serve some time. At some time in the future. Maybe not.
Acting like the courts have already resolved and repaired all this is just sticking your head in the sand.
Nice strawman
Just curious - if the NCAA came out today and said they were vacating Paterno's wins and did nothing else would you be ok with that? What if Paterno hadn't been fired, hadn't died and was still the PSU head coach - would you be ok with what they did then? I really have no opinion on the penalties so this isn't some attempt at defending one side or the other - I don't really care.
What do you mean by okay with that?
Would you think that the NCAA was within their jurisdiction to make that penalty.**I'm not a lawyer and don't speak lawyerese so let's assume for the moment that I'm not trying to trick you or ask vague questions on purpose
The NCAA doesn't have the power to sanction PSU in any manner whatsoever for what happened. But nationwide moral outrage provides the NCAA with the cover to try to foist unwarranted sanctions upon PSU. If PSU doesn't have the stones to stand up to the NCAA given the social climate I have no problem with that.
The fact that you are saying what the NCAA is doing probably wouldn't hold up in court is even more proof that the NCAA does in fact have tons of power. If they didn't, Penn State would just say no we're not doing anything you say or take them to court. They will do neither because the NCAA has a lot of power, including the power to keep this out of the courts.
The power exercised by the NCAA in this case was not innate. It was solely derived through public outrage. The NCAA is using that power to increase the scope of its powers in the future.
The power of the NCAA is whatever is conferred on it by the presidents of its member universities
Right. They didn't have the power to do this prior to the member universities agreeing to it (including Penn State).They have now expanded their police power to a place where it has never been exercised (and was only exercised in a knee-jerk, near sighted fashion)
It remains to be seen that now that they've entered the realm, whether they continue to police beyond their original scope.
So, let's review:
The NCAA
didn't have the authority to do this
The NCAA
gained the authority to do this by agreement
The NCAA
has expanded its role to uncharted waters
The NCAA did this in response to great public outcry.
My argument all along was that I didn't think we wanted the NCAA having this kind of power. The actual penalty itself seems fair. I'd love to see the folks on the 'its too much' and the 'its not enough' sides go away.
My (not bigger, but different) concern is how the NCAA continues to wield this new power going forward.