1. The Ravens IMO could do whatever they wanted. It's not their job to implement additional punishment outside of what the league mandates, and had they chosen to keep Rice and let him come back, I wouldn't have blamed them. Rice's story made big time headlines, but teams consistently bring back impact players that get into trouble with the law, and serve their league mandated suspensions. We've seen players come back from everything, vehicular homicide (Stallworth, Little Brent), domestic violence, drug and weapons offense... On the flipside, I wouldn't have had (and don't) any problem with them cutting Rice over his behavior (now, or 3 months ago). That is their choice as an organization. Some teams operate in that manner (I.e., Pittsburgh); most don't. See all players with criminal records; there's a lot of them.
2. I don't have the numbers, but I'd be pretty willing to bet that since Goodell has been the commissioner, there have been other incidents where players have been found legally culpable of domestic violence, whether by trial or pleading out. I'd also bet that court documents would be able to provide highly detailed information regarding the circumstances surrounding the majority of those cases. For example, Greg Hardy has already been convicted of domestic violence, and is currently in the appeals process. Google his case and you can find all the dirty details of the incident, and trust me, Rice has nothing on him (Hardy had a nice game yesterday with 4 tackles, a sack and a forced fumble. But prior to the backlash on Rice, and the announcement of the new DV policy (6 week suspension, 2nd offense = lifetime ban), what was the common punishment for DV convictions? Were most players getting 2 games; 6 games; a season? I honestly don't know, but I cannot remember hearing of a player being suspended for a first time DV offense for any serious amount of time. Even Daryl Washington's one year ban this season was for the DV charge combined with a second documented failed drug test. If Goodell had instituted his new, tough on DV policy, and then suspended Rice 6 games, I highly doubt we're having this conversation today. If he had just given Rice half a year or a year out of the blue, and that was 4x to 8x what any player had previously gotten for the same offense, he (and probably most of this board) would be crying foul. My guess is the NFL underestimated the backlash, but due to Rice's popularity, the high profile nature of the issue, the fact it's on tape, and what was going on with Gordon at the same time, it blew up on them. Goodell's two game suspension was most likely standard operating procedure when he made that decision.
3. I really don't understand the current indefinite suspension by the NFL today. Like I said, I'm all for the Ravens cutting him, but what does the NFL have to prove. They already modified their suspension policy regarding domestic violence. Does Ray McDonald and Greg Hardy get 6 game suspensions if found guilty, or are they suspended indefinitely? I'm sure they'll have some excuse like Rice's statements counter this new video that we had never seen before (yeah, right). It seems to me this just adds additional confusion on what the policy actually is. If they felt they needed to go retroactive on Rice (which I think is a slippery slope anyways), why not give him 6 games.
I think what was Rice did was awful; I don't know if I'd go so far as others and call him a despicable human being. I also think he should have to pay the price. Seems to me like he originally did receive a penalty in line with penalties given out for previous DV infractions. The villagers got angry, and the story grew beyond the realm of just to the NFL to a hot button news topic in general. To save face, the NFL reviewed and modified their punishment policies on domestic violence incidents, and things settled down. Then today's tape was made public and the villagers got angry again. So now, on a whim, they go back and make the new policy retroactive for Rice only, but implement a harsher punishment, inconsistent with their own policy. I think that's a huge mistake and one that could come back to bite them long term. What's a negotiated CBA if the commissioner can implement new policies whenever he wants, then still has the discretion to go against that policy based on a case-by-case basis, as well as having the right to determine retroactivity. I wonder who the last player currently playing in the league right now is, who was convicted on some form of DV charge. I guess if he wasn't suspended or only suspended a few games, Goodell is going to go back and give him 6 games... or maybe an indefinite suspension. What about the second to last guy. Is it retroactive to him two, or just Rice and the last player...