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Thread: Ray Lewis

  1. #1
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    Ray Lewis

    http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/fo...icle-1.1250503

    I wonder when the NFL got around to ban Deer Antler extract? This is too funny!

  2. #2
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    A great player for whom I have zero respect.

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tom G View Post
    A great player for whom I have zero respect.
    100% agree with this sentiment.

  4. #4
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    Ray Lewis has this to say regarding Anna Welker's qutoe:

    “I’ve always been a firm believer of the Good Book, and the Good Book always confirms, even a fool is counted wise until he opens he or she mouth,”

    The Good Book ??? I wonder if Ray is familiar with this:

    A man who is laden with the guilt of human blood will be a fugitive until death; let no one support him

    I agree with Mrs Welker

  5. #5
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    On a related note:

    Thou who taketh the knee taketh the loss

    ;)

  6. #6
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    OK...........

    I'm going to consider this a Super Bowl thread and stick this in here-------

    http://sports.yahoo.com/news/nfl--re...190346715.html
    I have never understood why it is "greed" to want to keep the money you earned, but not "greed" to take someone else's money---Thomas Sowell

  7. #7
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    "Those comments were a reflection of what I said in my head, but not really how I feel." Dude plays in San Francisco of all places, and comes up with those comments on Superbowl weekend?

    What a first class idiot.
    Lem populum: sed quicumque non habent suffragia, semper nobis

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Broncogreg View Post
    OK...........

    I'm going to consider this a Super Bowl thread and stick this in here-------

    http://sports.yahoo.com/news/nfl--re...190346715.html
    Kwame Harris anyone?

  9. #9
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    Just as I 1st suggested--the libs are trying to kill our game



    Please, Oh Please, Progressives, Make Football Reform A National Priority
    by Noah Rothman | 1:57 pm, January 30th, 2013 video » 39 comments

    If God is a Republican — which, given the results of the 2012 election, is highly unlikely — the almighty will ensure that progressives take their cues about public policy from MSNBC’s Now with Alex Wagner.

    On Wednesday, MSNBC’s midday panel program invited influential liberals and progressive policy makers on to debate the merits of regulating the game of football at all levels – from the NFL to secondary school. The object is to prevent violent injury and protect those too foolish to make what the MSNBC panel felt was decisions in their best interest. Surely, conservatives everywhere join this panel in supporting progressive legislators who may want to take up this cause.

    The subject of violence in football was most recently broached by President Barack Obama who told The New Republic’s reporters that he would have a hard time agreeing to allow his hypothetical son to play the notoriously violent sport. With that, progressives everywhere had license to fantasize about saving football players everywhere from themselves.

    “In terms of regulating this stuff, there is such a narrative in Washington about government overstepping its bounds – government getting overly involved,” Wagner began. “Do you feel like there is bipartisan support to regulate safety in the NFL?”

    Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-NJ) said that there is growing support in Congress for new NFL regulations, including government-mandated education programs about on-field safety.

    New York Times media culture columnist David Carr wondered if new helmet technology was necessary to prevent traumatic brain injury on the field.

    Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor of The Nation magazine, suggested that the NFL has some culpability when players are injured because of its historic efforts to cover up the threats to personal safety that NFL players face.

    Finally, New York City deputy mayor Howard Wolfson said that he sees a shift in sports culture, supported anecdotally by his recent consumption of articles in popular sports magazines focusing on football-related injuries.

    What was not surprising in this clip was the instinct to dismiss any opposition to the federal regulation of football as the knee-jerk reaction of an ill-informed populace clinging to their barbaric fetishes.

    Yes, progressives, the risks associated with playing professional – even college and high school-level football — are extraordinarily high. The rewards for those players skilled and fortunate enough to receive college scholarships or be drafted into the NFL are equally high.

    No one is forced anybody to play football. Each man who chooses this path is aware of the risks they are assuming.

    There is no convincing those who perceive themselves to be the betters of those who would assume such risks that they are undertaken clear-eyed and voluntarily. Progressives who seek to regulate the game of football, (or the consumption of foie gras, or the light bulb you can purchase, or your right to own a firearm) presume that the individual who embarks on this dangerous path is simply ill-informed about the threats they face – or too feeble-minded to comprehend those threats.

    But, as an opinion writer with a conservative bent, it is not my intention to dissuade progressives from embarking on a crusade to regulate the game of football. May they ever seek to bubble wrap life’s sharpest edges. Conservatives could not hope for a greater illustration of liberal paternalism.

    Here’s hoping we pursue yet another national conversation –- it is one the American right will welcome.

    Watch the panel discussion below via MSNBC:
    I have never understood why it is "greed" to want to keep the money you earned, but not "greed" to take someone else's money---Thomas Sowell

  10. #10
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    No one is forced anybody to play football. Each man who chooses this path is aware of the risks they are assuming,
    There are quite a few former players suing the NFL who disagree with this statement.

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