Why stop there? capital punishment for everyone!JBJCurly said:Bob nailed it this time!!! We should take anyone that has EVER committed a felony and just put them in prison FOREVER!!! No second chances. No redemption. No time served.
Why stop there? capital punishment for everyone!JBJCurly said:Bob nailed it this time!!! We should take anyone that has EVER committed a felony and just put them in prison FOREVER!!! No second chances. No redemption. No time served.
i have to say i was upset with you for an ealier video but this one video makes me want to buy you a trophy and sing your greatness in the street. That basterd should hav been wiped cut and beaten till he was on the brink of death then set up in a cage match with a MMA fighter.MovieBob said:Maddening
MovieBob wonders why people keep buying Madden, and why anyone would want Michael Vick on the cover.
Watch Video
I do enjoy a good joke! I am glad you share my sense of humour.emeraldrafael said:<url=http://www.macleans.ca/article.jsp?content=20060612_128443_128443>Is that so? You're so funnydex-dex said:at least our football league does not employ criminals just because they can put their butt in the air and throw a ball between their legs.
Oh so would I, the curse is just consolation in case we fail to prevent him from being chosen.AgentBJ09 said:I think it hit him early with his conviction.canadamus_prime said:...On the bright side, at least if he does get on the box he'll suffer the Madden curse.
Still, the Madden curse...Would be fun to watch if he did make the cover, but I would rather he not be the chosen one anyway. He should have been removed from the running as soon as he was convicted.
Someone should make a thread detailing waht it is, cause this response has been common.naab said:All right I'll bite, what is "Madden Curse" or what is that?
OT: And ultimately, people who are going to buy Madden and play the game on a casual and/or competitive basis won't care to look at the cover of Madden 2012... We get hit with so much media on a daily basis.... we flip through channels, have about 4-6 internet tabs up at once while on the cpu, and unless we're playing a specific game story play through about 2-4 games a day.
Sadly no one is going to even look at the cover of Madden long enough to go, "Hey I don't agree with this bastard on the cover of Madden."
But yes... what is Madden Curse?
Dastardly said:I'm with you on this, but I do want to throw in an alternate reasoning:MovieBob said:Maddening
MovieBob wonders why people keep buying Madden, and why anyone would want Michael Vick on the cover.
Watch Video
It's okay to ask us to forgive Vick. It's okay to ask that we believe in redemption, and to open ourselves up to the possibility that we are also capable of all evil things if the world were to just catch us on a bad day. It's okay to point out the fact that he's "done his time" and is trying to get his act together. All of that is okay, and I agree.
However.
Forgiving someone, or believing they have redeemed themselves, does not mean forestalling the logical consequences of those actions. It is not wrong, unforgiving, or uncharitable to vehemently want to deny Vick this spot. He paid his legal debt to society, and that's fine. It means he cannot be punished again, but refusing to honor something is not the same as punishment.
If someone robs me and gunpoint, goes to jail, gets out, and then comes to see me for forgiveness, I might choose to use that opportunity to forgive them. I'd let them know that I didn't like what they did, and I'd stop wishing horrible things to happen to them. I'd let them know I really do hope they go on to make better choices. But forgiving them doesn't mean I have to like them, be "buddies," or ever even speak to them ever again. I certainly don't have to make them best man at my wedding, or keep a picture of them on my desk.
I do actually, if your being sarcastic. Really, this is going to fuel alot of jokes between the Canadian kid at my college and myself when he talks about the CFL and I talk about hte NFL.dex-dex said:I do enjoy a good joke! I am glad you share my sense of humour.emeraldrafael said:<url=http://www.macleans.ca/article.jsp?content=20060612_128443_128443>Is that so? You're so funnydex-dex said:at least our football league does not employ criminals just because they can put their butt in the air and throw a ball between their legs.
I have to disagree with you on the idea that animals are less advanced. It's not inherently a false statement but it needs to be qualified. Less advanced technologically? Certainly. Less advanced intellectually? Alright? But there are other ways to quantify advancement... there are animals with richer genetic heritage then humans. Puffer fish for example posses 0 junk DNA. Living beings evolve certain ways to fit into a biological niche. We have our place, other animals have there's, I could know more survive in the Indian jungle then a tiger could survive in New York.Susan Arendt said:So torturing them for fun and profit is ok? I'm not arguing your core point - they are, certainly, less advanced creatures than people - that doesn't make his behavior any less reprehensible.AvauntVanguard said:Sorry Bob, I have to disagree.
I don't like Vick, but yes. They're just dogs. Sorry.
I'm not simply the type of christian who thinks we're above animals or what have you; I simply don't think they deserve this much respect. Until they get thumbs and start building shit, I never will.
Look, I had a cat for the first 15 years of my life. He was there when I was born and he definitely possessed some intelligence and memory. I got that. But I didn't cry when both our cats had to be put down due to sickness and then depression (Yes, our cat suffered depression after the first one died). While I can understand some of the concepts that many animals are just barely a couple steps down from us... They're still just that. Below us.
Sorry.
Woodsey said:The guy served his punishment - punishing him further by leaving him out of these sort of things undermines the judicial system.
"He's been given the opportunity to make a living off his athletic prowess."Susan Arendt said:He got his second chance - he's still playing professional football and getting paid obscene amounts of money for it. He's been given the opportunity to make a living off his athletic prowess. Anything other than that? He was a millionaire who got his jollies torturing and killing innocent animals. He can die in a damn fire.boeingguy787 said:Seriously, guys? NOBODY believes in second chances? I thought that the justice system was designed to rehabilitate people, and Vick seems to be rehabilitated (unlike countless others who have not changed their ways).
While I agree with your reasoning on the whole I must nitpick about your last statement. Punishment is adding something negative or removing something positive. So refusing to honor something is punishment, not punishment by law in this case but still punishment.Dastardly said:Forgiving someone, or believing they have redeemed themselves, does not mean forestalling the logical consequences of those actions. It is not wrong, unforgiving, or uncharitable to vehemently want to deny Vick this spot. He paid his legal debt to society, and that's fine. It means he cannot be punished again, but refusing to honor something is not the same as punishment.
That would be true, but this forum is full of Gen Y. And if there's anything that Gen Y wants to be it's to be judge, jury and most especially executioner.Woodsey said:Prison is the punishment. The ENTIRE purpose of it is to set an amount of time that - if we're going to be crude about it - evens out the balance sheets. Designating the punishment is the job of a judge, not any of us.