texanhead08
All Pro
I saw a blurb earlier and it was quoted by a stripper friend of his that he has 7 children, but it didn't say by how many women.
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So what on the video?
Foster found the need to chime in (tweets included):
Arian Foster rips Anheuser-Busch's statement on NFL's issues
He has a valid point weeding through his tweets. Of all the sponsors, for them to become politically correct is definitely laughable when you think of their commercials over the years
He has a valid point weeding through his tweets. Of all the sponsors, for them to become politically correct is definitely laughable when you think of their commercials over the years
What you talkin' 'bout Willis?
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What you talkin' 'bout Willis?
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Well, there is an easy solution for all of that: don't beat your wife and/or abuse your children.
You don't see JJ Watt on the TMZ website. Just sayin'....
Agreed. A VERY valid point. Perhaps the NFL should drop all sponsorship by sellers of ALCOHOL like Anheuser Bush and ban it at all NFL Stadiums. Now THAT would be a statement.
But forgive me if I don't hold my breath for it to happen.
linkAnheuser-Busch commits about $200 million a year in rights fees and additional advertising to the NFL and is in the fourth year of a six-year deal it signed in 2011 that makes Bud Light the official beer of the league. In the last year, more Bud Light has been sold in the United States than any other beer ($5.28 billion at retail). One out of every five beers bought is a Bud Light.
Anheuser-Busch also has paid to lock up the rights as the exclusive beer advertiser of the Super Bowl broadcast for the past 28 years. From 2009 to 2013, the company spent $149 million on advertising for the game, according to Nielsen.
Do we even know what "the PC crowd" refers to anymore or is it just a catch all for "anyone who has a view I don't agree with"?
If taking a stance against beating a 4 year old makes me a member of the PC crowd, then I'll wear the label proudly.
Or, he could be a stand up human being and never get his name out there for this kind of behavior. It happens. There are plenty of men out there who are decent people and never have to worry about TMZ stories associated with their names.
Total non-sequitur and truly appears like you wanted a chance to rant about everyone else ranting.
Frauds, give me a break. Are you saying everyone here is a fraud? What a broad brush you like to paint with, man. It's hard to take you with a serious attitude when you generalize everyone and put yourself on your shiny little pedestal. If only we could all be as awesome as you, I guess.
Or, he could be a stand up human being and never get his name out there for this kind of behavior. It happens. There are plenty of men out there who are decent people and never have to worry about TMZ stories associated with their names.
AP was convicted by the court of public opinion before the judicial system got a chance to play out. I personally believe in a presumption of innocence before judging him as guilty. But that's just me,
DA is going to have a hard time winning this case, especially against Rusty Hardin.
That's my whole beef with some of these things, is that you get a picture posted on the internet and your life gets trolled by everyone. You and your wife have a fight, both react badly, yet neither press charges against each other and you get suspended indefinitely.
We all have a right to due process, but in the age of the internet slander and prosecution in the court of public opinion is all you need.
All it will take it one minor incident where it can happen though, and Watt's name could be dragged around for months as a POS. People make mistakes. What Rice did was horrible, but the outrage for it now is silly when this happened months ago and everyone ignored it.
I don't see NFL fans and sports fans crying about Mike Tyson being all over tv and in movies and reality shows everywhere. Where is the outrage there? Mike Tyson raped a woman, beat the snot out of his ex wife, and sexually assaulted Teddy Atlas's niece when he was younger. Oh, and he also bit a man's ear half off in the middle of a fight. Yet, beyond all of that he is still one of the most polarizing and popular figures in sports history and people love the guy. I'm sorry, but I'm sick of the "selective outrage" in AMerica with sports figures. Jim Brown is another guy that gets paraded around the NFL locker rooms as a mentor for god ****ing sakes! This guy has a record a mile long of beating his ex wives and GF's, and we're supposed to continually make Ray Rice public enemy #1 for his incident that took place like 7 months ago when he was already reprimanded by the league??
Sorry, but sports fans and the public comes off like total frauds to me with their selective outrage on certain public figures where so many others get a pass.
...Vikings caved in to pressure. Suspended indefinetly.
Vikings place Adrian Peterson on Exempt/Commissioners Permission list, wont be with team until legal matters are resolved
Posted by Curtis Crabtree on September 17, 2014, 2:16 AM EDT
The Minnesota Vikings have reversed course on Adrian Petersons reinstatement to the team and have placed him on the exempt/commissioners permission list, which will require Peterson to remain away from all team activities until the resolution of his legal proceedings.
The Vikings released a statement early Wednesday morning that announced their decision regarding Peterson. The pressure was building on the organization after their decision to reinstate Peterson on Monday. Sponsors were beginning to speak up and politicians called for Peterson to remain suspended.
Owners Mark and Zygi Wilf finally elected to alter their decision and found a mechanism to keep Peterson away from the team indefinitely while his legal matters are addressed. The lengthy statement from the team is as follows:
This has been an ongoing and deliberate process since last Fridays news. In conversations with the NFL over the last two days, the Vikings advised the League of the teams decision to revisit the situation regarding Adrian Peterson. In response, the League informed the team of the option to place Adrian on the Exempt/Commissioners Permission list, which will require that Adrian remain away from all team activities while allowing him to take care of his personal situation until the legal proceedings are resolved. After giving the situation additional thought, we have decided this is the appropriate course of action for the organization and for Adrian.
We are always focused on trying to make the right decision as an organization. We embrace our role and the responsibilities that go with it as a leader in the community, as a business partner and as an organization that can build bridges with our fans and positively impact this great region. We appreciate and value the input we have received from our fans, our partners and the community.
While we were trying to make a balanced decision yesterday, after further reflection we have concluded that this resolution is best for the Vikings and for Adrian. We want to be clear: we have a strong stance regarding the protection and welfare of children, and we want to be sure we get this right. At the same time we want to express our support for Adrian and acknowledge his seven-plus years of outstanding commitment to this organization and this community. Adrian emphasized his desire to avoid further distraction to his teammates and coaches while focusing on his current situation; this resolution accomplishes these objectives as well.
We will support Adrian during this legal and personal process, but we firmly believe and realize this is the right decision. We hope that all of our fans can respect the process that we have gone through to reach this final decision.
The Vikings did make an admirable move in getting ahead of the story when they deactivated Peterson for last weeks game against the New England Patriots. However, they made a misstep in bringing him back to the team so quickly while this matter hangs over Peterson.
They have now realized their error and corrected it. With Petersons first court hearing not scheduled until October 8, it certainly doesnt appear hell be playing for the Vikings again any time in the near future.
As usual, no one gives a damn about the kid, but if money is involved ...
And regarding Watt, none of you really know what that guy is like unless you know him personally and are around him constantly. I get so sick and tired of people getting this personal hero worship on people they have never spent a minute with in their lives and acting like they know these people. I've spent time with many athletes that had great reputations publicly and heard them say all types of stuff that many of you would find to be extremely disappointing based on what some of your assumptions may be about them. Tiger Woods had the most squeaky clean image probably more than any other athlete and over night everyone turned against him and was sooooooo shocked. I wasn't shocked at all, because he is a famous rich person that could be leading any kind of life for all I know.
I don't think Watt is a bad guy personally. I think he is a great guy most likely and he seems to do a lot of great things for children and disabled people. But for all I know he may treat others in his life horribly. WE DON"T KNOW. The fact that some people just assume this stuff based on what they see the media report or not report in some cases is not any clear indication of how a person is. It is a presentation of how they want a person to appear to be.
Ian Rapoport ✔ @RapSheet
Unreal RT @DailyMail: Adrian Peterson's high school football coach admits he beat him with wooden paddle http://dailym.ai/1sox9R8
I don't even want to hear about this crap man. I understand a little bit of reporting when an incident first happens, but this **** storm of non stop coverage going on has to stop. I don't watch the NFL for this garbage. It is a sport, and it isn't supposed to be "One life to live" with these players. The general public needs to get over themselves with this constant judging on everything.
And regarding Watt, none of you really know what that guy is like unless you know him personally and are around him constantly. I get so sick and tired of people getting this personal hero worship on people they have never spent a minute with in their lives and acting like they know these people. I've spent time with many athletes that had great reputations publicly and heard them say all types of stuff that many of you would find to be extremely disappointing based on what some of your assumptions may be about them. Tiger Woods had the most squeaky clean image probably more than any other athlete and over night everyone turned against him and was sooooooo shocked. I wasn't shocked at all, because he is a famous rich person that could be leading any kind of life for all I know.
I don't think Watt is a bad guy personally. I think he is a great guy most likely and he seems to do a lot of great things for children and disabled people. But for all I know he may treat others in his life horribly. WE DON"T KNOW. The fact that some people just assume this stuff based on what they see the media report or not report in some cases is not any clear indication of how a person is. It is a presentation of how they want a person to appear to be.
Ian Rapoport ✔ @RapSheet
Unreal RT @DailyMail: Adrian Peterson's high school football coach admits he beat him with wooden paddle http://dailym.ai/1sox9R8
Arian Foster is GOING OFF on Anheuser-Busch for daring to criticize the league’s handling of domestic violence crisis - sayingt he beer giant is, “Selling poison on that high horse.”
Annnnd, Rusty trots out Mom...All of these people coming out of AP's past is the work of Hardin. Media plants, good lawyering.
http://www.chron.com/neighborhood/w...on-s-mother-defends-NFL-star-says-5762412.phpSpeaking publicly for the first time since her oldest son was indicted by a Montgomery County grand jury, Bonita Jackson said Peterson is far different from how he is being portrayed in the media. She said the 29-year-old is a loving son and father who grew up in a family where children were disciplined from an early age.
Jackson said that both she and his father, Nelson Peterson, who lives in Dallas, were "big disciplinarians" with their children as they grew up, She said she used her hand, switches and belts to occasionally spank all of her six children in order to correct their behavior.
"I don't care what anybody says. Most of us disciplined our kids a little more than we meant sometimes," Jackson, 50, said in an interview from her home in Spring, a Houston suburb. "But we were only trying to prepare them for the real world."
"When you whip those you love, it's not about abuse, but love," Jackson added, accompanied by her current husband, a Baptist minister. "You want to make them understand that they did wrong."...
I found it a ch!ckensh!t move for the Wilfs to push their first year head coach Mike Zimmer out in front of the cameras to take bullets intended for the owners, and setting him up to "say the wrong thing" and create public backlash against the coach.
This is an owner matter/decision on policy, not a football coach's. You'd think the owners put Zimmer into the storm as a test balloon -- as if they had a big money public/private stadium project in process and wanted to see how much poo landed on Zim for not abandoning his player before they did same.
Now Wilfs are following public sentiment and the Head Coach is left to mend his reputation.
Some parents have it easy and have kids that never go through any growing pains. If you have a kid that has some growing pains or is just difficult you will do anything to fix the situation. It is so easy for us to judge people and say "I never (insert punishment)" or "if that guy would just (insert punishment)" and assume that it would work. I used to see kids acting like idiots and think "if only their parents would discipline them more". Now I'm a parent. There isn't even a one size fits all with my son. He's been a difficult kid at times and he's only 11. I've spanked him, I've done the "jail tour", I've yelled, grounded, talked, hugged publically scolded him and just about anything else you can think of. I'm sure that some people might look at me and say some of it was abuse. Now going into 6th grade my son is a whole new kid. He's well behaved, polite and respectful. I can't tell you if it is my methods, growing up a little or what, but I wouldn't change what I did. An old supervisor of mine just went and visited his son in jail. He did a lot of the same stuff I did and he told me that he constantly questions if he did things the wrong way. Nobody really knows. As a parent though, you'll do anything you can to fix the situation. If one of those kids holding a sign outside of walmart stops stealing, if that's what he needs and it works then isn't that better than getting thrown in jail? Of course you shouldn't be beating a kid to a pulp, but how can we question every parent's methods? I've seen kids that were coddled turn out to be great kids. I've seen other kids treated the same way be involved in home invasions. I've seen the same thing with kids that got beaten to a pulp at home. I just don't know how anybody that has been a parent can honestly sit there and look at someone that doesn't put their kid in danger and say "that's abuse". I used to look at kids misbehaving in the store and think "I could fix that in one week". No I couldn't.
Just really have a problem with people judging parents methods. The truth is you'll find out if it worked or not about 20-25 years later.
Mike
Some parents have it easy and have kids that never go through any growing pains. If you have a kid that has some growing pains or is just difficult you will do anything to fix the situation. It is so easy for us to judge people and say "I never (insert punishment)" or "if that guy would just (insert punishment)" and assume that it would work. I used to see kids acting like idiots and think "if only their parents would discipline them more". Now I'm a parent. There isn't even a one size fits all with my son. He's been a difficult kid at times and he's only 11. I've spanked him, I've done the "jail tour", I've yelled, grounded, talked, hugged publically scolded him and just about anything else you can think of. I'm sure that some people might look at me and say some of it was abuse. Now going into 6th grade my son is a whole new kid. He's well behaved, polite and respectful. I can't tell you if it is my methods, growing up a little or what, but I wouldn't change what I did. An old supervisor of mine just went and visited his son in jail. He did a lot of the same stuff I did and he told me that he constantly questions if he did things the wrong way. Nobody really knows. As a parent though, you'll do anything you can to fix the situation. If one of those kids holding a sign outside of walmart stops stealing, if that's what he needs and it works then isn't that better than getting thrown in jail? Of course you shouldn't be beating a kid to a pulp, but how can we question every parent's methods? I've seen kids that were coddled turn out to be great kids. I've seen other kids treated the same way be involved in home invasions. I've seen the same thing with kids that got beaten to a pulp at home. I just don't know how anybody that has been a parent can honestly sit there and look at someone that doesn't put their kid in danger and say "that's abuse". I used to look at kids misbehaving in the store and think "I could fix that in one week". No I couldn't.
Just really have a problem with people judging parents methods. The truth is you'll find out if it worked or not about 20-25 years later.
Mike
Great post.
It appears to me the east coast/west coast/ knows best when it comes to the use of corpral punishment. Rather than the south/Midwest. Atleast that's what the media wants you to believe.
For me the question is, putting Peterson in jail, taking him away from his son and taking away his earning power really the best thing for his son?
The real problem with Peterson is having so many illegitimate children with so many different women. Those choices are coming back to bite him in the butt. But that's a discussion to have at another time in another thread.
For me the question is, putting Peterson in jail, taking him away from his son and taking away his earning power really the best thing for his son?
Of course you shouldn't be beating a kid to a pulp,....
Just really have a problem with people judging parents methods.
True dat....Nobody really knows.
When I keep chasing balls amongst cars on Woodway... I'd was picking out a switch.As a parent though, you'll do anything you can to fix the situation.
Travis Johnson said when switches & belts stopped working on him his dad used his fists: "I love my daddy for it. He made me the man I am today."
Former Texans DT Travis Johnson on Adrian Peterson:"If they're old enough to talk back to their parents, they're old enough to get whupped."
Former Texans DT Travis Johnson backs Adrian Peterson:"If (his son) was Adrian's complexion you wouldn't have seen none of those welt marks"
Former Texan Travis Johnson on Adrian Peterson:"At this age you want a switch & a belt now..rather than (he) get Tasers & bullets & billy clubs later"
Former Texans DT Travis Johnson on Adrian Peterson: "I don't think people should butt in the business of a man disciplining his child."