Jason Whitlock's article

shawn555

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http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/...phan-daughter-why-still-playing-sunday-120112



In KC, its no time for a game
Updated Dec 3, 2012 4:50 AM ET
FoxSports.com

KANSAS CITY, Mo.

Editor's note: This story was written on Saturday night, and is the piece referenced by Bob Costas during NBC's airing of Sunday Night Football.



Football is embarrassingly tone deaf.


Chiefs facility
TRAGEDY IN KANSAS CITY

Chiefs' Belcher kills girlfriend, himself
Reiter: So many questions unanswered
Chiefs get emotional win | Reaction
Fans mourn | Moment of silence
Whitlock: No time to play a game
Who was Belcher? | Career in pictures
Jovan Belcher, a starting linebacker for the Chiefs, murdered the mother of his child shortly before 8 a.m. Saturday. He hopped in his car, drove to the Kansas City Chiefs practice facility, thanked Romeo Crennel and Scott Pioli ? and shot himself in the head in front of his coach and general manager around 8:10 a.m.

Within two hours, the NFL instructed the Carolina Panthers to travel to Kansas City as scheduled in preparation for Sunday?s noon kickoff. By 3 p.m., the Chiefs announced that Crennel and team captains had decided to play Sunday?s game as planned.

Short of terrorist attack and weather disaster, nothing slows the NFL.

A 25-year-old kid gunned down his 22-year-old girlfriend in front of his mother and three-month-old child, and all he could think to do in the immediate aftermath is rush to thank his football coach and football employer. Belcher?s last moments on this earth weren?t spent thanking the mother who raised him or apologizing to the child he would orphan. His final words of gratitude and perhaps remorse were reserved for his football gods.

It should come as no surprise that Crennel, Chiefs players, Pioli, owner Clark Hunt and NFL commissioner Roger Goodell quickly agreed not to delay Sunday?s football congregation at Arrowhead Stadium.

Football is our God. Its exaggerated value in our society has never been more evident than Saturday morning in my adopted hometown. There?s just no way this game should be played.

Twenty-eight hours after witnessing one of his starting linebackers take his life, Crennel will stand on the sideline as young men play a violent game. Twenty-eight hours after one of their best friends killed the mother of his child and himself, Chiefs players will take the field and play a violent game.

Football is a game of emotion. Football is a game in which the coaches and players preach about treating each other as family.

How can they play Sunday? Why should they?

Belcher and his girlfriend didn?t die in a car accident 30 minutes away from Arrowhead Stadium. This isn?t some tragedy Crennel and Pioli heard about. Belcher crashed his car through the gates of the Chiefs practice facility. He pointed a gun to his head in front of Crennel and Pioli. He killed himself within a quarter of a mile of Arrowhead Stadium, where the players and coaches work.

I just don?t get it. And I?m not trying to vilify the Chiefs for choosing to play Sunday?s game. It shouldn?t be their decision. Roger Goodell should?ve made this call. Crennel, Pioli and Kansas City players are justifiably still in a state of shock.

You may argue that we all grieve differently. You may argue that playing the game is the best way to move on and heal. You may argue that canceling or delaying the game would serve no purpose and would be unfair to the fans who traveled to Kansas City to see Cam Newton and the Panthers play the Chiefs.

I would argue that your rationalizations speak to how numb we are in this society to gun violence and murder. We?ve come to accept our insanity. We?d prefer to avoid seriously reflecting upon the absurdity of the prevailing notion that the second amendment somehow enhances our liberty rather than threatens it.

How many young people have to die senselessly? How many lives have to be ruined before we realize the right to bear arms doesn?t protect us from a government equipped with stealth bombers, predator drones, tanks and nuclear weapons?

Our current gun culture simply ensures that more and more domestic disputes will end in the ultimate tragedy, and that more convenience-store confrontations over loud music coming from a car will leave more teenage boys bloodied and dead.


In the coming days, Belcher?s actions will be analyzed through the lens of concussions and head injuries. Who knows? Maybe brain damage triggered his violent overreaction to a fight with his girlfriend. What I believe is, if he didn?t possess/own a gun, he and Kasandra Perkins would both be alive today.


sports deaths of 2012
IN MEMORIAM

We remember those who have died in the sports world in 2012.
That is the message I wish Chiefs players, professional athletes and all of us would focus on Sunday and moving forward. Handguns do not enhance our safety. They exacerbate our flaws, tempt us to escalate arguments, and bait us into embracing confrontation rather than avoiding it.

But we won?t. We?ll watch Sunday?s game and comfort ourselves with the false belief we?re incapable of the wickedness that exploded inside Jovan Belcher Saturday morning.
 

ChrryBlstr

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anything can be used as a weapon :shrug: coffee cup, knife, sword, beer bottle, fist, why are guns singled out?

Well, as of yet, the correlation between the increase in homicides, assaults and crimes in general and coffee cups, swords, beer bottles and fists has yet to be proven.

Knives I'm not so sure about. I would, however, guess that the use of knives as weapons would pale in comparison to the use of guns.
 

hedgehog

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Seems to be the cowards way out :shrug:

so banning guns for law abiding citizens is the answer? all the criminals will have them and us peasants will have no way to fight back, seems like a great idea to me
 

shawn555

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so banning guns for law abiding citizens is the answer? all the criminals will have them and us peasants will have no way to fight back, seems like a great idea to me

You make so much money that you must live in a nice private gated community where this is not an issue.
 

doubleornothing

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Why do people insist on excusing the behavior and try to find blame instead?

This part kills me:
"Our current gun culture simply ensures that more and more domestic disputes will end in the ultimate tragedy"

Really? What the hell is our current gun culture and how would any of it ensure more and more domestics disputes will end in the ultimate tragedy?
I think our current culture of welfare grabbers and the like ensures more and more desperate shit bags with no respect or value of life will go on creating cowardly acts that end in ultimate tragedy. Not the, so called, gun culture.
How do you like that, can you feel that, yeah!
 

airportis

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Why do people insist on excusing the behavior and try to find blame instead?

This part kills me:
"Our current gun culture simply ensures that more and more domestic disputes will end in the ultimate tragedy"

Really? What the hell is our current gun culture and how would any of it ensure more and more domestics disputes will end in the ultimate tragedy?
I think our current culture of welfare grabbers and the like ensures more and more desperate shit bags with no respect or value of life will go on creating cowardly acts that end in ultimate tragedy. Not the, so called, gun culture.
How do you like that, can you feel that, yeah!



are you fucking stupid?

no seriously, are you?

what can your pea size brain not comprehend about the fact that with it being so easy to get your hands on a gun, the chance of a dispute ending in gun violence is heightened?

how is it that difficult of a concept for some of you?
 

Skulnik

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Jason Whitlock apologizes for his unfunny Jeremy Lin comment on Twitter

.By Kelly Dwyer | Ball Don't Lie ? Mon, Feb 13, 2012 9:55 AM EST.. .
.
Jeremy Lin, prior to Friday's win over the Lakers (Getty Images)

You're an NBA fan. Dissatisfied with the typical online outlets, you're coming to an NBA-obsessive blog on a Monday to read more than what the more orthodox NBA media outlets are giving you. You search and you scour for takes and columns and tweets and video and you'll do it all again come Tuesday morning. Tell me, have you ever read a Jason Whitlock column on the NBA? Do you even think to go to him when NBA news breaks?

Jason Whitlock knows this. He's also an unfunny boor with a massive ego, and the combination of those factors plus his NBA irrelevancy leads to Twitter comments like this, in the wake of Jeremy Lin's brilliant 38-point performance against the Lakers on Friday night:


Some lucky lady in NYC is gonna feel a couple inches of pain tonight.



There are funny jokes, and then there are unfunny jokes that mix with needless racial stereotyping and the laziness that comes from not even bothering to look up the fact that the Knicks would be flying to Minneapolis directly after Friday's game.

On Sunday, after much criticism and derision, Whitlock came through with an apology of sorts:


I then gave in to another part of my personality - my immature, sophomoric, comedic nature. It's been with me since birth, a gift from my mother and honed as a child listening to my godmother's Richard Pryor albums. I still want to be a standup comedian.

Don't you dare involve Richard Pryor in this, Jason Whitlock. Maybe your mother makes lame jokes all the time, but do not invoke Pryor's name. His jokes were funny. This was pathetic.

[Related: Jeremy Lin is latest ex-Warriors player to shine elsewhere ]

I like dark, weird humor. Michael O'Donoghue remains a steady influence on me, even as I write up posts about Dwight Howard dunking on a fake giraffe. But this, to paraphrase the least-darkest comic of all time in Jerry Seinfeld, offends me more as someone who appreciates humor than it does the ugly and needless stereotyping of a 6-3, 200-pound man. If you're going to go nasty, at least go out being funny.

Whitlock's not going anywhere, though some called for and even expected his dismissal from FOX over the weekend. The Asian American Journalists Association was more than correct in looking past the "not funny" aspect of Whitlock's noise and calling out its blatant stereotyping.

Jeremy Lin, meanwhile, went on to overcome tired legs in his fifth game in seven nights on Saturday, and score 20 points in New York's win over the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Whitlock, per usual, will be dutifully ignored by NBA fans until he says another stupid thing about the league.
 

Skulnik

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whitlock.jpg



Look at this Fat Racist PIG.
 

WhatsHisNuts

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Jason Whitlock apologizes for his unfunny Jeremy Lin comment on Twitter

.By Kelly Dwyer | Ball Don't Lie ? Mon, Feb 13, 2012 9:55 AM EST.. .
.
Jeremy Lin, prior to Friday's win over the Lakers (Getty Images)

You're an NBA fan. Dissatisfied with the typical online outlets, you're coming to an NBA-obsessive blog on a Monday to read more than what the more orthodox NBA media outlets are giving you. You search and you scour for takes and columns and tweets and video and you'll do it all again come Tuesday morning. Tell me, have you ever read a Jason Whitlock column on the NBA? Do you even think to go to him when NBA news breaks?

Jason Whitlock knows this. He's also an unfunny boor with a massive ego, and the combination of those factors plus his NBA irrelevancy leads to Twitter comments like this, in the wake of Jeremy Lin's brilliant 38-point performance against the Lakers on Friday night:


Some lucky lady in NYC is gonna feel a couple inches of pain tonight.



There are funny jokes, and then there are unfunny jokes that mix with needless racial stereotyping and the laziness that comes from not even bothering to look up the fact that the Knicks would be flying to Minneapolis directly after Friday's game.

On Sunday, after much criticism and derision, Whitlock came through with an apology of sorts:


I then gave in to another part of my personality - my immature, sophomoric, comedic nature. It's been with me since birth, a gift from my mother and honed as a child listening to my godmother's Richard Pryor albums. I still want to be a standup comedian.

Don't you dare involve Richard Pryor in this, Jason Whitlock. Maybe your mother makes lame jokes all the time, but do not invoke Pryor's name. His jokes were funny. This was pathetic.

[Related: Jeremy Lin is latest ex-Warriors player to shine elsewhere ]

I like dark, weird humor. Michael O'Donoghue remains a steady influence on me, even as I write up posts about Dwight Howard dunking on a fake giraffe. But this, to paraphrase the least-darkest comic of all time in Jerry Seinfeld, offends me more as someone who appreciates humor than it does the ugly and needless stereotyping of a 6-3, 200-pound man. If you're going to go nasty, at least go out being funny.

Whitlock's not going anywhere, though some called for and even expected his dismissal from FOX over the weekend. The Asian American Journalists Association was more than correct in looking past the "not funny" aspect of Whitlock's noise and calling out its blatant stereotyping.

Jeremy Lin, meanwhile, went on to overcome tired legs in his fifth game in seven nights on Saturday, and score 20 points in New York's win over the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Whitlock, per usual, will be dutifully ignored by NBA fans until he says another stupid thing about the league.

whitlock.jpg



Look at this Fat Racist PIG.

Well, I guess this tells us all we need to know. You have no argument, so you'll attack the source. Nuff said.
 
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