Joe Paterno, fired tonight by the Penn State board of trustees.
He had to be. No coming back from this. The scandal surrounding the alleged child-molestation incidents involving the former Penn State defensive coordinator … well, “radioactive” was the first word that came to mind and it still seems best.
All Penn State could do was clean house, and that included the football coach, the guy with 409 career victories whose promise to retire at the end of the season (perhaps five more games) was not nearly good enough.
The people I am most embarrassed for, at this moment?
It’s not Paterno. It’s not the Penn State president. It’s not Jerry Sandusky, alleged child-molester. (“Embarrassment” is not the proper word for Sandusky.)
It’s the Penn State students who are demonstrating/protesting over Paterno’s ousting.
I recognize that college students, in particular, feel the tug of “taking it to the streets” — making sure The Man understands what they are feeling or even demanding. It’s cliche, but it happens. I get it. A rite of passage and all.
Paterno, however, is not coming back, nor should he. The students are involved in a pointless exercise, unless their goals are simply “to show that we’re mad and unhappy.” If that’s all you’re trying to convey: Mission accomplished. If you really do mean “bring back Joe Paterno” … well, then you’re seriously misguided.
OK, brace yourself for another round of “in my day” … but in my day, college students demonstrated all the time. It was just another day at school. Big demonstrations about the war in Vietnam. Demonstrations about race relations. About farm workers. Back then, we even had a Hard Left on campus, and the Communists would demonstrate now and then, though they never got as many people as they wanted, much to my amusement.
Students in Egypt and other Arab countries were key in rising up against autocratic leaders this year. That makes sense, too.
But going out to demonstrate against Joe Paterno’s dismissal — when removing him as coach was the unavoidable Next Step to ending Penn State’s national humiliation? Really? You want to be remembered for “marching for JoePa?”
The “occupy Wall Street” people make more sense than that.
PSU kids: Go back inside. Have another beer. Ask yourself why Joe Paterno allowed years and years of creepy stuff to go on around your program. And then turn to something truly serious. Like, say, the responsibilities of observers to report evil when they see it.
Discuss.
3 responses so far ↓
1 Dennis Pope // Nov 10, 2011 at 11:09 AM
Last night’s ridiculousness at Penn State sort of reminded me of the night it was reported Seal Team Six got Osama bin Laden. Much less celebration, of course, but it struck me as similar. One key difference, I’ll admit, was that this time we got to see and hear (albeit incoherant ramblings) from the dead person.
2 dm // Nov 10, 2011 at 2:48 PM
amen to the post
3 Chuck Hickey // Nov 10, 2011 at 7:23 PM
The biggest scandal in college athletics — ever. And it’s not close.
And it’s made all the more appalling and sickening by clueless knuckleheads protesting the firing of someone who KNEW his friend/former assistant was screwing around with 10-year-olds in the school’s locker room showers for as long as 13 years. And then the revered St. Joe helped cover it up, knowing what he knew and the friend/former assistant was allowed to remain on campus, exposing (pun intended) more kids to a predator’s every move.
It’s sick. It’s revolting. And if kind of garbage is happening at the epitome program of college athletics, it makes you really wonder what’s in the underbelly at the cesspool schools.
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