I hope not.
by WaxonWaxoff (2020-05-31 01:34:20)

In reply to: Actually, Somewhat Inevitable....  posted by dillon77


by the time basketball rolls around this incident will be six months removed. How many protests do we need to have, for how long? IMO, if they choose to protest fine, wear the shirts on your own time, not as official representatives of the school. I also believe it had a divisive affect on the team when Reimer championed it. MY two cents


Thanks. Your question nailed it!
by BabaGhanouj  (2020-05-31 12:26:58)     cannot delete  |  Edit  |  Return to Board  |  Ignore Poster   |   Highlight Poster  |   Reply to Post

"How many protests do we need to have, for how long?"


The answer to that question of as to how long & how many
by maverick  (2020-05-31 14:01:36)     cannot delete  |  Edit  |  Return to Board  |  Ignore Poster   |   Highlight Poster  |   Reply to Post

protests would be until change takes place. If things don't then there will be periodic protests of this nature


Thx...WW and 2nd Streeter for Insights, Opinions
by dillon77  (2020-05-31 08:53:19)     cannot delete  |  Edit  |  Return to Board  |  Ignore Poster   |   Highlight Poster  |   Reply to Post

Three quick comments. Once again, intended as observational.

- Let me be more specific: the "somewhat inevitable" tagline had to do with expecting huge numbers and elements of society reacting to this situation, not a comment on what any ND has or will do. My apologies if that was written in a confusing or dual-meaning mannter (it wasn't).

I thought of Taya Reimer primarily as a young person (who also happened to be on a team) who -- who chose to react to a similar incident.

However, I also thought of my mid-20's daughter and her friends who lives in Brooklyn a 1/2 mile from Barclay's Center, where numerous outbreaks took place. She (my daughter) is coming "out" to NJ today and I look forward to her reports and insights.

- 2nd Streeter raises a really good point that I've been thinking of, which is how many protests seem to take on a violent hue, whether threatened or actual. (Not all protests "back in the day" were non-violent, but the vast majority were.)

- Once again, these comments are made as observational...if I want to enter the "political" board, I will, but I (primarily) come to ndnation for basketball.

- Short-term, to paraphrase the late, great John Prine, I "wish you all the best."




Not political but observational as above posters
by 2ndstreeter  (2020-05-31 06:38:14)     cannot delete  |  Edit  |  Return to Board  |  Ignore Poster   |   Highlight Poster  |   Reply to Post

Society has changed much. The protests of the ‘60’s whether anti-war/racism were generally not accompanied by looting and burning other than Watts, Detroit, et al. It seems now that element is a close companion.

By the way, the CFB Hall of Fame in Atlanta was looted. Now there’s a T-shirt story.

In the end, pray for our nation. We need compassion and healing to carry the day.