...you don't know what he did...?
he yelled, cussing, at a group of female reporters (some that covered Osuna's beating of a woman) specifically about Osuna. that is not "making a statement that offended someone."
you can sit there and feign naivete over why he did what he did and said what he said to specific people, but i won't.
"Well, you’ll learn soon enough that this was a massive red wave landslide." - thethe on the 2020 election that trump lost bigly
“I can’t fix my life, but I can fix the world.” - sturg
sheesh, people these days so offended over the beating of a woman. back in my day, the woman got back in the kitchen like a GOOD woman and shut up about it, and i told my work buddies how she got out of line and they all nodded and agreed!
MAGAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
"Well, you’ll learn soon enough that this was a massive red wave landslide." - thethe on the 2020 election that trump lost bigly
“I can’t fix my life, but I can fix the world.” - sturg
Don't get me wrong, if you want to agitate to get the guy fired that's fine with me. It's a free country for the moment.
I think the guy acted like an unprofessional dickhead. If the Astros want to fire him for that, fine. If they don't, I don't think really think anything he did was particularly "terrible."
I get that some folks believe that players should get lifetime bans for running afoul of certain issues du jour, but if those aren't the rules then I can't get too excited about teams signing players who have served their punishments. I'm not sure I agree with a lifetime ban for domestic abuse. As someone mentioned, Bobby Cox had a run in with that. While that did lower my view of Bobby forever, I'm not sure his professional career needed to end because of once reported incident.
Has your level of moronic-ism now extended past the topic of baseball?
It is blatantly obvious he was making comments directed at this female reporter, and he was making them due to her objections over the Astros employing a woman beater. It takes exactly three brain cells to understand what's going on here.
Is the guy a punk? Definitely. Should he be fired or banned or castrated or executed? Probably not.
Was he making them with the intention of defending the teams acquisition or domestic violence? Lets assume that the comments were made directly towards the reporters. Can someone not defend themselves against what I assume were very critical articles of the organization?
Natural Immunity Croc
What SI reported was that he said: "Thank God we got Osuna. I'm so f***king glad we got Osuna".
I don't know if he intended his statements to be directed towards the reporters or not. I tend to think he probably did say it for their benefit, but I'm not sure that really matters.
An adult, particularly a reporter, ought to be able to handle a profanity being said in their presence. A reporter also ought to be able to handle an angry reaction about his or her story without melting.
I think probably the reporter in question didn't melt into a pool of goo, but this whole little controversy makes it seem like she did. And that's too bad. I bet she's tougher than that. The profession is tougher than that.
Last edited by Southcack77; 10-23-2019 at 03:55 PM.
I know that Taubman commuted no crime but I understand how he could have animosity towards those reporters if they’re the sort that create the current environment.
Honestly I just hate the present environment. People complain about everything and will never stop complaining but the minute someone expresses frustration about the complaining they’re a terrible person who should be silenced. Things used to be better.
"I am a victim, I will tell you. I am a victim."
"I am your retribution."
I have no plans to agitate anything. What the Astros choose to do doesn't cause me to lose sleep. But, it would be nice to see them address the issue instead of trying to deflect it/cover it up.
I don't think the guy should necessarily get fired. But if I was running a business, there's no way I'd let an employee get away with that. If nothing else, it just looks bad on me and my brand.
This was pretty gross by Taubman if the reported facts are true and its definitely something that could be considered fire-worthy. But its not too hard to find a small amount of sympathy for anyone who finds themselves in the bullseye of the public shaming machine. Its just a by-product of social media and its a completely natural evolution of human behavior, but its still pretty nuts how often non-criminal behavior gets the same amount of public scorn as an actual crime.