DeROK wrote:A few observations...
One Arlan Spectre is a moron. If you're wasting your time as a senator by doing a probe into a football team breaking \"league\" rules, not U.S. rules, you're not doing your job.
Two, let's say the Patriots did video tape the Rams practice - It's a dirty, low move for sure. But is it \"against the rules\" and punishable? I don't think it is. Personally, while I don't condone the Patriots' actions there, there is some responsibility on the part of the Rams to make sure personel from the opposing team aren't hanging around the practice, much less hanging around with a video camera.
I agree that I think it's pretty stupid how involved Congress is getting involved in stuff like this, especially when there are problems like wars, social issues, social retirement, health care, etc to be addressed. HOWEVER, I read this today from
Peter King's article:
From Noah Charles, of Philadelphia: \"A few days ago you criticized Arlen Specter for getting involved in Spygate, suggesting it's not any of Congress' business. While I agree with you that Specter's comparison of the NFL's tape destruction to the CIA's tape destruction was ridiculous political hyperbole, I think you are missing the larger point:
\"The NFL has a congressional antitrust exemption. That makes the NFL's business Congress' business. The antitrust exemption imposes on the NFL a sort of public trust. If teams [as opposed to individual players] are engaged in organized cheating and the league itself is doing nothing about it, it calls the credibility of the entire sport into question. The NFL is big business, and the Super Bowl is the biggest cultural event of the year. If the Pats cheated in 2002, and the league knows or willfully chooses not to know, then Congress might be protecting a tainted product from competition. In that case, it's more like professional wrestling than sports.\"
While I have no interest in seeing the NFL fail, I agree with Sen. Specter that the league's destruction of the evidence is highly suspicious, and was handled in a way that does not provide the viewing, paying public with confidence that what we are watching on the field is the product of two teams matching skills and wits on a level playing field. If the league cannot guarantee to the public the integrity of the product, then Congress is justified in re-thinking the antitrust exemption. Anyway, that's just my two cents.\"
Now it makes A LOT more sense as to why Specter is possibly getting involved...