Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem isn't so much with the drinking. It's the callous way that they treated a human being who was slowly dying right in front of them. All they had to do was pick up a phone and dial 911.
And then they lied about what happened after he finally did get to a hospital!
Wait - they did? Are you referring to all the CYA texts or did they affirmatively lie to doctors or something?
They lied to the ER doctors about what had happened to him.
Hadn't heard that - what did they say happened?
In addition to not disclosing what happened to Tim and the exact timing, they attempted to clean up the evidence, deleted text messages discussing it, were seen on surveillance punching him, moving him, throwing water on him etc. They lied to everyone they spoke with regarding what happened.
And don't forget they also put a clean shirt on him before he was taken from the house - so he'd look 'better' to the doctors. Bc of course no doctor will question 12+ hrs of injuries, brain responses etc. bc he was a fresh spiffy polo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The blame needs to be placed on the individuals who made the decision to allow their "brother" to die. This is not the same as the Sandusky scandal.
Of course the blame needs to be placed on the individuals. But, I don't know anyone who, if he had the choice, would willingly attend a college with a terrible moral stigma.
That argument may work when describing the rich Washington kids who choose to go there, but what about the struggling kids from PA who need to attend an in-state school for econonomic reasons?
+1
Most people just go to their local state schools. Going out of state is expensive for most people.
Almost 40% of Penn State students are out-of-state.
I was a psu Schreyer honors alum who was schocked at how many OOS kids were there. I didn't get it. Except for those who were Jefferson med direct admits, why would you go to psu out of state
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something is wrong with the character of people who would voluntarily choose Penn State. That's why all this inexplicable souless activist occurs there. The people and atmosphere are toxic.
The young men who made the conscious decision to allow this man to suffer and die without making any effort to help should be held responsible. Penn State did not "make" these men behave in such a heartless manner. The issue here is the complete lack of any ethics, moral responsibility, or basic common sense. These kids did not "become" this way because of the college they went to.
Psu is responsible because it accepted these kids without screening out their profile
Seriously?? Everyone has an opinion regarding this matter, however, at least make a valid argument...
Yeah it's a stupid concept. It's basically a general northeast population at a large state school. You get what you get.
However the school is responsible for cultivating citizens who don't condemn a football coach turning a blind eye to repeated violent child sexual abuse for 20+ years and for that they should be condemned. The whole school needs to work on their ethics and maybe give up football for 10 years until they get that straightened out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem isn't so much with the drinking. It's the callous way that they treated a human being who was slowly dying right in front of them. All they had to do was pick up a phone and dial 911.
And then they lied about what happened after he finally did get to a hospital!
Wait - they did? Are you referring to all the CYA texts or did they affirmatively lie to doctors or something?
They lied to the ER doctors about what had happened to him.
Hadn't heard that - what did they say happened?
In addition to not disclosing what happened to Tim and the exact timing, they attempted to clean up the evidence, deleted text messages discussing it, were seen on surveillance punching him, moving him, throwing water on him etc. They lied to everyone they spoke with regarding what happened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The guy's older brother goes to PSU as well. When Tim hadn't come home, his roommate called Tim's brother and I guess the brother had a hunch bc he called the local emergency room and was told his younger brother was there. How awful. Those sons of bitches. They could have dumped him outside at 10 pm, called his brother and said - come get him, he may need to go to the hospital but you figure it out. The older bro had decided frat life wasn't for him and he suspected it wouldn't be for Tim either but when he said he wanted to pledge, the older bro told him about the craziness, to not careful, walk away anytime etc. So I fully believe if the older bro had gotten a phone call, he would have been there and Tim would have gotten care 12 hrs earlier.
Wow, that makes what happened even more horrible.
The brother was with his parents when they gave an interview to NBC the other day. He looked so angry.
Now I get why.
Truly horrific.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something is wrong with the character of people who would voluntarily choose Penn State. That's why all this inexplicable souless activist occurs there. The people and atmosphere are toxic.
The young men who made the conscious decision to allow this man to suffer and die without making any effort to help should be held responsible. Penn State did not "make" these men behave in such a heartless manner. The issue here is the complete lack of any ethics, moral responsibility, or basic common sense. These kids did not "become" this way because of the college they went to.
Psu is responsible because it accepted these kids without screening out their profile
Seriously?? Everyone has an opinion regarding this matter, however, at least make a valid argument...
Yeah it's a stupid concept. It's basically a general northeast population at a large state school. You get what you get.
However the school is responsible for cultivating citizens who don't condemn a football coach turning a blind eye to repeated violent child sexual abuse for 20+ years and for that they should be condemned. The whole school needs to work on their ethics and maybe give up football for 10 years until they get that straightened out.
But again, Penn State did not "cultivate and create", people are who they are. There are some people who will never hear anything that does not fit with his or her beliefs. On the other hand, there are many people who do not fully research a topic prior to making a broad general opinion. It goes both ways.
Yes, you are who you are but you are also greatly influenced by your environment and the collective culture of the people around you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something is wrong with the character of people who would voluntarily choose Penn State. That's why all this inexplicable souless activist occurs there. The people and atmosphere are toxic.
The young men who made the conscious decision to allow this man to suffer and die without making any effort to help should be held responsible. Penn State did not "make" these men behave in such a heartless manner. The issue here is the complete lack of any ethics, moral responsibility, or basic common sense. These kids did not "become" this way because of the college they went to.
Psu is responsible because it accepted these kids without screening out their profile
Seriously?? Everyone has an opinion regarding this matter, however, at least make a valid argument...
Yeah it's a stupid concept. It's basically a general northeast population at a large state school. You get what you get.
However the school is responsible for cultivating citizens who don't condemn a football coach turning a blind eye to repeated violent child sexual abuse for 20+ years and for that they should be condemned. The whole school needs to work on their ethics and maybe give up football for 10 years until they get that straightened out.
But again, Penn State did not "cultivate and create", people are who they are. There are some people who will never hear anything that does not fit with his or her beliefs. On the other hand, there are many people who do not fully research a topic prior to making a broad general opinion. It goes both ways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something is wrong with the character of people who would voluntarily choose Penn State. That's why all this inexplicable souless activist occurs there. The people and atmosphere are toxic.
The young men who made the conscious decision to allow this man to suffer and die without making any effort to help should be held responsible. Penn State did not "make" these men behave in such a heartless manner. The issue here is the complete lack of any ethics, moral responsibility, or basic common sense. These kids did not "become" this way because of the college they went to.
Psu is responsible because it accepted these kids without screening out their profile
Seriously?? Everyone has an opinion regarding this matter, however, at least make a valid argument...
Yeah it's a stupid concept. It's basically a general northeast population at a large state school. You get what you get.
However the school is responsible for cultivating citizens who don't condemn a football coach turning a blind eye to repeated violent child sexual abuse for 20+ years and for that they should be condemned. The whole school needs to work on their ethics and maybe give up football for 10 years until they get that straightened out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something is wrong with the character of people who would voluntarily choose Penn State. That's why all this inexplicable souless activist occurs there. The people and atmosphere are toxic.
The young men who made the conscious decision to allow this man to suffer and die without making any effort to help should be held responsible. Penn State did not "make" these men behave in such a heartless manner. The issue here is the complete lack of any ethics, moral responsibility, or basic common sense. These kids did not "become" this way because of the college they went to.
Psu is responsible because it accepted these kids without screening out their profile
Seriously?? Everyone has an opinion regarding this matter, however, at least make a valid argument...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Something is wrong with the character of people who would voluntarily choose Penn State. That's why all this inexplicable souless activist occurs there. The people and atmosphere are toxic.
The young men who made the conscious decision to allow this man to suffer and die without making any effort to help should be held responsible. Penn State did not "make" these men behave in such a heartless manner. The issue here is the complete lack of any ethics, moral responsibility, or basic common sense. These kids did not "become" this way because of the college they went to.
Psu is responsible because it accepted these kids without screening out their profile
Anonymous wrote:The guy's older brother goes to PSU as well. When Tim hadn't come home, his roommate called Tim's brother and I guess the brother had a hunch bc he called the local emergency room and was told his younger brother was there. How awful. Those sons of bitches. They could have dumped him outside at 10 pm, called his brother and said - come get him, he may need to go to the hospital but you figure it out. The older bro had decided frat life wasn't for him and he suspected it wouldn't be for Tim either but when he said he wanted to pledge, the older bro told him about the craziness, to not careful, walk away anytime etc. So I fully believe if the older bro had gotten a phone call, he would have been there and Tim would have gotten care 12 hrs earlier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem isn't so much with the drinking. It's the callous way that they treated a human being who was slowly dying right in front of them. All they had to do was pick up a phone and dial 911.
And then they lied about what happened after he finally did get to a hospital!
Wait - they did? Are you referring to all the CYA texts or did they affirmatively lie to doctors or something?
They lied to the ER doctors about what had happened to him.
Hadn't heard that - what did they say happened?
In addition to not disclosing what happened to Tim and the exact timing, they attempted to clean up the evidence, deleted text messages discussing it, were seen on surveillance punching him, moving him, throwing water on him etc. They lied to everyone they spoke with regarding what happened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem isn't so much with the drinking. It's the callous way that they treated a human being who was slowly dying right in front of them. All they had to do was pick up a phone and dial 911.
And then they lied about what happened after he finally did get to a hospital!
Wait - they did? Are you referring to all the CYA texts or did they affirmatively lie to doctors or something?
They lied to the ER doctors about what had happened to him.
Hadn't heard that - what did they say happened?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem isn't so much with the drinking. It's the callous way that they treated a human being who was slowly dying right in front of them. All they had to do was pick up a phone and dial 911.
And then they lied about what happened after he finally did get to a hospital!
Wait - they did? Are you referring to all the CYA texts or did they affirmatively lie to doctors or something?
They lied to the ER doctors about what had happened to him.