In the span of 18 months, Javon Walker has had a teammate die in his arms and has been brutally assaulted himself (from people he KNEW). Walker's friends hope he starts accepting their offers to help. Why don't these guys just get it? They are so fortunate to live in this country and make the kind of money they do. Suspend him for a year or two, with NO paycheck..MAYBE then, it will sink in.
In the span of 18 months, Javon Walker has had a teammate die in his arms and has been brutally assaulted himself (from people he KNEW). Walker's friends hope he starts accepting their offers to help. Why don't these guys just get it? They are so fortunate to live in this country and make the kind of money they do. Suspend him for a year or two, with NO paycheck..MAYBE then, it will sink in.
Just listen. He got his ass kicked by people he KNEW, he got willingly into the vehicle the guy who kicked his ass was driving. Poor judgement, obviously. This guy who kicked JW ass also, has many past charges against. He is a bad dude. If you were a pro athlete, shouldn't you be more careful with you are with? What don't you understand? I shouldn't even have to point this out. Even his teammates understand this and are offering their help. You honestly didn't "get" this? You think this is funny, and laugh? I think it is sad. BOL.||confused.gif' border=0>
Just listen. He got his ass kicked by people he KNEW, he got willingly into the vehicle the guy who kicked his ass was driving. Poor judgement, obviously. This guy who kicked JW ass also, has many past charges against. He is a bad dude. If you were a pro athlete, shouldn't you be more careful with you are with? What don't you understand? I shouldn't even have to point this out. Even his teammates understand this and are offering their help. You honestly didn't "get" this? You think this is funny, and laugh? I think it is sad. BOL.||confused.gif' border=0>
i thought people came and got him in his hotel? so what that he knew him. whats the percentage of girls who get raped that know their attacker||confused.gif' border=0> javon walker just got raped but in his pockets thats all. what are his teamates going to help him out with?
i thought people came and got him in his hotel? so what that he knew him. whats the percentage of girls who get raped that know their attacker||confused.gif' border=0> javon walker just got raped but in his pockets thats all. what are his teamates going to help him out with?
The story is JW hopped in the car with 2 people he met at the club. He didn't know these guys. But when you're drunk and people offer something you can't refuse, you make bad decisions. JW did that. But you figured millionaires like him would hire a bodyguard or two.
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The story is JW hopped in the car with 2 people he met at the club. He didn't know these guys. But when you're drunk and people offer something you can't refuse, you make bad decisions. JW did that. But you figured millionaires like him would hire a bodyguard or two.
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Would you want JW as an employee? Not me.
for the most part the league and teams dont give a crap. i know they say they do but if they did how many superstars would be on teams. they want someone as an employee who is gonna put that shiny trophy in their office and that big fat ring on their finger and most importantly wads of cash in their pocket. do you understand?
Would you want JW as an employee? Not me.
for the most part the league and teams dont give a crap. i know they say they do but if they did how many superstars would be on teams. they want someone as an employee who is gonna put that shiny trophy in their office and that big fat ring on their finger and most importantly wads of cash in their pocket. do you understand?
He makes poor decisions....you really hang out with people who would rob you? Are his teammates offering him help just because? GL 730champ!||an_cheers.gif' border=0>
He makes poor decisions....you really hang out with people who would rob you? Are his teammates offering him help just because? GL 730champ!||an_cheers.gif' border=0>
yeah so he got in the car for a ride home so he wouldnt catch a dui instead he caught a beatdown||an_roll_laugh.gif' border=0> he is a target should of had his gun on him then we would be talking about a different story||an_light.gif' border=0>
yeah so he got in the car for a ride home so he wouldnt catch a dui instead he caught a beatdown||an_roll_laugh.gif' border=0> he is a target should of had his gun on him then we would be talking about a different story||an_light.gif' border=0>
I would never jump into a car with somebody I just met in LV. Are you kidding me? And I am not even close to be rich or famous....I believe I can make better decisions/common sense than that...but that is just me.
I would never jump into a car with somebody I just met in LV. Are you kidding me? And I am not even close to be rich or famous....I believe I can make better decisions/common sense than that...but that is just me.
some people are friendly like that i dont know? im sure there are stories where a guy has met another guy hopped in his car and they become best of friends from a random night.||surprised.gif' border=0>||reallyhappy.gif' border=0>||an_violin.gif' border=0>||an_tongueout.gif' border=0>||an_drunksick.gif' border=0>||an_baby.gif' border=0>||an_laugh.gif' border=0>||an_beatup.gif' border=0>||an_wink.gif' border=0>||an_roll_laugh.gif' border=0>
some people are friendly like that i dont know? im sure there are stories where a guy has met another guy hopped in his car and they become best of friends from a random night.||surprised.gif' border=0>||reallyhappy.gif' border=0>||an_violin.gif' border=0>||an_tongueout.gif' border=0>||an_drunksick.gif' border=0>||an_baby.gif' border=0>||an_laugh.gif' border=0>||an_beatup.gif' border=0>||an_wink.gif' border=0>||an_roll_laugh.gif' border=0>
If you guy watch TMZ, Andy Dick the comedian/actor jumps in cars with strangers all the time. For some reason stars always think its okay to do so, until something like this happens to JW. Live and learn.
If you guy watch TMZ, Andy Dick the comedian/actor jumps in cars with strangers all the time. For some reason stars always think its okay to do so, until something like this happens to JW. Live and learn.
||an_roll_laugh.gif' border=0>||Peace_5.gif' border=0> Not stressed....just worried you might have children!!! Lmfao! ||thumbs_up.gif' border=0>||an_cheers.gif' border=0>
||an_roll_laugh.gif' border=0>||Peace_5.gif' border=0> Not stressed....just worried you might have children!!! Lmfao! ||thumbs_up.gif' border=0>||an_cheers.gif' border=0>
Although I didn't think it was possible, the latest Don Imus controversy is almost as ridiculous as the first one. Imus recently made an off-hand remark on his radio show about Adam "Pacman" Jones' string of arrests, noting that "Pacman" was black. "There you go," he said. "Now we know." Some people chose to infer that Imus meant that Jones' blackness lay at the heart of some inherent criminal proclivity. Suddenly people are up in arms, ready to gather a posse, fire the torches and go after Imus. Again.
Never mind that his explanation is completely plausible. Since his kerfuffle after he referred to the Rutgers women's basketball team as "nappy headed hoes," there have been people out there unfulfilled by Imus' public, ugly mea culpa, unhappy with his dismissal and completely predictable return to the airwaves. These people, consumed by the business of taking offense, have been waiting for him to say anything that could be construed as racist, ready to pounce and take him down. Again. He may say something insensitive to blacks in the future, but his latest sound bites don't rate.
I found his comments about the Rutgers team insensitive but only slightly off-sides. Imus commented that the girls team was a little mannish and rough-looking (real talk). These observations were not altogether shocking or fresh; black commentators have said similar things about other female basketball players for years. And even though his jibe was consistent with his other shtick designed to rile sensitive ears, Imus should not have called those young women names—they didn't have a knock coming. He apologized. His mistake then, as now, was trying to explain himself.
Once you begin apologizing, you can never stop, and it will never be enough for some. So he has allowed himself to be put under the thumb of the preacher-pimps and race cops who make a living off the misery and discontent of the black bourgeoisie who believe it is their responsibility to decide when and how much black people should be offended by the white man's ignorance.
They sit in country-club canteens parsing language and reviewing tape in hopes of finding evidence of racism. Then someone can ring the BlackFone™ and have the Rev. Al Sharpton rush to the scene of the crime with a trunk full of T-shirts demanding an apology, maybe even shake loose a donation or two for good measure. When Sharpton's on message, he's sharp, but who can tell anymore? Sharpton is an uneven activist who has trained the media to turn to him as the arbiter of race and Pope of Blackness. America waits breathlessly for his ruling on this week's racial injustice. Most of America. Not me.
Imus is in the business of talk radio, and his business is caustic wit and irreverence. But if Imus can't order a cup of coffee—black—without a special dispensation, without the need of some kind of interpreter or co-signer, then soon he'll be out of business, along with a lot of other folks. Black folks. Because when you start trying to censor other people, you're next.
Although I didn't think it was possible, the latest Don Imus controversy is almost as ridiculous as the first one. Imus recently made an off-hand remark on his radio show about Adam "Pacman" Jones' string of arrests, noting that "Pacman" was black. "There you go," he said. "Now we know." Some people chose to infer that Imus meant that Jones' blackness lay at the heart of some inherent criminal proclivity. Suddenly people are up in arms, ready to gather a posse, fire the torches and go after Imus. Again.
Never mind that his explanation is completely plausible. Since his kerfuffle after he referred to the Rutgers women's basketball team as "nappy headed hoes," there have been people out there unfulfilled by Imus' public, ugly mea culpa, unhappy with his dismissal and completely predictable return to the airwaves. These people, consumed by the business of taking offense, have been waiting for him to say anything that could be construed as racist, ready to pounce and take him down. Again. He may say something insensitive to blacks in the future, but his latest sound bites don't rate.
I found his comments about the Rutgers team insensitive but only slightly off-sides. Imus commented that the girls team was a little mannish and rough-looking (real talk). These observations were not altogether shocking or fresh; black commentators have said similar things about other female basketball players for years. And even though his jibe was consistent with his other shtick designed to rile sensitive ears, Imus should not have called those young women names—they didn't have a knock coming. He apologized. His mistake then, as now, was trying to explain himself.
Once you begin apologizing, you can never stop, and it will never be enough for some. So he has allowed himself to be put under the thumb of the preacher-pimps and race cops who make a living off the misery and discontent of the black bourgeoisie who believe it is their responsibility to decide when and how much black people should be offended by the white man's ignorance.
They sit in country-club canteens parsing language and reviewing tape in hopes of finding evidence of racism. Then someone can ring the BlackFone™ and have the Rev. Al Sharpton rush to the scene of the crime with a trunk full of T-shirts demanding an apology, maybe even shake loose a donation or two for good measure. When Sharpton's on message, he's sharp, but who can tell anymore? Sharpton is an uneven activist who has trained the media to turn to him as the arbiter of race and Pope of Blackness. America waits breathlessly for his ruling on this week's racial injustice. Most of America. Not me.
Imus is in the business of talk radio, and his business is caustic wit and irreverence. But if Imus can't order a cup of coffee—black—without a special dispensation, without the need of some kind of interpreter or co-signer, then soon he'll be out of business, along with a lot of other folks. Black folks. Because when you start trying to censor other people, you're next.
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