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First decommit at OSU

Just wait until these recruits from California, Texas, Florida, etc start hearing it from their friends and family about what a disgusting POS they chose to play for is. They have a ton of options and all of them are better than playing for a liar with zero credibility who harbers abusers.
 
You miss that grand jury report? It’s an epidemic in the Catholic church. Surely you can see that.
Yes, I read GJ report. I've also read a few others. You realize that that report was written by a completely one-sided prosecution whose lead dog thinks he's going to use this stuff to get elected governor.

So, what did you think of the Sandusky GJ reports?
 
Meyer underperforms with the talent that team has on hand. Only Alabama has more and that may be debatable. But you don't see Ohio St in the playoff every year like Bama does with that talent. In fact, we've played them about straight up with classes that were in the 40s, 30s, and 20s in their rankings. Ohio St doesn't need much of a drop off in recruiting to fall hard. Meyer isn't getting the results he should now with every single one of their classes being elite.

Now, the one thing that will actually make the Buckeyes give a damn about abuse is if it hurts their football.

We are seeing the first of probably many rejections by recruits with actual values of an Ohio St program and school that seems to have none. How far will it go? Well, when the kids of high values and high talent start rejecting Ohio St, they are left with high talent and people with no values and that will eventually turn into how Meyer killed the Gator program. The question is how long the Buckeyes will be anchored to a coach who is slowly killing them because he has no remaining credibility.

In his defense Ohio state has a much tougher row to hoe in conference than bama. With the talent bama has they should be undefeated every year and they aren’t. If they played in the big ten east they wouldn’t make the playoff every year.
 
You realize that that report was written by a completely one-sided prosecution whose lead dog thinks he's going to use this stuff to get elected governor.

I knew two priests on the list (one was administrative failure, the other actual abuse). The one was abusing someone I probably knew — he’s still anonymous but went to school after me probably in class with one of my three younger siblings.

I always thought there was something creepy about the rectory. Maybe I sensed what was happening. Maybe not.
 
I knew two priests on the list (one was administrative failure, the other actual abuse). The one was abusing someone I probably knew — he’s still anonymous but went to school after me probably in class with one of my three younger siblings.

I always thought there was something creepy about the rectory. Maybe I sensed what was happening. Maybe not.

The basketball coach from my high school was convicted of recording boys showering in the locker room with hidden cameras. Pillar of the community type guy. Probably had political aspirations. He had a mandatory shower policy for his teams and it always struck me as odd/felt off even when I was 13/14 in the early 2000s.
 
In his defense Ohio state has a much tougher row to hoe in conference than bama. With the talent bama has they should be undefeated every year and they aren’t. If they played in the big ten east they wouldn’t make the playoff every year.
I would agree as of the last maybe 2 years, before that it was widely believed that the SEC was the toughest conference.
 
Yes, I read GJ report. I've also read a few others. You realize that that report was written by a completely one-sided prosecution whose lead dog thinks he's going to use this stuff to get elected governor.

So, what did you think of the Sandusky GJ reports?

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church_sexual_abuse_cases

In a 2001 apology, John Paul II called sexual abuse within the Church "a profound contradiction of the teaching and witness of Jesus Christ".[15]Benedict XVI apologised, met with victims, and spoke of his "shame" at the evil of abuse, calling for perpetrators to be brought to justice, and denouncing mishandling by church authorities.[16][17] In 2018, Pope Francis began by accusing victims of fabricating allegations,[18] but by April was apologizing for his "tragic error"[19] and by August was expressing "shame and sorrow" for the tragic history,[20] without, however, introducing concrete measures either to prosecute abusers or to help victims.[21]

The abused include boys and girls, some as young as 3 years old, with the majority between the ages of 11 and 14.[2][3][4][5]The accusations began to receive isolated, sporadic publicity from the late 1980s. Many of these involved cases in which a figure was accused of decades of abuse; such allegations were frequently made by adults or older youths years after the abuse occurred. Cases have also been brought against members of the Catholic hierarchy who covered up sex abuse allegations and moved abusive priests to other parishes, where abuse continued.[6][7]

By the 1990s, the cases began to receive significant media and public attention in some countries, especially in Canada, the United States, Australiaand, through a series of television documentaries such as Suffer The Children (UTV, 1994), Ireland.[8] A critical investigation by The Boston Globe in 2002 led to widespread media coverage of the issue in the United States, later dramatized in Tom McCarthy's film Spotlight. Over the last decade, widespread abuse has been exposed in Europe,[9][10] Australia, Chile, and the USA.

From 2001 to 2010 the Holy See, the central governing body of the Catholic Church, considered sex abuse allegations involving about 3,000 priests dating back fifty years,[11] reflecting worldwide patterns of long-term abuse as well as the Church hierarchy's pattern of regularly covering up reports of abuse.
 
....and a perfectly good Anti Ohio State thread ruined by religion.

:mad:
Psuro…. I have to "throw a flag" that sig photo is one that you used in the past. That is a serious error in decorum :)
By the way, I still haven't figured out how she placed those beers there :)
 
Mudslide prediction in Cbus. Once he's gone - or his persona is gone (which it already is), recruits are going to look elsewhere. Like Happy Valley.
 
In his defense Ohio state has a much tougher row to hoe in conference than bama. With the talent bama has they should be undefeated every year and they aren’t. If they played in the big ten east they wouldn’t make the playoff every year.
Wrong - Bama would do just as well. Boggles my mind those who sell them short. Their run under Saban has been spectacular and the SEC West is almost regularly the toughest sub conference. The Big 10 East has finally achieved some sort of parity recently.
 
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church_sexual_abuse_cases

In a 2001 apology, John Paul II called sexual abuse within the Church "a profound contradiction of the teaching and witness of Jesus Christ".[15]Benedict XVI apologised, met with victims, and spoke of his "shame" at the evil of abuse, calling for perpetrators to be brought to justice, and denouncing mishandling by church authorities.[16][17] In 2018, Pope Francis began by accusing victims of fabricating allegations,[18] but by April was apologizing for his "tragic error"[19] and by August was expressing "shame and sorrow" for the tragic history,[20] without, however, introducing concrete measures either to prosecute abusers or to help victims.[21]

The abused include boys and girls, some as young as 3 years old, with the majority between the ages of 11 and 14.[2][3][4][5]The accusations began to receive isolated, sporadic publicity from the late 1980s. Many of these involved cases in which a figure was accused of decades of abuse; such allegations were frequently made by adults or older youths years after the abuse occurred. Cases have also been brought against members of the Catholic hierarchy who covered up sex abuse allegations and moved abusive priests to other parishes, where abuse continued.[6][7]

By the 1990s, the cases began to receive significant media and public attention in some countries, especially in Canada, the United States, Australiaand, through a series of television documentaries such as Suffer The Children (UTV, 1994), Ireland.[8] A critical investigation by The Boston Globe in 2002 led to widespread media coverage of the issue in the United States, later dramatized in Tom McCarthy's film Spotlight. Over the last decade, widespread abuse has been exposed in Europe,[9][10] Australia, Chile, and the USA.

From 2001 to 2010 the Holy See, the central governing body of the Catholic Church, considered sex abuse allegations involving about 3,000 priests dating back fifty years,[11] reflecting worldwide patterns of long-term abuse as well as the Church hierarchy's pattern of regularly covering up reports of abuse.
You could be the editor of that wiki page. Have you read the Sandusky GJ report? What is your opinion?
 
Wrong - Bama would do just as well. Boggles my mind those who sell them short. Their run under Saban has been spectacular and the SEC West is almost regularly the toughest sub conference. The Big 10 East has finally achieved some sort of parity recently.

Their schedules the last couple seasons have been bad. They have a one game season this year. They had a one game season last year and lost that game and were still put in. If our OOC was any combination of Alabama opponents not named auburn 78sweetrevenge would give himself an ulcer because of how bad it would be.
 
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church_sexual_abuse_cases

In a 2001 apology, John Paul II called sexual abuse within the Church "a profound contradiction of the teaching and witness of Jesus Christ".[15]Benedict XVI apologised, met with victims, and spoke of his "shame" at the evil of abuse, calling for perpetrators to be brought to justice, and denouncing mishandling by church authorities.[16][17] In 2018, Pope Francis began by accusing victims of fabricating allegations,[18] but by April was apologizing for his "tragic error"[19] and by August was expressing "shame and sorrow" for the tragic history,[20] without, however, introducing concrete measures either to prosecute abusers or to help victims.[21]

The abused include boys and girls, some as young as 3 years old, with the majority between the ages of 11 and 14.[2][3][4][5]The accusations began to receive isolated, sporadic publicity from the late 1980s. Many of these involved cases in which a figure was accused of decades of abuse; such allegations were frequently made by adults or older youths years after the abuse occurred. Cases have also been brought against members of the Catholic hierarchy who covered up sex abuse allegations and moved abusive priests to other parishes, where abuse continued.[6][7]

By the 1990s, the cases began to receive significant media and public attention in some countries, especially in Canada, the United States, Australiaand, through a series of television documentaries such as Suffer The Children (UTV, 1994), Ireland.[8] A critical investigation by The Boston Globe in 2002 led to widespread media coverage of the issue in the United States, later dramatized in Tom McCarthy's film Spotlight. Over the last decade, widespread abuse has been exposed in Europe,[9][10] Australia, Chile, and the USA.

From 2001 to 2010 the Holy See, the central governing body of the Catholic Church, considered sex abuse allegations involving about 3,000 priests dating back fifty years,[11] reflecting worldwide patterns of long-term abuse as well as the Church hierarchy's pattern of regularly covering up reports of abuse.


As activists demand that their universal platform policy be enabled in all such situations ...

“It is unacceptable to target, defame, or exclude anyone because of their

race, ethnicity, national origin, language, religion, gender, age,

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