LUconn wrote:belcherboy wrote:LUconn wrote:I did not say he was Judas. I'm saying you guys apparently would say "can't fault a man for bettering himself" to anybody. If somebody is saying to your face over and over and over the same thing, a thing that is above money and prestige, and then as soon as either of those are presented to him he does cartwheels to go against his word, I'm not gonna sit here and say "you go McKay! I'm not gonna be a hater! I'd do the same thing!" Where is your breaking point as to what you'll excuse? This isn't about bettering yourself. This is about character and integrity. We shouldn't cheer on those who are displaying that they don't have any just because they're coming out on top.
Why bring up Judas then? People who are bitter bring up the "worst case scenario" when arguing IMO. I can't stand when people bring up Hitler or Judas in discussing something as trivial as a sports coach. Sorry, just a pet peave of mine, nothing personal.
I don't know why he did what he did, but I can't question his integrity. I've seen people come and go from every business I've worked in (including ministry). People who seemed FULLY dedicated to what they were doing, and claimed dedication, but when does it become alright when someone you depend on leaves? If he continues to say the same thing but leaves 5 years later, does he keep his character and integrity?
To me this feels like the dumped boyfriend/girlfriend. We felt the relationship was great, and then we get dumped for someone else. Just my outside perspective.
It's called hyperbole. You use the extreme case scenario to make your point effectively. I started using Cain because Judas is somewhat cliche, but Judas did it for the money so it was very parallel. From everything you've just said, I don't see why you can't question his integrity. It's like you're trying to hard to take some kind of high road you'll just excuse and ignore anything that happened. It's not the end of the world but what happened also isn't right. And we shouldn't be afraid to say that.
Thanks for the lesson, but it is a TERRIBLE use of hyperbole. Taking the most hated person in the history of the world, and comparing him to a former head basketball coach. Again, if it makes you feel better, than go for it.
My question is, when could McKay leave and keep his integrity? Does he have to tell everyone in advance he is leaving? Does he have to retire from Liberty to keep his integrity in tact? Would 5 years have made it better? Perhaps finishing his contract with us? How about guys like Calipari, is his integrity shot? I'm sure he told players and fans alike that he was "dedicated" to the Memphis program on many occasions? How do you think McKay should have handled himself here if he wanted to leave?