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Sanctimonious Hypocrites Can't Diminish the Warmth for Joe Paterno

This was forwarded to me by a friend. The author is a retired Bloomsburg U professor who does commentary/editorial bits for WKOK in Sunbury.

(Also, sorry, but I couldn't get the paragraphs to indent for some reason)



Sanctimonious Hypocrites
Can't Diminish the Warmth for Joe Paterno

by Walter Brasch


Gov. Tom Corbett (R-Pa.) praised Joe Paterno and ordered flags on all state buildings to fly at half-staff for four days.

That would be the same Tom Corbett who had said he was "personally disappointed" in Joe Paterno for not doing more to alert authorities in the Jerry Sandusky case, while acknowledging that Paterno did nothing illegal and followed university rules for conduct.

That would be the same Tom Corbett who, as attorney general, assigned only one investigator to the case in 2009, while devoting almost innumerable personnel and financial resources to prosecute high-profile cases that could help lead him to the governor's office.
That would be the same Tom Corbett who had the authority to order the arrest of Jerry Sandusky as soon as the claims were made, but who allowed the investigation to drag two years.
That would be the same Tom Corbett who stepped up the investigation only in the third year, after he was elected governor.
That would be the same Tom Corbett who accepted about $200,000 in campaign donations from trustees of Sandusky's Second Mile foundation and then danced around questions of why, as governor, he authorized a $3 million grant to the Second Mile.
That would be the same Tom Corbett who as an ex-officio member of the Penn State Board of Trustees, with the power to increase or decrease state appropriations to the university, big-footed his presence to demand that the Trustees do something to Joe Paterno.
Now, let's look at the Board of Trustees. On Jan. 22, the day that Joe Paterno died from lung cancer, the Board issued a honey-dripped PR-laden written commemoration.
That, of course, would be the same Board that, influenced by the harpies of the media and a horde of the public who knew everything about everything, except people and football, had wanted to terminate Joe Paterno's contract after his teams had losing seasons in 2003 and 2004. He was too old, they said. He was getting senile, they claimed. His coaching strategy was too conservative, they declared with the shrill cry of a wounded hyena. But, an 11-1 season in 2005 quieted their panic. And so they stewed, knowing that a football coach, educator, philanthropist, and humanitarian had a greater reputation than all of them combined.
That would be the same Board that violated every expectation of due process, listened to the other sanctimonious hypocrites who were quick to condemn someone without knowing the facts, and by a cowardly and impersonal phone call violated four levels of the chain of command and fired Joe Paterno hours after he had announced his retirement. It was their pathetic way to make people believe they, not the most recognizable person in Penn State history, were in control. The reality, of course, is they botched the firing in a feeble attempt to protect themselves, not Penn State and, certainly, not the rights of a tenured full professor, who had given 61 years of service to the university.
That, of course, would be the same Board that should have known for at least six months, and probably longer, of a grand jury investigation into Jerry Sandusky's conduct, but apparently had no crisis management plan to deal with what would become the greatest scandal in its 156-year history.
That, of course, would be the same Board that had operated in a culture of secrecy that regularly violated the state's Sunshine law and enjoyed its status as receiving state tax moneys while not having to be under the glare of the public right-to-know law.
That, of course, would be the same board that includes the CEOs of U.S. Steel, Merck, and a major division of the Bank of New York Mellon; and an assortment of senior executives from insurance, investment, and education. Even a retired assistant managing editor of The New York Times is on the Board. And, yet, this Gang of 32, which should have known better, bumbled, stumbled, and proved that malfeasance and incompetence is what it should be best known for. For the most part, they acted like undergraduates struggling to earn a grade of "C" in a course in human relations, having already decided they didn't need the course in business communications. Based upon unsubstantiated puffed-up statements by the governor, the Board of Trustees, and a hyper-inflated mass media trapped in a 24/7 news cycle, a cowardly pair of U.S. senators, Bob Casey (D-Pa.) and Pat Toomey (R-Pa.), withdrew their nominations to award Joe Paterno the Presidential Medal of Freedom. The Big 10 removed the Paterno name from the Amos Alonzo Stagg-Joe Paterno championship trophy.
Now, let's turn to the new president. The Board forced the resignation of a respected 17-year president for not doing enough to investigate the Sandusky allegations. By most accounts, the new president, formerly the provost and executive vice-president, is a decent person with a good academic reputation. But, is it credible that if the No. 1 person should have known more and done more, how could the No. 2 person be ignorant of the allegations? Nevertheless, the Board sent the newly-minted president out on nothing less than a belated PR field trip to calm the rising storm against the Board for its incompetence and insensitivity in firing Joe Paterno. At three meetings with hundreds of alumni, the new president, facing alumni wrath, did little to alleviate their anger. But, he promised the university would do something-he didn't know what-he didn't know how or when-to honor Joe Paterno.
Of course, since the Board was so inept, secret, and hypocritical in its own actions, it had no idea what it was going to do. The Board statement the day of Joe Paterno's death merely stated the university "plans to honor him," and is considering "appropriate ways."
The greatest honor will not come from the Board, the administration, or even the Legislature, many of whom sought the media spotlight to pander to certain voters by condemning the coach. At the statue by Beaver Stadium, thousands of students, staff, faculty, and community residents are coming to pay their respects. Hundreds had met him, for he was one of the more accessible persons in the community, often walking home alone from practices and games; his phone number was in the book; his home was in a quiet residential area not a mansion on a hill reserved for the wealthy. Most of the mourners had never met him, but they all knew him.
On Tuesday, about 27,000 people from all over the United States stood in line up to three hours to walk past the body of Joe Paterno, guarded by past and present scholar-athletes. NFL super-stars and football fans, academics and those who never went to college, all were there to honor the man who was an outstanding quarterback and cornerback who earned an English literature degree from Brown University, one of the more prestigious in the country; a man who later created the "Grand Experiment" to develop and promote a winning football program that would make education and citizenship more important than sports, and would make "success with honor" more than words.
On Wednesday, thousands stood shoulder to shoulder and lined the streets of Penn State and State College, an honor guard as the hearse carrying Joe Paterno slowly moved from the Pasquerilla Spiritual Center, past Beaver Stadium, and to a private funeral. On Thursday, more than 12,000 packed the Bryce Jordan Center for a memorial service. The first 10,000 tickets were claimed within 10 minutes on Tuesday. Sue Paterno need not have worried when she quietly asked some mourners to keep her husband warm. When journalism turns into history, it will be written that Joe Paterno had done more than was expected, in every part of his life. The people, not the governor or the trustees who will quickly be forgotten in the cold, will keep Joe Paterno warm.

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Excellent , hard hitting article..... and

“There’s an obligation, a moral responsibility, for all adults to watch out for children, either your own or someone else,” Dambly said. “It was in our opinion that Joe Paterno did not meet his moral obligation and for that reason _ me, personally for that reason, I felt he could no longer lead the university and it was unanimous.”
Dambly insisted Paterno was not fired, although he never appeared as coach again. (Outrageous LIE !!!!)
Mark Dambly, you need to resign also.

by pink panther on Jan 30, 2012 6:11 PM EST reply actions  

This is really good.

I had the same thoughts about the hypocrisy of Corbett, BoT, journalists, etc. when Joe passed away. But I couldn’t express it as well as this guy just did.

All I could think of was how Mr. Potter in “It’s A Wonderful Life” praised Peter Bailey after he died and Bailey’s brother (Uncle Bailey) admonished him with “Oh, that’s fine Potter, coming from you, considering you probably drove him to his grave!”

Seriously, I immediately thought of that and couldn’t get it out of my head. I thought it was spot on.

by J Breezy on Jan 30, 2012 6:13 PM EST reply actions  

Indents disappearing - that almost always happens with copy and paste.

Preview then edit it with an “Enter” where every new paragraph should start.

by J Breezy on Jan 30, 2012 6:54 PM EST reply actions  

I'll remember that for next time.

My friend copied and pasted it into the email he sent. If he had sent the link, I would have posted it in the fanshots. Then again, no one would have read it there, so I guess this was for the best.

"I guess we had a couple of Catholics praying for US!" - JVP, after the down to the wire win over Notre Dame in 1987

by icavalera on Jan 31, 2012 3:08 PM EST up reply actions  

This is fan-damn-tastic

Thaaat’s a rec. And the hits just keep on coming.

In the dark days right after the presentment was made public, it was hard to imagine this kind of pushback being possible. But Phil Knight’s “villians” have made defending Joe so much easier. The tide has turned, and my spirit is buoyed by these kinds of pieces. Thanks for posting.

by Jitterbug on Jan 30, 2012 8:18 PM EST reply actions  

I think the truth is slowly starting to come out and the hysteria has died down.

It will be a long, slow road, but we have begun the journey. As more people actually pay attention to the facts, they slowly erase the speculation, and as the emotions subside, people begin to think with cooler heads. While there will always be people that choose to believe their opinions over fact, seeing things like this come out will help turn the tide of public opinion.

It is easy to go down into Hell; night and day, the gates of dark Death stand wide; but to climb back again, to retrace one's steps to the upper air - there's the rub, the task.

by Succss With Honor Always on Jan 30, 2012 8:54 PM EST up reply actions  

Maybe it's just me...

but NRO seems to be sitting on my comments rebutting the braying herd an awfully long time.

Unrepentant Joe Paterno Apologist®

by leeharvey418 on Jan 31, 2012 11:00 AM EST up reply actions  

Excellent article.

Ashame so few intelligent people exist in this world.

by FB6244 on Jan 31, 2012 8:58 AM EST reply actions  

Slowly

the old narrative is changing. It is going to keep doing so as long as we don’t stop.

If they ever tell my story let them say that I walked with giants. Men rise and fall like the winter wheat, but these names will never die. Let them say I lived in the time of Bradley, tamer of offenses. Let them say I lived in the time of Paterno.

by SarcasmJam on Jan 31, 2012 10:45 AM EST reply actions  

I really do believe...

That you will never in your lives read another Grand Jury Presentment… this was leaked for the sole purpose of creating said mass hysteria and making it easy to get rid of Joe and whoever else they could (Spanier, etc). Grand Jury testimony is supposed to be confidential and for the purpose of getting an indictment against the person charged. I look at all of the politics involved in this case (well documented in the article above) and it makes me mad that those linkages are conveniently removed from most of the Media’s coverage. The average reader shamefully will not take an extra minute to read something like this to understand the true picture probably b/c you won’t find it on ESPN. And not to rev up the consipiracy theorists, but I can help but wonder a little more what happened to Ray Gricar…

by PSU Jen on Jan 31, 2012 1:14 PM EST reply actions  

My Gricar Theory (not really)

When Surma realized that he couldn’t get rid of Joe as easily as he thought after the 2004 season, he hatched a plan that would take years to reach its logical conclusion and ensure that Surma became known for much more completing U.S. Steel’s removal from relevance.

First, he had to create a scandal that would shame Joe and force the BoT to fire him. Fortunately, Surma is a member of the Illuminati and thus, in addition to knowing the true location of the Holy Grail, was plugged into the Catholic Church’s pedophelia scandals and the offshoot investigations including the various JS investigations. Surma simply had to reach out to his buddy, and newly elected PA Attorney General, Tom Corbett, to convince the local prosecutor to convene the grand jury to investigate JS.

Because he had failed at this once before, Gricar refused and told Surma that this was a wild goose chase (not because JS was innocent, but there were no witnesses). Surma knew that Gricar would be a thorn in his side, but he isn’t a killer, so instead Surma asked him to visit his offices in Pittsburgh where Gricar mistakenly witnessed a murder.[FN1] Corbett then told Gricar that the murderer had deep mob connections and offered Gricar a spot in the witness protection program. Gricar accepted and was moved to Montana where he was later killed by renegade Sioux warriors while hunting Elk.

Now the only thing standing in Surma’s way the fact that Corbett wanted to run for governor. Both men knew that if Corbett brought the charges against Joe/PSU, that his chances in a statewide election would go down appreciable except with the three Pitt season ticket holders living in Ron Cook’s basement. Corbett had to be elected and safely distanced from the investigation before they could leak the grand jury presentment that Corbett and Surma co-write along with help from ESPN’s lead reporter on journalism ethics [FN2] and Corey Giger.

Once Corbett was elected, the plan was put in motion with Surma leaking the grand jury presentment in a PSU football off week to ensure that Joe would never coach another game on the Penn State sidelines.

[FN1] the murder was actually part of a Shakespeare in the Park production, but Gricar did not know that.

[FN2] this position has gone unfilled since 2007, when ESPN’s ill fated "Who’s Now" drove the writer who held this position to kill himself.

"WHY IS EVERYONE THE FREAKING STUPID?" BMAN13

by kijana's acl on Jan 31, 2012 2:07 PM EST up reply actions  

I needed to bump an amazon order over $25 for the free shipping, so I added David Icke's book.

I will confirm or refute your theory when it arrives.

Sandwich is the best
Bread use aside from making
Russians stand in line

by WorldBFat on Jan 31, 2012 2:49 PM EST up reply actions  

I should start writing those

typographical errors aside, conspiracy theories really don’t take that long. Just plug in some buzz words and high profile names, stick in a few jokes (even if they are so inside that only you get them) and voila! Beats lawyering.

"WHY IS EVERYONE THE FREAKING STUPID?" BMAN13

by kijana's acl on Jan 31, 2012 3:02 PM EST up reply actions  

good read!

Thinking u have a future in literature – or journalism!!

by PSU Jen on Jan 31, 2012 7:28 PM EST via iPhone app up reply actions  

"If you strike me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.".

These were the last words of Obi Wan Kanobi to Darth Vader.

Like a true Greek hero, JoePa shouldered the blame and became a target for public outcry for a tragedy not of his own making.

There are of course better ways that he could have exited this world, but I’ll bet he’s looking down and realizing that the past few months were somehow poetically appropriate: not good, not great; but also not terribly bad. With the benefit of hindsight, he took as much focus away from his beloved University as he could.

In time, I expect a Penn State resurgance.
Wonder if intercession could have anything to do with continued “success with honor.”?

by TonyLion on Feb 11, 2012 9:29 AM EST reply actions  

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