Class action lawyer Pat Salvi was on the radio yesterday, trying to win in the court of public opinion before having to actually put out facts.
Most importantly, he is trying to re-define hazing:
1) Hazing can be any emotional uncertainty felt by the victim, regardless of what others perceive (so if 29 of 30 players feel there was no hazing, doesn't matter, the outlier was still hazed).
2) Hazing doesn't have to be on-going. If you get made to feel uncomfortable once, then you were hazed.
3) Hazing doesn't need to affect the person in the moment. You can have repressed feelings that come out decades later, you can change your mind, and if you say so, you were hazed. There is no statute-of-limitations, so it's completely acceptable to go back in time and drag others through lawsuits.
4) Hazing is not an individual activity, conducted by individual players. Rather, hazing is an institutional activity. Salvi, of course, refuses to name names or bring action against individuals because that's not where the money is.
5) Coaches, administrators, staff, etc. must accept a player's version of events and react accordingly. There is no such thing as tough love, come-to-jesus, get-over-it, maybe-you're-crazy, or give-the-other-person-the-benefit-of-the-doubt. If a player claims to be a victim, then everyone must accept he/she was a victim, and everyone else must adjust their actions.
- Is this the world we want to live in?
- Aren't the majority of 17-22 year-olds hormone-laced idiots trying to figure out their way in the world?
- Does encouraging people to think of themselves as victims make them any healthier?
- We all saw Kain Colter be used by Class Action Lawyers, have his friendships with his teammates fray, and then have his life spiral out of control. The one guy who always stood by Kain is Coach Fitzgerald.
Listen to class action lawyer Pat Salvi for yourself below. Note: the radio host is NU alum Dan Proft, who was very skeptical of Salvi's motives.
Most importantly, he is trying to re-define hazing:
1) Hazing can be any emotional uncertainty felt by the victim, regardless of what others perceive (so if 29 of 30 players feel there was no hazing, doesn't matter, the outlier was still hazed).
2) Hazing doesn't have to be on-going. If you get made to feel uncomfortable once, then you were hazed.
3) Hazing doesn't need to affect the person in the moment. You can have repressed feelings that come out decades later, you can change your mind, and if you say so, you were hazed. There is no statute-of-limitations, so it's completely acceptable to go back in time and drag others through lawsuits.
4) Hazing is not an individual activity, conducted by individual players. Rather, hazing is an institutional activity. Salvi, of course, refuses to name names or bring action against individuals because that's not where the money is.
5) Coaches, administrators, staff, etc. must accept a player's version of events and react accordingly. There is no such thing as tough love, come-to-jesus, get-over-it, maybe-you're-crazy, or give-the-other-person-the-benefit-of-the-doubt. If a player claims to be a victim, then everyone must accept he/she was a victim, and everyone else must adjust their actions.
- Is this the world we want to live in?
- Aren't the majority of 17-22 year-olds hormone-laced idiots trying to figure out their way in the world?
- Does encouraging people to think of themselves as victims make them any healthier?
- We all saw Kain Colter be used by Class Action Lawyers, have his friendships with his teammates fray, and then have his life spiral out of control. The one guy who always stood by Kain is Coach Fitzgerald.
Listen to class action lawyer Pat Salvi for yourself below. Note: the radio host is NU alum Dan Proft, who was very skeptical of Salvi's motives.
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