FatHobbit;391450 wrote:I don't think anyone would argue that a murderer deserves the same penalty as someone who got their first speeding ticket. Different crimes (and patterns of bad decisions) deserve different punishments.
I don't disagree with any of this. The direction of the conversation has been drunk driving and zero tolerance as it relates to remaining on a particular sports team. LJ says zero tolerance is a cop out and each case should be looked at individually. I don't see it as a cop out as much as it is a statement that some things will not be tolerated.
One side says that coaches are mentors and when kids make these "mistakes" they should be nurtured...or something. I would just say that kids have to bring some type of morals or value system to the table already. Most people are taught that stealing is wrong at a young age. I don't buy the "kid mistake" argument for an 18 year old, regardless of how much he stole, when my seven year old knows that stealing is wrong.
Drunk driving is a pretty popular issue. Its on billboards, tv, radio, pretty much everywhere you go. So aside from the legal implications, if there's a zero tolerance policy on that particular issue in order to play football, I don't know what is unfair about it. If a coach doesn't want a player who makes that type of bad decision, I certainly understand it. You probably aren't going to see a zero tolerance policy for a college football team that says, "if you get caught speeding you are off the team".