I know it's convenient, but holy crap, it gets old. I would almost welcome a Bruiser dissertation on the evils of billboards more than these "Sidney sucks" posts. By the way, LEWIS played like a ****** tonight, not Sidney.
I completely agree with this, andsocial mediahas exacerbated the problem. Once upon a not to distant past,you couldcuss the efforts of a player in the comfort of his own home withyour drunk buddies. Now,you and every single drunk buddy take toFacebook/Twitter/Message Boards to dogout a player. Now, while I still cringe at the swan-ish "players might read this message board" theory,they definitelyare onTwitter and Facebook. If you take it out of the context of sports,can you name any other situation where this would be deemed acceptable behavior by anyone?It's flat out bullying hidden behind the excuse of "Ijust want MSU to succeed." But on the internet, where you often think thatall the other people out there are exactly like you in every single way,you say stuff you wouldn't dare utter to someone's face, or even in a crowd of actual people. And the subject of the rant? Well, they're playing"big boy sports" right? Theyshouldn't be affected byyour words right? In fact, they should get over it and it will make them better right?Don't be ridiculous. Imagine if you logged onto toFacebook and it was nothing but people talking about how fat you were, how lazy you were, how much of a wasteyou were, how people would like it better if you weren't around. You sound likea bunch of bullying high schoolgirls.Incognegro said:there are too many people taking their displeasure of an athlete way too far.
Anyone else see the irony in this post? No one should say that Sidney sucks but it is OK to call Lewis a ******?DawgBalls2 said:I know it's convenient, but holy crap, it gets old. I would almost welcome a Bruiser dissertation on the evils of billboards more than these "Sidney sucks" posts. By the way, LEWIS played like a ****** tonight, not Sidney.