rmcjacket23
Ravens Ring of Honor
Yeah I'm not really seeing barely any of the "he must be innocent" crowd. You're going to need to point those users out individually, because I'm not seeing anything like that.I don't want to get into a deep discussion, but this thread should shed light on why women are hard pressed to want to come forward. So many people who seem to be fully on the couldn't be Tucker train because he's good at football and it'd be beneficial if he's on the team and innocent than the other opposite.
But I will also say- in the case of Deshaun Watson, those women received death threats. I don't think anyone here is THAT unhinged, but people are with these celebrities.
Why wouldn't the stores come forward? I'd imagine coming forward would absolutely wreck their reputation and their business.
I don't have any actual insight into the case, but we have at least nine women who have come forward, people who have shared this being an issue YEARS ago, and a member on the board who was pointing toward substantial issues with Tucker all year.
It's really not looking good.
I think there's plenty of people, like me, who think adjudicating this process is wildly, wildly, wildly outside the scope of what a business like the NFL should be doing.
As for what the "victims" should have done, I could argue both sides for days. I think if you have specific women who refuse to come forward for years and years, there's really not a whole lot of other "solutions" to the problem. Same can be said for rapists, pedophiles, etc. Everybody just expects that there's going to be some sort of action from anybody other than the rapist and the victim that is going to help reduce the frequency of these issues, but historically, that's just never the case.
I have zero idea why the business wouldn't come forward. And they don't even need to do it publicly either. A simple phone call from business management to the police would at least act as some sort of deterrent. That information never needs to be made public.