MaxBuck
SoCal, Baby!
I don't mean to be insulting, truly, but this whole argument seems pretty pedantic and legalistic to me.cincibuck;1939216; said:How would you define "university" and "education" that would give a college the moral leverage needed to break, bend, modify, subordinate or ignore written rules agreed to when becoming members of an organization created, designed and authorized to monitor, enforce and adjudicate agreed to rules?
If, in order to field "a competent team," it is necessary to go against the spirit and letter of the laws the college agreed to, then the college is stating that ethics can be broken, bent, modified, subordinated or ignored in the pursuit of athletic excellence; especially "if everyone else is doing it."
Plausible deniability to me means that a system is in place such that minor violations are not "discovered," since they mean fuck-all in the grand scheme of things. Major violations, like getting $40,000 for one's autographs, would not fall within this realm.
In all honesty, the terms "moral leverage" and "subordinated ethics" do not have much apparent meaning to me.
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