Troy Aikman's willingness to call out the league for dumb rules... call out refs for bad calls... call out QBs for poor play and call out coaches for bad decision making
quickly vaulting up the ranks of best color analysts
Golf with @WerderEdNFL + @SportsSturm! They’re back and supporting @DoItForDurrett again! Bob and The Hardline @dfwticket will also be broadcasting live this Friday at Texas Live! Be there and bid now!
https://t.co/AY5QDur9d0
i’d argue you’re too easily moved by the choice words. “privilege” and “equality” are selected because they confuse the notion of fairness. another way to frame his statement “if you’re accustomed to succeeding due to hard work, ingenuity, risk/sacrifice, and, sure, some amount of luck, having the outcomes reset so that everyone is rewarded more equally feels unfair.”
is succeeding after making good choices, sacrificing personally, and working hard really “privilege”?
is it oppressive that everyone doesn’t get to the same place?
perhaps the real oppression is the loss of individual liberties when naively egalitarian philosophies mutate into marxism, denying opportunities for individual sacrifice, effort, and achievement to be rewarded.
framed as privilege v equality misses the mark.. equality of opportunity and equality of outcome are v different things. silicon valley’s most successful are the immigrants who found america as one of the only places on earth where an individual with zero baseline privilege can struggle and sacrifice and effortfully succeed. calling them privileged after the fact seems hardly the point. but an easy one to make.