Thursday, November 7, 2024

NFL Threw Ray Rice under the bus

Raynard Jackson, NNPA Columnist
Raynard Jackson, NNPA Columnist

By Raynard Jackson, NNPA Columnist

By now most people have heard how Ray Rice has been thrown under the bus by the National Football League (NFL) and his former team, the Baltimore Ravens.

First, some background for the non-football fans. Rice was drafted by the Ravens in the second round (55th overall) of the 2008 NFL draft. He signed a 4-year contract for $ 2.805 million plus a $ 1.1 million signing bonus. Last year, he signed a 5-year, $ 35 million contract, paying him a $15 million signing bonus.

Second, here are some cold facts:

On February 15, both Rice and his then-fiancée, Janay Palmer, were arrested and charged with assault after a fight at an Atlantic City, N.J. casino.
On March 27, a grand jury indicted Rice on third-degree aggravated assault (charges against Palmer were dropped).
On March 28, Rice married Palmer (the date had been planned and announced before the assault charge).
On May 20, Rice was allowed to enter into a pretrial diversion program. Upon successful completion of the program, which will be a minimum of one year, the third-degree charge of aggravated assault causing serious bodily injury would be dismissed. The arrest would remain on his record, but with no conviction.
On July 24, the NFL suspends Rice for 2 games.
On July 25, the Raven’s organization rallies around Rice.
On August 28, the NFL established domestic violence policy for the league.
On September 8, the celebrity Website TMZ releases video of Rice knocking out his wife in an elevator and dragging her out of the elevator when it stopped .
On September 8, the Raven’s terminates Rice from the team.
On September 8, 2014, the NFL suspends Rice from the league indefinitely.
The Associated Press reports Sept. 10 that an law enforcement officials said he sent damaging video of Rice knocking out his then-fiancee to the NFL, despite League denials.
The above narrative is the only thing we know to be indisputable.

Prior to the video’s release, Rice had been caught on a security camera dragging his fiancée out of the elevator. That got him suspended for two games without pay. The penalty, which some criticized as too lenient, cost him about $530,000 in salary.

Now that everyone has seen the graphic video of the actual event, people have all of a sudden become filled with phony righteous indignation. Rice should have been punished not because of the video, but because of the act itself. But doing a bait-and-switch on his punishment amoung to pilling on.

Now many professional athletes, entertainers, politicians, and the public want to make public statements about how terrible a person Ray Rice is. Where was this outrage before the release of the video? Where is the outrage from these athletes and entertainers about the precious Black children being killed in Chicago? Where is their outrage about anything other than collecting a bigger paycheck?

To ultra-feminist groups, especiallye the National Organization of Women (NOW), why are you so selective in your outrage about how women are treated? To this day, you have never criticized Beyoncé for objectifying herself and women in her music. Yet your criticize Hip Hop for the same thing. Where is their outrage about a woman who raped a child in Arizona when he was 14 and now, at 20, is being forced to pay child support for a 6-year-old child he never knew existed?

It sickens me that people want to take, by all accounts, a good person and kick dirt in his face because he made a terribly horrible mistake; a mistake because there was nothing in his past that indicated this type of behavior. Even more troubling is the contention that Ray does not deserve a second chance. That’s a mighty high standard, considering human frailty.

There was absolutely nothing in the video that Rice hadn’t already admitted to police and the Baltimore Ravens. The Ravens have admitted as much. The difference is that the NFL faced a growing backlash, based on the release of the video

Rice is not guilty of breaking any laws. The criminal justice system – with everyone having access to the controversial video – treated Rice as the first-time offender that he was. He was dimissed by the NFL for violating a league’s “conduct” policy. In other words, for “conduct detrimental to the league.” Once that is invoked by the league or a team, based on their collective bargaining agreement, punishment can be anything from a fine to being banned from the sport.

The NFL, after meting out a 2-game suspension, changed the rules in the middle of the ride. After serving half of his 2-game suspension, Rice was retroactively given a death sentence.

Raynard Jackson is president & CEO of Raynard Jackson & Associates, LLC., a Washington, D.C.-based public relations/government affairs firm. He can be reached through his Web site, www.raynardjackson.com. You can also follow him on Twitter at raynard1223.

2 COMMENTS

  1. The US press loves to attack young black men (especially star entertainers) for rampant social ills. You (or anyone else) cannot tell me that spousal abuse is not a problem in the larger (white) society. So why is the “first” whipping boy for this problem a young black man?What has Ray Rice done to merit this distinction? Of course the answer is that he is black and a member of a group that cannot and will not defend him. This is not like the case we would have witnessed if he had been Jewish, white or even Hispanic.

    I can only wish him and his family success and peace in dealing with a problem that many in this country have to deal with.

  2. I believe what he did was wrong, but I am amazed at the rush to demonize him. But then again, to this day there are folks who refuse to forgive Michael Vick (sigh). Clearly there are a lot of people in this world that has never done anything they are ashamed of that required unmerited forgiveness.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

online wholesale business for goods from
China