Don Wassall said:
icsept said:
If Jones is not signed this year the caste system will have claimed its latest, greatest victim. Pacman Jones, Leonard Little, Tank Johnson, and Travis Henry, etc. all have less talent and greater criminal histories than Jones.
That can be said of literally hundreds of blacks in the NFL. A mainstream published book that came out about a decade ago noted that a quarter of the players in the NFL had criminal histories. Everyone with an IQ over 75 knows that almost all of them are black. Add in all those who haven't been caught or who commonly have criminal charges dismissed and the national degradation and ridicule of Jones for a minor incident is even more glaring. And I say "minor" because a good portion of those "reporters" and "journalists" in the anti-white corporate media, especially those over a certain age, have done plenty of coke snorting themselves. There was a time in this country during the 1970s, '80s, and into the '90s when snorting coke was almost as commonplace as drinking alcohol and smoking weed.
The book was titled, "Pros and Cons: The Criminals Who Play In The NFL." The authors wrote, "And we are not talking about just a few bad apples, here. Our research shows that 21 percent-one of every five-of players in the NFL have been charged with a serious crime."
The authors found that players with a record in Los Angeles County had their records expunged after a time. This is not counting those with dismissed charges.
Most of this book's details are unknown. When the hardback edition was published in 1997, ESPN ignored it. In the 1998 paperback edition, the authors found this "curious." The authors, Jeff Benedict and Don Yaeger, also wrote that ABC, Fox, and CBS never mentioned "Pros and Cons" on their many pregame shows that season. Only CBS's NFL Today came close. "The show's producer and a correspondent spoke to the authors numerous times about doing a piece on the book, before the show finally declined to go forward," wrote the authors in the 1998 edition.