Sunday, September 28, 2014

Arbiter of Violence

Ray Rice, Adrian Peterson, and Anthony Schlegel.

You are probably familiar with the first two names and recall some recent news headlines. Mr. Schlegel, if you haven't already seen or heard, is an Ohio State University strength and conditioning coach now best known for his body slam technique.

As I watch the photo and video of Schlegel tackling the unruly spectator circle through the social media cycle, I can't get this question out of my mind:

Who gets to decide when violence is accepted and when it is abhorred?

What facts can help us determine when something is awesome versus when it is awful?

Are there aspects of the offender or victim in the incident that are relevant, like skin color or gender?

Does the apparent ability of a grown man to take a punch, so to speak, negate the offensiveness of the violent act?

Do not misconstrue. I'm not defending Rice or Peterson. Furthermore, I think the guy running on the field got exactly what was coming to him. I think he deserved every pound of force in that body slam and every blade of field turf in his face.

It feels like one of these three situations is okay and the other two are not, but it bothers me that I cannot explain why that is.

Friday, September 19, 2014

Insurance Quote

I met with a life insurance salesman a few weeks back. During the course of the meeting he matter-of-factly defended a certain mutual fund as a no brainer, easy money investment and said, "that fund did 18% last year, now where you gonna put your money that can beat that?"