The NFL was not created for the task of serving women, or really having
anything to do with women, unless they want to watch. It's two groups of
men beating on each other for hours, what in the wide, wide world of sports
does that have to do with women? The fact the NFL does ANYTHING for people
outside of the game is above and beyond.
Oh and we have a legal system meant to punish the guilty, we shouldn't be
pushing employers to do it sans trial.
+Craig Goetsch Yeah, but women work for them, so they should be paid for their time, and that pay shouldn't be, to use the technical term, jack shit. And if you read up on a few of these cases mentioned, you'll see that they did, in fact, go to trial...and lost. Millions of dollars in fact.
+Wesley MessinoI know they shouldn't have to, but anyone that stays at a job that treats you that bad is an idiot. And if all the women stopped doing it ,they would treat them better.
+sill gorilla Because they shouldn't have to? Because even if that is technically an option that doesn't make the way the NFL treats them any less exploitative? The fact that they could make more literally anywhere is the problem. You should never be able to say that, that's the point of minimum wage.
Musicians don't get paid for practice time either. You understand that,
right? Also, they don't have to do this. They could get different jobs.
So... really the only victims here are the suckers who listened to you two
windbags.
+Wesley Messino more accurately, they are paying you in advance for a product and own the rights to that product. The live performance is a different beast and the musicians get paid by ticket sales from the venue.
+Matt W. Actually, when a label signs you that's often exactly what happens. They pay you up front on the hope that you were a good investment, so you have some money to live off of while you make music and practice. Same thing when you get a publishing deal for writers.
James Jones caught a pass from Aaron Rodgers behind the line of scrimmage on a screen pass. Inside the five yard line Jones extended for the goal line but appeared to lose the football before reaching the end zone (which was recovered by a Vikings defender). On the field it was ruled a fumble recovery inside the end zone by the Minnesota Vikings resulting in a touch back. The Packers wanted to challenge the play saying that ball crossed the end zone line before James Jones lost the ball. But, since it was a turnover it was reviewed automatically and Mike McCarthy was not supposed to throw the challenge flag. After reviewing the play the ruling on the field overturned to a Green Bay Packers touchdown but also were penalized 15 yards on the ensuing kickoff for throwing the flag unnecessarily.
At the time the rule was is that if the coach threw a challenge flag on a play that is automatically reviewed by the booth upstairs, the play will no longer be reviewable and the original call will stand right or wrong. In this situation, Green Bay Packers got lucky, the refs saw the flag before Jordy Nelson hid it, but because the play was already being reviewed by they booth they still took a look at the play. This rule was later changed in that same season.
+Nathan Steele Dishonest...dishonest man,that is what you meant.
wholesale cheap nfl jerseys free shipping from china.(fake sport jerseys reviews)
www.herebuyjersey.com**wholesale cheap nfl jerseys free shipping from china**
IWFFA / Women's Flag Football Commercial Edited by Sandra Scott Filmed by NFL Films Inc.
IWFFA Commercial Edited by Sandra Scott Filmed by NFL Films Inc. All action Lots of very close up plays Great passes and catches. flag grabbing, tough ...