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Ed Oliver interview - NFL put him in the drug program?


YoloinOhio

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3 minutes ago, Mr. WEO said:

Mad? Lol that’s messed up doc.  I really don’t care other than no he’s available to do his job.  I’m not into the hero worship and the “like/hate” stuff that keeps you going.

 

Again, it’s incumbent on the player, medical staff and coaching staff to know who needs what to be eligible to play.  A medical staff that cannot see an obvious problem with a players need list isn’t doing its job.

 

You keep saying that.  Then you whip out lines like "he didn't protest the circumstances of his arrest" because he's "sweating out the test results" in the face of negative blood tests, and it belies your words.  We already know that any Bills player being charged with something is enough for you to convict him but even with total exoneration, you're still at it.  I guess the question is: do you think they fudged his test results?  That can be the only explanation. 

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1 minute ago, Doc said:

 

You keep saying that.  Then you whip out lines like "he didn't protest the circumstances of his arrest" because he's "sweating out the test results" in the face of negative blood tests, and it belies your words.  We already know that any Bills player being charged with something is enough for you to convict him but even with total exoneration, you're still at it.  I guess the question is: do you think they fudged his test results?  That can be the only explanation. 


Fudged his results so they would be negative and have to drop the charges??

 

Youve left the rails again doc...

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18 minutes ago, Mr. WEO said:


Why? What is the risk?

 

1. Reputation - immediately ranting on social media makes you look guilty;

 

2. It goes down extremely badly with law enforcement and you can bet your bottom dollar it puts you on the hit list. It shouldn't be the reality but it is. Calling them out in public to embarrass them is not wise. 

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3 minutes ago, Mr. WEO said:

Fudged his results so they would be negative and have to drop the charges??

 

Youve left the rails again doc...

 

:lol:

 

Let me put this another way (for everyone else, since...).  Oliver knows he hasn't been drinking or doing drugs.  He gets arrested and tested anyway because someone called in a report and "DUI experts" think he's impaired by something other than alcohol.  Tell me then, why would he be sweating out test results...which ultimately came back negative?

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I don't think Ed should have been arrested and I'm glad the charges were dropped. I think it was wrong of the NFL to force him into a program before the results of the legal proceedings were in. And this kid definitely does not need any type of babysitter, ridiculous to even suggest it. 

 

But, this does not appear to be racially motivated at all. He wasn't pulled over because he was black, he was pulled over because someone told the cops that he was driving erratically (swerving) and maybe the cops witnessed it themselves as well. And I can understand the cops being cautious of putting a possibly intoxicated driver back on the road. Maybe the breathalyzer wan't working, maybe he's on drugs, not alcohol, they could have thought. So, a major inconvenience for Ed, but not a complete miscarriage of justice. So, I don't blame the cops too much. What if he had been drunk or on drugs and went on to crash his car, injuring someone? Then people would say to the cops, you pulled him over and then let him back on the road? But, big props to Ed for handling the situation so maturely.

 

The bone I have to pick, once again, is with the media. I watched the full interview with Ed. He spoke very openly and maturely about the situation, with really good perspective (and some good advice from Mom). Made me respect the kid even more.

 

But here are the headlines from just the main page of TBD (so this is just the sports reporters, not even the more politically-minded news outlets):

 

Bills' Ed Oliver says he felt 'violated' and 'guilty until proven innocent' after arrest (Buff news)

 

When Bills’ Ed Oliver watched George Floyd’s death he thought: ‘That could have been me’ (Syracuse Post)

 

Bills DT Ed Oliver says felt “violated” by his arrest in Houston (WIBV-TV)

 

Bills Ed Oliver on arrest: ‘I felt I was guilty until proven innocent, not innocent until proven guilty’ (WGRZ-TV)

 

Ed Oliver: George Floyd could have been me (WROC-TV)

 

Ed Oliver: 'I felt like I was guilty and had to prove my innocence' (WHAM-TV)

 

Bills' Ed Oliver says he feels violated by unwarranted arrest (ESPN)

 

See how they pepper the headlines with "George Floyd" "Violated" "Guilty until proven innocent," making this once again a story about race (with no evidence that it had anything to do with race). Now, at least the headlines above used real quotes from Ed, even though the reporters are the ones who asked him all of the questions regarding race, to get those answers.

 

 

But then there is this headline from the D&C, which is a complete and utter twisting of a quote to fit an agenda:

 

Ed Oliver says being a Black man very well could have been why he was arrested (Roch D&C)

 

What did Ed actually say when asked if his arrest had anything to do with him being black:

 

Well, I’m not sure, but to be honest in Montgomery County, they have a no-refusal law so you can’t tell them, ‘No I don’t want to go to jail,’” he said. “That’s how it was explained to me so I don’t know. Maybe so, but the law in Montgomery County, I would hope to believe that whatever color you are, you’re going to jail."

 

How does "I'm not sure" "I don't know" "Maybe, but I would hope to believe that whatever color you are, you're going to jail" turn into "Being a Black man very well could have been why he was arrested"?

 

 

Quick shout out: Cheers to writers Matt Bove and Carly Mascitti for not race baiting with their headlines! The only two on the front page of TBD.

 

Bills DT Ed Oliver shares perspective gained following dropped DWI charges (WKBW-TV)

 

Bills defensive tackle Ed Oliver on dropped DWI charges (WHEC-TV)

 

 

Folks, we need to stop being triggered by the media and social media, stop fighting each other. It's time to sit down and talk, work together, not assume that half the country is ignorant and racist. Is there still racism today? Yes, there is. Do we need to continue calling out true racism whenever it rears its ugly head? Absolutely. But there is no systemic racism. That is a made up term that means absolutely nothing. Every time you use it, you are just saying "Everyone is a racist." Which is the furtherest thing from the truth. Think about and look into where all these current catch phrases come from. Did any of you think these up on your own, "systemic racism" "toxic masculinity" "social distancing" "the patriarchy" "the new normal" etc., etc. Take some time to think about where your words and ideas are coming from. These phrases don't just spring up from the grassroots.

 

 

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1 hour ago, GunnerBill said:

 

1. Reputation - immediately ranting on social media makes you look guilty;

 

2. It goes down extremely badly with law enforcement and you can bet your bottom dollar it puts you on the hit list. It shouldn't be the reality but it is. Calling them out in public to embarrass them is not wise. 

 

"Hit list"?  He was already "hit" in an arrest that he knew was dubious right away.  And silence in the face of this (especially now) does not make you look less "guilty".  With no evidence, there is no "hit".  Case evaporated. If he knew this from day one, there is absolutely no risk in. taking the public offensive against the police and the DA.  There is zero argument for advocating he keep silent.

 

 

Michale Bennett wasted little time in publicly attacking his arrest in Las Vegas as an injustice----and that was 3 years ago, when the climate for speaking out on social media was MUCH different than it is now--especially in the NFL.

 

 

 

 

 

1 hour ago, Doc said:

 

:lol:

 

Let me put this another way (for everyone else, since...).  Oliver knows he hasn't been drinking or doing drugs.  He gets arrested and tested anyway because someone called in a report and "DUI experts" think he's impaired by something other than alcohol.  Tell me then, why would he be sweating out test results...which ultimately came back negative?

 

He was taking Adderall, a banned substance in the NFL and a substance that would qualify in Texas as DUI, which would also make the gun charge stick.  

 

This is not hard to theorize doc.

 

But tell us all again how cops "fudge" data to torpedo the DA's cases lol.

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3 hours ago, Don Otreply said:

Evidently not in a material way, being no charges were levied against the person of interest. 

Its a difficult charge to prove, especially MJ and certain other legal over the counter products. The levels indicating high levels in the blood often subside by the time a test roles around. 

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1 hour ago, Mr. WEO said:

He was taking Adderall, a banned substance in the NFL and a substance that would qualify in Texas as DUI, which would also make the gun charge stick.  

 

This is not hard to theorize doc.

 

But tell us all again how cops "fudge" data to torpedo the DA's cases lol.

 

Again, I was asking you if that's what you were getting at by claiming he was sweating the results.  Now I see you're talking about the Adderall.  Fair enough.

 

Considering they didn't even find that in his system, he must not have taken any in at least 4 days.  He would know when he last took it so, again, no need to sweat. 

 

Now if they had found it in his system (likely at-worst in the therapeutic range and not above), it would have been interesting to see how his lawyer would have fought it.  I still believe he would have gotten it thrown out which is why I was saying all along that it all depended on his BAC.  But we'll never know now.

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14 minutes ago, Doc said:

 

Again, I was asking you if that's what you were getting at by claiming he was sweating the results.  Now I see you're talking about the Adderall.  Fair enough.

 

Considering they didn't even find that in his system, he must not have taken any in at least 4 days.  He would know when he last took it so, again, no need to sweat. 

 

Now if they had found it in his system (likely at-worst in the therapeutic range and not above), it would have been interesting to see how his lawyer would have fought it.  I still believe he would have gotten it thrown out which is why I was saying all along that it all depended on his BAC.  But we'll never know now.

 

The report said he quickly informed him he takes Adderall.  So yes, that's why he would be sweating it and not speaking out.  

 

How would he get it "thrown out"?  I don't think the law allows an Adderall "minimum level".

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1 hour ago, Mr. WEO said:

The report said he quickly informed him he takes Adderall.  So yes, that's why he would be sweating it and not speaking out.  

 

How would he get it "thrown out"?  I don't think the law allows an Adderall "minimum level".

 

At best he would have been sweating it out for a few hours to days until he talked to his lawyer, who would've asked him when he last took Adderall and then told him "you're good."  More likely he already knew, which is why he offered it up.

 

And how would he get it thrown out?  I don't know, how do people get, say, handjobs in massage parlors or cocaine charges thrown out?  Now you're suddenly out of ideas?

 

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16 minutes ago, Captain_Quint said:

The only thing normal with 2020 so far is that Weo and Doc are at odds about an off-the-field issue that happened during the offseason. 

 

Well, at least this off-the-field incident that correctly turned in the Bills player's favor happened recently...

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24 minutes ago, Doc said:

 

At best he would have been sweating it out for a few hours to days until he talked to his lawyer, who would've asked him when he last took Adderall and then told him "you're good."  More likely he already knew, which is why he offered it up.

 

And how would he get it thrown out?  I don't know, how do people get, say, handjobs in massage parlors or cocaine charges thrown out?  Now you're suddenly out of ideas?

 


You know the answer about krafts case so why ask?  It was explained to you from the week after that story broke and countless times since.

 

The stop and search were tossed. You see,everyone on the planet but you understood early on how that would get challenged and tossed.

 

Ideas?  Hmm maybe he could show them his doctors note?
 

 

Edited by Mr. WEO
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54 minutes ago, Captain_Quint said:

Let's not even mention those poor police that Shady stomped on!

 

No need.  They're footnotes.

 

50 minutes ago, Mr. WEO said:

You know the answer about krafts case so why ask?  It was explained to you from the week after that story broke and countless times since.

 

The stop and search were tossed. You see,everyone on the planet but you understood early on how that would get challenged and tossed.

 

Ideas?  Hmm maybe he could show them his doctors note?

 

Doctor's note?  That the best you got. 

 

What about technicalities?  Overzealous cops?  That he'd been on the drug for years and it helps him focus?

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6 hours ago, Mr. WEO said:

 

"Hit list"?  He was already "hit" in an arrest that he knew was dubious right away.  And silence in the face of this (especially now) does not make you look less "guilty".  With no evidence, there is no "hit".  Case evaporated. If he knew this from day one, there is absolutely no risk in. taking the public offensive against the police and the DA.  There is zero argument for advocating he keep silent.

 

 

Michale Bennett wasted little time in publicly attacking his arrest in Las Vegas as an injustice----and that was 3 years ago, when the climate for speaking out on social media was MUCH different than it is now--especially in the NFL.

 

 

 

 

 

 

He was taking Adderall, a banned substance in the NFL and a substance that would qualify in Texas as DUI, which would also make the gun charge stick.  

 

This is not hard to theorize doc.

 

But tell us all again how cops "fudge" data to torpedo the DA's cases lol.

 

Michael Bennett is hardly a solid and stable role model. You can think it is too cautious and risk averse if you wish but I guarantee that his attorney advised him to say nothing. If you are looking at that as somehow implicating him you are way, way off.

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