Friday, December 17, 2010

High school hazing probe embroils Boise State football player

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6BG0DS20101217

This isn't hazing kids, it's called serial rape where I come from.
This is pack mentality.
Scary isn't it?
Now think back to your own high school days.
My how things have changed haven't they.
The question is why?
I graduated in "76", and nothing like this was ever on the radar, much less even a thought on the horizon.
What has changed so much that it's bred this type of mentality?
Is anybody even asking that question? If not I think it's time to start, because this type of situation (so called hazing) can only get worse from here.
Is that what hazing actually is a show of dominance? I always thought it was "the right of passage", and I don't consider rape as a right of passage.
This is hazing, just like the investment banks, were only doing business.
Both situations are criminal acts, and neither one should be taken lightly.
But some how both are trying to be passed off as, "no harm no foul".
When you over look crime, and this is a heinous crime, you open up the pattern for the acceptance of worse.
A spade is a spade my friends,
and these young men are sexual predators with a pack mentality.
This type of behavior just doesn't go away, it grows.
It's time to address a problem that is spiraling out of control.
Your own child's life depends on it.
The victims of these animals aren't just going to get over it.






An investigation into sexual hazing in southeast Idaho that has embroiled a member of Boise State University's powerhouse football team has grown to include more victims, authorities said on Thursday.

Three college football players and two others are facing a raft of sexual crime, battery and false imprisonment charges stemming from incidents at a high school in Blackfoot, Idaho, last year, according to court documents.

Police say the five athletes forcibly penetrated fellow members of the high school basketball team and battered and restrained the victims in a locker room and on a school bus during a three-month period that began last December.