- Joined
- Sep 23, 2008
- Messages
- 32,870
- Likes
- 291
- Points
- 0
Unethical is a grown man in diapers humping a teddy bear. But when do we ever see that?
Ask Al Franken.

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Unethical is a grown man in diapers humping a teddy bear. But when do we ever see that?
Ask Al Franken.
![]()
Seriously, the NBA is a business. You and everyone else need to chill the fuck out. It's a business, and Portland is simply making a business move. It's a little desperate, but it's a business move, and ultimately, it will have little effect, as there will be at least one team that will sign Miles. But I truly believe, given current management, it's a business move, and I ultimately think Portland did is as they have little to lose. What, are you going to stop being a Portland fan? Everything else we've gone through, and them giving back what they got from a guy like Miles, and you'll stop being a Portland fan? Didn't think so. I'd think fans should be happy Portland is making business decisions and sticking it to the players that stuck it to Portland.
You know, in my little inconsequential world (compared to an Allen or Wallace) I have had my legal battles. Good attorneys help, but I will take the lesser attorney and facts on my side any day of the week. Hard to overcome the facts, and if I know they got nothing . . . bring that shit on.
it's_GO_time said:And for whatever reason the Blazer organization thinks it is their job to tell other businesses how to run their business.
Also note that your fantasy of always having civil legal fees paid for rarely happens in the real world.
That's my point, it is a business. And for whatever reason the Blazer organization thinks it is their job to tell other businesses how to run their business.
I don't care about this email other than I think it hurts the Blazer public image and might cost them in trade negotiations. But whatever, not my money or my problem.
That's my point, it is a business. And for whatever reason the Blazer organization thinks it is their job to tell other businesses how to run their business.
That's my point, it is a business. And for whatever reason the Blazer organization thinks it is their job to tell other businesses how to run their business.
I don't care about this email other than I think it hurts the Blazer public image and might cost them in trade negotiations. But whatever, not my money or my problem.
My reponse was if someone threaten me on a business level, that would be my response to them. And I would think other business owners might have the same response to Allen. I know the Cavs owner did and behind close doors I'm guessing the majority of owners felt the way the cavs owner did.
I don't think that was what they were doing.
Agree with you that it hurts the public image, although that may be very temporary. I don't see why it would hurt them in trade negotiations. As you say, it is a business.
barfo
Why does Portland care about public perception? Our fan base is not that of the Lakers. We fans don't come and go, blowing to and fro with the wind. If you're a Blazers fan, you're a Blazers fan tried and true.
That's not a knock on Lakers fans (being a Lakers fan is a knock enough in and of itself), it's just the nature of a team that has a smaller, yet solid fan base, versus a large-market team, much like the Yankess or Red Sox, that has a following that swells when it's successful, and shrinks when it's not.
Yeah, it's a business. Miller made a business decision. WalMart makes business decisions all the time. Sometimes, they look bad to the public, yet they often make money for the business. What do you think WalMart prefers: making big bucks and is so-so public perception, or is breaking even and has good public perception? They prefer to be making money. And if you agree the NBA is a business, you'd agree that the Blazers are trying to make money. This move, if successful (however unlikely it is) could earn Portland more money than they might lose from it.
Really? You would invite a lawsuit? Again, remember, Paul Allen gave up on this franchise once before.
Perhaps this all is a way to get him back to Seattle with the Blazers? I couldn't blame him at this point if this is the support he gets from the Blazer "fans". The Comcast disaster fits right into this scenario.
The Jailblazer era and the lottery era that followed point to the contrary. Our image was a wreck and that played a part in attendance dropping waaay down, although I'm sure our record played a bigger part. It doesn't really matter, since the point is that fans did leave, and now they've come back again, just like every other fan base.
I didn't invite the lawsuit . . . I responded to a threat (again behind close doors because I don't bring myself down to the level of opposing business). If a lawsuit ensues, so be it. But I won't stand for someone telling me my business and how to run it.
I don't know what the heck the Blazers were doing, but we already know how it was recieved by one owner
the league
and the union (not well).
And sometimes . . . in fact often . . . people make bad business decisions.
Blazer put out this email and Miles gets signed within 24 hours . . . good business decision?
the foodcart business must be brutal!
I kid!![]()
![]()
![]()
I don't know what the heck the Blazers were doing, but we already know how it was recieved by one owner, the league and the union (not well).
The union kind of threw me here. What they basically did was support a player making $9 million a year for doing nothing (Miles) over supporting an active player who now has one FA window shut down (one less team active in the FA market). Stupid move by Hunter, IMO.
I see where you're coming from, but we're talking about Hunter siding with an actual player vs. a hypothetical player.
I don't know what the heck the Blazers were doing, but we already know how it was recieved by one owner, the league and the union (not well).
The NBA needs to step in right now and end this nonsense.
The player's union is supporting any team that signs Miles after Portland's threat. What exactly can Portland sue other teams for btw?
The player's union is supporting any team that signs Miles after Portland's threat. What exactly can Portland sue other teams for btw?
I think it's pretty hollow in the end. I think it was more a threat than anything, and I think management knows they can't do anything. They've been saying for months now they've got plans designed for however the Miles saga unfolds. I think Portland's management is just seeing how other franchises respond, but ultimately, Portland has a plan on how it wants to respond (roster-wise, with less cap room).