zimpy27 wrote:Chopping off your nose to spite your face is the expression here.
This could lose the players hundreds of millions of dollars, money they could use strategically to keep pressure on social reform.
People need to use the money they make and the platform they have to keep the fire going for years, social reform isn't about chucking everything in the fire at once and making the biggest possible flame, you want to keep the flame going and keep the pressure on changes to happen. It takes time and intelligent thinking.
This is why I'm annoyed at folks who act like this proposal is the best thing for players.
How about:
Pay players more for incurring extra risk to themselves and loved ones, not just with covid but heightened injury risk as Spida brought up.
Can't pay them more because of this recession? Establish a plan to issue more payments when the NBA inevitably goes on the upswing again, even if that's past their playing days.
Don't want to go down the path of negotiating with players for due payment? Create a general fund. For each of the original players that return to Orlando, contribute X money to the fund and have it go straight to charities voted on by players.
Don't have that money now? Issue debt, or sign a contract to do it in a smaller but sustained way for years to come.
There are a lot more concessions the billionaires can make. Don't let anyone fool you that this is the best offer on the table.