A former assistant football
coach and key prosecution witness in the upcoming conspiracy trial of three
former Penn State leaders accused of covering up Jerry Sandusky's sexual abuse
crimes told his players during a November 2011 closed-door meeting that he,
too, was sexually abused as a boy, sources told ESPN The Magazine. Everyone who knew about this
including McQueary, did nothing to stop it because they wanted to protect their
precious football program and University's reputation. They should each get 10
years. McQueary, an unfortunate plus the red hair. Lightning struck thrice in
this guy's life. Regardless, I dream of him reaching to greatness, and upon
witnessing the subhuman Sandusky and a boy in the shower, storming straight in
and smashing that old pervert's head upon the concrete, wrapping the victim up
in a towel, and calling the campus police. We all know that it has should to be
done. He
saw children being raped and did nothing, he should be in prison. At this point
can anyone believe a anything this thing says?
I think I am agree this But
sometimes your instinct is to run as far away as you can did remember about a
year after I lost my lifelong best friend to a fatal disease she had had since
she was a child, a co-worker suffered a similar loss. The details of the death
were eerily similar to the loss of my best friend. I could find no way to
approach him and offer comfort - maybe it was because the pain was so fresh,
but I just couldn't bring myself to share my similar experience because it
would have reopened the wounds for me. It's been a decade since that incident,
and I still feel bad about it. It's not the same thing exactly, but it is an
instance where my similar experience should have caused me to respond with
empathy, but instead I withdrew into myself and turned away because it just
called up too many painful memories about losing my closest friend. It was on
Macquarie to step in and defend that kid when Sandusky was assaulting him, and
he fumbled it. There's no question about that. But sexual abuse victims often
have strange reactions to other incidents of sexual assault, especially if they
haven't had strong support for dealing with what they went through. I know more
than a couple people who were molested as children and who, when seeking help
from their parents - who themselves had been abused - were simply told that was
the way the world worked, or something to that effect. I think this revelation
does quite a bit to explain Macquarie’s bizarre (to most people) actions that
day.