Thursday, March 16, 2023

the daily mail is blocking all comments on university of alabama basketball team suspected murder accomplice brandon miller… and lying about it!

By N.S.

“Comments 0
“Share what you think


“No comments have so far been submitted. Why not be the first to send us your thoughts, or debate this issue live on our message boards.”

[There’s no way to “debate” the story on its message boards, either.]



5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Did you try to leave a comment?

You seem to have an odd, childish obsession with this.

It's a UK website, so stories about the US, especially college sports, aren't going to attract a lot of interest -- also basketball is not a major sport in the UK.

The story is in the the Sports section -- scrolling down and down and down, I don't see it -- so it clearly isn't featured in any way, and for the average reader may be hard to find, or you have to look for it.

I see many UK sports stories, including about football (soccer), which is by far the most popular sport, with fewer than 10 comments -- in fact, there aren't many stories with more than 10 comments, and most of those are what you would expect: big time football/soccer, e.g. the Champions League.

Anyway, probably few will read the story, and I would not be surprised if no one bothers to comment -- and there would not be anything conspiratorial about that.

Nicholas said...

Yeah, right, eahilf.

Anonymous said...

On an outlet like the Daily Mail,you'd think SOMEONE would put their two cents in.

--GRA

Anonymous said...

They don't post the comments because they are so negative directed against an identifiable group that is beyond criticism.

Anonymous said...

>[There’s no way to “debate” the story on its message boards, either.]

What is there to 'debate' about this story? -- it's fundamentally about a university providing protection for a student athlete who has (so it is claimed) received death threats.

There is little, if anything, to 'debate' there -- it would be irresponsible not to provide protection, which would open the university to serious liability were something to happen (assuming it could be shown they were aware of the threats/risk).

One can 'debate' whether he ought to be playing, given that there are questions about his role in a killing -- personally, given the seriousness of the crime, and reports of his association with the gun, I think the university should have suspended him from the team, even if he has not been charged with a crime -- I'm sure there is a 'morals' cause in every NCAA athletic scholarship contract that would allow them to do that, not to mention the damage he and the others have done to the school's reputation -- but given the obvious corruption spawned by big-time NCAA sports and the money it brings, I'm not surprised he will apparently be allowed to play.

But is the comment section of a Daily Mail story, a UK media outlet, or their 'message boards' (whatever those are), really the place to do that?

>This is a test.
>This is a test. the dm seems to be blocking all comments.

LOL