0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
He's in a very difficult position.How can he show remorse now and have people believe him?I don't have an answer. Maybe if he spent time and money at a local RSPCA centre? Proffesionals footballers have plenty of spare time.If he has the inclination he might be able to undo it but it means going above and beyond. Nobody has done it before.He's a celebrity, if he could convince someone like Chris Packham that it was an aberration, then I'd believe him.
Quote from: River Don on February 13, 2022, 09:03:17 pmHe's in a very difficult position.How can he show remorse now and have people believe him?I don't have an answer. Maybe if he spent time and money at a local RSPCA centre? Proffesionals footballers have plenty of spare time.If he has the inclination he might be able to undo it but it means going above and beyond. Nobody has done it before.He's a celebrity, if he could convince someone like Chris Packham that it was an aberration, then I'd believe him.Chris Packham has Asperger's Syndrome. I doubt very much that he could be convinced that someone committing an act of sickness like Zouma did can be easily remorseful and reformed.
Surely if he just says sorry and spends time with animal welfare groups so he understands them all will be forgiven It works for some who have been anti semitic in the past
Hound the same applies to A Rafiq and his anti Semitic historic behaviour Right or wrong doesn’t matter who anyone is or what they have done everyone should play by the same standardsThis country at the minute definitely has selective standards of behaviour and forgiveness depending on who you are and whether they fit into the current vogue standards