Don't be so quick to make McNair a hero

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.
Mar 30, 2006
2,969
937
113
42
#1
By Jason Whitlock

We can quit calling Steve McNair a great leader now. Leadership starts at home.

And I'm no longer all that interested in hearing about the community service work McNair did in Tennessee and Mississippi. Service to community begins at home, too.

If you read this column regularly, you know I'm not the morality police, you know I'm far from bothered by McNair's May-December romance and you probably should've surmised I get my "Becky on" from time to time.

Stop reading now if your preference is sugar-coated, politically-correct, phony-ass pontificating. You can find plenty of that garbage littering the Internet.

I'm going to get knee deep in this Steve McNair tragedy and what it really signifies.

Until the police wrap up their investigation, I'm only willing to acknowledge four victims — McNair's four sons.

I don't know how to classify the adults in this saga — McNair, his wife Mechelle or his 20-year-old girlfriend, Sahel "Jenny" Kazemi.

The kids, they're victims of two horrific crimes: 1. the murder of their father; 2. their father's apparent abandonment so that he had time to wine, dine, vacation and shack up with his jump-off.

Let me repeat, I'm not some sanctimonious moralizer.

Personally, I prefer June-December romances, but a blossoming May flower certainly could be fertilized into a special, 28-year-old bouquet by a patient and attentive gardener.

As for the life-experience, station-in-life disparity between a retired millionaire quarterback and a Dave & Buster's waitress, well, let he who has never Captained cast the first hoe.

Every man I know has a little Captain in him. We see a pretty young thang working her way through nursing or cosmetology school and it's just in our nature to pay a cellphone bill, a car note or get her nails done.

It's what we do. And if you've earned a chunk of change in professional sports or in corporate America, you might buy a big black Escalade in her name, fly her to Vegas or go parasailing over the ocean.

It's not a black or white thing. It's not an athlete thing. It's a man thing we haven't been able to shake since Eve gave us an apple.

The look of pure, unadulterated joy on McNair's face captured as he and Jenny parasailed is one every real man recognizes as the uncontrollable feeling of elation that gushes through the male, middle-aged body when he finds the Tenderoni Bobby Brown sang about.

Do not read this as me condoning McNair's extramarital affair. I'm not.

But we don't know the nature of Steve and Mechelle McNair's relationship. We don't know what made them happy, what agreement they reached or what was transpiring in their marriage.

What we do know is that McNair had four sons. And based on the observations and comments of Kazemi's neighbors and neighbors at the condominium McNair rented, McNair spent so much time with Kazemi over the past few months that people assumed they lived together.

You see, this is my problem with McNair, with American men as a whole.

We shirk our responsibilities as fathers. We don't have time for it. We think it's a part- or no-time job. We think our career is more important. We think charity work is more important. We think some young tail is more important.

We foolishly believe we're unnecessary in the rearing of children. This mindset must die.

I pass no judgment on McNair kicking it with a woman 16 years his junior. I don't agree with it, but I pass no judgment on McNair "cheating" on his wife.

However, I think it's ridiculous and embarrassing that he spent so much time chasing after a Nashville waitress that he created the impression he lived with her.

Many have tried, but you can't maintain two homes, two families. If HBO has shown us anything, it's that kids are the losers when it comes to Big Love.

You can't live with a waitress in a condo/apartment, take her parasailing, clubbing, to Vegas and raise a brood of boys living in a home on the other side of town.

Kids are game-changers. Kids require sacrifice. Kids are a daily and sometimes hourly responsibility. You don't properly raise them in your spare time with money, fame, gifts and glowing newspaper and magazine stories about your courage to play on Sundays despite injury and pain.

Steve McNair sounds like a warrior who fought the wrong war. He won a public-relations battle.

He was so popular in Nashville that when his under-drinking-age "Becky" got popped driving her mistress ransom while drunk and/or high the police called a cab to give McNair, the Escalade passenger, a ride home.

This is the privilege of fame and inclusion in the boys club. We're so mentally diseased that we instinctively feel empathy and envy when we see a married father of four liquored up with his near-teenage girlfriend.

You know what the cop was thinking:

But for the grace of God, two-tenths of a second on my 40 time and the high school coach who made me play tight end rather than receiver, there go I.

Steve McNair was flawed in the same way as most American men.

Too many men think financial success is their primary and most important contribution to a relationship with their kids, wives and/or girlfriends. A grown woman has the right to settle for that. Children shouldn't have to settle for anything less than their father's very best effort.
 
Mar 12, 2005
8,118
17
0
37
#2


I feel bad for his Kids, and the only reason I feel bad for him is that He died not having a chance to make things Right...that's all it's his fault though he chose the Dark path and he ended up in the Dark...
 
May 9, 2002
37,066
16,283
113
#4
Jason can kiss my ass, but he has some good points in there regarding the kids.

However, the one thing I don't like, is that he looks past human nature, especially in men, in his article. Men are genetically CODED to be "providers", that is, have money, a house, and such. And in in turn, women are genetically CODED to find this attractive in men. Men are also genetically CODED to "spread their seed", as that is what we are biologically BUILT to do.

I also do not like how he threw all AMERICAN men into the "bad father" cauldron...what a schmuck. Should we look past the aging mother of two that cant seem to hold onto a man to save her life, so she tires he damnedest to find one while leaving the kids home with a babysitter 4 nights a week? Humans want COMPANIONSHIP that is NOT unconditional...thats a FACT of life.
 
Feb 14, 2004
16,667
4,746
113
42
#5
Jason sounds like a damn woman in that article. bad mouthing men. and what's with the HBO reference? lol
 

Stealth

Join date: May '98
May 8, 2002
7,137
1,177
113
41
#8
Fuck that. He's right people should be good fathers, but you need to know when its appropriate to make a stand. You don't get on your high horse and try to prove a point about fathering when a good man just got murdered.


My dad's a good man. He wins teacher of the year awards at one of the worst schools in the state. He has a state championship coaching football. He's changed tons of people's lives. But he was a shitty father. He left my mom for a woman 20 years younger than him. Doesn't change the fact that he's a good man. If my dad just died and somebody wrote an article about him, disrespecting his death like that, I'd flip the fuck out.
 

Tony

Sicc OG
May 15, 2002
13,165
970
113
48
#11
Man fuck Jason and that bitch for killing Steve! He should have steered that article more towards these scanless home wreckin' bitches! All that shit Steve did for her and she still killed him. I guess going from driving a Kia to driving an escalade wasn't enough for that greedy bitch huh... she was the one fucking a married man, she should have waited till the divorce was final before she gave up the ass! *Bumps "Bitches ain't shit" from The Chronic*

Jason needs an ass whoopin' for writing this stupid as article he don't know what kind of father he was to his kids!
 
Nov 12, 2002
2,158
1
0
42
www.MSMOfficial.com
#14
usually i think Jason makes valid points in his articles.....this shit is just dumb and misdirected tho....

you cant blame a man for doing whut is in his nature to do.....we're primal animals and its our nature to make sure that our species is continued......we're basically dogs or cows that can walk and talk but we think we're civilized cuz we figured out how to make a computer or fry a hamburger........all we know how to do inherantly is fucc and procreate......sorry and shit for the dead bitch and all but she should have known wtf she was getting into from tha jump
 

Chree

Medicated
Dec 7, 2005
32,404
13,935
113
40
#15
This shit has me pretty upset, really though, why talk badly about a man who is no longer here to defend himself, who cares if he had a bitch on the side, what man doesnt get tired of his naggin ass wife and pulls another bitch, especially a young one whos willing to do shit that wife wont, at least he wasnt neglecting his children and not taking care of them
 

Defy

Cannabis Connoisseur
Jan 23, 2006
24,139
16,658
0
46
Rich City
#17
I'm a man. I'm a father. And I'm not a captain. I couldn't finish the whole article.


with that ol "think of the kids" ass shit....what happens when the kids see you trashing their dead father?
 
Feb 14, 2004
16,667
4,746
113
42
#18
Defy, i never even thought about it like that. that's a good point. talking bad about McNair and not even thinking what the kids will think seeing him talking bad about their dead father that they will never get to see again alive. just makes me want to kick Jason's ass more. what a dipshit Jason is. he should be fired.
 

askG

Sicc OG
Nov 19, 2002
2,178
32
48
#19
fuckk all this shiit music unfluenced is spitting...

nobody is in a position to say shit about anybody personally w.o knowing them and even then, thats some cold shit...let the man rest in peace...noboy on earth got the right to air out other ppls personal bussiness or call them out...none of your effin beeswax.


RIP AIR MCNAIR