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Penn State Scandal: Obama Calls For 'Soul Searching' After Sandusky Scandal, Paterno Firing

Obama Carrier Classic

Associated Press   11/11/11 10:25 PM ET   AP

CORONADO, Calif. -- President Barack Obama says the Penn State sex-abuse scandal should lead to "soul-searching" by all Americans, not just Penn State.

"Obviously what happened was heartbreaking, especially for the victims, the young people who got affected by these alleged assaults," he told Westwood One Radio in an interview Friday night, in his first public comments on the scandal.

"And I think it's a good time for the entire country to do some soul-searching – not just Penn State. People care about sports, it's important to us, but our No. 1 priority has to be protecting our kids. And every institution has to examine how they operate, and every individual has to take responsibility for making sure that our kids are protected."

The Penn State scandal has cost several university officials their jobs, most notably longtime football coach Joe Paterno and President Graham Spanier. They were fired because trustees felt they did not do enough to alert law enforcement authorities after an alleged assault in March 2002 by Jerry Sandusky, Paterno's former assistant and onetime heir apparent, who has been charged with molesting eight boys over 15 years.

Obama said that the scandal shows that "you can't just rely on bureaucracy and systems in these kinds of situations. People have to step forward, they have to be tapping into just their core decency." When kids are mistreated – or anyone, for that matter – "all of us have to step up, we don't leave it to somebody else to take responsibility."

Obama spoke at halftime of a college basketball game – the Carrier Classic – between No. 1 North Carolina and Michigan State, held on the deck of an aircraft carrier.

The president, a huge basketball fan, also discussed the NBA lockout.

"It's killing me!" he said. But he said he had no plans to intercede.

"My attitude is that, in a contest between billionaires and millionaires, they should be able to figure out how to divvy up their profits in a way that serves their fans who are allowing them to be making all this money," Obama said. He made a similar comment about the NFL lockout a few months ago.

The president was also asked about a new policy approved by the NCAA allowing conferences to add up to $2,000 annually to athletic scholarships to help cover the full cost of attendance. While saying he wasn't familiar with the specific proposal, Obama said he supported the general idea that student athletes stay amateur but also have all of their expenses covered.

"They're bringing in billions of dollars into all the institutions that they support," he said. "I hope that we're able to preserve that sense of amateur athletics that makes college sports so terrific."

Obama said that even though he plays golf, basketball remains his favorites sport.

"I play golf for two reasons. One, it's my only excuse to get outside, and two, I'm getting too old to play basketball," the 50-year-old chief executive said. "But when it comes to true love, basketball will always be first in my heart."

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CORONADO, Calif. -- President Barack Obama says the Penn State sex-abuse scandal should lead to "soul-searching" by all Americans, not just Penn State. "Obviously what happened was heartbreaking, esp...
CORONADO, Calif. -- President Barack Obama says the Penn State sex-abuse scandal should lead to "soul-searching" by all Americans, not just Penn State. "Obviously what happened was heartbreaking, esp...
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10:59 AM on 11/15/2011
I wonder if Obama has stepped forward and tapped into just his core decency when kids are mistreated – or anyone, for that matter.
I noticed in comments he gave regarding the incidents at Penn State, he describes "folks" and his observation of the situation without actually personnally condemning what went on.
12:01 PM on 11/13/2011
Paul J. Soentgen, III asks my honorable fellow bloggers here to recall the infamous
"KIDS FOR CASH" scandal in Pennsylvania, where (2) Pennsylvania common pleas court judges in Luzerne County Pa. took kickbacks of over 2 Million dollars from a privately run Juvenile detention center, and then made sure this privately run Juvenile detention center had plenty of children to lock up for profit. The Judge who sentenced these children usually did so without the children having counsel. Thousands of children were given privson time for nonsense and without an attorney, the without an attorney problem a scheme by the Judge and the County to grease the skids to the Juvenile detention center.

The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania refused to rule on the goings on in Luzerne County, the public goings on the systematic lack of counsel for thousands of Juveniles, and it wasn't until years later that the FBI and US Attorney's office stepped in and finally brought down these Judges on the Kickback scheme. Pennsylvania is on the record has having no interest in upholding civil or constitutional rights of children, as Pennsylvania chose to cover-up for this systematic corruption instead.

THE LYNCHING OF VIRGINIA SOENTGEN, is another Pennsylvania atrocity that is still being cover-up to this day, and despite the interracial Soentgen children's intensified sufferings.

Penn State is right in the middle of this swamp, and is guided by trustees who are part of all that is rotten in sanctimonious Pennsylvania.
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tarayatre
10:46 PM on 11/12/2011
To stand as a country worth existing, we have to stand up for and defend our children. When we cease to protect them, we cease being a country of value and substance.
10:03 PM on 11/12/2011
Mr. President, you want soul-searching, well Paul Soentgen sent our 5000 desperate e-mails for assistance to all of the law school professors of Pennsylvania, all of the law school professors of Yale, Harvard, Chicago, Duke, Stanford, UCLA, Baylor, and even the enitre law school faculty of Oxford Law in England, and yet not one of these esteemed professors cared a wit about:

THE LYNCHING OF VIRGINIA SOENTGEN.

The University industrial complex is fat, happy and corrupt!

May God forgive you all,
Paul J. Soentgen, III.
05:43 PM on 11/12/2011
"you can't just rely on bureaucracy and systems in these kinds of situations. People have to step forward, they have to be tapping into just their core decency." When kids are mistreated – or anyone, for that matter – "all of us have to step up, we don't leave it to somebody else to take responsibility."

Obama is spot on with this comment, except that he assumes that everyone has a "core decency". Clearly that is not the case with McQueary (a 6'4" former athlete who couldn't find the strength or courage to stop a child rape) and all the rest of the Penn State administration who covered it up so as to not lose football revenue.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
peegan
Obama 2012
05:36 PM on 11/12/2011
Soul searching is a good place to start, for a moment. But when it comes to protecting kids, I am for lowering the hammer.We are living in a time when people seem to operate almost exclusively from their own interests. So make it in their interest to never leave children in this position again.
06:36 PM on 11/12/2011
A good start would be for the NCAA to require Penn State to donate all its football revenues for the next 5 years to RAINN.
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05:34 PM on 11/12/2011
Yeah, do some soul searching and if in your soul you find that your are a person who is likely to do these things to a child, kill yourself immediately.
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jukesgrrl
Stop the Republican war on women's bodies.
05:25 PM on 11/12/2011
I don't think these people from "Happy Valley" have souls to search.
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mjune
04:53 PM on 11/12/2011
Mature, on the mark, and gentle yet pointed about the need to think about the real victims as well as the real causes.
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VFausone
04:08 PM on 11/12/2011
LOL "soul searching" oh yes, like all those bankers you mean?
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naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
03:39 PM on 11/12/2011
Soul-searching doesn't satisfy. Prosecutions are in order just as they were with the Bush/Cheney war crimes.
03:39 PM on 11/12/2011
neb 17 ps 14
03:24 PM on 11/12/2011
Soul Searching ? Sorry Prez, I like you but you should have made a more definitive statement than that. HE should have said how sickening that such a thing went on for so long and that the justice dept will take whatever steps legally necessary to bring all pervs involved to justice.
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Dupree
Speaking Truth to Lies
04:47 PM on 11/12/2011
WE are forever seeking the perfect answers and responses.....could it be that we all are unique individuals and express ourselves in different vernaculars? This is how YOU would like to state it and that is your right....and you of course is entitled to your opinion but I think soul searching has far more value than forever seeking to pretend that we are so removed from evil. For if the truth be told...every single person has evil in them that is either under great restraint and control. Mankind is flawed. Some far more egregious than others as clearly illustrated by these allegations. However, let's never become so holy than thou and so removed from our own flawed make up that we began to imagine that those that have fallen in such decadence came from the same stock as our selves...humanity. This will quench the anger and start the tears to flow that some of us...lack the capacity to rise above the cesspool of the dark side of mankind. But make no mistake...mankind is capable of every evil under the sun and given the right circumstances or lack of developed moral restraints...he will fail to rise above the beggarly elements. This is most humbling truths.
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jukesgrrl
Stop the Republican war on women's bodies.
05:24 PM on 11/12/2011
As much as this conspiracy sickens me, President Obama does have the responsibility to respond keeping in mind the innocent until proven guilty rule. It's yet another crime that there has never been a trial about these cases, but in fact there hasn't been, so he needs to speak carefully.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CASSIE60
Retired History Prof..never a closed mind
01:43 PM on 11/12/2011
The soul searching began in 1874, and kids are still being abused in America.

In fact, the 1874 case of Mary Ellen McCormack, a self-possessed 10-year-old who lived on West 41st Street, in the Hell’s Kitchen section of Manhattan. It was Mary Ellen who finally put a human face on child abuse — and prompted a reformers’ crusade to prevent it and to protect its victims, an effort that continues to this day.

Tellingly, the case was brought by the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. In 1874, there were no laws protecting children from physical abuse from their parents. It was an era of “spare the rod and spoil the child,” and parents routinely meted out painful and damaging punishment without comment or penalty.
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COPESTIR3
04:24 PM on 11/12/2011
Excellent comment! Indeed when we are more upset over the firing of a coach, rather than the impact of rape of child, we have a problem. It is a problem of perspective. The firings and prosecutions are appropriate. Games and season will come and go. But the damage to the children will last a least lifetime if not generation. We can all enjoy our sports, but never at the sacrifice of our children's innocence.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
peegan
Obama 2012
05:31 PM on 11/12/2011
Your point about how we are not doing enough to protect children is spot on. But in doing so, I have seen this comment before and it is a bit off. I am posting a link that gives a good history of Mary Ellen. There were in fact laws to protect children at the time, but authorities were reluctant to intervene in family matters. A woman named Etta Wheeler was trying to help Mary with little success. On the advice of her niece Mrs. Wheeler turned to  a man named Henry Bergh for assistance.  Mr. Bergh was well known for his work for animal rights and was the founder of the ASPCA. Mrs. Wheeler's niece said, not unkindly, that help might be found here because Mary was "a little animal surely." Mr. Bergh was of assistance, and a lawyer from the ASPCA filled a case in the courts to remove Mary from her home. But it was always made clear that the court was being asked to enforce existing child abuse laws. I think it is a fascinating case.  http://www.privatefamilymatter.com/first-case-of-child-abuse
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SHIRLEY CARR
optimist with experience sez
01:08 PM on 11/12/2011
We can't soul search for all the wrong that has been done in the past. We can only be reminded that we have to step up and do our part now and in the future and try our damnedest to atone/amend our ways to become better people, especially when it comes to our children, for their futures depend on us.