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re: "I learned a lot of Auburn characteristics and being an Auburn man"

Posted on 9/19/17 at 4:09 pm to
Posted by Tuscaloosa
11x Award Winning SECRant user
Member since Dec 2011
46626 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 4:09 pm to
quote:

The Auburn Creed
I believe that this is a practical world and that I can count only on what I earn. Therefore, I believe in work, hard work.

I believe in education, which gives me the knowledge to work wisely and trains my mind and my hands to work skillfully.

I believe in honesty and truthfulness, without which I cannot win the respect and confidence of my fellow men.

I believe in a sound mind, in a sound body and a spirit that is not afraid, and in clean sports that develop these qualities.

I believe in obedience to law because it protects the rights of all.

I believe in the human touch, which cultivates sympathy with my fellow men and mutual helpfulness and brings happiness for all.

I believe in my Country, because it is a land of freedom and because it is my own home, and that I can best serve that country by "doing justly, loving mercy, and walking humbly with my God."

And because Auburn men and women believe in these things, I believe in Auburn and love it.


You guys & your University speak of these qualities as if they're exclusive to those people who attend Auburn... it's as if you people truly believe the only people who believe in those things are "Auburn men & women."

The things addressed in that creed are universal to humankind. They are basic core values that every decent human possesses. You are not special.
Posted by LSU GrandDad
houston, texas
Member since Jun 2009
21564 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 4:10 pm to
quote:

My question is what exactly are these characteristics of being an Auburn man, and how are they different/superior to other manly characteristics?


odd question. maybe you should ask this about A&M.

no, on second thought, maybe you shouldn't.
Posted by Tuscaloosa
11x Award Winning SECRant user
Member since Dec 2011
46626 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 4:14 pm to
quote:

Seemed like a giant waste of time to me.


I'm well aware that you don't understand why it was posted. I will explain it, if you like.

Every Saturday of college football season, I start a thread entitled "Hey Auburn..." with a message of "frick you." This is usually posted on the Score Board, because that board is essentially not moderated, threads aren't anchored or deleted, etc. as they would be on the SECRant.

The day I posted that thread was the first official Saturday of college football season. However, because the SEC didn't have any games, the Score Board didn't open. So I had to be a little creative in the way I designed the thread. The first letter of each paragraph spelled out "frick YOU." It was a nice, light hearted, creative welcome to the college football season we had all been long awaiting.

I'm really sorry you missed out on the fun.
This post was edited on 9/19/17 at 4:15 pm
Posted by Huddie Leadbetter
Member since May 2016
3822 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 4:26 pm to
quote:

"I learned a lot of Auburn characteristics and being an Auburn man"
It is too high of a bar that has been set. If it was shared here many would call it unattainable. They would be right except for the exceptional men that come through Auburn.


cut and paste

Former AU running back says Auburn is a racist school

Auburn transfer finds home at SIU By Zack Creglow, Daily Egyptian April 15, 2004(U-WIRE) CARBONDALE, Ill. --

Brandon Jacobs walkshastily across the Auburn campus, quietly counting the days until he reunites with his friends at Southern Illinois. A season at Auburn left him questioning his ability,his decision to attend there and himself. When hisbest friend at Auburn, Tony McClain, chose to transfer to SIU last fall, Jacobs was left alone. "I got a few friends at Auburn, but I can count them up on one hand," Jacobs said in his baritone Cajun muffle. ADVERTISEMENT Two weeks ago, he decided to join McClain as a Saluki.As he finishes the semester at Auburn, he continues to envision how his career might have gone -- how it should have gone. He thinks of Auburn vs. Alabama,86,000 screaming fans watching him carry the football. But that isn't what he remembers. His memory evokes Auburn fans chanting, "You Suck!"and being told by Auburn coaches that in the pre season he would start -- only not to receive a carry in the final four games -- and the condescending manner he feels blacks are treated in Auburn, Ala. "At Auburn, there isn't that many great people,"Jacobs said. "You are everything to these people if you are an athlete. Normal black people don't get treated like we do. If you aren't an athlete, they don't want anything to do with you, and that isn't right."

He had entered Auburn as the gem of the recruiting class, a 6-foot-4, 260-pound running back widely considered the top junior college prospect in the nation only to finish the season as a whisper. He was relegated to the bench in a sport he had dominated since he was 4 years old. "It killed me," Jacobs said. "It had me wanting to quit. It killed my insides. I never even had left the field before Auburn. I was never the one on the bench.I still haven't adjusted to that. It still kills me." He never felt farther from home.

In sun-baked Napoleonville, La., home of Jacobs andhis legend, his mother Janice answers questions regarding him daily. People ask about him at the post office and the super market. It doesn't matter where. Everybody in the town of 750 people is interested in how her son is doing. Everybody cares. One of his high school teachers even started a professionally designed website for him, www.brandonjacobs.net. Football is tradition in the Southern town. When Jacobs played, people flooded Napoleonville from allover with the town's two stoplights directing thei nflux of traffic. More than 8,000 fans piled into the lone grandstand and scattered around the field just to watch him run. "Oh Lord, when he played, the whole town just went crazy," Janice said. "He brought people out to football games who never went to a game before. People came from everywhere."

After rushing for 3,022 yards and 38 touchdowns, he chose to resume his career at Auburn. He had the opportunity to attend the home state school, LSU, and had offers from Miami, Texas and Nebraska. After failing to meet academic standards, Auburn placed him at Coffeyville (Kansas) Community College.Quietly tucked away in the vast grassy plains of rural Kansas and the nearest city, Tulsa, more than an hour away, Jacobs and his Red Raven teammates developed a strong bond. "That is it, just hang out with guys," Jacobs said."But we had fun playing football, working out and lifting weights. We had fun doing those kinds of things. I remember going out and having water balloon fights. We would just joke around, making fun of each other. They don't do that at Auburn. "When somebody had a problem at Coffeyville, they didn't run to the coaches; they ran to their teammates."

The chemistry spilled onto the field. The Red Raven offense was unstoppable as he and Muhammad Abdulqaadir formed the most potent backfield in the nation during his freshman season. "When he and Muhammad played together, Muhammad always wanted Brandon to go in there and mash it up a bit before he went in," said SIU defensive line coach Bryce Saia, who joined the Saluki staff this winter after six seasons at Coffeyville. "When Muhammad blew out his knee, you saw tears come out of Brandon's eyes." After Abdulqaadir left for SIU, Jacobs no longer had to share carries. The ball was his. Saluki head coach Jerry Kill first saw Jacobs when he made a visit to Coffeyville to recruit future SIU players Frank Johnson, Linton Brown and Jamarquis Jordan. In the third quarter of the Dalton Defenders Bowl,which pitted the Red Ravens against Rochester (Minn.),Jacobs broke lose on a counter. He outran the entire secondary and walked into the end zone for an 85-yardtouchdown. He finished the game with 259 yards on 24carries. "Little did [Kill] know, No. 27 would be playing for him someday," Saia said.

In the last weekend in March, Jacobs took a visit to Carbondale, Ill., and met with Kill in his office. He heard truth in what Kill said to him. "He is a straight-up guy," Jacobs said of Kill. "I had a lot of one-on-one conversations at Auburn that were untruthful. Even when the guys from Coffeyville would get into trouble here, he didn't throw them out like a dishrag." During the visit, he saw familiar faces, people he used to consider family. He saw three former Red Raven coaches, his former backfield mate, Abdulqaadir, and his best friend, McClain. When it came time for him to leave, he sat at the hotel crying. In that weekend at Carbondale, the gaping void in his life was bandaged. Jacobs felt like he regained a part of who he was, and he signed a financial aid agreement three days later to play atSIU. "I couldn't tell you how it really felt to be backwith those guys," Jacobs said. "I couldn't describethat. I felt good about myself. It brought some prideback that told me I could be the person I was a longtime ago." Kill has already told him he wants him down to 250 pounds and expects him in Carbondale in early June to join the team. Jacobs already has thought out his first carry. "I love hitting someone right up in his chest," Jacobs said. "I'd like to start with an 80- or 90-yard run,maybe run over a couple of linebackers and outrun the secondary." He will still have to fight for more carries, just like at Auburn. Along with him, the SIU backfield is crowded with holdover Antoine Jackson, Minnesota transfer Terry Jackson II and former Coffeyville teammate Arkee Whitlock. But he doesn't care. His family is here. He hopes it will become his home.
This post was edited on 9/19/17 at 4:44 pm
Posted by Sid E Walker
InsecureU ©
Member since Nov 2013
23887 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 4:31 pm to
quote:

It is too high of a bar that has been set. If it was shared here many would call it unattainable. They would be right except for the exceptional men that come through Auburn.

Then why does AU football regularly suck if their young men are so exceptional?

Is the Auburn Creed a bait and switch scam?
Posted by jsmoove
Member since Oct 2010
12627 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 4:34 pm to
quote:

Seemed like a giant waste of time to me.

quote:

Every Saturday of college football season, I start a thread entitled "Hey Auburn..." with a message of "frick you." This is usually posted on the Score Board, because that board is essentially not moderated, threads aren't anchored or deleted, etc. as they would be on the SECRant.

The day I posted that thread was the first official Saturday of college football season. However, because the SEC didn't have any games, the Score Board didn't open. So I had to be a little creative in the way I designed the thread. The first letter of each paragraph spelled out "frick YOU." It was a nice, light hearted, creative welcome to the college football season we had all been long awaiting.


I'm well aware of your dumb "fuc* you" threads, but
Posted by Tuscaloosa
11x Award Winning SECRant user
Member since Dec 2011
46626 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 4:56 pm to
Nevermind. That was mean.
This post was edited on 9/19/17 at 5:02 pm
Posted by RockyMtnTigerWDE
War Damn Eagle Dad!
Member since Oct 2010
105424 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 5:27 pm to
I told you it is too much to share here and the weak minded wouldn't understand. You proved my point son.
Posted by RockyMtnTigerWDE
War Damn Eagle Dad!
Member since Oct 2010
105424 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 5:28 pm to
ANother one that it's just too much for you to understand and I don't want to throw pearls before swine like yourself.. you don't know what to do with them.
Posted by warcry
Mobile
Member since Aug 2011
4770 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 5:43 pm to
quote:

Aman


"Honey, heat up my TV dinner, I found something on Auburn to put on the rant. I am going to get em'!
Posted by AUstar
Member since Dec 2012
17052 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 5:44 pm to
quote:

cut and paste

Former AU running back says Auburn is a racist school


Do you think Bama is immune from racism? You do realize bama STILL has segregated sororities, right? The racism in Alabama's Greek system has made national news several times. Oh look, here's a BuzzFeed article from 2014 talking about it.

I will quote:

quote:

Standing before the podium, UA senior and fellow Kappa Delta sister Kirkland Back scanned the assembly for raised hands. Two minutes had passed, Back said, and there wasn’t a gesture in sight. Dead air filled the room.

From the back of the auditorium came a sudden voice of dissent: “Can we just fricking leave?”

The outburst, shouted by a senior sorority member, spurred enough chaotic uproar to halt the conversation and send everyone out the door. Questions were left unanswered, the status quo unchallenged.

“The whole university is in turmoil, the state is in turmoil, we’re the shite mark on the entire country, and they wanted to leave,” recalled Back, Honors Association president and the Kappa Delta member elected to spearhead the diversity initiatives within the chapter.


Chick calls sorority sisters to talk about their race problem. 200 Sorority sisters refuse to talk and ask to leave the meeting.

Alabama, you guys are still living in 1964 and you want to talk about AU's racism (I don't doubt AU has some, but it's not systematic there).
Posted by CaptainBrannigan
Good Ole Rocky Top Tennessee
Member since Jan 2010
21644 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 5:47 pm to
Well there is not a 70 page melt calling him a quitter like Gumps did last year for Blake Barnett.
Posted by DuncanIdaho
Ouray, CO
Member since Feb 2013
14970 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 6:12 pm to
Pretty sure the Bama fan shouldn't be pulling the racist card.
Posted by Aman
Alabama
Member since Mar 2010
5181 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 6:20 pm to
quote:




"Honey, heat up my TV dinner, I found something on Auburn to put on the rant. I am going to get em'!



Posted by BammerDelendaEst
Member since Jan 2014
2212 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 6:42 pm to
This is exceptionally retarded,even for you.
Posted by NorthGwinnettTiger
Member since Jun 2006
51831 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 6:44 pm to
quote:


Former AU running back says Auburn is a racist school


So racist he's still bringing his family to Auburn games...
Posted by Rabern57
Alabama
Member since Jan 2010
13364 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 6:50 pm to
quote:


These people somehow managed to get brainwashed into believing that they are morally superior to everyone else because they love their University
The irony.
Posted by Tuscaloosa
11x Award Winning SECRant user
Member since Dec 2011
46626 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 6:52 pm to
There is no irony. Bama fans don't prance around and pretend like we're the only people in the country that love our school, or that we're morally superior because we believe in a certain set of universal values.
This post was edited on 9/19/17 at 6:53 pm
Posted by Korin
Member since Jan 2014
37935 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 6:57 pm to
quote:

Do you remember how they cheered (and really still do) the dirtiest SEC player to ever strap on cleats, Nick Fairly. Not just defended, but really just loved how he made illegal hit after hit intentionally trying to hurt players with some of the nastiest cheap shots the game has ever seen. That's all you need to know about what being an Auburn man is all about. When it comes to high morals, many just talk the talk and dont actually walk the walk.

Fairley will forever rustle UGA fans so he's good in my book.
Posted by NYCAuburn
TD Platinum Membership/SECr Sheriff
Member since Feb 2011
57002 posts
Posted on 9/19/17 at 6:57 pm to
quote:

These people somehow managed to get brainwashed into believing that they are morally superior to everyone else because they love their University - as if that's a quality that sets them apart from anyone else.


Interesting comment from an Alabama fan
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