We need to talk about foobaw

Last Sunday, Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa was knocked down in the second quarter of a game against the Buffalo Bills and hit the back of his head on the turf. He lay there for a few seconds, then tried to stand up on wobbly legs then he collapsed, obviously slobberknocked. They took him into the locker room, then sent him out to play the second half, claiming he had passed the concussion protocol and that he had collapsed due to a leg injury, which anybody could plainly see was a lie.Last night, against the Cincinnati Bengals, he was again knocked down and hit the back of his head. This timehe lay motionless for several minutes and was carted off the field. Yeah, he ' s paid tens of millions of dollars and the glamor and the glory are obviously worth it to a lot of young men, but . . . The list of former football players who have suffered from serious behavioral problems and dementia is far too long to even start. And you don ' t need to play in the NFL, or even big time college foobaw, to develop the disease called Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy. It can result from repeated small blows to the head which don ' t result in an apparent concussion, and those are an inevitable part of the game of North American Football. The helmet protects the scalp and the skull, but it doesn ' t protect the brain, that sloshes around inside the skull whenever there ' s a blow to the head. The helmet makes itmore dangerous, not less.Tua ' s a grown man so you may want to arg...
Source: Stayin' Alive - Category: American Health Source Type: blogs