The NFL is a business and the politics behind the business sometimes get in the way of rules being as best as they can. The politics behind that rule is the union that represents the NFL Refs allowed some rules in but wanted to keep some others from being reviewable in order to keep their representatives from looking bad. With really highly paid jobs on the line it makes sense for the union to not want everything reviewable.
It happens in every sport (or hell, every business for that matter).
You realize how hard that is sometimes? Most fans only see that the call is messed up after watching super slow motion replays. Even when you can see the mistake in real time you are seeing it from an angle that no referee has. Referees usually have eye level views with 5 to 10 guys in between them and the play.
I have officiated both baseball and football (up till the high school level) and being a professional official is a job I'd never want. Too damn hard and you face too much criticism on things you usually can't even see.
"There cannot be true dispair without hope." - Bane
"There cannot be true dispair without hope." - Bane
"There cannot be true dispair without hope." - Bane
Likely entirely different. While not everything we think is based on our perspective, the majority of it is, and HOW we think is entirely based on our perspective. Our perspective determines what we think is right, wrong, either morally or logically, and as a collective, society determines what is right and wrong on the prevalent individual perspective. Given the differences between what is considered right and wrong between modern and ancient, we can conclude that most individuals now share an entirely different viewpoint than ancient. Thus, those from the ancient may view our society in a completely different light that we do, and those from the future would do the same if in an equal position.
+49
Morning.
Bye.
+ 16
Bye Joy.
"There cannot be true dispair without hope." - Bane
+ 18
Bed time. Night everyone.
"There cannot be true dispair without hope." - Bane