historian said:
I have corrected the original to clarify my meaning:
"What longtimebear said about the decline of loyalty, commitment & values and what others have said abou college education reflects an overall decline in American culture. The value of college education has declined accordingly, especially as they often are laboratories of new ideas & trends. Unfortunately, many of the changes have been more detrimental to schools & to society."
I wasn't talking about NIL or money specifically but about changes in America over the past few decades. It was also based partly on the posts of boykin_spaniel & others.
Culture, ie., loyalty, patriotism, honesty, etc., are not commodities or assets that are handed out and we keep them in our wallets. The important values for me at least exist in an equilibrium requiring trust and reciprocal actions from those who lead and those who are led. Getting back to sports, NCAA was not wrong in allowing an athlete compensation for their name and likeness, nor was it wrong to allow those athletes the opportunity to change direction in their career and not be tied to a place they no longer wanted to be. Where the NCAA failed, and failed spectacularly, is in their complete failure to lead in these matters. By allowing changes without any control system, without any limits, they have taken us more than a 100years backward to when there were no recruiting rules. I seem to remember a story about early Texas Football where the dominant player from one college made a deal to play for the other team at halftime. When you take away the rules, and the leadership, the money rules.