In reply to by Wolverine Devotee

mgobaran

October 18th, 2013 at 12:32 PM ^

You guys saw that picture and thought "He is pushing his religion on me!" ??

He is obviously showing off his UofM Pink wristband. Relax people. The damn religious wristband isn't even in focus.

GoBlueBorderBattle

October 18th, 2013 at 12:09 PM ^

I personally love boobs! Big titties, little titties, old titties, young titties, white titties, black titties, perky titties, saggy titties!!! All titties! And I personally hate cancer! And cancer hates boobs! Any effort to bring attention and save those beautiful mammaries, I can support. Enough of the political and conspiracy theories on this subject. I think they should do a yoga pant appreciation/awareness month as well.

GoBlueBorderBattle

October 19th, 2013 at 2:41 PM ^

Lighten up bud. Pink is the color we are discussing. Pink is the chosen color to bring awareness to BREAST cancer. I understand cancer is the target. It's Ok to lighten the mood sometimes Francis! You're probably a blast to hangout with. NOT! I'll bet you can kill a party in record time with your political correctness and hypersensitivity.

dahblue

October 18th, 2013 at 12:42 PM ^

How about Michigan does something novel and raises awareness for all cancers and not just breast cancer?  We could even wear our traditional uniforms in support of this broad approach to raising awareness of cancer!  

Here's some awareness - lung and colon cancer both kill more people each year than breast cancer.  My family has unfortunately been affected by breast and other cancers, and while the general sentiment of the pink shit comes from a good place (at least among the fans), the saturation feels like a bit of an insult to those who suffer from the many other cancers.

If Michigan wants to jump into this pool, why not do something similar to the Mott campaigns?  Mott treats children, not just children with a certain disease.  We're Michigan; let's do better than following the pink road to nowhere.

ijohnb

October 18th, 2013 at 2:24 PM ^

sucks in all forms, so I am not trying to minimize any form of it, but it does puzzle me why so much attention is paid to one form of cancer while others are kind of just treated as one big pool.  I don't have any problem with it, of course it is a good cause, but it does seem somewhat disproportionate and kind of curious.

GratefulBlue

October 18th, 2013 at 1:18 PM ^

Not sure if this is a common sentiment, but two breast cancers sufferers I know (one no longer with us) both told me repeatedly that October was their least favorite month because they were constantly being reminded of their disease.

Wendyk5

October 18th, 2013 at 1:35 PM ^

I get all the breast cancer awareness month overkill sentiment, but a friend of mine was diagnosed with breast cancer right before summer. Early detection, a quick and non-disfiguring surgery and then 6 weeks of radiation that was a walk in the park compared to a lot of other cancer treatments. She is now cancer-free. I'm not sure if that would have happened without all the pink stuff. So, more awareness for other cancers, but appreciation for breast cancer awareness. 

BiSB

October 18th, 2013 at 2:34 PM ^

The fear is that at some point the 'awareness' efforts start to crowd out and cannibalize the actual medically helpful funding efforts. When people think they are "doing their part" by wearing pink and buying pink merchandise believing that the money will primarily go to research, they are less likely to donate to other efforts that might be more fruitful.

Mr. Yost

October 18th, 2013 at 2:17 PM ^

...if you don't agree with the "cause" then STFU and watch the football game.

Would you suggest that Michigan bring negative attention on itself by not participating in this nationwide "event." I say event so I don't offend anyone who is for or against the "event."

Some of you need to relax and stop acting like your opinion is the only one in the world that matters. If you don't care for this, that's fine...just move on and watch the game. It's the exact same players. It's not like we're putting survivors on the team or stopping the game every (x) seconds to honor a survivor.

Everything is literally the exact same except for some wristbands and patches. That's it.

dahblue

October 18th, 2013 at 2:41 PM ^

Say what?

Would you suggest that Michigan bring negative attention on itself by not participating in this nationwide "event.

Negative attention?  When a team doesn't wear pink whatnot's, is there a single person who thinks, "Those bastards!  They don't support the fight against breast cancer!"

Let's see if the team all grows mustaches in November.  I know you can't sell a mustache, but Movember is about awareness too.  Mr. Yost, no need to get shitty with folks ("STFU"). It's just that some have tired of a "fundraising" campaign gone awry.

Hobbes

October 18th, 2013 at 4:03 PM ^

There's a lot of criticism of Susan G. Komen here and elsewhere - probably rightly so, as only approximately 6% of funds Komen raises goes to actual research/cure efforts.  The rest goes to PR, marketing, and corporate salaries/expenses.  If you're inclined to give, a much better recipient of your money is the Breast Cancer Research Foundation (www.bcrfcure.org)  88% of funds raised goes to research.

bokee88

October 18th, 2013 at 9:02 PM ^

I have no connection to this charity and I am thankful I don't have to deal with these 3 day walks, etc. I have always assumed this was a good charity because of its popularity. So I checked what you wrote and I only found the opposite. But the number you quote is wrong and they spend most of the money on education. You make it sound like only 6% goes towards a good cause. Education and awareness are still a good cause.

Two sources I found are below. The second one is critical of them but not about where the money goes it confirms that most of the money goes towards "good causes".

Just thought I'd share.
http://www.charitynavigator.org/index.cfm?bay=search.summary&orgid=4509…

http://pinkribbonblues.org/2011/03/komen-by-the-numbers-2010-and-still-…