If Draymond doesn’t serve a severe suspension and possible criminal charges then the team/league is protecting the on-court products over their supposed morals— full stop.
It is not morals. It is PR.
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Rambling on ...
So much of this nonsense is fake morality as a form of virtue signaling. Showing how good of a person you are by how willing you to severely punish whatever offense occured. The larger the punishment the more moral a human being you are. The better the human being you are.
Whether that is the one doing the punishing (team owners, league front office) or folks calling for more severe punishments (fans on social media).
"I prove how good of a person I am by showing everyone how severe a punishment I'd give this other person" and the punishments just keep escalating and escalating ... to the point they are no longer connected the original offense / crime. It is not about the offense. It is about the virtue signalling of morality for the punishers and the mob foaming at the mouth calling for more punishment.
1. The NBA just had an owner forced out of the league for behaviour that occurred behind the scenes/out of the public eye and you have high-profile NBA employees going out in public saying "We need to make sure that everyone knows we will do our best to make sure that no one ever knows about these behaviours".
You're talking about virtue signalling in terms of punishment, but what you're not understanding is that in light of of these "protect the house, find the leaker" comments, it's clear that the NBA is engaging in virtue signalling when it talks about employee safety (including things like the Ime or Sarver situations) or social justice issues. That's pretty crap, even if it's not surprising.
This isn't about fighting - this is about the team organisation coming together (in a climate of increasing accountability) and saying "We aren't going to do anything to punish Green, we are just making sure things like this stay out of the public eye".
2. It's a weird presumption to assume that the people who have a problem with this are people who've never been in locker rooms. I'm sure many of us have played more inherently violent sports than basketball, and behaving like Draymond would have gotten you thrown off the team, 100%. In fact, I'd say it's more likely that anyone who says that throwing hooks like this is a regular thing either never played or played on some massively toxic teams.