OPINION: What’s In A Name?

OPINION: What’s In A Name
The Brett Favre legacy is not looking good, as he faces scrutiny over welfare fraud
By D. S. Mitchell
Say His Name
What do you think of when you hear the name Brett Favre? Until a week ago, I never thought of Brett Favre one way or another. I’m more into basketball, myself. I knew he had played in the NFL for the Green Bay Packers, and I’d obviously seen pictures of the old dude, he was a football icon.
The Internet
From the internet I found the following statistics. In the 15 years spanning 1992-2007, Favre was synonymous with the Green Bay Packers and was their most legendary quarterback. During that time, he led the team to two Super Bowls and became the first and only NFL player to win three consecutive AP MVP awards.
- 3× Associated Press MVP (1995, 1996, and 1997; the last shared with (Barry Sanders)
- 11× Pro Bowl pick
- 6× First- or Second-team All Pro choice
- 1990’s NFL All Decade Team
- NFL 100th Anniversary All-Time Team
- Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame (2015)
- Pro Football Hall of Fame (2016)
Lots of It
I then looked up his financials, on the internet of course. It is estimated from his player contract days with Green Bay alone, Favre earned more than 140 million dollars. This apparently, does not include money from other teams he played for, or endorsements and licensing fees. His net worth today is estimated to be well over 100 million dollars. So why does a guy with buckets of money need to steal from welfare recipients? The answer of course is that he did not ‘need to steal’ money from anybody. But, Mr. Favre with a 100 million dollars in the bank decided it would be okay to steal from starving kids in his home state of Mississippi.
Conclusion
Put away the Brett Favre jerseys and the Green Bay Packer pendants from his glory days and call out Brett Favre for what he is, a cheat, and a liar, and possibly a criminal. Brett Favre used his power and influence to redirect money from Mississippi welfare recipients to the construction of a new volley ball stadium, at his alma mater, Southern Mississippi. Just so you understand this, Brett Favre, millionaire football icon, decided it would be okay for a bunch of impoverished kids in Mississippi to miss a couple meals, so his daughter could play volleyball in a fancy new stadium.
**Mr. Favre states he repaid the 1.1 million he diverted from poor kids. But, he didn’t pay back interest. If the scam had not been uncovered, I’m sure Mr. Favre would have not repaid a nickel. I think it is time that the U.S. government hold states accountable for delivering welfare money to those most in need, not rich football icons.













































































































































