Of course RA aren't going to come out and say that, but the persecution is evident when you see the double standards at play. When you've had cases of players doing drugs, getting involved in fights on tour, undermining coaches, getting drunk publicly and so on, and they're all offered a chance at rehabilitation, you have to wonder what's so terrible about Folau's post that not only has his firing been announced, but he's been publicly disowned by his coach and teammates, humiliated by the chairman of the NRL telling the world that there's no room for Folau in his code and everyone who's so much as liked his post on Instagram has been warned by their own employers.
That's why this is so much more than just an employment issue. If RA just wanted to discipline him, then dropping him for a fortnight would have done just fine. Or a month, if they took it that seriously. Instead, what they're doing is trying to destroy him professionally. Why would they do this? The only reason that makes any sense is that it's his attitude they want to punish, not his actions, and in doing so ensure that any similar attitudes will be driven from the public square.
Well, the message seems to have gotten through. Gary Abblett's had to explain why he liked Folau's post and that it had nothing to do with homophobia. Samu Kerevi's felt the need to apologise for expressing his Christian faith on the Easter weekend. Billy Vunipola's been hassled by the public and threatened by a pitch invader, sure, but he's acknowledged that it's [retty much his fault for "putting his foot in his mouth." And even on this thread, in response to my point that all forms of bigotry are objectionable. one of the responses was that anti-Christian bigotry wasn't that bad, really, because Christians at least had the option of keeping their opinions to themselves.
How's that for irony? If Christians don't want to be discriminated against they can just stay in the closet! Something tells me we'll be seeing a lot more of that going forward.