You realize you have changed what you're actually trying to argue, right?
This was your reply to my OP:
I'm not a lawyer, but my understanding is that the Class Action Settlement is sort of a proxy for a collective bargaining agreement. Any athlete can opt out of the settlement, but if they don't, the terms are binding within the bounds of the Class. Also if anyone opts out of the Settlement, they are on their own insofar as litigation against the NCAA is concerned.
How you got to your last statement from that is beyond me.
There is no nuance if you're changing goalposts. Anyhow, this horse has been beat to death. I'm checking out of this one.
You're welcome to check out unless you want to continue trying to get in the last word. But your post above begs a response.
I concede that in our initial discourse on this topic, as you quoted above, you expressed confusion over my point (my bad for not being clear). I attempted to clarify that and
directly quoted your statement that I was having an issue with. You subsequently expressed an understanding of my point. You also created a slight tangent to this point concerning how a class action could not affect future employees. We had a couple of exchanges to this tangent, which may have clouded my original point.
I’ve tried to be consistent with my argument that the NCAA proposal includes a cap, regardless of your stating that it can’t work without collective bargaining. I’ve quoted your ”can’t be a cap” statement twice and highlighted it an additional time in another post. I don’t see how I could have made the origin of my argument any more clear, and that goalpost hasn’t moved. If I’m wrong about the cap and it gets shot down from the settlement, I’ll gladly concede that you were correct.