kilcoo316 wrote:Giblet wrote:I guess I think silver platter means handed to you with no personal worries or losses, like the definition of the term.
This is not the case for the 2009 season with Jenson Button. The perspective is that he was on a failing Honda team, that he stuck with, not that he lucked into some team that handed him a car on a silver platter. His career with this team did not start at the track debut of the BGP-01.
Personal worries? About what?
Losses? He still made a few million in wages last year.
Button stuck with Brawn? What choice did he have? Did he have another drive lined up? No. Did he lose money last year as a result? No, he still made a few million.
Giblet wrote:
He earned that car from that team, and that is why I am beginning to think I am the only one that understands what a silver platter is.
He earned nothing.
Barrichello might have earned that car since he convincingly outperformed Button in 2008.
You have an extremely warped view of a silver platter, and/or a warped view of F1. Which is why I'm getting somewhat pissed off.
You are acting like an idiot. Button AND Barichello earned that car. Nobody outclassed anyone definetely considering that they were driving a tank when everyone else had a car.
Everything I said is true. I have no clue what you arguing, or why you are getting pissed off over a simple discussion.
Relax man.
I am aware he made millions, but he took a PAY CUT, and you are ignoring that as well. That is my point, not that he made no money.
It is blatantly obvious you have no idea what a "sliver platter" is. You are arguing against fact. "Handed on a Silver Platter" to everyone but you means not having to work for something.
The guy had to deal with a car that was one of the worst in recent F1 history vs expectations, for two years in a row. Getting promised a good car and being handed a piece of crud.
Maybe you need to stand up a bit as everything I have said has sailed right over your head, twice now.