While property is an awful way of putting it and definitely gives unnecessary slavery vibes, the reality is any of us who take a paycheck from a person and/or company understand it. It's really only the people who a) have never had a job or b) can't keep a job that think Kyrie is righteous here.
When you take $ from an employer and sign a contract saying you are working for them, you are understanding that they expect you to do this job to the best of your ability. This includes the guy making $7hr raking leaves in a cemetery and the six figure VP of whatever in a Fortune 500 company.
Now, does everyone, or shyt most people, give 100% every day all day? Of course not. But we are all smart enough to know if we thumb our nose at our boss and make our lack of effort clear and apparent, odds are, we will not have that job. In the cases where someone was wronged by their boss, I can see it. Was Kyrie? What did the Nets do to him? He signed there didn't he?
I'm with SAS on this, if he doesn't wanna play basketball anymore, cool, good luck. But tell the Nets that so they can spend that $ elsewhere. The same way if you or I are not happy at our jobs, we should quit. If we can't quit because we need the $, well, maybe at least pretend to try? This is white collar worker 101
The moron wants to get paid $40 million and still not have to play, and will likely cry like a bytch on social media about fines or whatever if it does happen as if he is some victim