In the days after the New England Patriots dumped him, receiver Antonio Brown has come out talking money and smack, threatening to take former teams to arbitration for having the audacity to tear up his contracts.

In tweets that have taken on a not so slightly unhinged quality, the 31-year-old receiver sounded purely pugnacious: “Will not be playing in the @NFL anymore these owners can cancel deals do whatever they want at anytime we will see if the @NFLPA hold them accountable sad they can just void guarantees anytime.”

Unfortunately for this former All-Pro, he is unemployed for straightforward reasons: He is on the receiving end of horrific accusations from two women. A trainer has accused him in a lawsuit of sexually assaulting her three times, and an artist said that he had exposed himself to her and that, after she spoke of this to Sports Illustrated, he had sent her threatening group text messages, replete with photographs of her children.

Brown is not what Mother Jones had in mind when she campaigned for worker’s rights. And as sports contracts have personal conduct clauses, he could wave goodbye to many millions of dollars.