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Guy Chamberlin

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Everything posted by Guy Chamberlin

  1. The smart people have been able to separate the folly of negotiating with Hamas with the equally ineffective horror of killing tens of thousands of innocent Palestinians, the occasional international aid worker, and sometimes the hostages themselves. https://apnews.com/article/israel-hostages-gaza-hamas-war-52fa9628e6284cdad6d7f7db6cc30742
  2. This is another perfect example of you pretending there's an irrational contingent here than isn't is as wise as you are. Seriously. Find me one post from a person who has zero idea what it's like over there.
  3. Hmmm. If they led with the most egregious missteps from both the left and the right and showed their homework, there's the theoretical chance they could change some minds.
  4. That's an excellent if depressing article by Berliner, who is absolutely correct that diversity itself is meaningless if it's not a diversity of opinion. I blame rescinding the Communications Act of 1934, which perhaps ironically had the federal government requiring companies using public airwaves to operate in the public interest, convenience, and necessity, including mandatory hours spent on balanced civic discourse (usually stuck in the early Sunday time slot) 24/7 cable monetized the news, and found it could profit off narratives and identity politics. And they could profit even more if they fired working reporters and replaced them with talking heads. Easiest way to keep the story going is to have good guys vs. bad guys, and pretty soon every story coming across the transom got broken down into those two bins. Social media made it infinitely worse. And then Donald Trump comes into the mix, transforming one of only two parties in this country, and launching something much worse than most of us imagined. Even as I lobby for a balance of opinion, I'm just gobsmacked this guy even exists and that a cult has grown around him. Time, space, and logic appear to be broken. This f#&%er IS the bad guy, by almost every historical definition of the term, and his vision for America is by his own definition: revenge. He literally wants to overturn democracy for personal gain. They barely hide the grift anymore. So when even the moderate Dems at NPR, or CNN, or here on HB see what might be a legitimate story about Hunter Biden, or a Chinese Lab theory, or just Joe's cognitive challenges, the first reaction is: s#!t, this could help Trump get reelected. It's not a journalist's job to direct political outcomes. But sweet Jesus.....if facts remain facts and NPR is the corollary to Newsmax, I will run with their bias until Walter Cronkite returns from the dead.
  5. But that would mean the end of the post board as we know it.
  6. You tend to dedicate a lot of posts to the pro nut bros, and often claim HB posters are among them, when they're not.
  7. Outside of a small faction of Hamas apologists, pro-Palestine sentiment is mostly about their right to exist -- like Israel -- and to stop the wholesale bombing of civilians as conducted by the Netanyahu government. Not exactly nutty.
  8. I've got a different take on the guy. I see a competent but not especially gifted 7' 4" athlete who gets most of the team's offense funneled to him. Given so many mismatches, he's going to get his points. But with a little bit of defensive strategy and talent, he and the team become a lot less efficient. Even with his incredible advantage, he's not a great finisher. Mostly what concerns me, and would keep him off my draft board, is watching him stand flat footed, arms at his side, as a Husky player drives past him. How often he's out of position, or makes no real effort for rebounds. Or simply has them taken out of his hands by a more motivated defender. I think the NBA will eat him alive.
  9. I think if we all compared notes, we'd realize every part of the country, down to individual cities and even neighborhoods, handled the "mandates" differently, including ignoring them completely.
  10. It's worth recalling that in March of 2020, our closest working example of a pandemic was the 1918-19 global Influenza outbreak that infected a third of the world's population, and killed more people than the World War that had just concluded. Also in March of 2020, I rolled my eyes at the oncoming hysteria, convinced it was merely the next Bird Flu. As I learned more, I learned I was wrong.
  11. We've been laughing about the early days of Covid, when we watched YouTube videos about wiping down your groceries as soon as you brought them into the house. But I never felt betrayed by the information and warnings provided. It always was an evolving pandemic emergency, taking place on a global scale, with countries executing a full range of precautions having nothing to do with Anthony Fauci. I thought the scientists generally chose their words carefully, based on the best available information, and were not afraid to change course as better information became available. I don't think I've seen the full list of what they got wrong, but they weren't wrong to take emergency measures in the early days, along with most countries. In hindsight, perhaps schools should have opened earlier. Then again, Sweden was pretty smug about keeping everything open, including schools, until they had a delayed response that landed them among the worst COVID cases per capita in the world. Masks weren't perfect, and mandates weren't the answer, but they were always sold as the best prevention we could control, and that remains true --- as it is with every virus. There was no doubt an attempt to downplay the possibility of accidental or intentional Covid lab leak from China, but while evidence now suggests it's a distinct possibility, there's roughly the same evidence for the Wuhan Wet Market theory. Once the vaccine was available, 90%+ of COVID deaths were among the unvaccinated. Much was made about vaccinated deaths, but come on. They weren't wrong that Ivermectin and other rumored cures were not effective and should not be taken for COVID cure or prevention. For some reason the "experts" promoting dips#!t cures to show up the Fauci lovers were not held to the same standard of vetting and blaming.
  12. Many people enjoy brown rice. Why are you always bringing race into it?
  13. I think we have to get to the place where we accept that Joe Biden is in decline, but it can be successfully mitigated. Given the alternative and what's at stake, we accept the inside intel that Joe remains highly knowledgeable and capable on important subjects -- vastly better than Donald Trump -- and that Joe will remain prone to both physical and verbal missteps while under constant scrutiny. The party stops pretending he's not too old and that we didn't deserve someone younger and more inspiring, but instead it transparently limits his press conferences and extemporaneous opportunities, and begins delegating more public roles to his cabinet members and spokespeople. Biden is the President and will give some perfectly good speeches when needed, but it will be a team effort. And if you look at the team Biden assembles vs. the team Trump will assemble, it's not even close. It's grown ups vs. the worst teenagers you can imagine. It's Big Ten vs Community College.
  14. There was a kerfuffle a dozen years or so ago, just as my kids were moving into the local Middle School. We have about a 50/50 split between White and Hispanic kids here, and this made a lot of white parents nervous about sending their kids to the public middle school, where they were scared of both non-existent gangs and Hispanics dragging down the academic ranking. The school created a series of Advanced Placement classes (can't recall if the district was involved) that certainly sounded merit based but were essentially designed as a safe space for the white kids, a fact everyone seemed to recognized by the complexion of the classrooms. The principal was replaced and the system was changed, and most folks were good with it, as smart kids of any ethnicity still had the chance to excel. In what was no doubt a well-intentioned move, they created a recognition program exclusively for ESL or second-generation Hispanic students with some aspirational name like Rising Achievers, but when you attended the awards ceremonies it looked like a two track system, with a patronizing nod to kids given lower expectations. But the same district has tried to maintain the college track AP for high schoolers, and no one wants to abandon some kind of merit based option.
  15. The network would be sad to have a playoffs without LeBron James, Steph Curry and/or Kevin Durant, but sometimes youth needs to be served and the top tier is loaded with young talent. That being said, the Nuggets are deep, experienced, and tested, and I honestly don't know anyone who hates them. That's rare all by itself.
  16. I thought the only way this works is that whatever team gets Bronny will get LeBron James at a huge discount so he can end his career playing with his son. I would not want to be the coach of that team.
  17. It was actually a series of stupid and slanted questions. My issue was about the qualities I'd look for in a teacher, taking your larger posting history into account. I'm sticking with that answer. You cheerfully admit the many many subjects you know next to nothing about. So I'm honestly not being a d!(k about this.
  18. It's mostly that you don't seem very curious, or interested in doing the simple things that would turn your opinions into informed opinions. Kinda the antithesis of teaching, really.
  19. I'd be willing to do what's good for college sports.
  20. I want to go back to the days when I didn't think you were a real teacher.
  21. Massive contract renegotiating when the time comes, with broadcasting entities giving the Big 10 and SEC no choice but to play along. Go ahead and let them keep their name and brand, but they go back to geographic roots that aren't even a generation old. Even with more equitable distribution, it's certainly possible these conferences could get more money from the new college sports landscape than they have now.
  22. It doesn't get talked about much, but conference realignment has been 100% driven by football, and most schools have another 20+ athletic programs forced to follow along. The Pac 10 and ACC/Big10 mergers in particular will add a large burden to sports that can't afford it, especially the travel schedules that aren't conducive to athletes, students, and tight budgets. I'm wondering if the growth of women's volleyball and men's and women's basketball might allow other people in on the decision. A return to geographic alignment could make a lot of sense for both monetary and rivalry reasons.
  23. I can tell you from direct experience that much of the DEI spending goes to hiring a consultant for a one day seminar, having someone write up a boilerplate DEI statement for their digital media, cleaning up the optics wherever possible, and legitimately encouraging human resources to bring in and/or promote people of color. All told, it's not much money. The bigger companies may hire a full-time DEI officer. It will be interesting to check back on this in a few years. In other words, there's plenty of box checking and posturing and even some silliness, but at the end of the day it moves the needle a bit, and the diversity will likely have a positive return for the business.
  24. Don't worry about offending me. I mean, not any more than you already do. : ) I'm going to take a wild guess that the "story after story" about transgenderism run amok appear in the conservative media you consume, specifically culled for your outrage and conveniently ignoring more baseline evidence. Hollywood weirdos? Someone with 3 non-binary children? Why does that negate the scientific numbers we agreed on? If we're going on a case by case basis, all kinds of parents -- well intentioned and not -- can f#&% up their kids. To put it another way: if we were to collect all the stories of devout Christians raising their kids with visions of cultish fundamentalism, scientific denial, and physical punishment for their sins, would the trans community perhaps want to distance itself from Easter?
  25. Workers control the means of production. Wealth inequality is something to be corrected. The value of a commodity is measured by the worker's skill, yada yada yada. I'm sure this isn't what you or Carol had in mind, or Karl for that matter, but it's not that big of a leap from that post. Also, it's laughable to think DEI investment is taking anything away from corporate bottom lines. Carol is so keen to badmouth DEI and ESG, she unwittingly crawls in bed with Karl Marx. Best of all, she's right. Shared ownership is a smart corporate move that's been available to them forever and avoided for the selfish reasons that create class conflict.
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