October 23, 2007

Football vitriol

Every time I got the urge to come back and start typing, I'd first go take a look at all the bloggers in my bookmarks list. I'd see all the annoyance and unpleasantness, and decide my time was better spent playing with my children. Then, of course, football season started, and I figured I might start blogging Patriots games again. Except that when you're watching the games on TiVodelay, that seems a little trite. And I'm quite tired by the time I'm done watching the game. And really, do you need another person telling you how great the Patriots are? I didn't think so.

But I got really annoyed at Gregg Easterbrook this week. His Tuesday Morning Quarterback column is filled with the most hate-filled vitriol about the Patriots. Worse than terminal BDS, really. I excerpt and comment for your "pleasure":

Argument for the New England Patriots as scoundrels in the service of that which is baleful: Dishonesty, cheating, arrogance, hubris, endless complaining even in success.

See, Easterbrook has a hard-on for the videocamera scandal; he thinks it's this generation's Watergate. What Gregg has forgotten is that, in fact, scheming for advantage is way of life in the NFL, as is breaking the rules, and taking your penalties when caught.

As for arrogance and hubris, this is a team which refuses to discuss anything except the coming game, always compliments their opponents before and after the game, and is the first to find fault with their own play. As for complaint, he is referring to the Patriots' known penchant to latching on to others without that discretion, and using that material to fire themselves up. So when T.O. says to "getcha popcorn ready", the Patriots do.

Belichick and the rest of the top of the Patriots' organization continue to refuse to answer questions about what was in the cheating tapes -- and generally, you refuse to answer questions if you have something to hide.

Yup, and only the guilty need a lawyer.

The team's star, Tom Brady, is a smirking sybarite who dates actresses and supermodels but whose public charity appearances are infrequent.

I love how charity in his mind is tied to the accolades that come with it. Hey Gregg, that isn't charity. That's buying an image.

That constant smirk on Brady's face reminds one of Dick Cheney; people who smirk are fairly broadcasting the message, "I'm hiding something."

Doesn't even need comment.

New England is scoring so many points the Patriots offense looks like cherries and oranges spinning on a slot machine. The Flying Elvii stand plus-159 in net points, by far the best scoring margin in the NFL. This is supposed to be impressive. But I think it's creepy....

Let's just get this straight. Because the Patriots are playing so well, they must be bad. Hunh.

On Sunday, the Patriots led the winless Dolphins 42-7 late in the third quarter, yet Tom Brady was still behind center. And he wasn't just handing off the ball to grind the clock, either. Rather, he was back in the shotgun, still throwing to run up the score. Here is a summary of the Patriots' possession with a 42-7 lead late in the third and Brady, Randy Moss and the rest of their offensive starters on the field: Pass, run, pass, run, pass, pass. When backup quarterback Matt Cassel entered the game in the fourth quarter, with the Patriots leading 42-14 -- a margin larger than the greatest fourth-quarter comeback in NFL history (see below) -- did he hand off the ball to grind the clock? Here were Patriots' coaches first three calls: Run, pass, pass. Cassel's second pass was intercepted and returned for a touchdown, and Brady re-entered the game. Did he grind down the clock? Pass, pass, run, run, pass. The final score was 49-28.

Ahh, yes, Easterbrook reveals his special place for "running to grind down the clock." For most quarterbacks, that makes sense; incomplete passes stop the clock. But to grind the clock, you not only have to keep the clock moving, you have to get first downs. Rather than going runwhacky, the Patriots continue to use a phenomenal passer - who had one grounding and three (THREE!) incompletions on the day. For Brady, passing is as reliable as running.

The week before, New England led Dallas 42-27 and had second-and-goal on the Cowboys' 6-yard line with 1:43 remaining and Dallas out of timeouts. Three kneel-downs would have ended the game. But Belichick kept calling plays, frantic to run up the score -- including calling a play with 23 seconds remaining from the Dallas 1-yard line, resulting in a touchdown that made the final New England 48, Dallas 27. The Patriots then kicked off, and Dallas got the ball with 13 seconds remaining. Cowboys coach Wade Phillips showed the dignity Belichick lacked and ordered a kneel-down.

What Easterbrook leaves out is that the reason the clock was stopped at 1:43 on second down was that Wade Phillips had just called a timeout. Had that not been called, the Patriots running plays would have run out the clock after third down, no touchdown. Wade Phillips wanted the ball back. The Patriots ran plays to eat up the clock. The Cowboys couldn't stop an undrafted free agent running back.

Innocent people falsely accused crave the recovery of their reputation, working hard to convince the world they are good. Creepy people who think they can get away with something act belligerent and show poor sportsmanship, which is what Belichick is doing right now.

Really? I've seen a lot of innocent people falsely accused just get tired and hide. And a lot more get really, really belligerent. In fact, guilty people often work hard to preserve their reputation.


Whew, got that out of my system, for this week anyway. See you later.

May 10, 2007

Two months of quiet time...

Sorry about that, for those that care. A month ago, our second child (heretoafter referred to as CozikinBoy) was born, and life has been quite, quite hectic. Maybe soon I'll start paying attention to the world again.

March 07, 2007

The Abortion line

Where do you draw the line as a moderate between the pro-lifers - "every cell is sacred" and the pro-choicers - "every abortion is sacred"?

I think a lot of folks have used viability as a touchstone, but, as Gus Van Horn and Amillia Sonja Taylor help us see, that's a doomed argument:

It takes little imagination to conceive of further advances in technology that will permit a fertilized egg to be grown to full term artificially. If, as Blackwell hopes, we confuse such advances in technology with actual viability, we will have what passes for a "secular" argument against all abortion.

Science fiction has been positing uterine replicators and artificial wombs for some time now. Clearly, we need another touchstone.

February 25, 2007

Maybe Dan Brown was right...

James Cameron and the Discovery Channel go for the big one:

Cameron and colleague Simcha Jacobovici used evidence from DNA tests, archaeological surveys and biblical studies, showing that 10 stone coffins discovered in a Jerusalem suburb in 1980 by Israeli construction workers belonged to Jesus and his family.

Some 20 years later archaeologists apparently deciphered some of the names on the tombs in the 2,000-year-old cave as Jesua, son of Joseph, Mary, Mary, Mathew, Jofa and Judah, son of Jesua.

The 90-minute Discovery Channel film, produced by Cameron and directed by Jacobovici, will be shown on Channel 4.

The things Israeli archeologists dig up. If true, very interesting. I expect worldwide riots, Christians! (Oh, wait. Wrong religion for that).

February 18, 2007

How much corruption is too little?

Bts does some math on corruption in Iraq:

Let’s call it a hundred million wasted, for a wastage of one part per three thousand, one thirtieth of a percent. I would love to see a reliable way to run major development projects in the third world with a waste and corruption rate of 0.03%. I’ve been awfully skeptical of the no-bid contracts handed out to Halliburton and friends, but this makes me reconsider. This is unbelievable performance.

I agree. Heck, I'd like to see Congress run something with less waste than 0.03%.

February 15, 2007

Yum

No, I haven't gotten lost recently.

But on a side note, if you like beef jerky, pick up a bag of Jim Beam Beef Jerky next time you spy some. Oh so good.

January 30, 2007

Health care

Aside from the fact that Bush proposed it, why doesn't the left like the health care proposal? After all, it's nothing if not a shift to a more "progressive" tax.

HH 104

Haveil Havalim #104 is up!

January 24, 2007

A Sample of Divisiveness

After the State of The Union address last night, I approached a coworker who leans very left for his take. I was honestly curious; I thought the President tried to embrace some of the issues from the left, even if he tried to sell only Republican solutions to them.

"I can't watch that man any more, he makes me too angry."

How is anyone supposed to reach across the aisle if there is no one there to listen? How can you argue to find compromise when your arguments can't even be heard?

He then challenged whether I supported the troop surge. I said yes, although I wished the number was even higher. He mocked that opinion, and when I asked for his success strategy, he asserted that success was impossible; our presence was the reason people were killing each other, and we should just give up and go home. At least he was honest, even if I can't grasp his reasoning.

January 22, 2007

Patriots at Colts

What an amazing shootout. After the first half, I thought the game was well in hand, but the Colts found the Patriots' weakness - an exhausted defense. Apparently, the Pats didn't fully recover from the Chargers game, and Peyton Manning and team exploited that in the second half. Players that I had never even seen on the sideline were playing for long stretches to give the starters a break, and that opened up all that the Colts needed.

Ellis Hobbs had another stellar day, but even his help - several amazing kickoff returns, as well as breaking up passes - wasn't enough to tip the scales back.

We'll resume our Patriots coverage in another 6 months.

January 21, 2007

Ownership as Tzedakah

Thirteen years ago, Robert Kraft bought the New England Patriots. The Mike Reiss does a nice retrospective, and this statement caught my eye:

"When my wife doubted me in buying the team, I told her that if we did a good job managing this asset, we'd do more in terms of impacting the psyche of the community than if we were in position to give a million dollars a week away," Kraft said. "Sport can bring a community together in ways that nothing else does. It's the great equalizer."

What an amazing perspective. The Krafts promised to bring a Super Bowl championship to Boston, instead of letting the Patriots go to St. Louis. And while I'm sure that making money was a big piece of their motivation, the Krafts' philanthropy is well-known (including the Kraft Family Stadium in Jerusalem), so I believe that the goal of increasing happiness in New England was a big piece of their motives.

Thank you, Bob and Myra Kraft.

January 15, 2007

Colts at Ravens

Sums it up.

January 14, 2007

Patriots at Chargers

What a game! Going into the game, my prediction was either a close Patriots win, or a huge Chargers win. I'm glad to be right in a good way. What happened? Ellis Hobbs (disclaimer: I wear number 27's jersey every week when the Pats play). And a lot of other great headsup play by the Patriots, I'll grant, but Ellis Hobbs had an amazing day - he had several last man tackles on LaDainian Tomlinson, and broke up a lot of passes to Antonio Gates. His goal-line stop of Lorenzo Neal was amazing, as well - like watching a ping-pong ball derail a bowling ball.

Heath Evans was the special teams guy today - he seemed to be in on every special teams tackle or knockout, which was nice to see (not enough credit is given to special teams tacklers, so here's one!).

Troy Brown, as usual, gets the offense/defense player of the game. Sure, he never took a snap on defense, but forcing that fumble on the interception? Amazing!

The CBS announcers are, in my opinion, idiots. Maybe they don't have as clear a picture as my HDTV, but several times they miscalled plays, or misanalyzed what was going on on the field. And then they'd do recaps that would run over the next play. Message to announcers: The Patriots do not have the traditional 22 second gap from end of play to break huddle. They often do a hurryup - so stop with cutting to clips!

Marty Schottenheimer: If you're going to make a point of not wearing a headset as a head coach, boy does it make you look nervous when you put one on halfway through the game.

LaDainian: The NFL is full of taunting. Both teams were aggressive and taunting - and note that it was your team with the two unsportsmanlike conduct flags. Storming off the field after your last game the season you're named the league MVP? That has absolutely no class. Your comment that they were mimicking Merriman's dance on their victory, and that was direct orders from Belichick to disrespect you holds no water. To quote Artrell Hawkins' comment to you, "You're better than this." You're going to need to apologize to Bill Belichick, and the Patriots, to get beyond this.


Next week is, yet again, the Colts and Patriots duking it out. Sorry to everyone who had been looking forward to the much-heralded shadow SuperBowl (Ravens at Chargers); you'll have to settle for this rivalry instead.

Welcome to Double Punishment

Governor Patrick has come up a way to pay for more police officers:

Governor Deval Patrick said yesterday that he had come up with a way to pay for more police officers in Massachusetts: charge convicted criminals a fee.
Unveiling his most detailed account yet of his plans for next year's state budget, Patrick said he would propose a "safety fee," which every person convicted of a crime would have to pay.

It's not clear whether he's proposing that the courts assess the fee as part of laying out a punishment. Presuming he isn't, this sounds a lot like a double punishment scheme - a judge hands out a fine for a misdemeanor, and then the governor adds on his own fee. This reminds me of the scheme South Carolina uses to fund the "uninsurable motorist" insurance pool - by charging a fee based on the number of tickets a driver has had in the last three years (it doesn't matter that you've already paid your fine to the jurisdiction in which you were ticketed, or that your insurance rates have gone up to reflect the violation). And the fee is collected - you guessed it - through your insurance company; you can't get insurance without paying the fee.

January 13, 2007

Colts at Ravens

I realize I don't normally cover non-Patriots games except in passing, but this one was a doozy. After the first possession - in which Baltimore had three positive yardage plays, but opted to punt with 4th and 2 around their 40 - I turned to my wife and noted that I was switching from predicting a Ravens victory to a Colts victory. Why? The Colts have one of the most amazing offenses in the league. Peyton Manning, now that he's imitating Tom Brady, may be one of the greatest quarterbacks ever. For the Ravens to win - no matter how good their defense - they needed to score points. And to score points, they needed to be on the field. With three plays of two or more yards each under your belt, you go for it on 4th and 2. Instead, the kick gets returned to the COlts 45, for a net shift of around 15 yards.

The Ravens defense deserves great kudos. Keeping the Colts out of the end zone for the entire game is an amazing feat, forcing 5 Colts field goals (the Colts' acquisition of Adam Vinatieri paid off with the 51-yard, bounce off the bottom crossbar field goal). But the Ravens offense couldn't put it together to match the output of their defense.

Some accolades should also go to the Colts defense - which has twice forced us all to eat our predictions of a Colts meltdown from their porous defense. I don't think they'll make it all the way - but I could be surprised.

January 09, 2007

A disturbing trend

Jemele Hill at ESPN Page 2 notes a disturbing trend, of which Darrent Williams's killing is the latest instance:

Over the past 12 months, three NFL players have been shot, and in the past couple weeks, police discovered one NFL player, Bears defensive lineman Tank Johnson, had enough weapons in his home to mount a terrorist attack. University of Miami lineman Bryan Pata was shot to death at his apartment complex in November. In Denver alone, three notable athletes have been shot since 2003 – Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker Joey Porter, Denver Nuggets guard Julius Hodge and now, tragically, Williams.

One unavoidable commonality about these episodes of gunplay: all of the athletes are black.

It leads to an inevitable question from all of us, but particularly mainstream America: Why do black athletes often seem to find themselves either holding a gun or staring down the barrel of one?

A good, and disturbing read; and a good followup to Juan WIlliams's Enough. Jemele notes some key problems:

While America is generally a violent place, no culture in this country glorifies violence more than the African-American community. And consequently, no other racial group is as disproportionately affected by it.
..
Two things you almost always see when "MTV Cribs" features a black superstar: a poster of Tony Montana and a poster of the Godfather. Montana and Michael Corleone, though fictional, are considered heroes by young black men everywhere. Montana and Corleone had one thing in common: both killed people to gain respect.
...
BET, the same network that saw fit to cut its nightly news program, has a new show called "American Gangster," which "chronicles the life and times of some of Black America's most notorious crime figures."
...
Black men constantly receive the message that they can't make it in life through using legitimate means, and the only way they gain society's respect is through the street game.

Sad and sobering. And truly hard to argue with.

January 08, 2007

Hobbs honors D-Will

Ellis Hobbs honored fallen Darrent Williams yesterday:

Cornerback Ellis Hobbs paid tribute to Darrent Williams, the Denver Broncos cornerback who died last week, by wearing his name on the shirt he wore under his game jersey yesterday. Both grew up in Texas and got to know each other before the 2005 draft, when they both were coming out of college.
"I was doing it out of respect," said Hobbs, who started for the third straight week. "I had all the emotions that I wanted before this. This just gave me a purpose to go out there. I asked the Lord 'Let him play through me.' I know how bad he wanted it on the field with his aggressive attitude. I can say that we're the same type of player. I respected him and he respected me."
Hobbs's gray Patriots T-shirt had the words "R.I.P. D. Williams," on it, in addition to the No. 27.

I hadn't realized that they'd known each other pre-NFL; although it makes sense -- both were drafted in the same year, into the same position, and both were from Texas. It was a good, non-distracting tribute.

January 07, 2007

Haveil Havalim #101

is up at Esser Agaroth

Jets at Patriots

Okay, third time's the charm. The Jet played a very good game; better than the 21 point gap in the score would indicate. But ultimately, the Pats played great football, and that was the difference. The Vince Wilfork 31-yard run after the "oops, was that a fumble?" play was just classic. And now on to San Diego.

SoccerDad gets his desire, and the Colts will go home to Baltimore. Kansas City's offense showed up in very predictable plays, and the Colts stepped up to shut them down. I'm not surprised at the Colts win - but I am surprised that with 40 minutes of possession, they only amassed 23 points. Unless the Colts get their game on, the Ravens are going to the championship.

As for the NFC, such a comedy! Of the four, the Eagles definitely looked like they might belong in the NFC championship game. Maybe.

Okay, maybe not. We'll have to see how the Saints perform next week; but as it stands, it really feels like the SuperBowl is going to be decided in the next three AFC games (and I'm hoping it's settled in Baltimore).

January 04, 2007

Amendment fun

The legislature split its understanding of the SJC yesterday - voting on the same-sex marriage ban, but not on the affordable health care initiative. Both are citizen initiatives, which needed two consecutive votes in the legislature to then be placed on the ballot. (Affordable health care already had one). What's interesting here is that both of these are bad initiatives, each one favored by one end of the political spectrum. And, that sadly, both are likely to pass if put before the people.

But first, a primer on how the Massachusetts initiative system works: First, you get ten signatures, submit your initiative to the Attorney General for validation (the crayon rule). Then you take a petition out and get a bunch of signatures. Now it goes to the legislature - they have to vote, as noted, in two consecutive sessions, but they only need 25% yea votes to pass (the leper rule). Then it goes on a ballot. It needs more "yes" votes than "no" votes, and 30% of the votes cast (the mob rule).

So it's pretty easy for an initiative to succeed if put before the people - because a number of folks might abstain (on the 2006 ballot, 6% abstained on Question 1, and about 11% on Questions 2 & 3), a lot might not show up (only 60% of registered voters showed up in 2006 (and only 80% of adults are registered to vote)).

Why are both of these bad, though?

The same sex marriage ban is bad - simply because government needs to be careful on its interaction with the bedroom. This initiative is, unfortunately, the logical next step in the battle - same sex marriage proponents need to get same sex marriage enshrined in law, and out of the wacky limbo state it is in, to take away the precedent argument (exercise for the reader: Argue the cases for polygamy, line marriages, and incest marriage using the current state of same sex marriage as a precedent). We shouldn't ban it, but we need a law here.

Affordable health care is not a right. And, in fact, we already have it; what advocates really want is the institution of the Dole, because that controls the mob's votes.

Update: The number of required signatures on a petition is 3% of the ballots cast for governor in the prior election; that currently means 66,594 signatures.

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