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Thursday, April 21, 2005
Current conditions in hell: 26°F with a 90% chance of precipitation.
Current conditions in hell: 26°F with a 90% chance of precipitation.
That's the only way to explain this:
Enter Maxine Waters. Waters has poisoned racial politics in Los Angeles for years; she essentially declared the Los Angeles riots a strike against racial injustice. Never saw a cop she doesn’t think is a racist. Yet here she was at the hearing declaring herself absolutely fed up with the race war between Hispanics and blacks that is raging on the streets of downtown L.A. “Why isn’t anyone talking about the Mexican Mafia (a gang of illegal Mexicans that controls the California prison system)?” she thundered. ‘I don’t care if you’re pink or purple or white or black or brown, I want you out if you’re committing crimes.’ There is no excuse not to control the border, she said. ‘I’m a liberal with a capital ‘L’,’ she said, ‘but I’m sick of it.’ Yeah, so this was something I didn't expect, and I'm sure no one else did either.
But you should have. One thing Molotov over at Booker Rising has been on top of is the growing conflicts of interest between the black community and the illegal alien population that continues to grow in the United States. Particularly in the South, illegal aliens are taking jobs away from black people more than any other group. And in North Carolina, they were trying to pass a bill allowing illegal aliens in-state tuition status, which would have been detrimental to black people trying to get into schools in the state.
There's also this:
Waters' timing was impeccable. A day after she spoke, 100 black and Hispanic students at Jefferson High School in South L.A. attacked each other in a race- and gang-driven brawl; three days later, the same thing happened, this time, students also hurled bottles at the police. Principal Norm Morrow told the Los Angeles Times:"We just have a lot of issues with race," said Morrow. "It's coming out of the community, into the school." Cops in riot gear now patrol the school. Actually I've heard some rumors that the Black/Mexican conflict was heating up in California. I haven't been able to confirm this, but word is that Mexican gangs have pledged to kill over 2,005 black men this year. It's more of a street rumor, but I've heard it more than once. Maybe Waters didn't hear about this, but she sees the growing rift between the two groups and is taking note.
We haven't heard the last of this issue. I wouldn't be surprised if we hear more black politicians speak out about the illegal immigration issue in the near future.
UPDATE: This will probably be the first of many updates on this issue. I've doing some websurfing and found this from Dan Stein from last month.
I attended a Capitol Hill hearing today on "Interior Immigration Enforcement Resources." No one could have missed the fact that Democrats are preparing to pounce on the Bush administration's failure to fully fund authorized detention space and ICE enforcement agents. Time after time, Congresswoman Maxine Waters -- a newcomer to the House Subcommittee on Immigration, Border Security, and Claims -- underscored the hypocrisy in the administration's failure to live up its public commitments to improve overall immigration enforcement. Her comments were echoed by Texas Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee and California Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez. Strange coming from people with no real track record supporting immigration enforcement. So Waters has stepped up her voice for border enforcement. A surprising name in there is Loretta Sanchez. After all, Sanchez won her seat after losing several times under her now-former husband's name, Brixey. She dropped the name in order to sound as if she was Mexican in order to attract that voting bloc. If she continues to stay on that platform, I don't see her winning reelection. The Hispanic lobby will do whatever it takes to keep the borders flowing with illegals.
I'll have more later.
Posted at 08:53 pm by Expertise
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Jim Jeffords and the RINOs.
Jim Jeffords and the RINOs.
Considering the rightful outrage many conservatives have had over the obstruction of several initiatives over the last few months by so-called Republican "moderates" (I'd rather call them lukewarmers) - the latest being George Voinovich and Lincoln Chafee's public misgivings that have held up the nomination of John Bolton - I've found it quite ironic that Vermont Senator Jim Jeffords announced his retirement yesterday.
The idea that Jeffords is retiring due to health problems is hot garbage, of course. The real reason why he is retiring is because his political career is DOA. The night he made that backdoor deal with Tom Daschle to give him a chairman seat in that committee was the night he committed political suicide. Facing opposition from both Democrats and Republicans during reelection, being the most impotent member of the Senate, and not to have the support and cash flow that would arise from a political committee doomed Jeffords to a fate that was obvious to anyone. "Retiring" would at least allow him to save face.
Jeffords switching parties hurt the Republicans at first, but it ended up being the best thing that could have happened to them. Jeffords fell on his own knife after threatening to do so for so long, and thus the Republicans could move on with one less nuisance within their own party. Although Jeffords wasn't ran out of the party like he claimed, the Republicans recaptured the Senate with a stronger majority than ever and are better off without him.
If Senator Frist and the rest of the Republican leadership had backbone, they would place even more pressure on the RINO group. After all; they need the Republicans more than than the Republicans need them. If they want to follow the path that Jeffords took, then go right ahead. The only one that is possibly untouchable is John McCain, who won reelection easily last year. The Democrats would be happy to see a couple of them announce they are "independents", and then would try to snatch their seats during reelection.
I have no problems with these senators voting against the party line. The problem is doing so without basing it on principle or to improve your politicial (and popular) standing. If the Republican Party is truly a conservative party, and is willing to follow a conservative agenda, then they'd give these senators an ultimatum: show us your vote, or we'll show you the door.
But the Republicans will never do that because they are more interested in political success rather than conviction. What's ironic, however, is the fact that it will be the obstruction of these senators - and the apathy of the Republican leadership towards them - that will cause the Republican Party to lose the Senate. They can't get anything done due to the fence riders.
Posted at 05:16 am by Expertise
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Wednesday, April 20, 2005
Nets make playoffs; Cavs stay home; Bobcats win closer.
Nets make playoffs; Cavs stay home; Bobcats win closer.
First of all, I'd like to say that this has been one of my better days on the blog. This is only my second time breaking over 100 visits to my blog in one day that wasn't Instalance inspired (note: visits, not hits), so that's a good thing. I suspect it was due to my sports posts over the last couple of days, so I hope to continue writing throughout the spring and summer months up into football season.
Well the NBA Playoffs are set, and this is probably the most wide-open playoffs since the strike-shortened season in 1999.
I'm glad the Nets made the playoffs, beating a Celtics team that had their third-string in there at the end of the game. No, it wasn't an impressive win but I'd rather see Jason Kidd and Vince Carter in there than Lebron James getting swept by the Heat in a brave but futile effort. Don't get me wrong; the Nets will fall too, but they might pull a couple of wins out of the hat before they succumb to Shaq and Wade aka Donkey Kong and Mighty Mouse.
I'm still sticking to the premise that Lebron won't be in Cleveland after next season. Well, he has three more years left on that deal, but I don't see Cleveland keeping him that long. If they're smart, they'll trade him to New York, which I'm sure is where Lebron wants to go anyway. Or in a surprise move, he might go to the Clippers, which has some tradeable guys on their roster.
Also, my Bobcats finished the season with a good win over the Detroit Pistons tonight. That win made them 18-64 for the season, which is better than a good number of expansion franchises created over the last 15-20 years. Personally, I thought they should have won about 10 more, if they weren't choking down the stretch constantly throughout the year.
Now they need to concentrate on the draft, and pick up a good guard that can bring the ball down the court and make something happen. I would love to see Arizona guard Salim Stoudamire become a Bobcat, as I think he or Louisville's Francisco Garcia would make a great fit.
Posted at 11:23 pm by Expertise
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I got the book.
Today I got a phone call from the library. They told me Brian Anderson's book, " South Park Conservatives" was ready for me to pick up.
I've read the intro and part of the first chapter. If I don't procrastinate, I should have the book done by the weekend. Once I do, I'll write up a lil report.
Men In Black is still on hold, though. I won't get that until mid-May. I might go ahead and buy it. Are there any other books I should keep an eye on?
Posted at 08:43 pm by Expertise
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Sports roundup.
- If you checked the scoreboard at the top of this page this morning (that's if they haven't updated to tonight's games), two games that should have grabbed your interest in the NBA was the Cavs win over Boston 100-86 and the Nets beat the Wizards 109-101.
These teams are vying for the last spot in the NBA Playoffs, and both have one game left. The Nets have the tiebreaker advantage, which means they only need to beat Boston and they're in. Cleveland needs to beat Toronto at home and then hope for the Nets to choke.
- I watched the Cavs/Pistons game over the weekend, and it was obvious to everyone in attendance and watching it on television that Lebron James isn't happy with the situation in Cleveland. You really can't blame him. They got rid of his help in the frontcourt with Carlos Boozer, they got rid of a decent coach in Paul Silas in order to keep Jim Paxson happy only to end up firing him, and he's pretty much doing everything on the court by himself. On the last play of the game everyone stood around waiting for Lebron to make a play. No one stepped up to get the ball, or to set a pick, or do anything.
Lebron is a pretty cool guy, so he isn't going to trash his team like other primadonna superstars would. It also wouldn't make any sense because they still have a chance to make the playoffs. But I don't see Lebron staying in Cleveland after next season if they don't get him some help and show some kind of competence in their front office. If he leaves, he'll probably head to the Knicks, where he'll make even more money off of his endorsement deals (I recall Jay Mariotti saying he has a top market clause on that $94 million dollar Nike contract of his which will make him even more money)and they're willing to get him what he needs to contend for a NBA title. I wouldn't be surprised if Isiah Thomas hasn't started talking to Lebron already.
- On that same scoreboard, in baseball the Yankees fell to the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, 6-2. That loss placed the Yankees in a tie for last place in their division and in a three-way tie for the third worst record in the league.
This weekend, George Steinbrenner, aka The Boss, chewed them out another butthole over the weekend. And can you really blame him? You don't spend the kind of money Steinbrenner has thrown out to that team (over $200 million) for them to be last place at any time of the year. And considering he's probably still sore over their chokefest in the ALCS last year to the Red Sox, this was inevitable.
- Two very sad deaths this week. For the Panthers, legendary linebacker Sam Mills passed after a long-time bout with intestinal cancer. Mills fought it as long as he could, and was an inspiration to both Panther players and their fans. What was supposed to only be months for him to live ended up being two years.
If you were a Panthers fan from the beginning, you remember Sam Mills very well. He was one of the reasons the Panthers made it to the NFC Championship in only their second season of existence. It wouldn't be surprising to the ones that knew him that he was able to fight a very tough disease as long as he did.
- Just down the road in Winston-Salem, WSSU's legendary coach Clarence "Big House" Gaines died on Monday night after complications from a stroke.
Coach Gaines took over as WSSU's basketball coach in 1946, after coaching the football team three years prior. He went on to coach the team for the next 47 years, retiring in 1993. He's in fifth place for the most wins by any basketball coach with 828. He won one NCAA title, going 31-1 with NBA star Earl "The Pearl" Monroe in 1968. Another player he coached is ESPN analyst Stephen A. Smith, who graduated from WSSU in 1991 (I don't know if that could be considered a claim to fame).
- Marion Jones was clowned royally on Monday after her embarrassing performance in the 400 meters over the weekend, running it in 55.03. Hell... I've ran the 400 in under 56 seconds. I don't know if she did used masking steroids, but right now things don't look good for her. And the pregnancy thing doesn't slide either, considering several female athletes coming back at or near the same level after the layoff.
That's it for now. I might have another roundup later this week.
Posted at 04:30 am by Expertise
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Tuesday, April 19, 2005
Felton, McCants AND May are entering the draft.
Felton, McCants AND May are entering the draft.
850 The Buzz, the sports radio station in the Triangle, is reporting on their blog that Raymond Felton, Rashad McCants, and Sean May - the nucleus that led North Carolina to the National Championship - will enter the NBA draft. According to sources at the ACC Sports Journal, Felton and McCants (McCants announced last week) will sign with an agent, making them ineligible for college play. May hasn't yet.
Felton and McCants aren't big surprises. Everyone knew they were leaving this year. However, I am very disappointed with Sean May, who said he was staying for his senior season on championship night, at the rally at the Dean Dome the day after, and throughout the season. I guess the money had more credibility than his word.
As for the Tarheels, this marks the first time in NCAA history that the national champion will lose their top seven scorers for the draft: three seniors and four underclassmen. Roy Williams will have to start from scratch next year. I expect 2006 will be a rough year for the Tarheel Nation.
Posted at 04:35 pm by Expertise
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Cardinal Ratzinger is now Pope Benedict XVI.
Cardinal Ratzinger is now Pope Benedict XVI.
Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, a German which was considered the frontrunner from the start, has been elected Pope of the Roman Catholic Church.
I know this will cause the conspiracy theorists to go into a frenzy and the secularists and relativists to go nuts. Ratzinger was known as a very hard-line cardinal. He's not that popular even within his own country. I expect them to disrespect Pope Benedict in a fashion similar to President Bush. He won't get a honeymoon; the bashing will start this afternoon, if it hasn't started already.

(Photo: AP/Yahoo)
I wish him well. This is a very trying time for the Catholic Church. I'm sure Pope Benedict XVI will
help the church continue to stand on principle, but it's not going to be easy at all.
UPDATE: Thought I was joking? Malkin linked to the Daily Kos response to the new Pope. Kos called the new Pope "Ratfucker". What a lowlife. Why anyone takes that fool seriously, I have no idea.
Andrew Sullivan is ranting too, albeit with a more civilized tongue. However, it's funny how people are criticizing a Catholic for actually believing in Catholic principles, and expecting other Catholics to follow the same belief. They're right; that makes no sense at all.
Posted at 01:30 pm by Expertise
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What's your Ron Mexico name?
What's your Ron Mexico name?
If you don't know the legend of Ron Mexico, here's how it goes...
Michael Vick was sued by a former girlfriend last month for knowingly giving her herpes. According to the suit, she contracted the disease back in 2003, and found evidence showing that he knew he had it way before then.
According to the court documents, Michael Vick used the alias "Ron Mexico" in order to check into a clinic. And the name has stuck. People are getting into the Ron Mexico craze so much that the NFL banned the name from being used in their online Pro Shop. No matter; because someone created RonMexico.com, and I'm sure they're making a killing through selling t-shirts and all kinds of merch via CafePress.
OkayPlayer found a "Ron Mexico" name generator that's pretty cool too. Put your full name in the box and let it rip.
My name was Rock Nauru. Good. This might come in handy if I ever need to go to the clinic. Well, you know; to go witness to the heathens and stuff. ;-D
Posted at 01:21 am by Expertise
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Monday, April 18, 2005
Monday Night Football moves to ESPN.
Monday Night Football moves to ESPN.
Starting in 2006, the football tradition known as Monday Night Football will move to ESPN after 35 seasons on ABC. ESPN, ABC's sister station, will pay $1.1 billion to the NFL over the next eight years. Meanwhile, NBC brought the rights to Sunday Night Football, which will keep a feature football game on broadcast television and brings football back to NBC.
<sarcasm> This was brilliant. After all, it worked for the NBA, right? </sarcasm>
Personally I am sick of ESPN, and I'm sure others are as well. While it may get a decent booster at first, I bet the ratings after a year or two won't be any better than Sunday Night Football's ratings are now. I understand ABC was losing serious money on the game every year, but it could have been saved. I guess nobody's ever heard of signing a lower contract. I'd rather have the show moved to CBS or NBC on Monday nights rather than to cable.
So, will Theisman, McGwire, and Patrick move to NBC, or be out of a job? (I'm sure Michaels and Madden will move to ESPN). My guess is they'll be out of a job. It's unfortunate, because I find them entertaining. NBC shouldn't be TOO bad, or at least they can't do a worse job than CBS is doing right now. It should be interesting to see if they keep the tried and true method they had before they gave up their NFL rights to CBS. And I'm sure Dick Enberg has already gotten the phone call and is ready to go into the booth.
Posted at 05:54 pm by Expertise
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The Contender, Episode Eight: Jimmy vs. Joey
The Contender, Episode Eight: Jimmy vs. Joey

(Photo: Yahoo's The Contender Page)
After Juan De la Rosa pulled out the very sloppy victory against Tarick Salmaci last week, we start with Juan in the ring worried about the cut over his eye. Sugar Ray told him it wasn't a deep cut, but Juan was coming up with excuses, saying he was a slow healer, and he didn't think he'd be able to continue in the Contender.
When Juan returned to the training house, he was saying the same things to the guys, and they could tell he was exposed and worried after the Salmaci fight. When Juan woke up the next morning, he complained about everything hurting. When Juan received his boxing glove pendant at the reward ceremony, he admitted he was frustrated at some of the things Tarick threw at him and had to change his style a bit.
We already knew the next fight, which were the remaining two who haven't fought yet, Jimmy Lang vs. Joey Gilbert. This was experience vs. heart matchup, as Jimmy had fought 24 pro fights while Joey had only fought eight times. Both are roughly the same age, as Jimmy was 29 and Joey was 28. Joey is a lawyer from Reno, NV (well, not all these guys have the Rocky stories). Jimmy is a family man, with wife Katie, and children Angelo, Jack, and Talia, and he lives off of his boxing earnings.
We got a chance to see both fighters' families, as Joey was able to see his father for the first time since he returned from serving in Afghanistan. Jimmy talked a little about his wife and family, and how he was worried about the fight because everyone figured he would walk through Joey because they felt Joey was not mentally prepared as well as inexperienced.
Fight time came pretty early in the show, as they usually show it at the end. In the first round Jimmy started out well, staying busy and working the combinations. For a while it seemed as if he may be frustrating Joey, and Joey seemed to get more and more agitated as the round went on.
Then it happened. Joey unleashed with a flurry of punches that got Jimmy in trouble, and once Joey started, he didn't stop until the bell. He looked as if he hurt Jimmy pretty good with a lot of those shots. No doubt Joey's flurry gave him the first round.
The second round went almost the same way. Joey threw a couple of jabs at the start of the round. Jimmy threw what he had, but then Joey threw some back and they were hurting Jimmy. Jimmy didn't look good at this point, and Joey seemed too strong and was imposing his will on Jimmy when he wanted. Second round went to Joey as well.
In the third round, the tide changed suddenly. Joey has had problems with his hamstring, and after he took a lunging shot at Jimmy, that leg went out on him. All of a sudden he was only hopping around on one leg and couldn't really move from the spot he was in. Jimmy took advantage of it by bobbing and weaving away from Joey's punches and hitting him at will. Although Joey tried to pretend as if Jimmy's punches weren't bothering him, it was easy to tell that he was in trouble.
Round 4 didn't get any better for Joey. Jimmy was the wrong one to have as an opponent with this kind of injury. Jimmy's technique was crisp, as he was bobbing under Joey's punches and hitting him with some huge shots that would have probably brought other men down. On top of that, Joey seemed dejected before the round, as he kept telling his corner that he had no legs due to the injury. This was easily Jimmy's round.
Stallone went over to Joey's corner and gave him some motivation. It's real simple; the winner of this fight is the winner of the fifth round, and the winner of the fifth round was the one who wanted it the most.
Well, it was Joey who found the will to win. Jimmy came out and worked the body again, but wasn't able to get off any big shots. All of a sudden, Joey comes out of nowhere with a good counterpunch, and then just goes after Jimmy with everything he had. Jimmy could do nothing but try to cover up, and Jimmy fell to his knees at the end of the round.
Joey won by unaminous decision, of course. Every round had a clear winner, and I'd bet Joey got a 10-8 decision by the judges for the final round. However, this is similar to the De la Rosa/Salmaci fight where the winner will not win their next fight. Joey is hurt, and he reaggravated that injury in the fight. If you don't have legs, you can't move. If you can't move, you can't dodge punches nor can you go after your opponent. In other words, you're no better than a punching bag. Joey probably won't quit the show, but I don't think he'll be able to handle the remaining fighters.
A dejected Jimmy simply didn't have the punching power to stand in there and trade shots with Joey. Joey is a natural athlete, and sometimes brute force will beat technique. But Jimmy was much like Brent Cooper; good technique but couldn't punch his way out of a wet paper bag. Nor did Jimmy know what to do in order to neutralize Joey's flurries.
After celebrating, Joey comes back to the training house, where all of the fighters welcome him back with open arms. None of them really gave him a chance to beat Jimmy, and doing it while injured didn't help things either. They gave him his props, and told him he showed true heart by pulling the upset in those circumstances.
The next morning, an examiner checked out Juan's "injuries" - the cut over his eye, the wrist, and his neck - and told him they wouldn't heal fast enough for the next fight. Then the examiner asked Juan did he really want to fight. It was apparent from Juan's attitude after his fight in the last episode that he didn't want to fight anymore, and he claimed he had to look out for his boxing future. The examiner suspends him for 45 days, but it was apparent that he only did that so Juan could save face.
He went into the living room with the other fighters and informed him that he was pulling out due to injuries. They didn't fall for it, particularly Sergio and Anthony. Anthony straight up called him a coward for quitting, which is ironic because his teammates called him a coward for ducking Jimmy Lang and fighting Brent Cooper. Sergio said if he's 18 years old and can't heal, there's a problem. It was apparent to most of them that Juan knew he was going to lose his next fight no matter who it was, and so he took himself out of the competition to keep his undefeated streak.
After Joey received his boxing glove pendant, the boys took Stallone's charter fight to Las Vegas to Caesar's Palace, to see where the final bout would be held. Two of them would make it there to fight for $1 million dollars. And Sly actually showed them 1 million dollars in cash, protected by security guards. Next, Sly allowed the boxers to each pick one card. Someone drove up with a Toyota Tacoma pickup truck. Whoever had the ace got the truck, and the winner was Sergio. Afterwards the guys had a night on the town after being given a $1,000 each by Sly.
The next day was crucial. After getting back to the training house, they had to deal with Juan quitting the show. That meant they had to vote on a replacement. They only had five choices, however - Ahmed, Jonathan, Miguel, Tarick, and Jimmy. The other four were not medically cleared to fight. After what many from the West saw as a blunder by voting Peter back into the house, they definitely wanted to make sure they didn't bring back a potential threat. They would cast their vote secretly, with no discussion.
So who did they bring back? Well, you'll have to find out next week. See ya then.
My Other Contender Posts:
1. The Contender Quarterfinals: Ishe vs. Sergio
2. The Contender, Episode Eight: Jimmy vs. Joey
3. The Contender Episode Seven: Juan vs. Tarick
4. The Contender Episode Six: Anthony vs. Brent
5. The Contender Episode Three: Ishe vs. Ahmed
Posted at 05:59 am by Expertise
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