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Sunday, April 24, 2005
Backbone.
Remember the Kentucky/Michigan State game from the NCAA Tournament?
At the end of the fourth quarter, Kentucky's down by three with about 11 seconds remaining. They come out, and tries the three with less than eight seconds left. Misses. Gets the offensive rebound and takes another shot. Misses again. Finally, they're able to get the ball back again, the kid takes the three just before the buzzer goes off, bounces around a bit, and finally goes in. Overtime.
You see, any other team would have been told to wait on that shot until there was maybe three seconds left on that clock, and then took the shot on the basis that if they hit it, there wouldn't be enough time for the opposing team to score themselves. But taking the shot with eight seconds to spare gave them enough time for two more chances to hit the basket.
The moral of this story? If you get the chance to get something done, take it. Don't wait until the last minute, and don't be afraid to take the shot.
That message needs to be given to the Senate Republicans.
The Republicans have clear majorities in the House, the Senate, and they have the White House. They handled the Democrats in almost every way in Election 04. So why are they acting like the losers? And why does it seem as if they are anticipating losing? They don't seem sure of themselves at the moment.
Right now they are in danger of losing the Social Security reform battle. John Bolton's nomination is about to be killed. They failed at saving Terri Schiavo. They're in danger of losing the filibuster battle. For a party that now has an 10-seat advantage in the Senate, there is no way this should be happening. With the Republicans allowing everything to be obstructed - something they campaigned on and won with in 04 - the Democrats look like the ones who are in control of the Senate.
We can blame the Lukewarmers in the Senate - and that blame would be right on target - but the problem lies deeper than that. These are men that lack conviction and backbone. A number of them simply don't believe in the principles they campaigned on. You can't wait until campaign time to become a conservative. You need to become one as soon as you get into Washington.
There is a growing section of the electorate that isn't willing to wait until their elected representatives are ready to do something. They want change now. The Minuteman Project, the reaction to the Schiavo affair, the reaction in North Carolina to the illegal alien in-state tuition bill; these are signs that people are tired of waiting for their politicians to do what they elected them to do.
As I said earlier this week, the Republicans will only lose the House and Senate through self-destruction; failure to maintain the confidence of the voting populace because they couldn't get anything done. Since November, what reasons have the Senate Republicans given the electorate to vote for them in 2006 or 2008? None. If they continue acting like a bunch of wimps and won't stand up for the conservative principles and issues upon which they were elected, they won't have a majority to waste.
Posted at 03:39 am by Expertise
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Saturday, April 23, 2005
Children, Schools, and Discipline.
Children, Schools, and Discipline.
Two incidents grabbed my attention today.
First, is it necessary for the police to slap handcuffs on a five year old child? Well in St. Petersburg, Fl it is. Wizbang's Kevin Aylward pointed to a story yesterday in Florida where a five year old little girl was handcuffed and arrested for throwing a tantrum.
That's right. A tantrum. Take a look at the first video, while she was in the classroom. Then there's the video in the office. Watch some of her antics first, and then scroll to the 5:00 mark on the office video, where they handcuff her.
I could see if this was a 14 year old kid raising hell. But a five year old little girl? Let's get real for a second; if you can't control a five year old child - even if you can't whup her, which is all she really needed - then you have problems. The police shouldn't be sent to a school because the teacher and the administration can't control that child. Lord knows if three of them got out of hand, much less one, because the school would have been in utter chaos.
When situations arise and you are limited by options, competent people adapt and find solutions. Period. The principal could have easily found an empty, but ventilated room, had the child placed in there, and waited until either she calmed down or her mother got there. There was no need to send the cops there. They should be concentrating on real criminals, rather than handling disturbances that could have been easily done by the school administrators.
What you had in that school was an undisiciplined child being an undisciplined child. Look at the office video. At the 3:00 mark, she was acting the fool; pulling stuff off the boards, standing up on tables, HITTING the administrator, etc.
But at the 4:30 mark, she happened to glance out of that window, and she immediately sat down. Could it be that the cops walked in? Of course. That tells you that she knew what authority was, and she knows what she can get away with and at what time. She sat there and didn't say another word for that moment on. If the teachers and administrators would show that kind of authority, then they wouldn't have that problem. Instead, they let the kids run over them and then resort to extremes in order to fan the fires they allowed to burn.
Every day we're given more and more evidence that a growing number of teachers and administrators that are supposed to be educating today's children are woefully inept and simply not capable of handling these students. Today it's a five year old girl getting handcuffed. Tomorrow it's a child being suspended due to pointing a chicken finger at someone. How about a child being suspended for doing cartwheels?
Or, how about a 8-year-old child beating a principal with a wooden pole?
Yeah. The principal sees the child walking on campus with a pole in his hand, just about as tall as he is. She tries to take the pole away from him, and he turns into Buford Pusser. She ended up receiving several lacerations to the head.
When it gets to the point that you are getting opened up by an eight year old child, it's time to retire. I don't care who you are. If you can not defend yourself against elementary school children, then you shouldn't be teaching elementary school. I do feel for this woman, but it's just another example of the incompetence of school administrators. At the very least, she should have went and called for help.
As a result, the school went on total lockdown, even after the cops took the kid away. All outside doors were locked; the kids never left their classrooms. They even ate lunch in there. "Crisis counselors" were called in to help with the grieving.
It's no wonder why these incidents happen. Schools are being ran by a bunch of whimps. I don't want to bring children in the world after reading these incidents.
Posted at 05:52 am by Expertise
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Friday, April 22, 2005
Felton, May, and Williams make it official: NBA Bound.
Felton, May, and Williams make it official: NBA Bound.
That's a tough one to swallow.
Don't get me wrong; I wish them well, and I understand that kind of money is hard to say no to. But there is something wrong when you have a league that continues to bring in guys inexperienced and not ready to play at that level, and it results in a product that continues to get worse year after year.
To be perfectly honest, Raymond Felton is the only Tarheel that I am confident will have some success in the league. His ballhandling ability and competent decision making at point will help him stay in the league. However, it's ironic that the guy with the least amount of experience (Williams) will more than likely be the first Tarheel picked in the draft.
I don't know if the age limit that has been proposed will work (a good number of kids will just go semi-pro overseas or head to the NBDL) but something's got to give.
UPDATE: A good point by Adam Gold at 850TheBuzz. ESPN and all of these national sports reporters are so full of crap, claiming that they broke the story that all these guys were going to leave (including NBC-17 Raleigh, who claimed Williams was going to stay, which was hilarious considering he will have the highest pick of all of them).
The Buzz broke that story Tuesday Afternoon, and those fools fell in right behind them because they knew The Buzz is a local station and thus didn't have to acknowledge them nationally. Everyone in the Triangle knew these guys were going to leave, so it isn't news to us. You got to love how journalists take credit for stuff they didn't do (that goes for you too, Mitch Albom).
Posted at 03:03 pm by Expertise
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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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