Former Socialist, Former Republican, Former Contributor to The American Spectator, Former Resident of Canada, Back in Boston Area After Stints in New York City & Atlanta, Current Mustache Wearer & Aficionado of Baseball, Bowling in All Its Forms, Cats, Music & Healthy Living
Friday, March 31, 2023
Prediction: McCarthy Will Invite Bibi To Speak To Congress Amid Row With Biden
What Would Mark Russell Have Thought of Trump's Indictment?
Thursday, March 30, 2023
Five Thoughts on Trump's Indictment By Manhattan DA Bragg
Wednesday, March 29, 2023
Keith Reid, R.I.P.
Why I Don't Plan on Following The 2023 Major League Baseball Season
Normally, at this time of the year, I would make my picks for the upcoming Major League Baseball season as I have on this blog from 2017 through 2022.
But I will not being doing so this year as the 2023 MLB season commences tomorrow. Nor probably for that matter next year or the year after that and beyond. The truth of the matter is that I no longer derive any pleasure from Major League Baseball in its present form.
I began to sour on the game in earnest during the COVID shortened 2020 MLB season. I thought it was irresponsible to play and generally didn't care for the intrusion of politics into the game. But most of all I despised the way the game had changed with the imposition of the ghost runner during extra-inning games.
For the uninitiated this means each extra inning begins with a runner on second base. How did that runner get on second without reaching first? Not by way of a single, double, walk, hit by pitch, wild pitch or passed ball, stolen base or throwing error. Nope, MLB just puts a runner at second base in the hope a cheap hit up the middle will end it all and penalize the pitcher who did nothing to allow the runner to get to second in the first place.
Now, as of this forthcoming season, the ghost runner has become a permanent feature of the game. Add the pitch clock and bases the size of a small continent and I cease to recognize the game I once loved. Frankly, I have watched very little baseball and cannot justify heeding any of my attention.
That doesn't mean I'll stop writing about baseball. However, this will most likely be confined to writing about Hall of Fame inductions and deaths of prominent figures in baseball. In other words, my baseball writing will be confined to the past instead of the present and the future.
The only things which might get me interested in following baseball in 2023 and beyond is either if someone takes a serious run at Joe DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak or if someone has a chance to become the first player to hit .400 in a season since Ted Williams. Both of these occurrences took place in 1941 (the year my Dad was born).
Mind you, for me to pay attention, someone has to hit safely in at least 40 consecutive games or being .400 after Labor Day. The last serious challenge to DiMaggio was when Paul Molitor had a 39-game hitting streak for the Milwaukee Brewers in 1987. To give you an idea of how long ago that was the Brewers were still an AL team. The last serious challenge to the .400 mark was when George Brett hit .390 for the Kansas City Royals in 1980. Yes, Tony Gwynn finished the 1994 season hitting .393 but that season ended because of the players' strike in August. Who can say what Gwynn would have been hitting a month later had the season been uninterrupted.
Needless to say, I am reasonably confident that neither of these things will come to pass. But even if they do then one must wonder if the larger bases come into play. Maybe Molitor could have extended his streak had he beat out a few extra groundballs. Ditto for Brett in his pursuit of .400. So even if someone eclipsed DiMaggio or joined Williams, we might just have to give them an asterisk.
Certain other things might pique my attention. If someone hit 5 HR in a game, matched Johnny Vander Meer's back-to-back no-hitters, if the NL won another All-Star Game or if the Montreal Expos were reborn. Again, I don't expect any of these things to come to pass.
I plan to acknowledge the winner of the World Series but won't dwell on it at length. There might be some smidgen of interest if its something out of left field like a Baltimore Orioles-Pittsburgh Pirates World Series and we can party like its 1979. Or if the Cleveland Guardians have a chance to win their first World Series in 75 years. Even a New York Yankees-Los Angeles Dodgers World Series would be interesting as this matchup hasn't occurred in 42 years after taking place 11 times between 1941 and 1981. But it would be but a mere footnote.
What happens if the Red Sox win the World Series? Would I attend the parade? Perhaps in the same way I attended parades when the Bruins won the Stanley Cup in 2011 on a beautiful June day or when the New England Patriots made their improbable comeback against the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl LI. But I won't have the same enthusiasm for it when the Red Sox won the World Series for the first time in 86 years back in 2004 much less 2007 or 2013. I left Boston during the Red Sox' World Series run in 2018 and have not been to a Red Sox game since that season. My desire to attend a Red Sox game much less watch it on TV or listen to it on the radio is simply ot there anymore. Ditto for any other MLB game or even minor league baseball which is constricted by these rules.
For this I have MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred to thank. Manfred has the attention span of a 4-year old. He thinks the game is too slow. Thus he seeks solutions in search of problems of his own making. Of course, Manfred won't be Commissioner forever. But I doubt his successor will roll back these measures. This is the way Major League Baseball will be played for as long as I shall live. In which case, Major League Baseball can go on without me and I shall go on without Major League Baseball.
Tuesday, March 28, 2023
Marjorie Taylor Greene Blames Transgenderism, Not Guns For Nashville Mass Shooting
How much hormones like testosterone and medications for mental illness was the transgender Nashville school shooter taking? Everyone can stop blaming guns now.
Except there is no "transgender Nashville school shooter" if she doesn't have a gun and use it. In this case multiple weapons were utilized to kill three children and three adults at a Christian elementary school. Yes, killer had a motive to use these guns. But without the guns, she is only a transgender individual, and those six people are still with us today.
But all that matters to Greene is that the killer identified as transgender because she uses transgenderism as a weapon to incite anger and hatred. Greene makes no distinction between law abiding transgender people and a single transgender person who commits mass murder.
What Marjorie Taylor Greene thinks of transgender people might not have mattered a few years ago when she was a private citizen making pro-QAnon videos. But it certainly matters now when she is the most powerful Republican in the United States Congress. Worse still, her influence has not yet reached its zenith.
Monday, March 27, 2023
Bibi Delays Israel's Judicial Overhaul - At Least Through Passover
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has put measures which would strip Israel's judiciary of its independence on hold for now.
Bibi's decision comes less than 24 hours after he fired Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for speaking out against the measures and a general strike which ground Israel to a halt today. Despite these events, Netanyahu's motivation to postpone the measures is likely because his own attorney threatened to resign from representing in his ongoing corruption trial unless he paused his plans.
However, this pause will likely be short-lived as Netanyahu has pledged to proceed with these measures after Passover which takes place between the sundown on April 5th and sundown on April 13th. While there is a possibility these measures could be moderated, given the composition of his cabinet it is unlikely that Itamar Ben-Gvir or Bezalel Smotrich or any other cabinet figures in the right-wing religious parties will be amenable to any compromise.
I'm sure that Netanyahu hopes the delay will cool off future protests once he resumes these proposals. But given the deep-seated opposition to these measures by a broad stratum of Israeli society including its military, I believe Netanyahu is vastly underestimating how much Israelis despise these measures. Not only do they represent a leap into authoritarianism, but Netanyahu is motivated by self-interest - namely trying to stay out of jail.
Bibi may have a respite, but it will be short-lived.
Two Thoughts on The Mass Shooting at The Christian School in Nashville
Sunday, March 26, 2023
Bibi Fires Defense Minister Gallant Over Opposition to Stripping Israel's Judiciary of Its Independence
Hate at Harvard: The Anti-Semitic BDS Movement Rears Its Ugly Head Again
I was walking through Harvard Yard this afternoon and saw that anti-Semitism is alive and well at Harvard with a wall on display promoting the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) Movement.
The aim and objective of BDS is a) demand the return of "all Arab lands" and b) allow the return of all Palestinian refugees. It must be remembered that Palestinian refugees are a different class of refugees that any other refugee in the world. If a Palestinian is a descendant of someone who was displaced following the formation of Israel in 1948 they too are a refugee even if they were born and raised in the United States and got elected to Congress (i.e. Rashida Tlaib).
Naturally, Israel is not about to roll over and play dead. The aims and objectives of BDS cannot be realized without murdering Jews - including Jews who do not live in Israel. Let us not forget that in Boston, BDS is a vocal supporter of The Mapping Project which maps out the addresses of Jewish institutions and organizations with the aim and objective of "disrupting" and #dismantling" these institutions and organizations. This disruption and dismantling can only be achieved by violence.
Thus BDS is an inherently anti-Semitic project. Frankly, Harvard shouldn't have this disgusting display anymore than a display of swastikas with signs declaring, "Work shall make you free." Alas, last year the Harvard Crimson gave a full-throated endorsement of the BDS movement. I hope the Harvard Crimson is proud of its endorsement because should violence is visited upon Jewish institutions and organizations in the Boston area then they will have crimson on their hands.
Sadly, anti-Semitism has been socially acceptable if it dressed up in the language of progressivism. Indeed, the aforementioned Congresswoman Tlaib has declared one cannot be a progressive if one supports Israel. This is the very corruption of progressivism. Harvard has participated in this corruption by legitimizing anti-Semitic hatred.
Friday, March 24, 2023
A Question for Marjorie Taylor Greene: How Can There Be Prosecutorial Misconduct If There's No Prosecution?
He didn’t show the grand jury hundreds of pages of evidence, and he should have done that. If they’re a grand jury, they need to have all the evidence there before they decide for an indictment … He should be disbarred if he’s going to be using his position to target the Republican Party’s top primary presidential candidate just for politics.
However, withholding exculpatory evidence or a Brady rule violation, only occurs if a prosecutor withholds exculpatory evidence from the defendant or his/her attorneys. So Greene's claims are baseless. But even if Bragg had withheld exculpatory evidence from Trump and/or his attorneys, chances are Bragg wouldn't be arrested but rather be subject to discipline by the New York State Bar Association. Of course, this could only happen if Trump is indicted and convicted. There is no guarantee of either.
It might be the case that Greene either doesn't know what prosecutorial misconduct actually means or that she does know and does not care. In her case, it is more likely the former whereas for Senator Paul, I think it is the latter.
Given her propensity towards conspiracy theories, I suspect Greene genuinely believes that Trump is not subject to the laws of this country or the Constitution and any attempt to hold him to account is tantamount to treason and warrants the arrest of those attempting to bring him to justice. All of which makes her demands that Bragg be arrested and charged for withholding exculpatory evidence both stupid and dangerous.
Tuesday, March 21, 2023
Willis Reed, R.I.P.
Rand Paul Calls For Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg To Be Jailed Because He Might Indict Trump
Monday, March 20, 2023
A Few Thoughts on The War in Iraq 20 Years Later
Saturday, March 18, 2023
Five Thoughts on Trump Claiming He'll Be Arrested on Tuesday
Wednesday, March 15, 2023
My Thoughts on The Passing of Jim Gordon
Bobby Caldwell, R.I.P.
Tuesday, March 14, 2023
What Happens If Saudi Arabia & Iran Don't Reestablish Diplomatic Relations Within The Next 8 Weeks?
Monday, March 13, 2023
Joe Pepitone, R.I.P.
Dick Fosbury, R.I.P.
Sunday, March 12, 2023
5.5% of Israel's Population Attended Last Night's Protest Against Netanyahu's Attack on Supreme Court of Israel
Saturday, March 11, 2023
An Evening With Gilbert O'Sullivan (Or Why Being Alone Comes Naturally)
On Saturday night, I went to City Winery Boston to see Gilbert O'Sullivan in concert. I am sorry to say that I did not have a particularly enjoyable evening.
Bud Grant, R.I.P.
Georgia Republicans Are Going After Fani Willis Because of Trump, Not Because of Her Race
Friday, March 10, 2023
Jesus Alou, R.I.P.
On Friday, former MLB outfielder Jesus Alou passed away two weeks shy of his 81st birthday.
The Dominican born Alou was one of three brothers to play in MLB along with his older siblings Felipe and Matty. In fact, not long after making his MLB debut with the San Francisco Giants in 1963, all three Alou brothers played the outfield at the same time marking the only time in MLB history a big league outfield was occupied entirely by brothers.
The youngest of the Alou brothers would remain with the Giants through 1968 before he was sent to the Houston Astros (via the expansion Montreal Expos). Towards the end of the 1973 season, the Astros sent Alou to the Oakland A's where he earned World Series rings in both 1973 and 1974 as a reserve player.
After spending the 1975 season with the New York Mets, Alou would play in the Mexican League before returning to the Astros in 1978 finishing out his career the following season. In 15 big league seasons, Alou was a career .280 hitter collecting 1216 hits. R.I.P.
Middle brother Matty Alou passed away in 2011 at the age of 72 of complications of diabetes while eldest brother Felipe Alou is still with us at the age of 87 best remembered for his managerial stints with the Montreal Expos and San Francisco Giants.
Jerry Samuels (a.k.a. Napoleon XIV), R.I.P.
Thursday, March 9, 2023
I Remember Robert Blake's Volatile Interviews With Johnny Carson
Actor Robert Blake passed away today from heart disease at the age of 89.
Blake had been an actor since childhood during his days with The Little Rascals and appearing in movies with the likes of Laurel and Hardy and Jack Beeny. He made his breakout performance as an adult portraying murderer Perry Smith in the 1967 movie adaptation of Truman Capote's In Cold Blood. In the mid-1970's, Blake starred in the hit TV series Baretta.
But to most people who came of age in this century, Blake is remembered for standing trial for murdering his second wife in 2005. Although acquitted of those charges, Blake was subsequently deemed liable for her death in civil court later that year forcing him to declare bankruptcy.
I mostly remember Blake for his TV interviews, particularly with Johnny Carson. Blake seemed to have a rapport with Carson and seemed relatively at ease around him. Yet you never knew where he was going to go from moment to moment. In most of his interviews, Blake talked about getting into fights or wanting to kill someone. One might not give such statements second thoughts. But watching him make these remarks in the 1970's and 1980's only to end up being put on trial for murder does give one pause.
I don't know if Robert Blake committed murder or not. But even if he didn't, I would probably be inclined to get no closer to him than through the distance of a TV screen. There's no doubt Blake endured significant physical, sexual and psychological trauma as a child and never found a way to cope with it when he wasn't acting. I can only hope he finds greater peace in the next world. R.I.P.
Chaim Topol Was Israel's Gift To The World
Actor Chaim Topol, known to most simply as Topol, passed away yesterday of complications of dementia. He was 87.
Although the role of Teyve in Fiddler on the Roof was originated by Zero Mostel, it was Topol who became synonymous with the character portraying him over 3,500 times over more than four decades on stages all over the world and on the silver screen in 1971 earning him an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor.
When I watched the film nearly 40 years ago, I thought Topol was well into his 60s when in fact he was in his 30's. Makeup certainly helps, but the authority in his movements and his voice gave the impression of an elder in command of his kingdom even if that kingdom was scarcely a parcel of land from which his family would be soon evicted by the Czar.
For many years, Topol was the best-known Israeli in the world and he did much good for Israel's image and for promoting a greater understanding of Judaism. Teyve sung of tradition but Topol became a tradition unto himself. R.I.P.
Wednesday, March 8, 2023
Three Thoughts on Tucker Carlson's January 6th Denialism
Sunday, March 5, 2023
Gary Rossington, R.I.P.
Gary Rossington, the last surviving original member of Lynyrd Skynyrd, passed away today at the age of 71.
No cause of death has been released. However, Rossington has had a long history of heart trouble and underwent bypass surgery back in 2021.
Rossington co-wrote several of Lynyrd Skynyrd's best known songs such as "Sweet Home Alabama", "Don't Ask Me No Questions", "What's Your Name" and "Simple Man". He also played lead guitar on "Tuesday's Gone" and slide guitar on "Free Bird".
In October 1977, Rossington was seriously injured in the plane crash which claimed the lives of Lynyrd Skynyrd lead singer Ronnie Van Zant, guitarist Steve Gaines and his older sister Cassie Gaines who was a backup vocalist with the group along with their road manager Dean Kilpatrick as well as the pilot and co-pilot. Rossington broke both his arms, wrists, legs as well as his pelvis.
As a result of the crash, Lynyrd Skynyrd would go on a decade long hiatus. During this period, Rossington and fellow Lynyrd Skynyrd member Allen Collins formed the short-lived Rossington Collins Band which released two albums in the early 1980's. Rossington would later form the Rossington Band with his wife Dale Krantz-Rossington before rejoining Lynyrd Skynyrd in 1991.
I leave you with a brief guitar solo from Rossington on "Tuesday's Gone". R.I.P.
Robert Haimer (a.k.a. Artie Barnes), R.I.P.
Robert Haimer, one half of the fictional, extraterrestrial novelty song duo Barnes & Barnes along with actor Bill Mumy, passed away yesterday of a long illness at the age of 69. Haimer's passing was announced by Mumy.
What began as a hobby between Haimer and Mumy (best known for playing Will Robinson on the 1960's sci-fi TV show Lost in Space) eventually resulted in Haimer sending several songs to Dr. Demento including "Fish Heads" which ended up becoming the most requested song in the show's history. Subsequently, a video of "Fish Heads" was directed by a young Bill Paxton who submitted it to Saturday Night Live which aired it in consecutive weeks. "Fish Heads" also became a regular staple in the early days of MTV.
Barnes and Barnes also had songs such as "Party In My Pants", "Love Tap" and "Soak it Up" as well as covers of The Beatles' "Please, Please Me" and "I Need You" by America. Interestingly, both Haimer and Mumy co-wrote songs with Gerry Beckley and Dewey Bunnell for several America albums in the 1980's and 1990's.
Here are Haimer and Mumy discussing "Fish Heads" on VH1's Greatest One-Hit Wonders of the 1980's. R.I.P.
Friday, March 3, 2023
Falling Ceiling Panel Narrowly Misses Woman at Harvard MBTA Station
This has shaken me up.
On Friday, the MBTA released video footage of a ceiling panel falling and narrowly missing hitting a woman at the Harvard Square station on the Red Line. The incident happened during rush hour on Wednesday.
Cianna Navarro, a 21-year-old student at Suffolk University in Boston, is lucky to be alive. The ceiling panel in question weighed 25 pounds. Had she been there a split second earlier there's a good chance she wouldn't be here to tell her story.
I am shaken up because I frequently use Harvard station and have been up and down the steps where the panel fell hundreds of times. It could have been me to whom this happened and perhaps I wouldn't have been so lucky. But for the grace of G-d.....
For its part, MBTA engineers are going to remove those panels at the Harvard stop while inspecting other panels over the next several weeks. Notwithstanding these measures, a lot of MBTA passengers are going to be looking up the next time they take the T.
But ceilings are hardly the only problem when it comes to the MBTA. At Porter Square, the escalator is a constant problem. At any given moment, at least one of them is being repaired. I fear the kind of accident which occurred at Back Bay station on the Orange Line in December 2021 happening at Porter, but only on a much larger scale as these escalators are the longest in the entire system.
If there is any public work which needs federal infrastructure spending it is the MBTA. We can't have corroded ceiling panels full of water randomly falling on unsuspecting passengers.
David Lindley, R.I.P.
David Lindley, (pictured in the middle) guitarist and master of virtually all stringed instruments, died today following an undisclosed illness. He was 18 days shy of his 79th birthday.
Lindley had a long association with Jackson Browne playing on nearly all of his hits and notably sharing back up vocal duties with Rosemary Butler of Birtha fame on "Stay". He also either recorded or performed with the likes of America, The Youngbloods, Ry Cooder, Graham Nash, Linda Ronstadt, Rod Stewart, Joe Walsh, Warren Zevon, Dolly Parton, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Shawn Colvin, Rickie Lee Jones and Ben Harper.
However, Lindley would get his start with the psychedelic band Kaleidoscope which he formed with his future brother-in-law Chris Darrow who would later play with The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. Kaleidoscope's psychedelia had a strong Middle Eastern sound much of which was driven by Lindley. David Lindley was playing world music even before the term was invented. He did this by keeping his mind open. R.I.P.