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, November 22, 2024
Judge & Ohtani Were No Brainers to Win AL & NL MVP
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
Tarik Skubal & Chris Sale Close Deal on AL & NL Cy Young Awards
Sale, who turns 35 in March, joins a Braves rotation which includes 20-game winner Spencer Strider, Bryce Elder, Max Fried and 40-year-old Charlie Morton. As such, Sale is not expected to be the ace of the staff. If Sale can pitch 150 innings and win 10 games, the Braves would be very happy with that indeed.
Well, Sale would exceed all expectations stepping up when the Braves lost Strider with season ending elbow surgery. Sale went 18-3 with a 2.38 ERA with 225 strikeouts in 177.2 innings pitched. As with Skubal, Sale would win the pitching Triple Crown as well.
I think Sale benefited tremendously from a change of scenery which took him closer to home. In addition to the NL Cy Young, Sale was also named NL Comeback Player of the Year last week.
Had Sale been healthy all this time, he would be closing in on 3,000 strikeouts. However, Sale's renaissance and his opportunity to build upon it resumes the Cooperstown conversation. Should that not come to pass, Sale has good reason to be proud of the season he just completed.
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
Matt Quatraro & Carlos Mendoza Should've Been Named AL/NL Manager of the Years Instead of Stephen Vogt & Pat Murphy
I have to admit I am surprised both Cleveland Guardians manager Stephen Vogt and Milwaukee Brewers skipper Pat Murphy were named AL and NL Managers of the Year, respectively.
While both Vogt and Murphy led their clubs to divisional titles in the first year as full-fledged big-league managers, I think the AL and NL honors should have gone to Matt Quatraro of the Kansas City Royals and New York Mets skipper Carlos Mendoza, respectively.
The Royals had a 30-win improvement in 2024 going from 106 losses to an AL Wild Card berth making their first post-season appearance since their 2015 World Series triumph. No one was predicting October baseball for the Royals this year. The fact that they did speaks well of Quatraro. Although the Guardians certainly exceeded expectations this season, the Royals had a far steeper climb in the AL Central.
Meanwhile, Mendoza had the unenviable task of replacing Buck Showalter, a manager with more than 1700 career wins under his belt. While it's true that Vogt was in a similar situation in Cleveland succeeding Terry Francona, he had built his reputation as a player. Mendoza had been part of the New York Yankees coaching staff but had not managed in any capacity since 2012.
When Mendoza was hired a year ago, the press was lamenting that the team did not nab Craig Counsell, the longtime Brewers manager who jumped ship to the Chicago Cubs and was replaced by Murphy. While Murphy faced some challenges, the Brewers did repeat as NL Central champions. By contrast, the Mets were one of baseball's most disappointing teams in 2023 and Mendoza made them a force again.
Alas, the BBWAA saw it differently.
Monday, November 18, 2024
Who Will Be The Better Pitcher Going Forward? Luis Gil or Paul Skenes?
Today, New York Yankees starting pitcher Luis Gil won the 2024 AL Rookie of the Year honors while Pittsburgh Pirates phenom Paul Skenes won the 2024 NL Rookie of the Year Award.
This marks the first time two starting pitchers have won Rookie of the Year honors in both leagues since 1981 when Dave Righetti won AL Rookie of the Year with the Yankees while the late Los Angeles Dodgers legend Fernando Valenzuela won NL Rookie of the Year honors (as well as the NL Cy Young Award).
After cups of coffee with the Bronx Bombers in 2021 and 2022, Gil had a breakthrough campaign going 15-7 with a 3.50 ERA in 29 starts. Gil fanned 171 batters in 151.2 innings pitched though he did lead the AL in walks with 77. Still, Gil was an integral part of the Yankees AL championship this past season.
Meanwhile, Skenes was just about the only thing Pirates fans had to cheer about in 2024. In 23 starts, Skenes went 11-3 with a 1.96 ERA fanning 170 batters in 133 innings pitched. Skenes might have won the ERA title but was 29 innings short of eligibility. Skenes was also the NL starting pitcher in the 2024 MLB All-Star Game.
The question is who the better pitcher from will be here on out.
I'm sure conventional wisdom would be on Skenes as he reached MLB less than a year after being the number one pick in the 2023 MLB draft. At 22, Skenes hasn't reached his ceiling. Gil, 26, has been a pro for almost 10 years since he signed with the Minnesota Twins out of the Dominican Republic before joining the Yankees organization in 2018.
Of course, a lot of it has to do with health. Gil missed much of 2022 and all of 2023 due to Tommy John surgery. Will this be in Skenes' future as well?
At least for the foreseeable future, Gil and Skenes will loom large in respective pitching plans of the New York Yankees and the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Three Reasons Why Mike Johnson Won't Release The House Ethics Report on Matt Gaetz
House Speaker Mike Johnson has come under fire for refusing to release the House Ethics Committee Report on Matt Gaetz who abruptly resigned from Congress last week after being appointed as Attorney General by President-elect Donald Trump. Gaetz's appointment was announced shortly before report was to be released.
Johnson has come under scrutiny for his decision by Fox News anchor Shannon Bream and Senate Republicans such as Oklahoma Senator Markwayne Mullin who want the House to share the report with the Senate.
But I suspect Johnson isn't going to budge for three reasons.
First, Johnson wishes to do President-elect Trump's bidding. Trump wants retribution, and he wants Gaetz to dish out that retribution and Johnson isn't about to cross him. I mean Johnson wants to continue to tag along with Trump's entourage at UFC events. I also think Johnson knows that Senate Republicans, whatever their concerns about Gaetz, aren't going to want to be on Trump's bad side either and will eventually back down. Johnson just does a better job at playing the role of a quisling.
Second, Johnson wouldn't be Speaker if Gaetz hadn't engineered Kevin McCarthy's ouster earlier this year while pouring cold water on Marjorie Taylor Greene's subsequent attempt to oust Johnson only months later. Is it any wonder that Johnson called Gaetz "one of the brightest minds of Washington or anywhere"?
Finally, Johnson has no desire to release the report because no good can come of it for Republicans. Word has it the report contains witness accounts of Gaetz having sex with minors. The release of the report will make Gaetz even more of a scuzzball than he already is and will reflect poorly on Johnson's leadership.
This is what happens when you have a Speaker of the House who is answerable to Donald Trump rather than to the American people and our Constitution.
Sunday, November 17, 2024
Winnipeg Blue Bombers Lose 3rd Consecutive Grey Cup Championship Game
Saturday, November 16, 2024
Who is Trump's Worst Cabinet Pick?
President-elect Donald Trump has spent the past week making appointments to the White House and the cabinet.
Several of these appointments have dropped jaws, raised eyebrows and caused hands to smack foreheads. Here are the five which stand out the most.
Secretary of Homeland Security - South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem
Secretary of Defense - FOX News personality Pete Hegseth
Director of National Intelligence - Former Democratic Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard
Attorney General - Former Republican Congressman Matt Gaetz
Secretary of Health and Human Services - Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
Noem is more knowledgeable about killing dogs than she is about homeland security. Hegseth served in uniform, but the Pentagon doesn't trust him as far as they can throw him. Gabbard is a pro-Assad apologist and a Russian asset who cannot be trusted with anything. Gaetz is more practiced at plying teenaged girls with drink than he is at practicing law and his appointment has made Republicans cringe though they are likely to go along with whatever Daddy Donald says.
But I think the RFK, Jr. pick is the worst of them all. There is reason to believe that he would see fit to ban all vaccines and with it we can give a warm welcome to measles, mumps, polio and perhaps even smallpox. With RFK, Jr. as HHS Secretary, America could see a death toll which surpasses that of COVID-19.
This isn't to say that Trump's "conventional" picks couldn't do their share of damage. Future Secretary of State Marco Rubio could broker Ukraine's surrender to Russia and, with it, an invitation to Russia to march across Europe killing millions more people.
Still, the fact remains that RFK, Jr. is the worst of a bad bunch as he has claimed COVID was invented to spare the Chinese and Ashkenazi Jews, that chemicals in water makes people gay and HIV does not cause AIDS.
But this is what America wanted and now we're going to get it and get it good.
Thursday, November 14, 2024
Vigil Planned for Hamas Leader Sinwar in Mississauga, Ontario as Mayor Compares Him to Nelson Mandela
I just want to point out — and I’m not being facetious — Nelson Mandela was declared a terrorist by the United States of America until the year 2008. Your terrorist and somebody else’s terrorist may be two different things.
Good grief.
Nelson Mandela never organized a massacre of civilians in South Africa or held people in captivity. Sinwar is a man who uttered, "We support the eradication of Israel through armed Jihad and struggle. This is our doctrine."
For her part, Parrish is claiming she did not compare the two. So why mention Mandela at all?
It must be remembered that Parrish spent nearly two decades as a Liberal MP earning headlines when in 2003 during the runup to the War in Iraq she shouted, "Damn Americans! I hate those bastards." Over the next year, Parrish frequently criticized then President George W. Bush and eventually stomped on a doll bearing his likeness on the CBC comedy show This Hour Has 22 Minutes. Not long thereafter, she was expelled from the party caucus by then Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin after she turned her ire on him and on the government.
She remained as an independent MP until 2006 when she turned her attention to municipal politics serving as a city councilor in Mississauga before becoming mayor earlier this year after her predecessor Bonnie Crombie resigned to become leader of the Ontario Liberal Party.
Before Parrish earned her notoriety, she also gained a reputation for being virulently anti-Israel. In June 2002, Parrish led a parliamentary delegation to Gaza and the West Bank sponsored by Palestine House. Parrish concluded that Israel's conduct was "a crime against humanity." It is also worth noting that Palestine House has its own troubling history of anti-Semitism.
In view of these facts, it is fair to say, despite her protests, that she truly believes Yahya Sinwar is the Palestinian equivalent to Nelson Mandela.
Anti-Semitism flourishes in civil society when the likes of "leaders" like Mississauga Mayor Carolyn Parrish turn a blind eye and glorify Hamas.
Monday, November 11, 2024
After Winning a World Series Ring with the Dodgers, Clayton McCullough Has His Work Cut for Him with the Marlins
The Miami Marlins have hired Clayton McCullough to be their new skipper succeeding Skip Schumaker who resigned after two seasons in the dugout.
McCullough, who turns 45 next month, has spent the past 10 seasons with the Los Angeles Dodgers earning a World Series ring as the team's first base coach, a role he had been in since 2021. Prior to 2021, McCullough served as the organization's minor league field coordinator. From 2006 to 2014, McCullough managed in the Toronto Blue Jays' organization. Drafted by the Cleveland Indians in 2002, he spent four seasons as a minor league catcher.
The new skipper will have his work cut for him. McCullough goes from a World Series champion to a team that lost 100 games this past season. While I'm sure he doesn't expect to win right away in Miami, there will be a big adjustment to make.
What's not clear is the terms of McCullough's contract? How long is his leash? Or in the case of the Marlins, the hook?
It is worth noting that McCullough was not the Marlins' first choice. The team was set to offer the position to Cleveland Guardians bench coach Craig Albernaz who abruptly withdrew his name from consideration opting to remain in Cleveland. Albernaz had a working relationship with both Peter Bendix, President of Baseball Operations and Assistant GM Gabe Kapler with the Tampa Bay Rays and San Francisco Giants, respectively, but clearly saw some red flags. Did those red flags come in the form of Marlins' owner Bruce Sherman who has overseen the departure of both Derek Jeter and Kim Ng. How long will it be before Bendix and Kapler are pushed out the door?
But perhaps McCullough is willing to take a risk with the Marlins because who knows if he gets another chance to manage in the big leagues. Albernaz might have calculated that something else will come his way. McCullough may have decided not to take that chance and jump in the shark infested waters which contain the Miami Marlins.
Sunday, November 10, 2024
A Message to Those Thinking of Heading to Canada Because of Trump's Imminent Return to the White House
Friday, November 8, 2024
I Have a Feeling The Anti-Semitic Violence in Amsterdam Will Soon Come to America
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
Harris Was a Great Candidate But Trump Won The Election The Moment Biden Was Forced to Drop Out
On Monday, the day before the election, I wrote there were three possible outcomes to the 2024 U.S. Presidential election - good, bad and ugly.
The good outcome was Kamala Harris winning and being sworn in as President on January 20, 2025.
The bad outcome was Kamala Harris winning but Congress and the courts or some combination thereof seeing to it that Donald Trump was declared the victor.
The ugly outcome was Donald Trump winning yet again despite his words, deeds and criminal behavior.
America chose ugly.
Yet the choice, however ugly, was made loud and clear. Trump won the popular vote (50.9% as of this writing) while making significant gains among Hispanics, Asians and African American males while also making inroads with both Jews and Muslims although making a point of not thanking Jewish voters.
Be that as it may, Trump regained all that he lost save for Nebraska's 2nd Congressional District. Trump won Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Georgia, Arizona and will gain Nevada. These are cold facts.
Kamala Harris was a great candidate, and I am proud to have voted for her and Tim Walz. I think Harris and Walz would have been good for America.
But I think Trump won the election the moment President Biden was forced to withdraw from the race.
Consider what I wrote on June 28th - a day after Biden's disastrous debate against Trump:
Today, there is a huge clamor for President Biden to drop out of the race.
After Trump was convicted of 34 felonies did anyone call upon him to step aside as the Republican nominee?
No one.
So, could someone please explain to me why one bad debate is worse than being a convicted felon?
Because in calling for Biden to step aside we're basically being told that none of his achievements matter over the past three and a half years matter be it the vaccine rollout, infrastructure legislation, Medicare negotiating drug prices, student loan relief, the Inflation Reduction Act, the CHIPS and Science Act and the short-lived Child Tax Credit.
The best that I can explain is that we have no standards of behavior and that style triumphs over substance.
When Biden bowed out on July 21st, I wrote, "The efforts of Democrats to change horses in midstream is a risky proposition that is more likely to fail than it is to succeed."
Alas, the gambit has failed.
Again, it is not a reflection against Harris. After all, the impetus of pushing out Biden was his poor debate performance against Trump. By contrast, Harris had a wonderful debate against Trump in September and was widely perceived as the winner of that debate.
And yet Harris' excellent debate against Trump didn't matter one iota. A majority of American voters chose Trump, who at that very same debate, claimed Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio were eating cats and dogs.
When we're more forgiving of a man who is an unpunished convicted criminal than a man who broke no laws but had a bad night on the debate stage while governing this country in good faith then we have asked for trouble and Trump will be more than happy to oblige in giving it to us.
Let's reflect on that during the last 75 days of American democracy.
Monday, November 4, 2024
The 2024 U.S. Presidential Election - The Good, The Bad & The Ugly
At this time 24 hours from now, results will be coming in for the 2024 U.S. elections with all eyes on the outcome of the presidential election between current Vice-President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump.
It might take several days for the results to be clear perhaps longer depending on the outcome. But from where I sit the results of the presidential election will be good, bad or ugly.
Good
The only good outcome of the presidential election is a Kamala Harris victory.
In this case, victory entails Harris surviving shenanigans by Trump and his quislings to overturn the will of the people and be inaugurated as the 47th President of the United States on January 20, 2025. Should this come to pass let us also hope there will be no attempt by Trump and his quislings to overthrow the Harris Administration.
It must be said that good isn't perfect. Harris will be constrained both by Congress of which one at least House controlled by Republicans and a conservative Supreme Court. I will also invariably disagree with some of the things a Harris Administration will say and do. Should I be dissatisfied with Harris' stewardship then it is quite possible that come 2028, I might choose a different President. But this is exactly what democracy ought to be.
Kamala Harris isn't entitled to my vote in four years from now, but she has earned it this year. She has earned it by seeking to help others rather seeking retribution for oneself.
Bad
A bad outcome would be a Harris victory which Congress fails to certify and sees fit to choose Trump with the Supreme Court bestowing its blessing. Should Congress and the Supreme Court see fit to disregard the free choice of the American people then we shall cease to be a democracy.
One could argue this isn't the first time this has come to pass with Bush vs. Gore in 2000. But Bush did not stay in power for life and was widely praised for his efforts towards a smooth transition to the Obama Administration.
Should Trump return to power by dubious means then all bets are off because we would truly be in uncharted territory. Above all else, do not expect Trump to surrender power willingly. Indeed, this scenario would invariably result in massive protests which a second Trump Administration would crush mercilessly.
There are those such as David French who does not believe that any effort by Trump to overturn the election will end in failure. But that doesn't mean he won't try and as long as he tries one cannot discount the possibility he might succeed.
Ugly
An ugly outcome would be a Trump win.
It would be ugly because Trump has made it loud and clear that he is seeking retribution. When I heard Trump say he'd be a dictator on day one, I understood it to be his intention to suspend the Constitution. Should this come to pass, and it survives judicial challenges, then Trump is free to jail and execute his enemies real and imagined, restrict the First Amendment by shutting down the free press, and make himself President-for-Life.
If a second Trump terms results in Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, the Obamas, the Clintons, Chuck Schumer, Nancy Pelosi and Liz Cheney being imprisoned and/or executed for treason then none of us are safe. What consequences would I face from a second Trump Administration for posting these thoughts? Would I lose the job I worked so hard to earn? Or would I lose a great deal more than that?
What makes this truly ugly is that we will have freely chosen this path with no hope of going back. There are a great many Trump supporters who despise immigrants, look down upon women and LGBTQ persons and cannot countenance any viewpoint contrary to their own. These are people who are sick of democracy and want to try something else.
I also believe there are Trump supporters who are still convinced that he is more bark than bite. I should mention I have come across those who loathe Trump as much as I do who are not convinced that he will become a dictator. Over the weekend, I was having dinner with one such anti-Trump friend who after reading Tim Alberta's article in The Atlantic about the chaos at the now infamous Madison Square Garden rally is convinced that Trump is too stupid to be a dictator.
At this stage, we can ill-afford to underestimate Trump whatever the outcome of the election. Let us remember that Trump tried to prevent the peaceful transfer of power once. If we reject him again, Trump won't take no for an answer and try once more.
But if he wins then the gloves are off. The Supreme Court has basically told him he can do whatever the hell he wants. So why wouldn't he? The only way not to answer that question is to not give Trump another chance.
Conclusion
For the moment, America still has a choice, and we can still choose a good outcome. Yet it is possible that we can make the right choice, and it might not be enough to prevent nefarious forces from imposing an outcome not of our choosing. Or we might see fit to burn it all down.
It remains to be seen which door America will choose to open. I can only we choose the door which won't lock behind us.
Sunday, November 3, 2024
On Being Promoted
I wish to share some good news. Tomorrow, I will begin my duties as a Records Lead at the law firm where I work in Boston's Seaport District.
What this will mean is that I will be involved in billing with our vendors, approving time sheets and supervising records personnel here in Boston as well as in our offices in Los Angeles and in San Francisco.
It remains to be seen if I will be visiting those offices, but I'm sure that could be a possibility down the road. Should this come to pass, it would mark the first time I've ever set foot in California. At the very minimum, I will need to familiarize myself with California labor law which is even more generous for employees than Massachusetts. Of course, I will also be attending a lot more meetings and mandatory trainings. But this will come with better compensation.
To say that my return to Boston in May 2021 has proved to be fortuitous would be an understatement. Consider what I wrote in my year-end postmortem on December 31, 2022:
For me, 2022 was my best year in many years. Dare I say perhaps the best year of my life.I say this in great part because I spent the entire year back in the Boston-Cambridge-Somerville area after having moved thrice between 2018 and 2021. Simply put I am where I want to be.I also say this because I am in my best employment situation in a decade. It is the first time in a long time where I have been in an environment people where rely on me and where my knowledge and judgment is respected and valued. Granted my position is relatively low on the totem pole but someone has to keep the totem pole sturdy.
Since writing that entry I have continued to maintain the trust of my managers and while building stronger relationships in the firm. Because of this I have now climbed the totem pole a few rungs but remain close enough to the ground to keep things steady.
Of course, there will be a period of adjustment. How long this adjustment will take remains to be seen. We will be hiring a new Records Associate to take over the position that I hold now in a month's time. It will take time to get him fully acclimated into the scheme of things as well. Fortunately, my managers are patient and understanding. This is key as this is far from a given in many workplaces.
As the law firm in based in Boston, there is always much work to be done. But better to be busy than not. There are far worse things with which I could be occupying my time.
While I am confident that I will succeed in my new role, I am not without some nervousness in the recesses of my mind. Last night, I dreamed I was working in a grocery store where I was promoted only to have all of my work questioned and delegitimized before I awoke.
Such worries are only natural. However, I do have a strong base of support at work and have no reason to believe this will change for the foreseeable future.
I suspect most people don't seek out to become a Records Clerk. When I lived in Ottawa, I spent 2½ years as a Records Clerk with what was then known as Revenue Canada. At the time, I was also working on my MA at Carleton University part-time. My ambition was to attain political work of some sort preferably with an elected official or in some capacity with the NDP. Aside from some internships with several NDP MPs and my involvement with the late Alexa McDonough's successful NDP leadership campaign in 1995, I never went far down this path as I had hoped. I did have some job interviews with a couple of NDP MPs, but nothing ever came of it.
When I got laid off from Revenue Canada late in 1999, I set my sights on finding political work in the U.S. Indeed, when I moved to Boston nearly 25 years ago it was as an organizer for the now defunct ACORN. This position lasted all of two weeks.
During my early years in Boston, I worked several jobs in the non-profit sector for a child abuse hotline and later in the vocational rehabilitation field. This did not prove successful either. While I was decent at these jobs, I generally found the working environment to be toxic and unfriendly.
In late 2003, I found myself working as a Records Clerk once more this time for an insurance company in Boston's Financial District. Until my current position, this was my most successful undertaking as I worked in this role for nearly a decade before getting laid off. I spent a couple of years as a floater before starting to work as Records Clerk in a law firm environment for the first time a decade ago.
During this period, now with a more conservative outlook, I was also contributing articles to The American Spectator earning extra money. I was hoping to parlay this into other ventures. Although my articles would occasionally get mentioned elsewhere and I did a few radio interviews, most of the satisfaction I received was seeing my name online. Of course, I would stop contributing to The American Spectator when Bob Tyrrell told me to stop criticizing Donald Trump. It is a decision I have never regretted. Although I contributed some articles to National Review Online and a single article to The Forward while I was in Atlanta, my writing these days is confined to this space.
I did attain a Paralegal Certificate from Boston University in 2016 resulting in paralegal work as a contractor for HHS for about a year before that came to an abrupt end. After a lengthy period of unemployment, I found myself back as a Records Clerk with another Boston law firm before transferring to New York six months later for yet another Records Clerk job with a different law firm. Then along came COVID which resulted in me losing that job along with millions of other Americans. Seven months later, I made my way to Atlanta for my first Records Lead position only to return to Boston seven months later.
Amid all the tumult, I came to accept that I am a Records Clerk and that it was a specialty I could take all over the country but has been put to its best use here in Boston. I have paid my dues and am finally being rewarded for it. This has been a long time coming and it has finally arrived.
Of course, there are no guarantees. We are 48 hours away from a presidential election. Should we see fit to return Donald Trump to the White House, the future of the United States and the world changes irrevocably on both the macro and micro level. If Jeff Bezos can kill a Washington Post editorial endorsing Kamala Harris to stay in good standing with Trump, then what could happen to a Records Clerk with a blog, however obscure, which is less than complimentary to the Orange One?
Well, I will cross that bridge should it come. At this point, I can only deal with the things with which I have some measure of control and as long as I can do that then this promotion will be a success. With that, I look forward to tomorrow.
Thursday, October 31, 2024
White Sox Name Venable New Manager to Bring Them From Rock Bottom
Wednesday, October 30, 2024
Dodgers Best Yankees to Win 8th World Series Title
Congratulations to the Los Angeles Dodgers who defeated the New York Yankees 7-6 in Game 5 of the World Series to win their 8th championship in franchise history.
The Dodgers were down 5-0 in the fifth inning when Yankees miscues by Aaron Judge and Anthony Volpe as well as a miscommunication between Gerrit Cole and Anthony Rizzo on a Mookie Betts groundball sparked a five-run rally. The Yankees would regain the lead on a sac fly by Giancarlo Stanton, but the Dodgers would answer with sac flies from Gavin Lux and Mookie Betts to give the Dodgers the lead for good.
To the surprise of no one, Freddie Freeman earned World Series MVP tying a World Series record with 12 RBI which was originally set by New York Yankees second baseman Bobby Richardson in the 1960 World Series when the Bronx Bombers fell short to the Pittsburgh Pirates. Freeman hit HR in the first four games of the World Series including a walk-off grand slam in Game 1. He actually homered in six consecutive World Series games going back to 2021 when he was a member of the Atlanta Braves.
Even diehard Yankees fans were hard pressed to root against Freeman, who aside from being among the most beloved players in MLB, had to leave the team during the summer to address his 3-year-old son Max's ordeal with Guillain-Barre syndrome.
The Dodgers won the first three games of the series. Although they were blown out last night 11-4, the lone Yankees victory was marred by a couple of lame fans who tried to rob Mookie Betts of his glove.
All 8 of the Dodgers' World Series have come in the past 70 years. The Dodgers won their first World Series title in 1955 against the Yankees while they were still based in Brooklyn. Their remaining titles have been in L.A. - 1959, 1963, 1965, 1981, 1988, 2020 and now 2024. Of course, the championship in 2020 came during the COVID shortened season in which no fans were permitted during the regular season with limited seating capacity in Globe Life Park in Texas and no celebration to boot. So, actually this will be the first time L.A. gets a World Series parade in 36 years.
And if the Dodgers look to the sky during the parade they might see Fernando Valenzuela smiling upon them as they sing Randy Newman's "I Love L.A.".
Tuesday, October 29, 2024
Terri Garr Brightened Both the Big and Small Screen
This afternoon, I learned of the passing of actress Terri Garr. She had been afflicted with MS for more than two decades, a condition which would eventually force her retirement. Garr would have turned 80 next month.
Despite being away from acting in the last decade plus of her life, Terri Garr's performances on the big and small screen endure because her presence brightened not only the proceedings but the medium in which they were presented. She made already great films like Young Frankenstein, Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Tootsie even better with her warmth and wit. Her frequent appearances on both The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and especially Late Night with David Letterman were always showcases for her droll wit. Garr kept both hosts on their toes, and they liked her for it.
I remember when Garr appeared on Letterman some years after her MS diagnosis. It was difficult for her to move around, and one could not help but feel for her under the circumstances. But her mind remained razor sharp. There was no pitying her. Terri Garr lived a good life and her talents shall live on. R.I.P.
NDP Hangs on in B.C. While Falling Short in Saskatchewan
More than a week after the people of British Columbia voted, the governing NDP has narrowly prevailed yesterday although it remains unclear if they will have a one seat majority or form a minority government with the Green Party. Either way NDP Premier David Eby has a little margin for error.
I will give B.C. Conservative leader John Rustad and his party for one thing. They reject election denialism. I just hope this view continues to prevail among right-wing political parties in Canada should Donald Trump be re-elected next week. Authoritarianism and authoritarian sentiments have a way of spreading.
Meanwhile, more than 1,100 miles east in Saskatchewan, the NDP fell short as the conservative Saskatchewan Party won its fifth consecutive majority government last night and second straight for Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe. However, the NDP acquitted itself well. While the Saskatchewan is leading and elected in 35 seats, the NDP is leading and elected in 26 seats under new leader Carla Beck. The Saskatchewan Party dominated in rural ridings while the NDP's strength came almost exclusively in Saskatchewan's two largest cities - Regina and Saskatoon.
Canadian political junkies not satiated with three provincial elections in Saskatchewan, B.C. and in New Brunswick will get a fourth when voters in Nova Scotia go to the polls on November 26th. In a shocking move on Sunday, Nova Scotia's Tory Premier Tim Houston called a snap election only three years into his mandate amid promises of a fixed election next year. It will be interesting to see if Nova Scotia voters punish Houston for his gambit or if he is counting on the opposition vote between the Liberals, NDP and Green Party to be sufficiently divided to give the Tories another term in office.
Watching election returns in Canada's provinces is, at least for the time being, infinitely more relaxing than watching our own elections.
Sunday, October 27, 2024
Today I Voted For Kamala Harris & Tim Walz
Today, I voted for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz.
I had originally planned to wait until after work on Election Day to vote as my precinct is a very short distance from my home. But I decided I want to get this over and done with now. So, I went down the Main Branch of the Cambridge Public Library this afternoon and cast my ballot.
This wasn't a tough call.
A Harris Administration will govern America in a way which improves the lives of people while preserving American democracy.
A second Trump Administration is not interested in improving the lives of people nor preserving American democracy. It is about seeking retribution against enemies mostly imagined. In the course of seeking this retribution, a second Trump Administration would, among other things, suspend the Constitution giving it the ability to arrest, try and execute their political opponents, shut down the free press, restrict free assembly and speech and otherwise make the lives of Americans as miserable as possible.
Again, not a tough call.
It isn't to say I would agree with every measure implemented by the Harris Administration. I am not without concern regarding how a Harris Administration will approach Israel. However, I am prepared to support the candidate in favor of preserving American democracy. Indeed, if I am dissatisfied with a Harris Administration then I am under no obligation to support it in 2028. Should we choose Trump there is a very reasonable chance there will be no election in 2028. Or if we do have an election in 2028 it will more closely resemble the sort of elections held in Russia.
This is not a chance I am prepared to take. So, I voted for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz.
What the rest of the country will do 9 days from now remains to be seen.
But, for the moment, there is a chance the country will make the right decision.
Friday, October 25, 2024
The Washington Post & L.A. Times Won't Endorse Harris Because They Fear Trump's Retribution
Within days of each other The Washington Post and the L.A. Times declared they would not be making an endorsement in the 2024 presidential election under the guise of independence and neutrality.
The reality is that the editorial boards of both papers intended to endorse Kamala Harris, and their owners or publishers quashed them.
Both Times owner Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong and WaPo owner Jeff Bezos believe Trump will prevail and do not want to incur his wrath. After all, Trump has declared a second term will be about retribution and surely the press, an entity he has repeatedly referred to as "an enemy of the people", will bear the brunt of this campaign.
Had the editorial boards of either paper intended to endorse Trump do you think either Dr. Soon-Shiong or Bezos would have stopped such an endorsement?
Should Trump's election come to pass, I think he will smell blood in the water. Independence and neutrality will not be enough for Trump. He will demand (and receive) the endorsements of The Washington Post and The L.A. Times come 2028. (Yes, I believe a re-elected Trump would suspend the Constitution and effectively become President for Life. But those thoughts will be for another dispatch.)
While The Washington Post and The L.A. Times might not endorse Kamala Harris; it doesn't the American people have to follow their lead. The story of the American voter in 2024 has yet to be written.
The Yankees-Dodgers World Series Will Be Good for Baseball
At this hour, Game 1 of the 2024 World Series is underway between the New York Yankees and the Los Angeles Dodgers.
A Yankees-Dodgers World Series will be good for baseball.
While the two teams have faced off in the World Series 11 times, it is the first time this matchup has come to pass since 1981.
This will serve as nostalgia for the Silent Generation, Baby Boomers and Gen-Xers albeit one tinged with sadness with the deaths of both Fernando Valenzuela and Rudy May earlier this week.
The Yankees-Dodgers rivalry can now be introduced to a generation of Millennials and Gen Zers.
It doesn't hurt that the game's two greatest players are on the field - Yankees slugger Aaron Judge and Dodgers powerhouse Shohei Ohtani.
There's a chance it won't be the last time these two titans face off in October.
Let the rivalry begin anew.
Thursday, October 24, 2024
Rudy May, Who Pitched in the Last WS Between Yankees & Dodgers in '81, Passes Away
Last night, I noted the 2024 World Series between the New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers has had a pall cast upon it with the passing of Dodgers pitching legend Fernando Valenzuela who pitched in the 1981 World Series - the last time these two teams met in the Fall Classic until tomorrow night.
Only hours after Fernando's death came word of the passing of another pitcher who took part in the 1981 World Series. Rudy May, who had two stints for the New York Yankees in the 1970's and 1980's, passed away yesterday following a prolonged battle with diabetes. May was 80.
May bounced around between the Minnesota Twins, Chicago White Sox and Philadelphia Phillies before making his big-league debut with the California Angels in 1965. May tossed 9 innings of one hit ball while striking out 10 Detroit Tigers. Unfortunately, he would not get the win as the Tigers prevailed in 13 innings.
Arm troubles as well as back troubles (which would persist for the rest of his career) would put May back into the minor leagues for three seasons before returning to the big league club in 1969 and would become a member of the team's starting rotation for the next five seasons. After struggling towards the latter part of the 1973 season, May was phased out of the starting rotation by fireballer Frank Tanana.
By mid-June, the New York Yankees had purchased his contract where he pitching fortunes would improve. That is until the Yankees hired Billy Martin in the middle of the 1975 season. May and Martin were like and oil and water and by the middle of the 1976 season, May was sent to the Baltimore Orioles in a 10-player deal. Among those going to the Orioles with May were future stars Rick Dempsey, Scott MacGregor and Tippy Martinez with Doyle Alexander, Elrod Hendricks, Ken Holtzman and Grant Jackson bound for the Bronx.
In 1977, May won a career high 18 games and pitched a career high 251.2 innings. However, the Orioles would trade the spectacled southpaw to the Montreal Expos in a six-player deal which included a future Expos starter Bryn Smith. Going to Baltimore were outfielder Gary Roenicke, relief pitcher Don Stanhouse and pitcher and future pitching coach/big league manager Joe Kerrigan.
May would begin his tenure in Montreal as a starter but was eventually moved to the bullpen where he thrived. In 1979, as the Expos were in their first meaningful pennant race, May went 10-3 with a 2.31 ERA in 33 appearances (26 in relief and 7 starts).
Prior to the 1980 season, May would return to the Yankees signing a 3-year, $1 million contract. May would play a similar role as he did with the Expos the year before and pitched even better. In 41 appearances (included 17 starts), May went 15-5 while leading the AL with a 2.46 ERA reaching the post-season for the first time in his career. Unfortunately, the Yankees were swept by the Kansas City Royals in the ALCS although he would pitch 8 strong innings in a losing effort in Game 2.
May was primarily a starter in 1981, but he would take a step back going 6-11 with a 4.14 ERA in 27 appearances including 22 starts. However, May would make three appearances in the 1981 World Series against the Dodgers pitching 6.1 innings giving up only 2 runs. However, the Dodgers would prevail in six games.
May's days with the Yankees and his big-league career would come to an end after struggling following the return of Billy Martin to the dugout with no love lost between the two. In 535 career appearances (with 360 starts), May went 152-156 with a 3.46 ERA striking out 1760 batters in 2622 innings pitched.
After his baseball career, May went into business with Circle K before joining British Petroleum.
The Dodgers will honor Fernando Valenzuela with a number 34 patch during the World Series. I hope the Yankees will do their part and honor Rudy May. R.I.P.
Wednesday, October 23, 2024
Fernando Valenzuela's Passing Casts a Pall on The Yankees-Dodgers World Series
A pall was cast upon the forthcoming World Series between the New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers with news of the passing of former Dodgers pitcher and Spanish language broadcaster Fernando Valenzuela at the age of 63.
Tuesday, October 22, 2024
Republicans Claim Harris Accused Israel of Genocide While Running Ads in Michigan Claiming She is Pro-Israel
A couple of days ago, my Mom sent me an article which purported that Kamala Harris had agreed with a heckler who accused Israel of genocide during a campaign stop in Wisconsin last week. The video evidence, however, does not support the author's assertion and is at best inconclusive. For their part, the Harris campaign claimed the Vice-President was in agreement with the heckler regarding civilian casualties rather than the accusation of genocide.
I will say though that when Harris says, "What he is saying is real," it does open the door to ambiguity. In which case, if Harris believes Israel isn't committing genocide, then she ought to say so when confronted by someone who tells such odious lies.
Yet it is hard for me to take Republicans accusing Harris of anti-Semitism with any degree of seriousness when Republican PACs supported by Elon Musk are running ads in areas with high Arab/Muslim populations which call Harris and her husband Doug Emhoff "America's pro-Israel power couple" and that Harris "leans on her Jewish husband." If Harris is vulnerable, it is not from Jewish voters, but from Arab/Muslim voters in Michigan and the Harris campaign knows it.
For good measure, former President Trump is claiming he would have made a deal with Hamas to prevent October 7th. And what kind of deal would that be? Like the one he made with the Taliban. Whatever deal Trump would have made with Hamas, it would have sold Israel down the river.
Monday, October 21, 2024
New Brunswick Voters Elect Liberal Majority Government Ousting Tories; Susan Holt to Become Province's First Female Premier
New Brunswick voters have rejected the Tories' bid for a third consecutive government by electing a Liberal majority government. Unlike British Columbia, where the results remain unknown, voters made their voices loud and clear. The Liberals have won 31 seats with the Tories reduced to 16 seats while the Green Party won 2 seats. For good measure, the Liberals won 48.2% of the vote.
As a result, Susan Holt becomes the province's first female Premier while current Tory Premier Blaine Higgs would lose his seat. While the Liberals are unpopular throughout Canada after a nearly a decade under Justin Trudeau, Higgs is held in even higher contempt. Higgs had become enormously despised throughout the province and among his own party with his autocratic leadership style. A dozen Tory cabinet ministers declined to run in this election and Higgs made little effort to campaign during the election. While I don't think there is any love lost for Trudeau in New Brunswick, their voters reserved their ire for Higgs and were prepared to give the more personable and team-oriented Holt a chance to govern.
Tonight's triumph notwithstanding, Liberal Party victories in Canada will become few and far between in the years to come.
Sunday, October 20, 2024
Dodgers Win NL Pennant; Will Face Yankees in World Series for First Time Since 1981
The Los Angeles Dodgers have won their fourth NL pennant in past eight seasons as they bested the New York Mets 10-5 in Game 6 of the NLCS.
In a lineup full of superstars, it was Dodgers shortstop Tommy Edman who stole the show hitting .458 (11 for 24) with a homerun and 11 RBIs earning NLCS MVP honors. Edman was acquired from the St. Louis Cardinals during the trade deadline in a three-way deal with the Chicago White Sox in which the Dodgers acquired closer Michael Kopech.
The Dodgers, who won the World Series during the COVID shortened 2020 season, will now face the New York Yankees in the World Series for the first time since 1981. Between 1941 and 1981, the Yankees and Dodgers faced off in the Fall Classic 11 times with the Yankees winning 8 of those contests with the Dodgers winning thrice including the last matchup in 1981.
The 2024 World Series will commence at Dodger Stadium on Friday.
The Red Sox Coming Back From an 0-3 Deficit to Best the Yankees in the 2004 ALCS Was Bigger Than Winning The World Series
It was 20 years ago today the Boston Red Sox did the impossible. They came back from an 0-3 deficit to beat the New York Yankees in the 2004 ALCS.
While winning the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals would mark their first championship in 86 years, it was icing compared to the cake of finally beating the Yankees. The Red Sox had come up short against the Yankees in 1949, 1978, 1998, 1999 and especially one year earlier in 2003.
When the Red Sox were down by a run in the bottom of the 9th inning of Game 4, I made a point of turning down the sound on FOX and listened to the radio broadcast by Joe Castiglione and Jerry Trupiano on WEEI. Of course, Mariano Rivera would walk Kevin Millar (who was telling anyone who would listen not to let the Red Sox win this game), pinch runner Dave Roberts (now manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers) would steal second and score on a base hit by Bill Mueller. David Ortiz would hit the walk off HR in the 12th inning. From this point forward, I tuned it exclusively to WEEI. I'd like to think this was one of many small things which tipped the balance of the universe in favor of the Red Sox.
Game 5 was the most difficult to watch. I felt so much stress, I came very close to turning off the game as the clock kept ticking in the early hours of the morning. But I had come this far, so I was going to stay all the way. Besides I was hardly the only one in New England who stayed up until 2:35 a.m.
Game 6 was the Curt Schilling bloody sock game. Then came the blowout in Game 7. I was working a lot of OT and was walking home at the start of the game. I will always remember Johnny Damon's grand slam HR in the second inning off Javier Vazquez because I was walking by the Corner Tavern on the corner of Mass Ave and Marlborough Street and I remember seeing the patrons in the basement jumping through the roof.
At the time, I was living in the Fenway. So, no sooner than Alan Embree got Ruben Sierra to ground out to Pokey Reese, I went out and made my way to Fenway Park with tens of thousands of other revelers. The crowd was overwhelming, and I thought to myself, "I hope my shoelaces don't become untied because I might get trampled to death." Sadly, a young Emerson College student named Victoria Snelgrove was shot and killed by a projectile at the hands of a Boston Police officer attempting crowd control. But for the grace of G-d....Given my recent experiences with Boston's St. Patrick's Day Parade, this is not something I would contemplate doing now. If the Red Sox go a World Series again, I will celebrate from a safe distance.
Nevertheless, the morning after the Red Sox triumph, the normally quiet commute on the Green Line was jovial with strangers actually talking to one another. This mood extended to giving homeless people $5, $10 and even $20 bills. Of course, such euphoria is short-lived which makes it all the more special when it comes by in fleeting moments.
This year, the Yankees go back to the World Series while the Red Sox had to settle for a .500 season. But with four World Series titles in this century, one cannot complain too assiduously. We are part of a generation during which the Red Sox, Patriots, Bruins and Celtics have all won championships and we can savor it in the moment and on anniversary days such as today. Sadly, Tim Wakefield and David McCarty are no longer with us but Big Papi, Pedro Martinez, Derek Lowe and Jason Varitek along with Terry Francona (albeit in a Cincinnati Reds uniform) are still very much with us.