Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Religion: Necessary, Evil, or Necessary Evil?

A friend of mine recently wrote the following, with the comment that this is how he would explain monotheism to his son when he is old enough:

"Long long time ago, a smart man came up with a work of fiction. He claimed to write it on behalf of a ghost writer and tried to pass it off as non-fiction. The book was a major hit for a small group and thus a cult classic was born. The fans believed themselves to be privileged for only they understood the true message of the book. The book was left open ended with room for a sequel.

Much much later, one of the fan club members took it upon himself to provide a different analysis of the book which was not taken well by the hard core fans. The new writer even went as far as to cite the original ghost writer as a family member. The fan base labeled him a liar and then worked with the powers-that-be to see him off. His death spread word of his interpretation quickly and oddly enough, years after his death his executioners officially released the sequel, somewhat based on his interpretation but mostly with their own. They then took this book and forced it upon the rest of the world they set to conquer.

It wasn’t till long after that the trilogy emerged from a nearby part of the world through another writer, an illiterate one nonetheless, claiming to be a descendant of the original writer and a favorite student of the ghost writer himself. His triquel (?) incorporated elements of the first two books and modernized it for its time. This led to another revolution around the world.

The problem is that all of the fans of all three hate each other because they believe that their lie is more truthful even though they all cite the same fictional ghost writer."

If you look through an objective prism and do not subscribe to any of these three religious ideologies, you can actually see the accuracy of the passage. Unfortunately many people refuse to do that even though as sentient human beings they certainly have the capacity to do so. Therefore, they would see fit to hang someone that believes what my friend above believes even though their faith forbids the killing another human being.

Oddly enough, the day my friend sent me this writeup, I happened to be reading The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Families, where Stephen Covey writes the following:

"...studies have shown that religious involvement is a significant factor in mental and emotional health and stability, particularly when individuals are internally motivated. When they are extrinsically motivated-by public approval or conformity, for example-the religious context is not always benevolent. In fact, it sometimes nurtures a culture that is extremely strict and sets unrealistically high expectations, causing people who are emotionally vulnerable to experience even more emotional problems." (Stephen R. Covey, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Families (New York: Golden Books Publishing Co., Inc., 1997), p. 300)

I'm not going to delve into the religion vs. atheism argument. Frankly, I don't know the answer let alone try to convince someone else that they must believe what I believe or vice versa. Religion is a very personal thing and if it gives people comfort and puts their mind at peace, I'm all for it. However, it becomes a whole other ballgame when one group tries to force its beliefs onto another group or a nation as a whole, such as the abortion debate.

There are moments that make me wonder what people are thinking. For example, a professional athlete accused of making anti-Semitic remarks once said, "I have nothings against Jews. My best friend is Jewish and his name is Jesus Christ." A part of me wants to go back and ask that same athlete today, "What did your best friend get you for your birthday last year because mine got me an iPod." Or the state politician in Arizona that once made a remark in a public hearing that the earth is only 5,000 years old. Ironically, the hearing was to grant a license to a uranium mining company. If you weren't aware, it was through measuring the radioactive decay of uranium that geologists and geophysicists were able to determine the earth to be 4.54 billion years old.

So, is religion necessary, evil, or a necessary evil? The answer is whatever you think it is, so long as you don't waste your time trying to convince anyone else they're wrong and you're right. I hate to seem like I'm copping out on this one after writing such a long post but this is really the clearest answer to the question.

Enough rambling by me. What do you think? Let me know. I'm curious to read about it. Thanks for reading!!

What the BCS Playoffs should look like...

I wrote a post in February that I revisited in October about what the BCS playoff system should look like. Well, based on my suggestions, here is what the 2009-2010 playoffs would look like:

#1 Alabama vs. #8 Georgia Tech (Orange Bowl)
#2 Texas vs. #7 Ohio State (Sugar Bowl)
#3 Cincinnati vs. #6 Oregon (Fiesta Bowl)
#4 TCU vs. #5 Boise State (Rose Bowl)

I realize that one of my alma maters, the Iowa Hawkeyes, would be eliminated from a BCS Bowl game, as would the Florida Gators. However, I said in my original post in February, only conference champs deserve a spot and at-large spots should only be awarded if there are less than 2 non-BCS conference teams in the top 10 in the final BCS standings. There are two again this year as well as two more in the top 25 overall (BYU at #14 and Utah at #23). It's hard to imagine with the number of January bowl games in addition to the BCS games that any of the non-conference champs would not get a prime bowl game. Iowa and Florida both controlled their own destiny and lost (the Hawkeyes' case, twice) so it's not unfair to bump them, especially considering both TCU and Boise State are unbeaten.

Oddly enough, the TCU-Boise State matchup would still take place in my system, albeit in Pasadena, CA rather than Glendale, AZ. In the current BCS system, I don't like those two teams playing each other because it's a slick way for the BCS to eliminate the issue of how mid-major teams stack up against the power conferences by having the two mid-major teams play each other. I would have preferred seeing TCU play Cincinnati and Boise State play Florida in the current system.

Thoughts? Comments? Please let me know. Thanks for reading!

Saturday, November 28, 2009

NYT: India's Eternal Crisis

Column from Saturday's New York Times

"India may have been passive after the Mumbai attacks. But India has not launched wars against either abstract nouns or actual countries that it has no hope of winning or even disengaging from."

War against an abstract noun. How true!

Parker: The GOP's suicide pact

Washington Post columnist Kathleen Parker writes about the GOP's so-called "purity test". This is significant because it's usually when party members start calling out their own kind that progress eventually happens. Such was the case of the Democratic Party, which led to the creation of the moderate Democratic Leadership Council in the 1980's, whose most prominent members at the time were Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton and Tennessee Senator Al Gore (and we know they weren't in those two jobs for long after the creation of the DLC.)

I don't often support most Republican positions but that doesn't mean I never would and never will. Remember, this is the party that started as a movement for the abolition of slavery. In any democracy, there need to be many political parties and in our democracy specifically, there need to be two vibrant ones.

Conservatives of today have forgotten, much like the liberals of the 1970's did, that the purpose of a political party is to get its members elected however possible. If you cast a wide net, you may catch some fish that stink but if you like fish, they'll all be delicious when you put them in the pot together and cook them.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Frank: The Persecution of Sarah Palin - WSJ.com

A particularly funny line in Thomas Frank's column:

"The respect she [Palin] shows history, though, is the kind of respect you show the flag when you soak it in kerosene and touch a match to it."

NYT: The Senate’s Health Care Calculations

Is there anything Nate Silver does not analyze? He's quickly developing a reputation for himself as a person of focused objectivity.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Colbert Report 11/12/2009: BEST SPORT REPORT EVER!!!

Here is the clip from last night's Colbert Report, where his Sport Report (pronounced SPOR ruh-POR) talks about a scandal involving the Indian Cricket team, and its coach's unusual instructions, as well as some good old-fashioned American trash talking with the Canadians over speedskating.

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Sport Report - Cricket Scandal & Letter-Writing Campaign
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorU.S. Speedskating

Thursday, November 12, 2009

NYT: America's Defining Choice

Nicholas Kristof's column today had a very telling quote from an OBGYN in Oregon, Dr. Linda Harris, as she talks about a woman that died of cervical cancer and left behind a 13-year old daughter:

"People talk about waiting lines in Canada," Dr. Harris added. "I say, well, at least they have a line to wait in."

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Two Columns in Today's Washington Post

Washington Post's progressive columnist, Ruth Marcus, and conservative columnist, Kathleen Parker, both have very good columns in today's paper. Marcus writes about all the lies being presented as facts on the healthcare legislation that passed in the House Saturday night and Parker writes about the heinous ways in which China violates human rights to maintain their one-child policy. Both columns got me thinking and I hope they generate a great deal of thought with you too.

Huffington Post: Jon Stewart Catches Sean Hannity Falsifying Footage To Make GOP Protest Appear Bigger

There are no words to describe this other than ENJOY:

The Daily Show With Jon StewartMon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Sean Hannity Uses Glenn Beck's Protest Footage
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political HumorHealth Care Crisis

Monday, November 9, 2009

NYTimes.com: Krugman: Paranoia Strikes Deep

Paul Krugman writes in this morning's New York Times about the GOP Press Conference at the Capitol last week and makes one very accurate point about the GOP response (or lack thereof):

"What all this shows is that the G.O.P. has been taken over by the people it used to exploit. "

Hi Pot, I'm Kettle. And I'm calling the shots now...

Friday, November 6, 2009

NYT: Chris Christie Confidential

Great column in today's New York Times written by a liberal childhood friend of Chris Christie. Although the line about how Christie tends to see things as black-and-white bothers me because it sounds too much like Dubya, if the rest of the column is true, there is hope for a Christie administration.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Washington Post The Fix: Scozzafava drops out of NY-23 special election

WTF?!?

Basically this seals the deal for conservatives in a conservative district. But at what cost? Scozzafava was considered a moderate Republican and at a time when people generally think the Republican party is dominated by wingnuts, this could actually help Democrats in 2010.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Time: Why Main Street Hates Wall Street

The Managing Editor of Time Magazine, Rick Stengel was on Morning Joe this morning talking about the cover story of the latest issue of Time:



Roughly 2 1/2 minutes into the clip, he talks about how even though Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley declared themselves banks rather than investment houses so they could borrow money from the Fed, they still don't act as banks. These firms claims their success is tied to the success of Main Street but the discussion goes into some detail about the disconnect between the two.

The specific comment about how regular folks cannot open an account with these firms and the investments they make are not available to regular folks is very important. Often because of CNBC and other financial news outlets the general public seems to believe that everyone that works at these firms is a superstar undeservedly making millions of dollars. On the contrary, most people employed by these firms are "regular folks" that will never make enough money through their jobs to invest in the instruments these firms are selling to their clients. However, these firms will rely heavily on these employees working long unpaid overtime hours at nights and weekends should those investments go south for the high net worth client just to make the client whole with little concern for the work/life balance of the rank-and-file employees making $30,000, $40,000, or $50,000.

Will Restricting Immigration Protect the Environment?

Will Restricting Immigration Protect the Environment?

Posted using ShareThis

Great post today by Amy Mehta on the Imagine 2050 website. I wholeheartedly agree that "blaming immigrants prevents wasteful Americans from taking ownership of their contribution to environmental pollution and degradation." It's easy to blame groups with no voting power because there is little or no retaliation from these groups.

Perhaps in a moment of life imitating art, this reminds me of "Much Apu About Nothing" episode of The Simpsons (Season 7, Episode 23) when the unreasonable bear tax (referred to by Lisa Simpson as "the smallest tax increase in history") had to be instituted because of illegal immigrants.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

My Solution from February to the BCS Mess

Okay, so I was thinking now that we have the first few BCS rankings of they season that I would write my two cents on how the NCAA can keep the BCS and have a playoff system. (Kind of like keeping the current health insurance system and adding the co-ops or exchanges to it.) Well, it turns out I wrote about this back in February and completely forgot about it. In fact, it was my second post on this blog.

Based on my the playoff matchups suggested in my post from February 4th and the BCS standings on October 25th, you would get the following matchups with the assumption that the highest ranked team in each conference will be the conference champ.

#1 Florida vs. #8 Georgia Tech (Orange Bowl)
#2 Texas vs. #7 Cincinnati (Sugar Bowl)
#3 Iowa vs. #6 Boise State (Fiesta Bowl)
#4 USC vs. #5 TCU (Rose Bowl)

If you're wondering where's Alabama, currently BCS #2, I'm using the higher ranked team from the SEC, which is Florida. If Alabama were to beat Florida, they would be #1. If TCU or Boise State were to drop out of the top 10 and no other mid-major team were to climb into the top ten, the spot would be Alabama's as an at-large team.

Let me know what you think.

Thomas Frank: Obama Is Right About Fox News - WSJ.com

Thomas Frank's most recent column in the Wall Street Journal has this accurately written blurb:

"To point out that this network is different, that it is intensely politicized, that it inhabits an alternate reality defined by an imaginary conflict between noble heartland patriots and devious liberals—to be aware of these things is not the act of a scheming dictatorial personality. It is the obvious conclusion drawn by anybody with eyes and ears."

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Thomas Frank: From John Birchers to Birthers - WSJ.com

I missed this last week. An interesting column by Thomas Frank in last week's Wall Street Journal about a prescient piece written four and a half decades ago.

Fox News and Shepard Smith Earlier Today

I saw something earlier today on Fox News that actually surprised me. At the top of the 3:00PM hour, anchor Shepard Smith was reporting stories about the Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial races. When he went to the reporter covering the Chris Christie campaign, the reporter had actually managed to get Chris Christie on the air for a brief interview. After completing the interview, Smith asked the reporter when Gov. Corzine would be interviewed. When the reporter replied that they were still waiting to hear back from the Corzine campaign, Smith said he had no idea the interview was to take place, apologized to the television audience that it happened, and said that if he had control of the situation, it would not have taken place at all.

I'm not sure if video of that segment is stored or saved on YouTube somewhere, but is it possible that by criticizing Fox News (appropriately so, in most cases) any responsible journalists on the network are actually losing their credibility? I've subscribed to the Alan Colmes podcast for months now and although he is put in an awkward situation as a liberal working for Fox News, he often cites Shepard Smith by name when defending the news programming on Fox News and distinguishing it from the opinion programming.


Updated: the video was posted on YouTube:

Should the NBA age restriction be eliminated?

Interesting op-ed in today's New York Times. It makes some sense, especially if more players like Brandon Jennings of the Milwaukee Bucks opt to play professionally in Europe instead of the NCAA. Of course, when I read about high school players jumping straight to the NBA, I always remember the name Korleone Young.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Is Fox News Un-American?

An article from last week's Newsweek. (Apologies for the mobile link; I originally posted this from my BlackBerry.)

The O'Garbage Factor
http://mobile.newsweek.com/detail.jsp?key=80113&rc=camp2008&p=0&all=1

Monday, September 28, 2009

Dr. Mehmet Oz on MSNBC's Morning Joe Today

It's been a while since I blogged or posted anything but I had to put the clip from Dr. Oz's appearance on Morning Joe this morning. He very succinctly sums up the non-political reasons why healthcare reform is so urgently needed in this country. He also doesn't get upset or annoyed when Andy Serwer asks him a question that he already answered! Enjoy the clip!

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

My Two Cents (or, more accurately, my 1,200 words) on How to Improve Interleague Play in Major League Baseball

I said in my post two weeks ago that I would share an opinion on Interleague play in Major League Baseball. Basically, there are a few things we have to accept:
  1. Interleague games are here to stay. They are too big a cash cow for the league to discontinue.
  2. The current way games are scheduled and opponents are selected are clunky, at best.
  3. Teams have a lot of issues with interleague play, especially American League teams that lose their DH in National League parks.
Basically, we have to accept that it's here to stay with issues. But that doesn't mean it can't be improved. Some of the thoughts below are things that I've come up with on my own. Others are based on observations I've made in other sports (specifically the NFL and NBA). A few points are suggestions I've read over the years. I can't claim credit for these and wish I could cite the source if I could recall where and when I actually read the suggestion. So here are the things Major League Baseball needs to change in order to improve Interleague play:

Balance the schedule. Right now, the scheduling is ludicrous, with one NL series taking place during Interleague play since there are two more NL teams than AL teams. Monday through Thursday of this week the St. Louis Cardinals will play the New York Mets at CitiField, giving them an extra series against each other than either of them will play against their other non-division opponents. Frankly, there's no clear understanding as to why the Cardinals and Mets drew each other. Of course, you can't balance the schedule until you balance the leagues, so...

Balance the leagues.
Right now, there are 16 NL teams and 14 AL teams. The best way to balance it would be to balance them at 15 teams per league, similar to the NBA. For purposes of illustration, I will suggest moving Milwaukee back to the AL Central and moving Kansas City to the AL West. The leagues would look like this (team order is based on hypothetical 2008 final standings):

NL East

Philadelphia Phillies
New York Mets
Florida Marlins
Atlanta Braves
Washington Nationals

NL Central
Chicago Cubs
Houston Astros
St. Louis Cardinals
Cincinnati Reds
Pittsburgh Pirates

NL West
Los Angeles Dodgers
Arizona Diamondbacks
Colorado Rockies
San Francisco Giants
San Diego Padres

AL East

Tampa Bay Rays
Boston Red Sox
New York Yankees
Toronto Blue Jays
Baltimore Orioles

AL Central
Milwaukee Brewers
Chicago White Sox
Minnesota Twins
Cleveland Indians
Detroit Tigers

AL West
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim
Texas Rangers
Oakland Athletics
Kansas City Royals
Seattle Mariners

Of course, by balancing the leagues, this would mean...

There would be an Interleague series taking place every day, which isn't a bad thing. Right now, Interleague play gets a lot of flack when teams like Pittsburgh and Kansas City play each other. This is akin to two non-Conference last place teams in the NBA playing each other in meaningless games at the end of the season. What Interleague games played at a specific time does is point unnecessary spotlight on these games when they really should blend into the background. Also, scheduling Interleague games over the entire season rather than at a specific time helps teams and the schedule makers by...

Making it easier to schedule road trips.
If games were scheduled across the season, an Interleague series could be scheduled at any time. For example, if the Angels were to play the Phillies in Philadelphia, the Phillies-Angels series could be scheduled during the Angels' East Coast road trip where they are also playing Boston, New York, and Baltimore. Same can be done for all of the other teams. Also, Joe Girardi of the Yankees complained about how Interleague play prevents him from using a DH for a stretch of games and even suggested last year that games should be broken up throughout the season. The question is, who plays whom and how often? The answers are...

Play 18 interleague games per team, 9 at home and 9 on the road.
Then teams can play 16 games against teams in their own division and 8 games against non-division teams, giving everyone 162 games per season as it is now. Since a major complaint is there aren't enough games within the leagues, this ensures that all league opponents are played more than any Interleague opponent and everyone plays the same number of games against everyone else.

Maintain only true "natural"/regional rivalries.
As much as Major League Baseball tries to convince us, San Diego and Seattle are not natural rivals unless you consider it natural that they're the only two West Coast teams that don't share their market with another team. Basically, the true natural rivalries are:

Mets-Yankess
Nationals-Orioles
Marlins-Rays
Cubs-White Sox
Astros-Rangers
Cardinals-Royals
Reds-Indians
Dodgers-Angels
Giants-Athletics
(If Pittsburgh is moved to the AL Central instead of Milwaukee, you can add Phillies-Pirates and Brewers-Twins as two more natural rivals.)

These teams listed above would play two home-at-home 3-game series' against each other. The other 12 remaining teams would play one home series against one team and one road series against a different team, randomly selected among the 12. (More on randomly selected opponents below.) Then, MLB should...

Take a play out of the NFL's playbook and determine opponents by strength of schedule. The reason I use the 2008 final standings above is to show, by example. The New York Mets finished in 2nd place last year. In addition to their six Interleague games against the Yankees, the Mets would play three games each against the other 2nd place teams from 2008: Boston Red Sox, Chicago White Sox (based on the standings above), and Texas Rangers. This leaves three more games to be determined by...

Each team draws a randomly selected opponent (or opponent by process TBD by someone that can think one up.)
So the Mets in my previous example would play the Yankees, Yankees, Red Sox, White Sox, Rangers, and team TBD. Should the Mets and Yankees both finish in 2nd place (as they did in 2007), they would not play each other 9 times. Rather, they would still play the 6 games scheduled as natural rivals and each team would draw another random opponent (or opponent by process TBD.) So this would address scheduling and parity of scheduling. One more thing to make Interleague play more interesting and fair would be to...

Switch the DH/pitcher rules for Interleague play.
Right now, NL teams gain an advantage by not having the AL team's DH bat in their home parks. This is grossly imbalanced in favor of the NL. Unless MLB can agree with the player's union to keep/dump the DH across the league, a twist to make Interleague play more interesting for the fans that don't get to see the "other" brand of baseball would be to have the DH for Interleague games in NL parks and have pitchers hit in Interleague games in AL parks.


Well, that's all I came up with. I welcome any comments, criticisms, and any thoughts on what I may have missed. Thanks for reading!!

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Colbert's Final Signoff from Iraq

Just a quick blurb to follow up my recent blog post about Stephen Colbert in Iraq. He had a great signoff at the end of his last show from Iraq that's worth seeing if you didn't catch it then:

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Operation Iraqi Stephen - Sign Off - Honey, I'm Coming Home
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorStephen Colbert in Iraq

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Bryce Harper: Baseball's LeBron?

Okay, this is a bit wonky but enjoy...

Sports Illustrated's Tom Verducci recently wrote an article about Bryce Harper, a baseball phenom from Las Vegas, who reportedly hit a 517-foot home run as a high school freshman last year. Verducci's article likens Harper not just to LeBron James but also to Tiger Woods and Wayne Gretzky. Harper's family also announced that he will be dropping out of high school and getting his GED so he can enroll in junior college and become eligible for the MLB draft a year earlier than he would have if he had stayed in high school. I tend to agree with this blogger on the reasons why it's not such a bad idea. Frankly, I don't understand why more kids that are just bored with high school but smart enough to get a GED don't bother to do this since it's considered the equivalent of a high school diploma and still allows you to enroll in community college.

I perused the article and saw this YouTube video about Harper:



He certainly has a fluid swing. It's a level swing, so he should be able to stay on top of a high pitch, which is typically not true with left-handed hitters. He even showed some power hitting the only opposite field HR in the event. I don't see him as a pitcher at all just because of his hitting prowess. It says he's a catcher but he has great speed and even scored from second base on a wild pitch six times this season. (That claim sounds similar to Kim Jong Il's claim that he shot 11 holes-in-one the first time he played golf or the scene in "The Babe" where Babe Ruth hits an inside-the-park home run on an infield popup.) Either way, I see him as a 1B or 3B unless he's defensively challenged fielding grounders, in which case that throwing arm and speed would make him a solid CF or RF.

Now to the downside, he's hitting 500-foot bombs in the video with an aluminum bad. I'd like to see how he does with a wooden bat. Also, at 7:02 in the YouTube clip is a slow motion side shot of his swing. There is a slight hitch in his swing that could make him susceptible to pitches low-and-away. If he starts to compensate by dipping that back shoulder, as many major leaguers tend to do in a slump, it could impact him psychologically since he's never failed at any level in baseball and further a downward spiral. In other words, his mental makeup and response to coaching are going to be key factors in his success.

That's my take. Read the article, watch the video, and judge for yourself. Thanks for reading my blog!!

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

The Stephen Colbert Blog Post

Looks like this week is Stephen Colbert week in politics. He is recording his shows from Baghdad all week and is the guest editor of Newsweek for the week. Here are his "editorial" in this week's Newsweek and a few video posts from Colbertnation.com and Morning Joe.

By the way, I know I haven't blogged in a while about sports (actually, I haven't blogged much, period) but I do have an opinion about interleague play in Major League Baseball that I've been kicking around for some time that I will share when I get a chance.

Enjoy the videos!

Colbert's announcement on the Colbert Nation web site that he's going to Iraq:

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Exclusive - Where and When Is Stephen Going to the Persian Gulf - Iraq Announcement
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorStephen Colbert in Iraq


Jon Meacham of Newsweek discussing on Morning Joe how Stephen Colbert became guest editor of Newsweek for the week:



Stephen Colbert getting his hair shaved off by General Ray Odierno under orders from "a superior":

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Obama Orders Stephen's Haircut - Ray Odierno
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorStephen Colbert in Iraq


The Morning Joe gang (minus Morning Joe himself, Joe Scarborough, who must have been off getting his umpteenth Starbucks before 7:00AM) discussing the head shaving video (shorter version of previous video):

President Obama's Cairo Speech

Here is the full video of President Barack Obama's speech in Cairo on June 3rd:

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Is Stephen Colbert really a conservative?

As reported on Countdown with Keith Olbermann last Friday, May 1st, a study was conducted at The Ohio State University where individuals were shown clips of The Colbert Report and asked if they thought he was a liberal or conservative. Apparently many conservatives just didn't get it:

Friday, April 17, 2009

Shashi Tharoor's son on 4/16/2009 Colbert Report

A funny interview with Kanishk Tharoor, the son of former UN Under-Secretary General Shashi Tharoor, who is currently running for the Indian Parliament from the state of Kerala.

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Indian Elections - Kanishk Tharoor
colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorNASA Name Contest


E N J O Y ! ! !

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Two clips worth watching...

I wanted to post the following two clips that I thought were interesting.

Rachel Maddow's 4/9/2009 interview with Kal Penn regarding his new position with the White House:



Stephen Colbert's 4/14/2009 interview with astronaut Sunita Williams, talking about the new C.O.L.B.E.R.T. in the space station:

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Space Module: Colbert - Sunita Williams
colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorNASA Name Contest


E N J O Y ! ! !

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Isiah Thomas takes Florida International University Coaching Job

Isiah Thomas was hired as the new coach for Florida International University. Now although Zeke and James Dolan are the reasons I have relinquished my fanhood of the New York Knicks, I think he will actually do well in this role. One thing I always thought about Isiah was he was not properly utilized as a general manager or coach. One thing no one can take away from Isiah Thomas is his eye for talent. I always thought the ideal role for him is similar to the one Gene "Stick" Michael serves with the New York Yankees. He was a pretty lousy manager and general manager but has an eye for talent that is better than anyone else in baseball.

Being a college basketball coach is essentially being an eye for talent and I think Isiah has that. The added bonus is he won't be in a situation where he depletes a salary cap, since college basketball players don't get paid (legally), and doesn't seem like the type that would be afraid of doing something underhanded as many college coaches are known to do (for better or for worse.)

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Harold and Kumar (actually, just Kumar) go to the White House

I think this is fascinating but I'm not exactly sure what Kal Penn will be doing for the Obama administration. Perhaps he can get my new South Asian improv troupe a gig at the White House?

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Great Article in Politico

Roger Simon of Politico writes a great column about the auto industry and the "horror" that a failing company might fail because of its own lousy business decisions over the years. The best line in this piece:

"Detroit will turn the corner when you go to the rental car desk and the person behind the counter offers you a Toyota or a Buick and you pick the Buick."

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Obama Speech Last Night

I haven't watched the President's speech yet from last night. It was my wife's birthday so we were blowing out candles on her cake at the time of the speech. Will try to blog about it later. In the meantime, here is part one of the speech posted by a YouTube user:



The other parts should be linked.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Clip on Rachel Maddow about the Indian Rupee

I haven't blogged in a while. I'm actually up on Twitter so if you want real-time blogging, please check out twitter.com/amodcomedy for updates.

Here is a clip on The Rachel Maddow Show about the contest for a symbol for the Indian Rupee:


Have a great day!!

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

This and that...

Just a couple of quick thoughts on the past few hours/days in politics:
  • Obama's speech has been analyzed to death. Politico has a nice review of what Obama was saying between the lines.
  • Jindal was just plain weak. He's been analyzed to death too. There's a reason I call him the Indian Clarence Thomas: extreme right-wing ultra-conservative that doesn't say much but when he does say something he sounds like an idiot.
  • I don't know anything about Gary Locke other than his Democratic response to one of W.'s State of the Union addresses. I reached out to a friend in Washington state to get his thoughts but haven't heard back.
That's it for now. More when I get another chance...

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Tom Friedman's column in today's New York Times

Thomas L. Friedman pens yet another great column in today's New York Times showing his expertise on South Asian affairs. Check it out if you can.

Stimulus done; next stop: Housing

Now that the stimulus is done, the President will be announcing his housing plan at 12:15pm today. In a well choreographed moment, 29 minutes after the bill was signed, the first infrastructure project paid for with stimulus money began: the construction of a bridge in Missouri. A lot of folks are saying this is a classic Rahm Emanuel move.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Ooh, a thinker. Why would we have wanted that?

Politico reports that President Obama actually wants to think through recommendations from the Department of Defense and ask probing questions about the usage of troops. Wow, this is what it feels like to have a president that likes to think with his brain? It's a far cry from the 7th worst president of all-time.

Presidential Survey

C-SPAN released their new survey of presidents, ranking the 42 people that have been POTUS prior to Barack Obama. Highlights/surprises:
  • Abe Lincoln was #1, George Washington #2 ... James Buchanan dead last at #42. (Oh gee, surprise, surprise.)
  • George W. Bush debuts at #36 on this list
  • Ronald Reagan cracks the top ten at #10
  • Bill Clinton is the greatest living president at #15
  • Harry Truman at #5?
Check out the list and enjoy!

Friday, February 13, 2009

House Passes Stimulus

The House passed the Stimulus bill by a vote of 246-183 with one member voting present. The bill will be voted on in the Senate sometime today. The vote will most likely occur around 5:00pm, which the monotonous C-SPAN voice said is "to accommodate religious beliefs of some members." In other words, so Joe Lieberman can vote for the bill.

I'm curious to know who voted "Present". House.gov does not have any information yet.

On to the Senate...

House and Senate to Vote today; Stimulus bill now $787 Billion

Looks like the House will hold a vote around 1:00pm today and the Senate sometime later in the day on the stimulus bill. Looks like President Obama could get his wish of having the bill on his desk prior to President's Day. Stay tuned...

New Gigs Coming Up

A personal note here: I have two gigs coming up. The flyers for the gigs are below. One is at 5:30pm on Saturday, 2/28 at Comic Strip Live and the other is at Tierney's in Montclair at 8:00pm on Sunday, 3/8. I need a minimum of four guests for the Comic Strip Live show so if you're undecided as to where to go, please try to come to that one! Thanks.

House of Cards

Great documentary on CNBC last night hosted by David Faber called House of Cards. It really goes into detail explaining all sides of this mess and does not take sides in the Mortgage lenders vs. Home buyers debate. It is going to air a few more times over the next few weeks so be sure to check it out!

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Judd Gregg withdraws nomination as Commerce Secretary

Judd Gregg (R-NH) has withdrawn his nomination as Secretary of Commerce. This made little sense when he was nominated and makes even less sense now. Why do I get the feeling he's only got two years left in the Senate before he goes back home to New Hampshire permanently?

Lincoln/Darwin Birthdays and Stimulus Holding Pattern

Amazing that both Abraham Lincoln and Charles Darwin were born on February 12, 1809, exactly 200 years ago today. Newsweek has an article that talks about the impact both have had on our world. For anyone trying to determine who made the greater contribution (as many of the comments on that article attempt to do), let's just accept it as comparing apples to oranges and leave it at that.

The stimulus issue is in a holding pattern today as the House and Senate decide when to vote on the newly compromised (pun intended) bill.

As far as sharing birthdays go, I happen to share a birthday with former New York Jets running back Curtis Martin (May 1, 1973). He was certainly my most favorite Jet player of all time even before I knew we shared a birthday. This guy was good and helped put the Jets back on the map but I didn't like him as much as his predecessor.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

We have a deal!

Senators are announcing right now to announce that House and Senate negotiators have reached a deal on the economic recovery (aka stimulus) bill.

Immigration Bailout?

Thomas L. Friedman has a great column in today's New York Times about how restricting immigration could impact the economic recovery. Fareed Zakaria also has a recent column in Newsweek about a similar topic. Zakaria also talks about how Canada is the only industrialized country not to have a banking bailout. Check out both columns because they're chock full of information that you won't typically get from network or cable news.

Video of Obama's First Primetime Address

Okay, I've got this embedding thing figured out. So here is the full video from Monday's Press Conference.



I have to say, this is a refreshing change from a guy (Bush 43) who couldn't answer a question and, on a couple of occasions, used a planted reporter to ask positive questions if the press conference was getting away from him.

My Thoughts on A-Rod

As a Met fan it kills me to defend a Yankee but I have to do it. I wasn't surprised by Alex Rodriguez's admission that he used a banned substance in 2003. Oddly enough, it was in 2003 that a former co-worker (who I will not name because I am no longer in touch with him and don't have his permission to quote this story) told me a story about his days as a minor league ballplayer. He mentioned that one of his minor league teammates played high school baseball with A-Rod. (I don't recall if this person was a teammate or on a competing high school team in the same league.) He mentioned that the person has told him that as a junior, A-Rod was approached by a team's scout, who told him that he had the skills but needed to bulk up by 15-20 pounds to guarantee being the top overall draft pick. The scout arranged for A-Rod to acquire some illegal substance to add on the weight and, lo-and-behold, Alex Rodriguez becomes the first overall selection of the Seattle Mariners.

Now I'm not saying what A-Rod did was right. I'm just saying that there are many more layers to peel off this onion and we can't swing from calling him the player with the most integrity to the one with the least overnight. There is a large gray area here regardless of whether or not the story I recall above is true. (Remember, I'm getting this information third-hand so I can't verify its validity other than to say the co-worker telling me this story was a pretty reliable guy.)

Also, to all those people that think the records should be thrown out, I was saying this back when Bonds was chasing the home run title: "throw out the records only if you can prove that not a single pitcher that gave up a home run to Barry Bonds was juiced." Few people were with me before the Mitchell Report when I said the pitchers had more reason to use performance enhancing substances than hitters and the Mitchell Report proved me right. In a bizarre, twisted, and absurd way, the playing field was level for all those home runs hit by Bonds, A-Rod, and everyone else in major league baseball, just like all of Roger Clemens' strikeouts against clean hitters count as much as those against juiced hitters.

Tonight's Word - Colbert Report 2/10/2009

I haven't posted in the week since I started this blog. I'm still getting the hang of this thing and to figure out how to post a video clip, I decided to post this clip from last night's Colbert Report. Enjoy!

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

I need to get this off my chest...

I've been watching MSNBC today and I have only one question:

WHAT IN THE WORLD IS CONTESSA BREWER WEARING TODAY? If you haven't seen it, it's a red dress that looks like the face of any non-human "Star Trek: The Next Generation" character.

Next HHS Secretary?

This morning on Morning Joe, Chuck Todd reported that the replacement for Tom Daschle could be Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius. I am amazed by Sebelius' political acumen simply by the fact that she is a Democratic Governor of a bright red state. Also, she was the state insurance commissioner that took on the largest insurer in the state of Kansas, so she's not likely to be bullied by the insurance industry as others might be.

A name that is interesting in all of this is former Oregon Governor John Kitzhaber, who is an M.D. and has made health care reform a personal issue with his Archimedes Movement. It is also believed that he may campaign for the position.

A thought I had was in addition to being HHS Secretary, Daschle was also going to be the White House Health Care czar. I wonder if both Sebelius and Kitzhaber would fill each fill one of those positions. No word on whether the two know each other. Ironically, Sebelius was sworn into office on the same day Kitzhaber's term ended in Oregon.

Either way, both of these potential nominees give me a better vibe than Daschle, especially with both of them being former governors and Washington outsiders (Tom Daschle was neither) at a time when Obama seems to be getting burned by Washington insiders.

Quick Thoughts on Tom Daschle

What I've heard from a couple of people that work in the healthcare industry is if Daschle had enacted what he put in his book, the healthcare industry would not be better off. And I'm hearing this from people that think the system is broken now!

I haven't read the book but I'll get around to it and see what I think. Right now I just got Gwen Ifill's new book and Chuck Todd's book on Amazon so it's next in the queue after I finish reading Stephen Colbert's book.

My Solution to the BCS Mess

(Wow, I have had way too many thoughts these past few months. I should have started this blog months ago.)

We've heard politicians talk about the college football "championship" situation. Here is what I think they should do:
  • Keep the BCS points system: this can be used to determine mid-major conference teams and seeding.
  • Use the Rose, Orange, Sugar, and Fiesta Bowls as National Quarterfinal games: this way if a team makes it to the Final Four but doesn't get to the championship game, they can still call themselves "Rose Bowl Champs", "Orange Bowl Champs", etc. Even better, keep them all as January 1st games to make New Year's Day the National Quarterfinal Day. Then you can have the semifinals around 1/8 (which is when this year's championship game took place) and have the national championship around 1/15. Better still, why not schedule the national championship game to take place on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day every year?
  • Select three new locations each year for the two semifinal games and championship game: cities fall over themselves trying to host college basketball's final four. Can you imagine how far they would go for college football even if they'll just be getting one game?
How would the teams be picked? Take the conference champion from the Big Ten, Big 12, Pac Ten, Big East, SEC, and ACC. Then take the top two mid-major teams in the BCS standings, so long as they finish in the top ten. If there is only one mid-major team in the top ten, pick the highest remaining team without an automatic bid. If there are no mid-major teams, pick the two highest teams without an automatic bid.

What if there are two or more mid-major teams in the top ten and a high ranked team, like Alabama in 2008, did not win their conference? Too bad. Win your conference or go to a lesser bowl. You deserve to go to the San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia Bowl on Dec. 23rd for thinking you're better than you actually are. This suggestion is still not truly equitable for the mid-major conferences but at least it's better than what they have now.

Where would teams play? After the seedings are done, the best way to do it would be to send the #1 seed to the bowl closest to them, followed by #2 to the closest of the remaining three sites, etc. This would reward teams for finishing higher in the standings.

What matchups would this have yielded for the 2008-09 bowl season? Here goes (based on this past season's final BCS rankings):
#1 Oklahoma vs. #8 Virginia Tech (Sugar Bowl)
#2 Florida vs. #7 Cincinnati (Orange Bowl)
#3 USC vs. #6 Boise State (Rose Bowl)
#4 Utah vs. #5 Penn State (Fiesta Bowl)

Then the 1/8 winner would play the 4/5 winner, etc. You can also preserve the other "lesser" bowls that schools currently use to generate revenue for their schools.

How would things have turned out this year? I'm guessing Florida and Oklahoma would still have made it to the national championship game with the same result. However, as President Obama said in his interview with Matt Lauer before the Super Bowl, wouldn't it be much better if Florida had won through a playoff?

Barack Obama: The First 7 Habits President?

The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People is a self-help book written by Dr. Stephen Covey in 1989. I was fortunate enough to take a 7 Habits workshop at a previous employer. For people that aren't familiar with the 7 Habits, check out the FranklinCovey website for more information.

How do the 7 Habits relate to Barack Obama? I started thinking about this during the campaign as I watched how he fended off both the Clinton machine and the Republican party. Here are some quick bullet points on what I've seen and what I think:
  1. Habit 1: Be Proactive - The use of 'proactive' here is as opposed to 'reactive'. The was evident when he made his speech about race after the barrage of Rev. Wright clips making their way around the media.
  2. Habit 2: Begin with the End in Mind - The campaign talked about how focused they were by establishing their message and strategy up front and following through. Where the Clinton campaign constantly changed their message, the Obama campaign established their message and adapted their tactics to the situations that came up.
  3. Habit 3: Put First Things First - Obama has focused on the economy first and foremost. Although there are other issues and problems in the world, it seems the economy has been put on the front burner because resolving that issue will lead to the betterment of other problems.
  4. Habit 4: Think Win/Win - Obama's focus on bipartisanship has shown how he seeks to seek a Win for everyone involved, not just the Democratic side at the expense of Republicans, which is the way politics has been played in the past.
  5. Habit 5: Seek First to Understand, Then to be Understood - The President's leg work in reaching out to Republicans, even visiting with them at the Capitol shows this habit. A profile that one of the cable news stations did about him (I don't recall which one) mentioned how as president of the Harvard Law Review, he would make conservatives members that he vehemently disagreed with feel as though he heard their point of view even though he did not share their opinions.
  6. Habit 6: Synergize - This habit is all about the sum being greater than the individual parts. His selection of former rivals Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton, as well as other key figures that were not always ardent supporters shows how he values differences and collaboration.
  7. Habit 7: Sharpen the Saw - Aside from his Hawai'i vacation prior to the inauguration, he has shown that he takes time off to focus on things that matter to him personally, like taking his daughters to school.
These are just things I've seen and noticed about his habits as a candidate and president. Let's see if this holds in the future.

Welcome to my blog!!!

Hey folks! Thanks for checking out my blog. I created this mainly to share my thoughts on things happening in the world of politics (and occasionally about sports). Unlike most blogs, I don't want to be the guy shouting "hey, listen to me, I'm important!" I'd like to be more like Matthew Cerrone of metsblog.com (which is my favorite blog, by the way. Please check it out if you're a Met fan), who once described himself as "the guy in the middle of a crowded room telling people 'check this out and check that out'".

So I hope you enjoy this and become readers for as long as I have something to say.

Thanks for your time,
Amod