Friday, May 6, 2011

Wazzup wid dis?


by Mark Ganzer on Friday, May 6, 2011 at 10:45pm
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If our nation's drug / alcohol / narcotic laws aligned with the practices of its citizens we would have:
(a) pot smoking legalized at 14
(b) beer and wine consumption legalized at 14
(c) cigarette smoking legalized at 14
(d) purchased of pot, beer, wine, cigarettes at 16
(e) crack and powder cocaine and heroin possession and purchase legalized at 18
(f) driving privleges granted at 18, subject to testing
(g) marriage licenses being granted only to those who both pass a personality profile examination to determine how well their core values and beiefs line up
(h) planned parenthood, most especially including prenatal, neo natal and mothers care, nutrition, child rearing, subsidized housing provided for the first 14 years of the child's life

SO WHY THE FUCK DON'T WE HAVE ALL THIS?

And if SARAH PALIN were to suggest as much, she would win 70+% of the popular VOTE!

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Stupid Article. Don't Read.


 
By  (Contributor) on September 9, 2010
2,255 reads 
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Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images
College football is the best sport in the world. 
It is a game of passion. It is a game in which players give it 100 percent, 100 percent of the time. 
There are no lockouts or contract negotiations. It is a game where no one is safe from the upset bug (just ask Ole Miss and Kansas).
This slideshow lists the five most dangerous teams in college football as well as why they are so dangerous. Let's begin.
Begin Slideshow

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Remembering Jackie Robinson By Gerardo Gomez BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator



BlackCommentator.com: Remembering Jackie Robinson By Gerardo Gomez, BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator

 
 
April 15th was Jackie Robinson Day in Major League Baseball. On this date we remember Jackie breaking baseball's color barrier line in 1947. All managers, coaches and players will be wearing #42 in honor of Jackie Robinson. As a Jackie Robinson fan, I am very happy that Major League Baseball retired his number in 1997 and for the past several years have honored Jackie Robinson on April 15th. I have always felt that Jackie Robinson is not only an iconic figure in the baseball world but should be remembered by all Americans. I think America needs to have a national holiday to remember the life of Jackie Robinson. A national holiday that will include a day of community service. Jackie Robinson would not have it any other way. Jackie was so humble that if he was alive today and seeing Major League Baseball using April 15th to honor him, Jackie would be the first one to say that he rather have Major League Baseball be dedicated to the needs of the community where there is a baseball team. He would still be addressing the issues of justice and equality in our society.
Number 42 to me is not only my favorite number but according to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams, number 42 is the "Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe and Everything." If that is the case, I would go as far as to say that Jackie's number 42 was a code for America to change its evil ways. No longer must they play the game of baseball by discriminating people for there color of their skin. No longer must people be force to go to separate bathrooms, stay in different hotels, eat isolated from White people, and no longer must black people be forced to live under an American apartheid.
Jackie not only demonstrated America's need to change its inhumane rules by the way he played the game but more importantly, how he carried himself in the baseball diamond. In order for the "noble experiment" to work, Jackie was forced to take all the abuse from white racist fans and opposing players. Even his own teammates didn't want to play next to him or even share the same clubhouse. But, Jackie knew that many of his teammates didn't care about the color Black but about the color Green. Robinson knew that as long as the Dodgers won a pennant or the World Series, he was helping his teammates get a good paycheck. Jackie once said, "Money is America's God." And to this day, this quote echoes throughout the whole world.
What people don't know about Jackie is that even before he broke baseball's color barrier line in 1947, he was always dedicated to the values of justice and equality. Once when he was in the military, he refused to get up from his seat and sit in the back of the bus. Jackie Robinson was court court-martialed for standing up for his rights. In the military he and Heavyweight Boxing Champion, Joe Louis, advocated for the equal rights of African-American Soldiers. While Rosa Parks played an instrumental role in the Civil Rights Movement, I like to say that it was Jackie Robinson on July 6, 1944 who was probably the first African American to refuse his seat while riding a bus.
After retiring from baseball, Jackie played a tremendous role in American politics. He continued to fight for the rights of African-Americans in all sectors. He criticized the New York Yankees for being a team that only hired white people. He protested companies who didn't hired African-Americans. On August 2, 1963, he joined workers who were picketing the construction site of Downstate Medical Center for allegations that Blacks were being discriminated from the hiring process. Jackie Robinson became great friends with Martin Luther King, Jr. MLK once said, "Jackie Robinson was a legend and a symbol in his own time."  In 1964, he co-founded the Freedom National Bank, a commercial bank owned by African Americans and operated in Harlem, New York. Jackie was not only a cofounder but he served as the bank's first Chairman of the Board. Jackie also championed for the equal rights in the housing sector. His concern for the racial segregation in the housing sector and the conditions that African American families were living in, inspired Jackie Robinson to start The Jackie Robinson Construction Company in 1970 to construct housing for low income families. Jackie Robinson was one of America's true pioneers during the Civil Rights Movement and people should not forget about that.
It is my tradition to go to Dodger Stadium on Jackie Robinson Day. I will proudly wear my Jackie Robinson jersey. I wear number 42 understanding that I continue Jackie's legacy of fighting for justice and equality. I owe a tremendous gratitude to Jackie Robinson for the amazing human being that he was.
Jackie Robinson is not only my hero but a source of my inspiration. No human being should go through what Jackie Robinson went through. His courage and unbending spirit are like no other. Jackie Robinson lived his life with a purpose. He understood that our lives are to be used to make our world a better place. Jackie is quoted as saying, "A life is not important except in the impact it has on other lives."


BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator Gerardo Gomez is a homeless rights activist and counselor in Los Angeles who is interested in social justice issues. He counts Jackie Robinson as his all time hero.  Click here to contact Mr. Gomez.
 

Strange Justice: The Barry Bonds Case By Dave Zirin BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator


 We cannot expect justice for Barry Bonds, nor even the kind of treatment under either the law, or media scrutinty, that Mark McGuire, for example, or Sammy Sosa would have received.  Bonds had the curse of being the best player, not merely of his generation, but perhaps of all time.  The records he broke (and set) will be the standard, quite possible forever.  For this, for succeeding at this incredibly high level, he will never be forgiven.
 
This wasn’t supposed to happen in Barack Obama’s America. We were told that these sorts of prosecutions wouldn’t be the priority of an Eric Holder Justice Department. But just as Guantánamo Bay detention centers and military tribunals have remained in place, the perjury witch-hunt trial of Major League Baseball’s home run king, Barry Lamar Bonds, continued unabated and has now reached a predictably ugly conclusion.
After seven years, and millions of dollars in court costs, Bonds has been found guilty of obstruction of justice. As for the all-important three perjury charges, the jury couldn’t agree whether Bonds lied to a grand jury investigating the Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative (BALCO) when he swore under oath that he never knowingly took performance enhancing drugs. Without corroborating evidence from Bonds’ trainer and lifelong friend Greg Anderson, the jury was deadlocked and the Judge declared a mistrial on all perjury charges. But the obstruction of justice conviction makes Bonds a convicted felon, and sets him up for a May 20 hearing where he could get as many as 10 years behind bars.
What did Bonds do to “obstruct justice”? According to one juror, “Steve,” the obstruction of justice charge was reached because, "The whole grand jury testimony was a series of evasive answers. There were pointed questions that were asked two or three or four different ways that never got clearly answered. That's how we came to that.''  Wow. Apparently, a “series of evasive answers” lines you up for a 10-year sentence behind bars. By that standard, Dick Cheney, Karl Rove, and Scooter Libby should be breaking rocks in Leavenworth for their performance at the Valerie Plame trial.
As BALCO founder Victor Conte - who is no friend of Bonds - said to USA Today, "This verdict absolutely makes no sense to me. Of all of these counts, the one that makes the least sense to me is the obstruction charge. Tell me how there was obstruction of justice. This is all about the selected persecution of Barry Bonds. This is not fair. I was the heavy in this. I accepted full responsibility and the consequences and went to prison. How is that obstruction? Doesn't make sense.”
It doesn’t. After all the public money, drama, and hysterics, this is what we’re left with. He was “evasive."  Keep in mind that we live in a country where the US Department of Justice has not pursued one person for the investment banking fraud that cratered the US economy in 2008. Not one indictment has been issued to a single Bush official on charges of ordering torture or lying to provoke an invasion of Iraq. Instead, we get farcical reality television like the US vs. Barry Bonds.
This was a trial where you longed for the somber dignity of a Judge Judy. Since Anderson wouldn’t talk, the government was left with two real witnesses: Kimberly Bell, Bond's mistress, brought in to discuss his sexual dysfunctions resulting from steroids, and Steve Hoskins, the business manager whom Bonds fired for alleged theft and fraud. But their real star was a once-anonymous IRS official named Jeff Novitsky, who has proudly seen Bonds as an all-consuming obsession, US Constitution be damned.
ESPN legal expert Lester Munson described the verdict as “a major triumph for federal agent Jeff Novitzky.” That alone should chill our bones. Without a warrant, Novitzky started his BALCO investigation by rooting through Victor Conte’s trash and taking it back to his house to sift through in his leisure hours. But Conte was a nothing to Novitzky. From the beginning, his sights were on Barry Bonds.
Jonathan Littman of Yahoo! Sports wrote, “two agents working on the case knew that Novitzky ‘hated' Bonds, and heard him brag about his hopes to cash in on a book deal. The agents demanded to see copies of his reports and were rebuffed by federal officials. Novitzky, however, was given carte blanche by the head of the IRS to drop the normal duties of an IRS agent -- investigating tax fraud and money laundering -- and became our de facto national sports doping czar.”
In 2004, accompanied by eleven agents, Novitsky marched into the offices of sports-drug testing monolith Comprehensive Drug Testing. Carrying a warrant which authorized him to see the sealed drug tests of just ten baseball players, he paraded out with 4,000 supposedly confidential medical files, including records for every baseball player in the Major leagues. As Jon Pessah wrote in ESPN Magazine, "Three federal judges reviewed the raid. One asked, incredulously, if the Fourth Amendment had been repealed. Another, Susan Illston, who has presided over the BALCO trials, called Novitzky's actions a 'callous disregard' for constitutional rights. All three instructed him to return the records. Instead, Novitzky kept the evidence..."
During closing arguments, Bonds’ attorney, Cristina Arguedas, looked at the jury as she pointed at the prosecution, accused them of misconduct and asked, "Why are we even here?"
It’s a good question. But asking the question is much safer than answering it. We’re here because Major League Baseball and the US government have long decided that Barry Bonds would shoulder the burden for the steroid era. We’re here because a surly Black athlete who thinks that the press is just a step above vermin was easy pickings for an industry rife with systemic corruption. Major League Baseball made billions off of the steroid era, an era many now see as a rancid, tainted lie. It was an era where owners became obscenely wealthy and billions in public funds were spent on ballparks. The press cheered and America dug the long ball. Now the dust has cleared, our cities have been looted, Barry Bonds could be going to prison, and Commissioner Bud Selig still has a job -- and a RAISE. With apologies to Harvey Dent, this is the story of the Black athlete today: Die a hero or live long enough to be a villain. And the men in the suits walk -- or in Selig’s case, slouch -- all the way to the bank.
Around the start of the trial, nearly a decade ago, Bonds said, "This is something we, as African-American athletes, live with every day. I don't need a headline that says, 'Bonds says there's racism in the game of baseball.' We all know it. It's just that some people don't want to admit it. They're going to play dumb like they don't know what the hell is going on."
We shouldn’t play dumb either. Both President Obama and Attorney General Holder said words to the effect that the US government would no longer be in the steroid-inspection business. Like so much else in the last two years, it was just words.
This commentary originally appeared in The Nation.

BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator Dave Zirin is the author of “Bad Sports: How Owners Are Ruining the Games We Love   ” (Scribner. His website is edgeofsports.com where you can subscribe to regular feeds of his column. Click here to contact Mr. Zirin.
 

Sunday, April 10, 2011


 
Local Sports

Frame leads boys to win at Sutherlin
The Reedsport Community Charter School’s boys golf team finished second last Monday at the Glide Invitational in Sutherlin. This was their first meeting with other teams from Special District 3.

Led by medalist Montana Frame’s 1-under-par 71, the Braves posted a team total of 355 to edge McKenzie by nine strokes for the runner-up spot. Bandon took the title with a 331 total. Host Gilde was fourth at 441, followed by Oakridge 458.

Frame shot an even-par 35 on the front nine and a 1-under 36 on the back to claim individual honors by seven shots over Bandon’s Ben Lindsay.

“Montana had his usual steady performance, and I was pleased with the way we played for the most part,” said Reedsport Community Charter School co-head coach Barry Miller. “Since the top two teams qualify for state, we have a chance to make it if the kids continue to work on the weak parts of their games. It was a good chance to compete against the other teams in the district.”

Senior Chad Cassaro had an excellent front nine with a 39, but struggled a bit on the much tougher and hillier back nine and shot a 49 for an 88. Meanwhile, junior Marcus Gabaldon recovered from difficulty with his driver and bettered a 50 on the front by shooting a 45 on the back for a 95. Rounding out the RCCS quintet were sophomores Garrett Kaufmann with a 50-51-101 and Andrew Wall with a 58-65-123.

“With the back nine being so much harder than the front, it was great to see Marcus better his score by five strokes,” said Miller. “Garrett was pretty consistent on both nines, Chad played really well on the front and Andrew posted some double-digit numbers that really hurt his score. Considering the unexpected heat and humidity, and all the uphill holes on the back, we had a pretty good showing.” 


The Braves return to action Monday, April 11, at the Bandon Dunes Invitational.

Softball team learns by playing
Losing a game does not mean the team did not play their best. It simply means they have to learn more to play well enough to win. This is true for the Reedsport Community Charter School’s girls softball team. They are such a young and inexperienced team that every game becomes a learning experience.

“I wish we had junior varsity programs for the girls,” said head coach Jennie Marsh. “We have a lot of young players and no seniors. We have girls that don’t know how to swing the bat.”

Knowing that a young team can grow into a winning team, Marsh has enlisted the aid of three volunteers, all Reedsport graduates and former softball players, to help coach the team.

“Ashley Edgar, Deanne Heubner and Vanessa are all a great help,” Marsh said. “It is nice to feel comfortable having the kids go with coaches who know what they are doing.”

The team has faced three tough challengers so far this season. Each game has brought a new opportunity to learn something about how the game of softball is played.

Yoncalla High School (March 28) 


“We were not hitting the ball very well,” Marsh said. “We scored nine runs, but we lost 19-9 for the first game and 10-0 for the second.”

Days Creek High School (March 30)

This was a much better game for the Reedsport team. The players were down 5-0, but then they scored four runs. The game was over when one of the players struck out. The final score was Days Creek 5-4.

Glendale High School

Another learning experience for the Reedsport team.

“This was not a good one,” Marsh said. “We had 12 errors and they had 12 runs. Two of our players were hurt in the game. The final score was 12-0, Glendale.”


Marsh has great hopes for the future of her young team.

“Once we get into a good groove, they will do well,” Marsh said. “By the end of the season we are going to surprise people.”

A very convincing win for Reedsport Oregon's Girl's golf


 
Local Sports

Girls win tournament by 55 shots
The girl’s golf team won big at the Siuslaw High School tournament held at the Sandpines Golf Course in Florence on March 28.

The tournament included Sutherlin, Gold Beach, Siuslaw, North Bend, Bandon, Coquille and Brookings. At the end of the tournament, Reedsport had only 424 points, outplaying second-place Sutherlin by 55 points.

On an individual basis, Monica Vaughn took first place with 77 points and Madison Richardson came in second with 101 points.

The next tournament will be on April 11 at Sandpines.