January 2012: David Gregory is Max Pain

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The Meet The Press Republican Facebook debate on Sunday became unbearable when David Gregory’s line of led to him begging the candidates to tell him about exactly how much pain needed to be doled out to real ‘murkins to balance the budget:

DAVID GREGORY: All right. We’re gonna come back to the question of obstacles to the nomination, but let me get to policy, Governor Huntsman. This is, by all accounts, an age of austerity for this country. A jobs crisis. Also a spending crisis in Washington. I wonder what specifically you would do to say to Americans, “These are cuts I’m going to make in federal spending that cause pain, that will require sacrifice?”

Esquire’s Charles Pierce panned Gregory’s thirst for painful policies…

Let’s talk substance. So Governor Huntsman, name three areas where Americans will feel real pain in order to balance the budget?

[…]

Jesus H. Christ on a banana boat, you usually have to pay $250 an hour to a nice lady in leather pants to beg for this much pain.

via Pain: The David Gregory Solution – Esquire

Instead of asking them to explain the rationale behind the policy prescriptions offered by Republicans, Gregory just assumes their correctness and then wants to know how gangsta they’ll be with their policy prescriptions if they are privileged enough to be president. It’s funny, in the worst economic crisis since the depression, Gregory seems to think that average Americans need to suffer more.

Watch for yourself below:

Some questions say a lot about the questioner

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Sully re-posts a question by economist Robin Hanson…

Why Do We Prohibit Long Hours?

Safety is the primary concern. Work 80 hours in a cube, typos ensue. 80 hours on a forklift, fatigue sets in, reaction time degrades and life and limb may be lost.

And we don’t really prohibit all the long hours we should. Sometimes because of worker shortages other times because of pressures on workers. Overtime is not a strong deterrent to companies pushing shift/wage workers past the limits of safety. Health care field is one where those restrictions don’t really hold. Ask a registered nurse who works night shift how many times they only work 37.5 to 40 hours a week:

Health care workers are placed in systems and settings where errors are bound to happen. That is, the systems are designed to achieve a particular set of goals, but inadvertently produce a certain level of errors. For example, health care workers are sometimes expected to work 24-hour shifts to ensure patients are cared for and have some continuity of care, although it is known that overwork and fatigue lead to decreased mental concentration and alertness.

 

 

On Tebow, Cam and fallacy fueled by the media

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My issue with Tebow is with the extremes in coverage of him. The fawning coverage of him is ridiculous. It was like the fawning coverage of Tony Romo when then Cowboys coach Bill Parcells warned the press and public not to pull out the annointing oils. It’s like the short lived turn around in opinion regarding journeyman Rex Grossman.

The Tebow mania does not upset me because of Tebow’s religion. I would bet almost Every Heismann winner thanks god “first and foremost”. There are prayer circles after every game involving both teams. QBs from Kurt Warner to Aaron Rodgers are actually, like Tebow, really religious christians. It’s definitely not important that Tebow has two good parents:

Tebow is the first super-athletic quarterback we’ve seen who also has the discipline to prepare as if he’s Peyton Manning.

[…]

You can’t build a revolutionary offense around a quarterback who lacks the discipline or maturity to prepare.

[…]

As it relates to Tebow’s on-field performance, we should quit focusing on his “Tebowing” and spend more time celebrating his two-parent upbringing. Bob and Pam Tebow are far more responsible for Denver’s winning streak than any higher power.

After reading Whitlock’s paean to two family homes as the NFL difference maker that should be exalted, let’s slap down some ridiculous claims:

1. I’ve never seen Tebow prepare. I don’t know if Whitlock has either. I just know what is said. Maybe Whitlock has inside sources, but saying he prepares like Peyton Manning when he is a sub-par passer (by any measure) is just ridiculous. In addition, what pundits say about QB habits can change from week to week. Take for instance Rex Grossman talk earlier after week one or two of this season. he was supposedly “Resurrected” and vindicated. Rex Grossman who has a long track record of having bright spots while being below average overall.

2. What revolution? Spread offense concepts have been integrated in the NFL widely prior to this season. Most notably the Patriots and Pittsburgh Steelers have integrated these concepts with success into their offenses. If you want to see a spread option properly employed, look to Carolina’s Rookie QB Cam Newton.Vince Verhei at Football Outsiders runs the math on Newton’s season so far: In short, it’s fair to say that Cam Newton has played like a young Peyton Manning and a rookie Herschel Walker all rolled into one. Any questions about who the rookie of the year should be?

3. What about some other athletic QBs? Randall Cunningham and Donovan McNabb were “super-athletic quarterbacks” and did pretty damn well in the NFL. Cam Newton, the quarterback who broke Peyton Manning’s rookie passing record is also a “Super Athletic” quaterback. Rookie Anthony Dalton, could be considered pretty damn athletic as well. He ran a spread option sets at TCU. Dalton’s Bengals have 9 wins and 6 losses this season to the Denver Broncos 8-7. he has adapted to the pro game much better than 2nd year player Tebow as well. Why? He, like Newton, is a better passer than Tebow.

All of Whitlock’s points foolishly diminish the defense and kicking game of the Broncos which were solid during the Tebow win streak and focus on factors that may loosely correlate to Tebow’s success, but can’t be proven to be causal.

A few Sunday evenings ago, I watched Trent Dilfer and Tom Jackson say that they can’t explain what Tebow is doing. Dilfer is lying to himself. He did what Tebow did as good as anyone has. What do you get when you mix a cagey defense led by a future Hall of Famers Ray Lewis and Rod Woodson, a great rookie running back in Jamal Lewis, a HOF tight end Shannon Sharpe and a hell of kicker in Matt Stover and presto! You have the 2000 Baltimore Ravens who erased the hell of the Irsay’s moving the Colts to Indianapolis in the middle of the night by stomping the lights out of the New York Giants. It was a pious christian QB named Trent Dilfer that “led” that team to a Super Bowl victory while in this mindstate:

In an industry in which the very air one breathes is laden with self-importance, the 6’4″, 229-pound quarterback makes genuine humility one of his top spiritual quests.

“Thank you, God, that you are using football as the means to break me so that I may know you better,” Dilfer wrote in his prayer journal on September 29.

The 28-year-old native of Santa Cruz, California, with the close-cropped beard does not expect faith to necessarily produce success on the football field. “I tend to differ from some athletes in the NFL who have been very outspoken in their faith,” Dilfer says. “I don’t think that our success level dictates the amount we can glorify God.”

Dilfer is usually an excellent football and quarterback analyst but his greatest utility in the pantheon of Ravens history and marketing was that he could be used as the “i’m going to Disney Land” spokesperson rather than Ray Lewis who had been convicted of some obstruction charges related to an attempted murder.

The San Francisco 49ers are doing it right now with a guy no one has faith in: the oft maligned Alex Smith. Alex Smith is still generally reviled by his fan base for not being Aaron Rodgers. Smith gets to hand off to Frank Gore and rely on his defense which has only allowed a rushing TD this season. Alex Smith is not credited with the comeback wins (like the win against my Philadelphia Eagles). Nor should he be solely blamed for their 3 losses. The 49ers are 9-3 currently and have clinched the NFC west. Tim Tebow shouldn’t be credited with Ws either. Tebow time is a misnomer. Denver RB Willis Macgahee, the Denver Defense (the firm of Bailey, Miller, Dumervil and Dawkins), and kicker Matt Prater help drive that team to wins. And they were never infallible. In the middle of all these comeback wins was a beat down at the hands of the Detriot Lions.

Close games mean the last plays of the game are more exciting. They don’t mean that a QB contributed more to a teams chances to win than all the rest of teammates combined. (Yes, a QB can have a good game for a team that loses).

In the end, Tebow makes the most sense talking about “Tebow Time“:

“I don’t think it’s Tebow Time,” he said Sunday of the late game comebacks Denver keeps rattling off. “I think it’s the Broncos Time.”

The rest of the team has played good to exceptional football. This hysteria hopefully all ended this past weekend. Tebow was beaten by a sub par Patriots Defense two weekends ago and threw 4 INTs vs. a very mediocre Bills defense. Those two losses have the Broncos in a tie with the oft penalized Oakland Raiders. The Broncos can win the division, but as the trends are now they will have to do it in spite of Tebow’s performances, not because of it.

“The Most Fascinating People of 2011”

HuffPo Most Popular List from the Politics Home Page the morning of 12/18
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HuffPo Most Popular List from the Politics Home Page the morning of 12/18

HuffPo Most Popular List from the Politics Home Page the morning of 12/18

Kinda hit me that Barbara Walters annual special to honor famous people for being especially famous over the last 365 days was one of the predecessors to those stupid “most e-mailed” or “most popular” lists on news sites. Except these lists are much more pervasive. It’s fitting Walters critique of the Kardashians as being talentless and famous just for being welcoming of fame (admitting that the K’s are not that fascinating) is in HuffPo’s version of this stupid list.

What could go wrong in a bar named “Broad Street Bullies”?

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The Philadelphia Sports Complex, about 10 to 15 minutes from downtown…

  • Other dining options:
  • Spectrum Grille, an upscale restaurant
  • Broad Street Bullies Pub
  • PBR Bar & Grill, a country-western themer based on Professional Bull Riders; Tex-Mex cuisine served during the day and a country & southern rock party at night (featuring a mechanical bull)
  • Victory Beer Hall, featuring beer hall-style tables, a stage for live indoor entertainment, and a 2,000 square-foot patio complete with a fire pit and a unique panoramic view of the Philadelphia skyline.
  • And free parking on nonevent nights!

Via Philly Live!? No, Xfinity Live! | Philadelphia Inquirer | 12/15/2011

The thing about these bars is that sporting events are usually done before the Broad Street Line is closed for the day so that all of us drunk sports fans who live in the city or near a suburban Regional Rail station can hop on a train and not drunkenly drive home. If they plan on opening a bunch of bars that will be open until 2AM, they probably need to consider extending full transportation schedules to and from the stadium to 3AM.

Hey Carney! Jake Tapper sits in the cool kid row & cool kids go first! Or else!

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Jake Tapper wants the respect that’s due to him as earned by sitting in the seats assigned to his employers press corps. Tapper wants to go first:

Carney confronted Tapper after he noticed his reaction and said, “Jake, I’ve been doing this for months,” referring to his style of jumping around the press briefing room for questions.

Tapper responded by calling it “annoying.” Fellow reporters in the press room broke out in “ohs,” and “whoas,” in response to Tapper’s candid answer. “Oh I’m sorry, tell it to your colleagues,” Carney said. “I’ll get to you.”

Tapper asked if Carney was “going to break with decades of precedent,” referring to the tradition of the press secretary first taking questions from reporters seated in the front row.

From: Jake Tapper, Jay Carney Clash At White House Press Briefing (VIDEO).

Tapper then wastes his valuable time to ask Carney why Democratic President Obama’s budget plans doesn’t implement the stuff that Republican Paul Ryan proposes to do to privatize Medicare and Medicaid in his budget plan. Carney explains to Tapper the President disagrees with the opposition.

Just Sayin’: Bad Sports Analysis

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Watching Cowboys at Buccaneers NFL game, at half time Deion Sanders insisted that he knows when a team quits and the Buccaneers had quit on themselves according to some Diagnostic Process. In the third quarter Tampa Bay defense and offense scored a touchdown, an extra point and two point conversion to the Cowboys’ field goal.

Tampa Bay may still lose, but they hadn’t quit. Even though Deion insisted he knew they had. 4th quarter has started.

Just sayin: making sh*t up about what you know people feel is lazy and effortless analysis. Maybe Deion quit on his broadcast team. But I don’t know that so I won’t insist that’s what happened.

President Obama at Fort Bragg: “Welcome Home”

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From Obama’s Speech to Troops at Fort Bragg – NYTimes.com:

Fort Bragg, we’re here to mark a historic moment in the life of our country and our military. For nearly nine years, our nation has been at war in Iraq. And you — the incredible men and women of Fort Bragg — have been there every step of the way, serving with honor, sacrificing greatly, from the first waves of the invasion to some of the last troops to come home. So, as your Commander-in-Chief, and on behalf of a grateful nation, I’m proud to finally say these two words, and I know your families agree: Welcome home! (Applause.) Welcome home. Welcome home. (Applause.) Welcome home.

The 9 years later, the Iraq War is drawn to a close.

Over the counter Plan B overrule is 2nd time HHS Secretary Sebelius ignores expert panel regarding Health Care

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It shouldn’t be a surprise as Sebelius did the same with mammogram recommendations. She said ignore the expert panel and then Republicans attacked health care anyway.

The advisory board recommendation that women at low risk of breast cancer should get fewer mammograms set off a firestorm of public debate this week and now it is going political too, affecting the health reform debate on Capitol Hill.

Two Republican Congresswomen, Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., and Rep. Sue Myrick, R-N.C., herself a breast cancer survivor, argued at a press conference today that the advisory board’s recommendation is a glimpse into what health care would be like if Democrats can pass their reform plans.

HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, meanwhile, told women to ignore the new advisory recommendations for now.

“The U.S. Preventive Task Force is an outside independent panel of doctors and scientists who make recommendations. They do not set federal policy and they don’t determine what services are covered by the federal government,” said Sebelius in a written statement.

Charles Pierce’s goes hard on Secretary Sebelius at his place at Esquire:

In today’s episode of Guess Who’s Running For Re-Election?, the administration throws beneath a bus the 51 percent of the population that would like to control its own damn reproductive systems without having to ask permission of The Voice of Rick Santorum’s Penis.

via Morning After Pill News – A Lesson for Kathleen Sebelius Regarding the Pill – Esquire

This is the Democrats equivalent of the GOP’s “98% of climate scientists agree, but what about the other 2%”. If you ask experts to investigate something to deliver a recommendation on something that is supposed to hinge on their expert opinion, then you should follow their opinion. Or else you open yourself up to criticism that you wasted money in hiring a commission you then ignored. Seblelius’s reasoning to keep all girls under 16 from accessing Plan B? Sexually active 11 year olds:

In her own statement, Ms. Sebelius said, “After careful consideration of the F.D.A. summary review, I have concluded that the data submitted by Teva do not conclusively establish that Plan B One-Step should be made available over the counter for all girls of reproductive age.” She was referring to Teva Pharmaceuticals, the pill’s maker. She noted that 10 percent of 11-year-old girls can bear children, so they needed to be studied as well.

11 year old girls and boys who would have access to Plan B would also have access to condoms, codeine based medications and other crap at your local drug store. If an 11 year old kid is looking for contraception, than their ability to purchase plan B is not the biggest problem they have.

Virginia Tech Shooting…1 Police Officer confirmed. Another person may have been shot.

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Virginia Tech says a police officer has been shot and a possible second victim has been reported at a parking lot near the campus, where 32 students and faculty died in a 2007 rampage that was the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.

 

Authorities are seeking a suspect. A campus-wide alert tells students and faculty to stay inside and lock doors.


http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/va-tech-police-officer-shot-campus-15114207#.TuEDfmOVqn4

Newt Gingrich: Poor children only work for crime

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Newt Gingrich’s stance on poor children:

“Really poor children, in really poor neighborhoods have no habits of working and have nobody around them who works so they have no habit of showing up on Monday,” Gingrich claimed.

“They have no habit of staying all day, they have no habit of I do this and you give me cash unless it is illegal,” he added. via Newt Gingrich’s disgusting remarks about ‘really poor children’ – PostPartisan – The Washington Post.

What Democrats in swing districts should realize about these little crumb snatchers Newt hates so much is that a lot of them are in “Real America”™:

Rural Americans disproportionately rely on the Food Stamp Program to help purchase food for a healthy diet. Based on our analysis of data from the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP),22 percent of the nation’s population lived in non metropolitan or “rural” areas in 2001, but a full 31 percent of food stamp bene?ciaries lived there. Overall, 7.5 percent of the nation’s rural population relied on food stamps, compared with 4.8 percent of urban residents.

 

 

 

Louis C.K.’s sees one revolution and pushes along another

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Louis C.K. sees women as the vanguard of progress in our society:

Overall, I think it’s a good time to have a girl in the 21st century because things are changing, with more opportunities for women. But girls are still the underdog, which means they’ll work harder, and everybody loves an underdog. The next Steve Jobs will totally be a chick, because girls are No. 2–and No. 2 always wins in America. Apple was a No. 2 company for years, and Apple embodies a lot of what have been defined as feminine traits: an emphasis on intuitive design, intellect, a strong sense of creativity, and that striving to always make the greatest version of something. Traditionally, men are more like Microsoft, where they’ll just make a fake version of what that chick made, then beat the shit out of her and try to intimidate everybody into using their product.

via Louis C.K.: The Next Steve Jobs Will Be A Chick | Fast Company.

The question is does the USA really have the opportunities open for women to lead, innovate and grow in this and coming generations or are other societies ahead of us in their readiness for the increased opportunities and achievements of women? There are measurable gains, but there is definitely need for more equity in opportunity and advancement.

It’s also interesting to note Louie is doing something revolutionary. He is identified as “white” American male even though he’s half Mexican but that doesn’t make him a number 2. He is a number two because he’s talent and talent doesn’t own the distribution channels. And as we see from NBA and NFL labor negotiations, talent never wins even when they organize. Louis CK is trying to buck this trend, he’s streaming his 12/10 Show from the Beacon Theater in NY live for five dollars. I hope this catches on.

 

US Court rulings already resulting in SOPA domain seizures

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Domain seizures are already happening as result of court orders against alleged “counterfeiters”:

After a series of one-sided hearings, luxury goods maker Chanel has won recent court orders against hundreds of websites trafficking in counterfeit luxury goods. A federal judge in Nevada has agreed that Chanel can seize the domain names in question and transfer them all to US-based registrar GoDaddy. The judge also ordered “all Internet search engines” and “all social media websites”—explicitly naming Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Bing, Yahoo, and Google—to “de-index” the domain names and to remove them from any search results.

[…]

“The fight against SOPA [the Stop Online Piracy Act] may be a red herring in some ways,” he notes, “since IP plaintiffs are fashioning very similar remedies in court irrespective of the legislation. Thus, even if SOPA is defeated, it may turn out to be a Pyrrhic victory—opponents may win the battle but may not have gained much as a result.”

via US judge orders hundreds of sites “de-indexed” from Google, Facebook

Adobe, Apple, Microsoft support awful SOPA through BSA.

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We can, however, show that it does. And somewhat disingenuously, if I may. You see, Microsoft is a major player in the Business Software Alliance, along with Apple and 27 other companies. And the BSA supports SOPA. This is from a recent BSA bulletin:

The Business Software Alliance today commended House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith (R-Texas) for introducing the “Stop Online Piracy Act” (H.R. 3261) to curb the growing rash of software piracy and other forms of intellectual property theft that are being perpetrated by illicit websites.

via 29 Tech Companies Back SOPA