Monday, June 29, 2015

Sorry, I was on vacation again

Interesting financial development in Washington last week, instigated by an invigorated Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). The agency released to the public 7,700 consumer complaints against the financial services industry. One banking rep called it a “public shaming” of the industry. Bankers had lobbied hard and expensively against the release, saying that the complaints amount to one-sided stories in each case.

That’s rich. The idea that a complaint by an American citizen and consumer submitted to a government agency should not be a matter of public record is a radical one indeed, yet that’s the world we’ve been living in up to this point. The culture of secrecy is slipping away from them and they can feel it. How is this different than the Federal Communications Commission publicly releasing the complaints it gets from TV viewers about broadcast programming? It isn’t.

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The four dissenting voters in the historic gay marriage decision at the Supreme Court are being dishonest. You're giving them entirely too much credit if you accept their written dissents at face value. They are members of ancient religious tribes and each of their dissenting "legal" opinions are reflective of ancient prejudices, personal anxieties, self-loathing, bad science, and bad sociology. The law was never a consideration.

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There's one person that we could dare say is most often forgotten as a gay pioneer-- a person that was "out and proud," and unapologetic, and also absolutely dominant in her field dating back to the early 1980s. Give it up for Martina Navratilova.

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Now's a great time to revisit 1996's Defense of Marriage Act. Bill Clinton, Joe Biden, Tom Daschle, Chris Dodd, Tom Harkin, Joe Lieberman, Patty Murray, Harry Reid, and Paul Wellstone are hoping you'll forget about that one.

Only seven years ago, Barack Obama told MTV he opposed gay marriage, and only four years ago, White House aide Dan Pfeiffer told a group of bloggers, "The president has never favored same sex marriage. He is against it." Now the White House lights up at night in the colors of the rainbow, and in only a decade, historians will be trying to sell us on the idea that Obama was a pioneer for gay rights.

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Hillary Clinton came out for gay marriage in March 2013, the same week Bill O'Reilly announced he was okay with it.

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Donald Trump has been fired from NBC for repeatedly denigrating Mexicans. Trump says that illegal immigrants are "pouring across our borders unabated. Public reports routinely state great amounts of crime are being committed by illegal immigrants."

I don't know why everybody is so upset. He's citing "public reports."

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

The limitations of Bernie Sanders

Bernie Sanders is fulfilling the progressives’ wish that a truly left-wing candidate might run for the Democratic nomination, and for the time, he is soaring, pulling within 10 percentage points of Hillary Clinton in the latest poll out of New Hampshire. But we’re about to find out what a giant mistake it was for Sanders, a political independent that caucuses with the Democrats in the Senate, to choose to run as a Democrat rather than as an independent.

Ralph Nader electrified the summer of 2000 with his independent candidacy, tallying almost three million votes and pushing a progressive agenda that Democratic candidate Al Gore refused to open his ears to until years later. By then, the former Vice President was a filmmaker and a defeated political candidate. Howard Dean was the upstart “progressive” in the 2004 Democratic Primary and the party machine famously rose up to destroy him in Iowa. Sanders, like Dean, is most vulnerable to destruction in this particular state.

The caucus system is profoundly polluted. It allows a small number of activists to dominate the majority. Voters in a caucus, as opposed to a primary, don’t have the whole of election day to cast their ballot, or the time requirement of only a few minutes to do so, or the option to vote absentee. Further, one caucus vote does not equal every other, and the vote is not private affair.

Iowans voting in the Democratic or Republican Party Caucuses are forced to brave the unpredictable weather conditions of a January night in chilly Iowa. The time commitment is the entire evening, perhaps from 6:30 or 7 local time to three hours or more later. (Anybody that works outside an 8 to 5 schedule is excluded.) After a lengthy discussion about the party platform (plus a spirited pass-the-hat effort you don’t find at a traditional polling location), the participants break down into their different candidate groups. They look around the room to see if they’re being judged for their choice by their boss, their co-workers, or their neighbors, especially if they're voting for Donald Trump. The candidates that fail to garner more than 5% of the vote are not tallied for their actual percentage, but actually dismissed entirely. Those candidates have been deemed “unviable” and their supporters must then choose between joining one of the “viable” groups or going home having not had their vote counted at all. (This happened to me and the rest of my precinct’s Dennis Kucinich faction in 2008. I joined my next door neighbors in the John Edwards camp, not feeling any peer pressure whatsoever.) The only vote tally that makes it out of the room and onto your television screen is the final vote, and that one has been shrunken down to a fractional allotment based on the percentage of registered Democrats in that precinct. These reported numbers will tell only part of a story and may bare only a passing resemblance to what would have been the actual vote.

Sanders is clearly a growing favorite in this race among rank-and-file Democrats, and could potentially give Clinton a run for her money for overall support, but he has absolutely no chance of supplanting the Queen of Wall Street Cash as the favorite among the party leadership and the party’s money changers. Sanders’ chance to guide the rhetoric of the debate is limited by the electoral apparatus itself. His “true” progressivism (contrasted by Clinton’s poorly-disguised Republicanism) will have the tangible impact of coloring Clinton’s stump speeches and dictating the nature of her campaign promises, but not in any way will it affect the method in which she truly intends to govern if elected.

Sanders’ voice will have been muted entirely by Super Tuesday in early March. The remaining six months of the race will be a sprinting battle between the preternaturally-dishonest Clinton, a Republican Neanderthal, and nobody else. And if a Nader pops up in there to sound a progressive voice during any part of that half-year, he or she will be labeled by the Democrats a threat to the progressive agenda, a spoiler, and an egotist. He or she will be told that the primary season was the proper time to have raised a voice. The electoral story will end with either a Democrat or Republican victory and a less-than-30% turnout of eligible voters.

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As a federally-contracted employee, my security clearance data is likely in the hands of the Chinese. I was notified of this by my employer earlier today. Aren't I lucky that the United States government keeps a file on me despite no criminal record and foreign governments can just lift it in full?

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Michael Jackson taught us that "it don't matter if you're black or white." It's good advice for Rachel Dolezal. And also for her critics.

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Robbers and cops

"Education" is one of those priorities that you probably assume everybody in politics is for. Well, you’re wrong. Education is the great financial equalizer, and that’s the most dangerous enemy possible in a kleptocracy. The Koch-funded Ayn Rand cultists in Wisconsin, Louisiana, and Illinois are each trying to pull off the most draconian of cuts in state education funding. It turns out that if you don’t tax people enough, you don’t have the money to fund the future economic prosperity of your state.

In Scott Walker country, the Badger State, the proposed cut is 13% of the current budget over two years and the elimination of tenure protections for faculty under state law. In Louisiana, where another Republican presidential candidate, Bobby Jindal, holds the executive, the proposal is for a one-year 78% cut. In April, a march by student groups to the legislature in that state drew 1,200 attendees. In Illinois, it’s 31% for one year. The president of Southern Illinois University says that tuition price would have to double statewide if the cuts turned out to be that drastic.

It’s bad enough that working class Americans are increasingly priced out of higher education. Millionaires and their heirs realize that an educated populace only mean more competition for pie slices. The high cost of college helps tamper upward mobility.

Particularly in respect to private colleges and universities, nobody in power in America questions the logic that poor people have to earn their way in while wealthy people make a purchase, even though these private schools couldn't survive without their buckets of taxpayer money that arrive in the form of government backed-loans. To the wealthy, a shared prosperity only translates to higher prices on goods. To keep the economic gap as wide as possible, it’s cheaper for them to keep the money that should go to the U.S. Treasury as tax and spend it instead directly on the politicians and on building walls around their homes.

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Over and over we hear, as one disgusting phone video after another goes viral, that "most cops are good." Well, probably in the sense that most haven't shot and killed a black person, this is true. But I'll bet it would be almost impossible to find one that hasn't falsified a statement. The unwillingness of cops at every level to accept oversight in the form of mandatory public record-keeping and statistics on misconduct and shootings tells us all we need to know. When a civilian files a false statement, that's a crime. When a cop files a false statement, that cop is subject to punishment at the discretion of a supervisor. They kill with impunity and steal in the mega-millions under a law called civil forfeiture. They have relentlessly opposed cameras forced upon their car hoods and on their person, and they have lobbied far and wide for laws that prevent the public video recording of officers while they're working on the job. Accusations of intimidation directed towards the public are legion. An unwritten rule stands that cops don't report misconduct on other cops.

If the police are constantly telling us that we "have nothing to worry about if we haven't done anything wrong," why do they oppose any form of oversight for themselves, and why take such aggressive action when they feel threatened? The man who shot the video of Freddie Gray being arrested in Baltimore was arrested. So was the man who shot the video of Eric Garner being choked out. And the primary witness in the Michael Brown shooting. Cops in New York even went so far as to try to poison the man behind the Garner video. (Only a hunger strike in prison by a suspicious Ramsey Orta may have saved his life.) The Fraternal Order of Police is attempting to make anti-police rhetoric a hate crime and public protests against police behavior subject to counter-terrorism laws.

Warning shots, mace, and tasers continue to be trumpeted as preferable alternatives to shootings and yet the killings of civilians by police continue unabated. In fact, they're ramping up. Why? The pattern of suppression suggests that cops view anybody on the civilian side of the "blue line" as untrustworthy when it comes to promoting the malignant culture of police corruption and terrorism ahead of truth.

Tuesday, June 09, 2015

Limited pool

My alma mater has hired a new men’s basketball coach to replace Fred Hoiberg. Iowa State has pulled Steve Prohm away from Murray State to replace Hoiberg, who moves on to helm the Chicago Bulls.

Were any minority coaches interviewed by the school during the one-week search process? It doesn’t appear likely. Prohm's Murray State team plays in the Ohio Valley Conference so royal pedigree clearly wasn't a determination in the final choice. He was reportedly chosen among seven candidates that received interviews. The six other names are formally unknown, but ESPN reported that three of the other six were Hoiberg assistant T.J. Otzelberger, Stephen F. Austin's Brad Underwood, and Valporaiso's Bryce Drew. Cyclone Insider has two others reportedly as USC's Andy Enfield and Wichita State's Gregg Marshall. That leaves one that could have possibly been a minority.

Was Prohm the best qualified candidate for the job? Maybe. We also know that the Cyclone job should have been a mighty attractive one. Hoiberg leaves a great team behind, one that finds itself ranked in basically every preseason Top 10 poll. Prohm accepted the job sight unseen, having never set foot before yesterday in Ames, Iowa, or on the Iowa State campus. So he clearly believes it's a big step up in his career.

According to 2012 statistics (the most recent available), the participants at the college level of men's basketball-- the players-- are statistically over 57% African-American, but the percentage of head coaches is less than 19%. In college football, African-American players now outnumber white ones for the first time, but only 10% of the coaches are black. These two black-dominated sports are, by far, the two largest revenue boosters among college sports, yet 89% of athletic directors are white. And you wonder why people keep referring to the college game in both sports-- where the players are not paid and scholarships are dependent on good health- as a plantation.,

If anybody in the media even bothers to ask the question, we'll get the same answer from the Iowa State AD that we get every time in this situation: there were no better qualified candidates. And on it goes. It's not just that white candidates get more chances, they also get more second chances. In college football, it has still never happened at any school at any time in history, outside of a historically-black college or university, that an African-American coach was fired and replaced by another African-American coach.

This is a taxpayer-funded position we're talking about at Iowa State University, and Prohm instantly becomes the third highest-paid employee in the state of Iowa. (Not bad for a guy who on Sunday was a coach with a little over 100 career wins, all in a conference that had the 23rd highest RPI ranking last year.) Aren't there some hiring rules and open records laws that apply here? Iowa State advertises itself as an Affirmative Action/ Equal Opportunity Employer.

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Your air conditioning is slowing down my internet.

Saturday, June 06, 2015

Vendetta against Venditte

Pat Venditte became the second ambidextrous pitcher in 120 years of Major League Baseball yesterday when he was called up by Oakland after eight seasons in the minor leagues. As he demonstrated in his first game at Boston's Fenway Park, he's capable of switching from left arm to right, and back again, in the same inning. (Some of us don't have even one big-league-caliber arm.) Venditte's first test was successful. He threw two shut-out innings in relief. If things continue to go well, the Athletics should be able to use him to eat up a ton of innings this summer. I'm going to assume they're wise enough to keep two different pitch counts.

Is Major League Baseball ready, though? There have always been a number of switch-hitters in the game, and so now, let the chess game begin. Pitch by pitch, the switch-batsmen are allowed to change sides of the dish, although it's extremely rare that they do. They stick, instead, to the conventional wisdom in the game, which is that left-handed hitters do better at the bat against right-handed throwers, and right-handers better against the southpaws. (No Major League pitcher yet has literally had a paw.) But this is not universal. I do recall that switch-hitting Hall-of-Famer Ozzie Smith went up to bat swinging right-handed against a right-hander at least one time in his career with the Cardinals. That leads me to wonder whether his official career statistics are fully accurate or if somebody might have gotten lazy at some point. For switch-hitters, we get accustomed to thinking "versus RH pitcher" and "batting left" would be the same thing, but in Ozzie's case, the statistics would be slightly different. I tried to look it up tonight on Ozzie's page at www.baseball-reference.com to see if that was true, but I started drowning in a sea of Ratio Batting and Win Probabilities and gave up.

But I digress. My concern for Venditte's cause stems from one of the highlights I saw on Sportscenter from last night's game. When switch-hitting catcher Black Swihart came to the plate for Boston in Venditte's second inning of work, the pitcher had to declare which arm he was going to use for that plate appearance. This was ordered by the home plate umpire to be consistent with a long-standing MLB rule that has almost never applied to an actual game situation. But that rule needs to change now. A pitcher should be able to throw it up there any way he wants, provided he starts with one foot on the rubber and respects the guidelines for avoiding a balk when there are runners on base and doesn't use steroids or bet on the games. Joaquin Andujar was an over-the-top right-handed pitcher, but sometimes with two strikes on the batter, he would drop his delivery down sidearm. He didn't have to tell the batter that he was going to do it. The element of surprise was the point. You can throw it underhand if you want to-- maybe to the Phillies' lineup this year to help make things fairer. Pitchers try to trick hitters. That's the tradition of the game. It's why some pitches-- maybe you've heard this-- are not thrown straight. The hitter's job is to try to adjust. Just like in football, where it's the quarterback's job to decide how much air is in the football, and then the defense adjusts.

It's time for the new MLB commissioner, Rob Manfred, to step up and be a Manfred. Retired lefty Al Hrabosky often says that baseball hasn't passed a rule that benefited the pitchers since before the time the mound was lowered in 1969. Here's a small corner of the game where that string could be broken. Or maybe I'm taking this whole thing too seriously.

Friday, June 05, 2015

Stay Human

I woke up this morning just hoping for the good news that the Cardinals had held on to a 7-1 lead late in Los Angeles, but I got much more: Stephen Colbert's new music director was announced as New Orleans' own Jon Batiste! Here, Stephen makes the introduction online, from NOLA, along with a plateful of beignets. I saw Jon with Stay Human open before Al Jarreau in the Jazz Tent at Jazzfest '14. He played a most memorable version of "St. James Infirmary." I thought the tent poles might dislodge from the ground from the massive swings.

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Aidah and I are proud new owners of a Honda CRV, my first-ever sport-utility vehicle. Costs a little more but it's the first vehicle that I could sleep in comfortably if I had to.

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Definitely worthy of one of your free New York Times clicks this month.

Tuesday, June 02, 2015

Baseball City U.S.A.

It may not be racism that's keeping Jason Heyward out of Mike Matheny's every day Cardinals line-up, but that's just if you want to call it, instead, the old-fashioned "good ole' boy" network. Throughout baseball's long history, "marginal" roster positions have rarely gone to African-American players. There's always been room for the superstars, of course (at least since the 1950s), but blacks still too often have to play like "super whites" to warrant inclusion at the game's highest level. I will go to my death believing this.

It's not just the Cardinals manager, who earned his current job by never having served as either a manager or a coach at either the major or minor league level, it's also the fans and the media. Heyward, acquired in an off-season deal for pitcher Shelby Miller, is already considered a "bust" by each of the named entities. He's been pushed this week into a three-man rotation for two outfield positions (right and center), along with Jon Jay and Randal Grichuk. Why is this exactly?

This bust, an All-Star with the Braves who owns two Gold Gloves and a Platinum one at only 25 years of age, batted just .217 in April, but has already rebounded (despite reports) with a .284 average in May. He has hit safely in each of his last five games, despite being dropped by his manager to 7th in the order, and even 8th on a couple occasions. He's 7 for his last 16, and even with his "slow" start, projects for 32 doubles and 19 stolen bases.

But he's on the bench tonight for the second time in six games, both times even against a right-handed starting pitcher (he's a lefty swinger), and there probably would have been at least another benching if not for left fielder Matt Holliday's flu symptoms throughout the weekend. In his place again tonight is Randal Grichuk, a "still-qualified-as-rookie" with white skin whom Matheny plopped into the #2 batting order slot late last season to the tune of a .171 postseason batting average. Grichuk is being touted by fans and by the club as a five-tool player, and I'd love to see it happen, but I count at least three of those five tools as currently inferior to Heyward's. (Those would be speed, glove, and arm.) Matheny says he can't keep him out of the lineup so you would probably assume he's played his way into it without question. Hmm. He's batting .281 entering tonight, with a couple home runs in 22 games. Some nice extra-base pop for sure, but he's walked only three times. Also, Grichuk doesn't bat 7th or 8th. In his last three starting assignments, he's been slotted alternately, 4th, 1st, and 5th.

The double standard is striking. Fans took to the message boards two weeks ago to destroy Heyward for misreading a fly ball as a base runner. Thinking initially that a long fly that wound up landing off the wall might be caught, he stayed close to second to tag and then didn't score on the ball that went for a double. A misread, but an honest one. One by a guy with his head in the game. Over the weekend, in a game against the Dodgers, Grichuk runs into an out when he's a trail runner at first and forgets how many outs there are, getting doubled off by the right fielder and sabotaging a scoring chance. Nothing online. Nothing about it in the Post Dispatch game write-up. Both players constantly hustle, it's clear, and I can accept online criticisms of the stripe that "the Heyward deal was a mistake." (Miller, who went to Atlanta, is enjoying a stellar 2015 on the mound.) But I have to call racism when I read items like "Heyward will never be a true Cardinal," which I have. This is projection based on race and race alone by members of a fan base that is unfortunately saddled with more than its share of racists.

Matheny has never had an African-American coach on his staff, not in four different incarnations. White left-handed reliever Randy Choate gets the last bullpen assignment in '15, and black lefty Sam Freeman is shipped to Texas late in the spring. Choate posted a 4.50 ERA last season, Freeman 2.61. When Matt Adams went down to injury late in May, reserve Mark Reynolds was given the job at first base. He's a career .230 hitter who has led the National League in strikeouts four times, and in fielding errors three times. That's actually impressively awful. He has fanned 1436 times in 4503 career plate appearances, and owns three of the ten all-time highest strikeout seasons in MLB history (including the top spot). His batting average each season from 2010 to last year is enlightening: .198, .221, .221, .220, and .196. But... he was batting .250 off the bench at the time of Adams' injury, with three homers, so there's no debate in the media or online about his fitness for the new assignment. Meanwhile, Xavier Scruggs begins his second season at first base for the Cardinals at AAA Memphis. He drove in 87 runs last year at that level, with 21 home runs, a .286 batting mark, and a .864 OPS. He's been given only 18 plate appearances at the big league level thus far, and Adams' injury didn't even open up for Scruggs a spot on the big league bench, let alone a job share. Instead, the Cardinals called up a third catcher. In the seven games since Adams departed, Yadier Molina's two back-ups behind the plate have tallied three plate appearances between them. I'm going to make you go online to find out Xavier Scruggs' skin color.

Carlos Martinez pitched a dazzler on Sunday. The team was honoring his deceased former teammate, fellow Dominican, and best friend, Oscar Taveras, and CMart came up big in those most emotional contest, throwing seven shutout frames, and extending his overall streak to more than 21. Maybe that will be enough to silence the narrative finally, from both the club and their fans, that the Dominican pitcher is "immature"and frequently "out of control." I really don't get this one. There have been no embarrassing moments on the field. No off the field incidents. The man has been hard as nails on the mound, nearly unhittable in two consecutive postseasons, never yet wilting for even a night under the brightest lights of the baseball playoffs and World Series. But a friend of mine at work told me this week he heard Martinez is a head case. Of course he did, that's the story the Cardinals are always leaking. Yes, he's intense as hell. But it's not immaturity when Lance Lynn pitches a fit on the mound, swearing loudly and frequently. John Lackey is "old school" in his intensity, an old surly grump, we're told. So was Chris Carpenter before that. Can't people recognize that these are subtly racist attitudes? Why am I the only one writing about this?

You had to depart the Post-Dispatch sports site and ESPN.com to read that there were Ferguson protests outside Busch Stadium again this past weekend. It wouldn't have probably made any headlines at all except that St. Louis police tazed a group of peaceful protestors, claiming that they were blocking traffic. That turned out to be just another blue lie exposed by personal cell phone cameras. YouTube has the video of the protestor-- a member of a St. Louis-area school board, no less-- getting tazed by police across from Ballpark Village while standing firmly on the sidewalk.

We've been saying this for over 10 months on this blog, but the Cardinals need to start acknowledging that this race problem is their problem too, not one that exists in the rest of society but ends at the ballpark gate. They play for a majority-black city, one of only a small number in the league and one in which most fans in attendance at Busch Stadium are white and venture from outside the city limits to the game.

During the summer of 1967, race riots-- the voice of the unheard and the oppressed-- broke out in Birmingham, Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, New York, Tampa, Houston, Newark, Cincinnati, Detroit, Buffalo, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, even Rochester, NY, and New Britain, CT, but one did not break out in St. Louis. There's a school of thought that says part of the reason it didn't is because the Cardinals were playing that hot summer on their way towards the National League pennant and a World Series Championship, and more importantly, they were doing so with a racially-integrated team-- one that featured African-American stars Bob Gibson, Lou Brock, and Curt Flood.

Imagery and identity are still powerful. Michael Brown was shot dead last year while wearing a Cardinals cap on his head. There's a Cardinals cap in his coffin. His father wears a Cardinals cap at many of the media events in which he's casting as bright a light as he can power at police violence and our still-unequal America. Michael Brown Senior doesn't wear the cap, as most of us do, to show he's a fan. It's actually a deeper connection than that. He wears the cap because he's showing you where he's from. It represents not the team, but the city.

Monday, June 01, 2015

Rand Stands

Wow, while Hillary Clinton is busy making speeches paid for by the banks funding the Keystone XL pipeline, Rand Paul single-handedly chokes out the PATRIOT Act, at least for a few days. I am deeply impressed. To counter, John McCain calls Paul "the worst (Republican presidential) candidate we could put forward." In a related note about McCain, Republican presidential candidates other than Paul include Mike Huckabee, Rick Santorum, Ben Carson, and Ted Cruz.