Busy week for me over at the four-letter, with my updated ranking of the top 50 prospects in the minors going up on Thursday, four days after I watched and wrote about the Futures Game.
I wrote up Boston’s trade for Drew Pomeranz and their trades for Brad Ziegler and Aaron Hill. And I held a Klawchat.
I’m not writing up the Yuliesky Gurriel signing but Chris Crawford did, with a tiny bit of help from me.
I also appeared on Alex Speier’s 108 Stitches podcast, discussing the Pomeranz deal and the Red Sox’ farm system.
And now, the links…
- There’s a measles outbreak in Arizona that started in a prison and spread because of unvaccinated employees. They’re a bunch of idiots. Vaccinate your kids, now. Vaccines are safe but measles kills.
- The Hannah Poling case, long touted by anti-vaxxer morons as ‘proving’ something or other about vaccines being bad, does not afford any support to the notion that vaccinations can contribute to the causation of autism. Full stop. That’s from the Special Masters in the court who oversaw the decision.
- The first major lawsuit against California’s eminently sensible, thoroughly constitutional mandatory vaccination law looks like a baseless hunk of garbage. Try not to have a heart attack and die from that surprise.
- The Ringer – I swear I’ve heard of this site somewhere before – has an outstanding profile/history of the most important comic strip ever, Bloom County.
- Turmeric is the trendy new ingredient, in part because it may some unproven anti-inflammatory properties. It can also irritate your stomach and cause heartburn, so, you know, don’t overdo it.
- A superb piece from Roth Cornet, departing editor of Hitfix, on Finding Dory and her own experiences with dyslexia.
- Turkey is in turmoil; here’s why the deposition of Recep Tayyip Erdogan isn’t a bad thing.
- The Brickyard in St. Albans (in the UK) has a fantastic safety-first policy for female patrons posted behind the bar (although I assume they’d do the same if a male patron had a similar problem). Every bar or restaurant should have the same – perhaps even with a code word (ask for a specific name that would tip off the bartender that this is a distress call) to make it clear.
- Writer and comedian Jessi Klein says pregnant women should just get the epidural and she’s right. The counterarguments are nearly all variations of the appeal to nature fallacy. Science is good. Medicine is good. Pain, though … pain sucks.
- A deranged ex-soldier gets a gun, executes a bunch of cops sniper-style, and the NRA’s message is unchanged.
- The great short story writer George Saunders went to Trump rallies and painted a real portrait of his base, without resorting to caricature or dismissal. They come off more as bad libertarians with a case of xenophobia.
- Popular Science makes the case that Trump’s VP choice Mike Pence is strongly anti-science. Not mentioned is that Pence’s office opposed a state bill to try to increase Indiana’s vaccination rate against HPV, or that he supports so-called gay “conversion” therapy.
- Speaking of which, Atul Gawande weighs in on the increasing mistrust of science, especially among conservatives.
- Why are police all over the country arresting people for criticizing cops? Isn’t at least some of this protected speech?
- A new study of hostile sexist behavior in video gaming shows men who harass women online are “low status” in the first place. In other words, they are literally the worst.
- Phillips Exeter Academy punished a student who sexually assaulted another student by making him deliver bread to her once a week. Yeah.
- Microfibers are poisoning the planet’s waters according to a study funded by Patagonia, the clothing manufacturer responsible for putting some of those microfibers into circulation.
- Consumer demand for organic and non-GMO foods is leading Big Ag to pay farmers to go organic. This is sort of good; industrial organic is better than traditional industrial agriculture, but still isn’t as sustainable as what you might call “true” organic, which involves less spraying of anything and more focus on soil health. Organic farming can still include dumping a lot of chemicals on the soil, but they’re natural (e.g., no synthetic nitrogen from petroleum) so people assume they’re less harmful and/or the food is more healthful.
- Baylor is burying its scandal by avoiding any paper trail. The important thing for us to do here is to make sure they can’t forget it by continuing to talk about it, for people like Jess Luther and Dan Solomon to keep investigating and reporting.
- The show Roadies made a whole episode depicting sexual assault as funny. In 2016.
- People with autism can, in fact, read emotions and feel empathy, contrary to the popular stereotype.
Hey, Keith. Off topic, but I noticed last week you tossed a little plug to a reader’s book on Twitter. My novel, After Life, came out today. It’s about zombies. Just curious if you’d be willing to toss a small mention my way as well. Twitter handle is @danieltkelley. Would be awesome of you.
Here’s the Amazon link: https://www.amazon.com/After-Life-Daniel-Kelley/dp/0692753133/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1468642049&sr=1-1&keywords=after+life+daniel+kelley
Daniel – congrats on the novel. I don’t promote stuff I haven’t read/liked, with very rare exceptions. I made one exception in Mike’s case because it was a somewhat academic work on sports labor markets, and thus of professional interest to some of my readers. I’ve declined to promote works by people I know/have met before because I didn’t like the works in question, so it’s not personal.
Totally fine. Just figured it couldn’t hurt to ask. Thanks anyway.
Of course women should not “just get the epidural.” Women should do their own research, talk with their doctors, and make an informed decision. There are benefits and risks to be considered, and making impassioned, blanket recommendations for epidurals is just as bad as impassioned, blanket recommendations against epidurals.
I hate this brand of reductionist Scientism.
Unrelated question — Keith, do you know if this comment field allows for any kind of editing tags (italics, bold, etc.)? I’ve thought about just testing it out, but as there’s no “Preview Comment” option, I’ve always just left them out. But it would be useful, if available.
You either didn’t read the linked piece or you’re being excessively literal. If women want the epidural, they should get it, and no one should make them feel bad about it. If they don’t, that’s their choice.
Yes, HTML tags work here. <strong> for bold, <em> for italics.
I read the piece and I read your comment that linked to it. Both strayed into overt advocacy for a medical procedure that comes with risks. The writer in question spent one sentence begrudgingly admitting that there are exceptions before immediately reasserting that women should get the epidural. Later, she takes a few sentences to list some of the risks, comments that women should do what makes them happy…and then concludes again that they should get the epidural.
The thing that really gets under my skin regarding arresting people for comments on social media is that online harassment has been a serious problem in some communities (ask any woman who comments on sexism in gaming) and the police have consistently avoided pursuing the harassers. The fact that they’re going after people who criticize the police isn’t just an apparent violation of the 1st amendment, it’s an appalling double standard as well.
Regarding the Baylor cover-up, I may be naive, but would love to see punishments for attempting to hide wrong doing increased enormously in athletics, politics, law enforcement, and so on. If people who have done wrong can count on taking less damage from covering up their actions than they would if the actions were exposed, then we need to change the math to encourage coming clean.
#Gamergate
My wife has RA and went to a pain doctor at Shepherd Center in Atlanta. He told her to take 3 turmeric pills each day. It has done more to relieve some of her inflammation than the methotrexate and embrel her rheumatologist had prescribed her. Not 100% but definitely works for her.
Has she had any stomach issues? I’ve read that turmeric can increase heartburn.
@Mistro Exactly.
Living in the SF Bay Area, we are surrounded by would-be mothers enamored with the concept of natural birth. One of the main arguments I hear is that this will let them feel more in touch with the birthing process, and thus strengthen the bond with the child. My wife gave birth to one of our girls completely ‘au natural’ (not by choice) and to our other girl with the aid of an epidural, and she found this argument to be completely false. With the natural birth, the experience was dominated by white-hot pain which left no room for anything else. The epidural allowed her to be much more aware of the process, and to appreciate the astonishing beauty of childbirth.
Do your homework yes, but no one should feel shame in getting the epidural.
Exactly. The idea that women who get the epidural, or women who choose not to breast feed (or can’t do so), should feel guilty or ashamed is absurd.
She’s been on it for about a month and a half and has not. It’s 1200 mg a day.