I had two posts for subscribers to The Athletic this week, one on how the Rockies’ next GM might start to turn the franchise around, and a draft scouting notebook looking at several day-one candidates, led by Fordham lefty Matt Mikulski.
On the Keith Law Show this week, my guest was MLB Pipeline’s Jim Callis, talking about this year’s MLB draft class. You can subscribe on Apple podcasts, Amazon, and Spotify. I also appeared on the Athletic Baseball Show on Friday, which will be my regular slot for most of the year.
If you’d like to buy The Inside Game and support my board game habit, Midtown Scholar has a few signed copies still available. You can also buy it from any of the indie stores in this twitter thread, all of whom at least had the book in stock earlier this month. If none of those works, you can find it on Bookshop.org and at Amazon.
For more of me, you can subscribe to my free email newsletter.
And now, the links…
- Longreads first: One of the many victims of disgraced writer/teacher Blake Bailey came forward to tell how Bailey manipulated and raped her.
- Alameda police killed Mario Gonzalez, who was unarmed, by pinning him to the ground for five minutes during an arrest on April 19th. This is a systemic issue.
- CloseCallSports has the best explanation of the obstruction call in Milwaukee that I tried to explain on Twitter, only to have my replies explode with people who didn’t like the call. An umpire can make a call that is technically correct – and Marty Foster’s was, indeed, justified by the rules – but so rarely made that we assume it’s wrong.
- Tony LaRussa’s animal welfare nonprofit is plagued by claims of racism and a toxic workplace environment. Between this and his multiple DUIs, LaRussa’s hiring by the White Sox this offseason looks even more suspect. Over at Sox Machine, Jim Margalus talks about some of what LaRussa is doing wrong on the field, too.
- West Virginia Governor Jim Justice (R) announced that residents aged 16-35 who get the COVID-19 vaccine will get a $100 savings bond, an ingenious use of the stimulus funding the state has received.
- After years of misguided opposition, Florida officials will finally release genetically modified Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, the kind responsible for spreading the Zika virus, dengue fever, chikungunya, and more, to stop the insects’ offspring from surviving into adulthood.
- Anti-vaxxers are adopting yellow stars and other symbols of the Holocaust, in case you were wondering how low they would sink in their war against science and rationality.
- The official Twitter account for the Auschwitz Museum is pushing revisionist history that absolves Poles of their role in the Holocaust (Haaretz, $ required).
- PBS has a new series coming up on May 11th called Extra Life: A Short History of Living Longer, about the extraordinary success of vaccines and other major medical advances that helped double our life expectancy in a century.
- Facebook claimed they removed the “Disinformation Dozen,” twelve people responsible for the vast majority of anti-vaccine lies on the internet, but ten of them are still active on the site.
- Joe Rogan told his millions of young listeners not to get a COVID-19 vaccine. That is dangerously irresponsible, and he shouldn’t be issuing medical advice.
- Julie DiCaro reminds us not to listen to people with obvious conflicts of interest – agents, lawyers, fans – when they try to downplay charges of sexual assault against popular athletes.
- Fox News is struggling to “pick a side” when their culture-war takes conflict with the facts, as with two recent manufactured outrage stories that turned out to be false – that Biden would ban or limit meat consumption, and that migrant children were being given Kamala Harris’ book.
- The BBC asks why the west neglects a potential superfood source that’s efficient, sustainable, and climate-friendly: insects.
- Epicurious revealed that they won’t publish any new beef recipes, part of an effort to encourage more sustainable eating. They stopped publishing those a year ago and they say nobody has noticed.
- Conservative writer Gary Abernathy argues that all conservatives should support reparations to Black Americans.
- From the National Review, the “Fairness Doctrine” is not the answer to Tucker Carlson’s misinformation.
- University researchers appear to have moved and possibly lost the remains of two children killed in Philadelphia’s bombing of its own citizens in 1985, part of a government assault on the MOVE cult.
- Deforestation in the amazon has soared under the reactionary Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, devastating native homelands and reducing one of the world’s most important carbon dioxide sinks.
- A teacher in Washington State’s Issaquah School District is on administrative leave after parents objected to a poem she used in her anti-racism curriculum
- Ashley Feinberg may have found JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon’s secret Instagram and Twitter accounts. Dimon has been accused of misleading investors in the “London Whale” investment disaster and of overseeing a culture of discrimination at his banks.
- Board game news: Capstone Games is reissuing the Uwe Rosenberg worker-placement classic Glass Road, and pre-orders are open now at $10 off.
- Renegade has a Kickstarter going for the ‘epic mad scientist’ game My Father’s Work, which they say will only be sold through their website once it’s released.
No surprise with Facebook, I reported a comment calling for anyone encouraging vaccines to be put to death. Three days later got a message saying they reviewed and determined it didn’t violate their terms and conditions. They’re happy to watch the world burn as long as the money keeps flowing in.
https://www.cnn.com/2021/04/29/media/joe-rogan-clarifies-vaccine-comments/index.html
Joe Rogan clarified his comments a bit and it’s worth including that link in the comments. I don’t listen to Rogan but he’s popular and he’s willing to listen and apologize. That’s a good trait and something our media should do more often.
I thought his apology was really weak. It’s the Fox News defense, that it’s all entertainment and no one should take it seriously. A proper apology would have included urging listeners to get vaccinated.
The article on reparations was complete bovine scatology. My ancestors arrived here and were handed rifles to go go and fight for Lincoln and did so willingly. No wealth was handed down to me. I maxed my 401k from the time I left college. So why should I or a taxi driver from the middle east who got here 5 years ago or anyone else who never benefitted from slavery have to have our tax dollars transferred even more than they currently are?
Gerry. there is a great deal of information out there for why reparations are fair. You can disagree with those arguments, but your simplistic “why should I?” rationale doesn’t even engage with any of them. On a basic level, they’re fair because you, as (I presume) a white person, have benefited and continue to benefit from the slavery of the past. Much of the infrastructure you benefit from was built on the backs of slaves. Much of the generational wealth your family started with, even if it’s minimal, came at the expense of slaves, while descendants of slaves often start with negative wealth. And you continue to benefit from the fact that descendants of slaves were prohibited from owning property, were (and still are) subject to discrimination when renting property, seeking employment, and generally living their lives, and so much more. It is simply not true that you haven’t benefited from slavery and from the discriminatory system that continues today.
Others have made these arguments much better than I can. I encourage you to seek them out, rather than rely on a simple “but I didn’t have slaves, so come on!” argument.
“Anti-vaxxers are adopting yellow stars and other symbols of the Holocaust, in case you were wondering how low they would sink in their war against science and rationality.”
Agreed. That’s low.
And so is calling someone who questions climate change or Covid policy or vaccine efficacy, regardless of how rational or non-rational their approach is, a “denier.” An obvious and naked attempt to equate them with people who deny the existence of Nazi death camps.
It’s called denialism.