Stick to baseball, 1/21/23.

No new content for subscribers to the Athletic as I’ve continued writing capsules for the top 100 prospects ranking, which will run on January 30th. Please stand by.

My podcast did return this week, with guest Seth Reiss, who co-wrote the screenplay for the film The Menu. You can listen and subscribe via iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, amazon, or wherever you get your podcasts.

I’m planning to send out another issue of my free email newsletter on Sunday, now that I’m back on track with the prospect stuff. I was fairly stressed about it as recently a few days ago, but I’ve caught up enough that I can finish everything with a reasonable daily output of words.

And now, the links…

  • Longreads first: A 17-year-old woman in Texas wanted an abortion. A judge decided she wasn’t “mature” enough to make that choice. ProPublica looks at the ramifications of that decision.
  • The San Francisco Chronicle has the heartbreaking story of a mother’s attempts to help her daughter, a 35-year-old opioid addict living on the San Francisco streets, touching on the city’s lack of services for addicts and for homeless people. There’s a sad baseball connection: The daughter’s boyfriend, Abdul Cole, was a Marlins minor leaguer for three years, but died last April.
  • The School Board of Madison County, Virginia, voted to ban 21 books from its libraries, including The Handmaid’s Tale and four books by Nobel laureate Toni Morrison, because Christian groups complained.
  • Meanwhile, two Christian activists in Crawford County, Arkansas, are trying to remove the library director and defund the system over the display of LGBTQ+ books, calling it an “alternative lifestyle.” Sexual orientation is not a lifestyle, or a choice. Gender identity is not a lifestyle, or a choice. Religion is a lifestyle, and a choice.
  • Iowa Republicans are trying to defund public schools by allowing parents to use vouchers for private schools, including religious schools, which would seem to violate the principle of separation of church and state. You can send your kids to a parochial school, but only without my tax dollars.
  • A couple of Eagles players recorded a Christmas album for charity, hoping to raise about $30,000. It raised $250,000 and will help fund two toy drives and a summer camp for Philly kids with serious behavioral problems. (We have a copy.)

Comments

  1. Brian in NoVA

    I’m not sure if I should laugh or cry that less than a week after the discussion we had here regarding CRT and what could be taught and how that DeSantis just went ahead and threw the entire baby out with the bathwater. If the libertarian of the GOP actually really existed or was interested in any of type of logical consistency (who am I kidding), they’d be just as furious at DeSantis as liberals are. He has zero type of logical governing philosophy other than if liberals are in favor of something, he’s against it. Just look at the gas stove nontroversy and realize that roughly just 10% of all Florida residents have a gas stove. The guy is the ultimate political panderer.

  2. The Abrdiges of Madison County?

  3. Speaking of being riveted by “Homicide: Life on the Street,” I will never forget the incredible tension I felt watching the “Subway” episode mentioned in the article.

  4. I remember having long conversations/arguments back in the Eighties with my graduate professor over public school vouchers. Back then it was sanitized within the broader “public choice theory.” Under any clothing, it’s veiled school segregation.

  5. Marge vs The Monorail had one of my most favorite Simpsons lines, back when the show could masterfully capture deadpan humor. Marge calls mono-thingy guy Homer when the monorail is hurtling out of control:

    “Homer, there’s a man here who says he can help.”
    “Batman?”
    “No, he’s a scientist.”
    “Batman’s a scientist.”
    “It’s not Batman!”