For subscribers to the Athletic, I’ve had several new posts, including a ranking of the top 20 prospects for impact in the majors in 2023 and a draft blog post on the Globe Life College Baseball Showdown, which featured TCU (Brayden Taylor), Vanderbilt (Enrique Bradfield Jr.), and more. I chatted with three of our beat writers about prospects – Dan Connolly about the Orioles’ farm system, Jen McCaffrey about the Red Sox’ farm system, and Dave O’Brien about Atlanta’s farm system.
I’ve done a bunch of podcasts and other interviews in the last few weeks, including the East Village Times’ podcast (Padres), the Seattle Sports Union podcast, the Phillies Nation podcast, WTMJ Milwaukee’s Extra Innings podcast, the Locked on Dodgers podcast, and the Sox Machine podcast (White Sox).
Over at Paste, I reviewed the game Quacks & Co., the kids’ version of the great push-your-luck game The Quacks of Quedlinburg.
On the Keith Law Show this week, I spoke with Fangraphs’ lead prospect writer Eric Longenhagen as we compared some of our rankings on our top 100s (here’s his top 100) and discussed the top of this year’s draft class. You can listen and subscribe via iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, amazon, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I sent out another issue of my free email newsletter on Friday, which marks my sixth so far this year, a better pace than I had in 2022, something I hope to keep up now that I’ll be writing something pretty much every week for the Athletic.
And now, the links…
- Longreads first: The New York Times Magazine has a long feature on Ghibli Park, a sort-of theme park built around the works of animation legend Hayao Miyazaki.
- Ninety-four women allege a Utah doctor sexually assaulted them, but a judge said Utah law makes this medical malpractice and threw their cases out. Utah legislators could just change the law, but they’re too busy trying to kill trans kids.
- The Appeal has stories of pregnant people who’ve been shackled and abused while in custody in Harris County, Texas, jails, the same jail system that saw 28 prisoners die last year and four already in 2023.
- De la Soul’s catalog is supposed to come to streaming platforms in March. OkayPlayer spoke to the attorney who helped clear most of the samples on their earliest work and made this possible.
- Funds from two programs created by then-President Trump’s Department of Agriculture to provide disaster relief to farmers flowed to wealthy landowners instead, such as a $983 payment to the owner of a $23 million mansion right near Trump’s own Mar-a-Lago resort. Over $5.5 million in total funds from those programs went to residents of the 75 wealthiest ZIP codes in the U.S.
- The New Republic is one of the few outlets doing real reporting on the effects of the train derailment and chemical release in East Palestine, Ohio, such as this article on dying animals and residents’ respiratory distress, and this editorial on the fake conspiracy theories around it and the real corruption that allowed it all to happen.
- There’s a network of neo-Nazi home-schoolers operating in Ohio, and the state says they can’t do anything about it. Maybe if they were teaching critical race theory and trans rights?
- Biden’s EPA has streamlined a program to approve alternatives to fossil fuels that originally covered biofuels but also includes fuels made from recycled plastics – even though one such process is likely to release a highly carcinogenic byproduct into the atmosphere. And the EPA won’t release details of the process, right down to the names of the chemicals involved.
- The majority-Black city of Jackson, Mississippi, is likely to end up with a separate, state-run court district with judges appointed entirely by white politicians, thanks to a Republican-authored bill that already passed the state’s lower chamber.
- A police officer in Pueblo County, Colorado, shot and killed an unarmed man in the car line outside a school because the man got into the wrong car by mistake. Video shows the officer gave no warning and neither he nor his partner gave the victim, 32-year-old Richard Ward, any assistance as he bled to death on the ground. The DA declined to charge the officers, saying they “justifiably feared for their lives.”
- A publisher planned to revise several of Roald Dahl’s books to remove potentially offensive language, but after criticism it appears they relented. I have a lot of thoughts on this, most of them opposing the effort. You can’t undo history, and art is a comment and reflection of its time. With a children’s book, you always have the choice not to read the book to your kids, or to read it in full and explain why some language or imagery is inappropriate or offensive. I’m also not sure what good this does for books with millions of copies in print.
- New York Times White House correspondent Peter Baker has a history of activism through his work and his social media commentary. He also criticized journalists who argued that the paper’s coverage of trans issues has been slanted when he co-signed a letter calling them “activists.”
- From the Onion: It Is Journalism’s Sacred Duty To Endanger The Lives Of As Many Trans People As Possible.
- The chaos and breakdowns within Twitter hampered rescue efforts after this month’s earthquake that killed thousands in Turkey and Syria.
- Russia used state media to support Canada’s so-called “Freedom Convoy” that protested the country’s attempts to limit the spread of COVID-19.
- I grew up in Smithtown, New York, and from kindergarten through twelfth grade I attended public schools in that district, which is now further embarrassing itself by adding armed guards at its schools despite no actual evidence that these prevent mass shootings.
- Board game news: The small publisher Holy Grail Games announced they’re shutting down.
- 25th Century Games has a Kickstarter up for three new tile-laying games: Agueda, Color Field, and Donut Shop. As of Friday morning it’s less than $2000 away from its funding goal.
- The Search for Lost Species is over 11x funded already on Kickstarter; it’s the sequel to The Search for Planet X, my #1 game of 2020.
- The Kickstarter for the last standalone expansion for Set a Watch is also fully funded, with just five days to go.
I honestly think the conservative/libertarian/conspiracy theorist crowd was just trying to jump in front of the East Palestine story before anyone else because it presented a very inconvenient truth about their ideology and the end results of it. History has shown us repeatedly that big corporations will routinely chase profits at the expense of safety for their workers and everyone else if they’re allowed to. In this case, their favorite politician bragged about rolling back regulations which might’ve led to the environmental disaster in front of us. That’s not a great look. By blaming literally everyone and everything else, it forces reporters to present “both sides” when the reality is much simpler. A certain amount of government regulation over big companies is good. Unrestrained corporate greed (like we saw with Norfolk Southern) will lead to a certain number of awful events.
Why are libertarians being lumped together with conservatives?
That’s lazy and careless, and very likely to offend people who ascribe to the non-aggression axiom and therefore find the “conservative” political platforms repugnant. Any libertarian with a conscience would, by necessity, thoroughly reject the ongoing atrocities attempted and committed by today’s GOP, and any Libertarian who doesn’t reject such atrocities is not a Libertarian.
I know you weren’t necessarily equating the two groups, but it certainly had the implication that you are throwing them together under the same bus.
Frank, I was referring more to conservative libertarians who think almost any government regulation on private industry is a bad one (think Grover Norquist types). The flaw with their logic is companies will take calculated risks to push the boundaries in favor of a few extra dollars. History has shown us that exact flaw repeatedly. East Palestine is exactly what happens in those scenarios.
Wyoming passed a law that raised the minimum age to marry in the state, but not before the Republican Party of the state tried to stop it’s passage. The reason was because it would prevent teen parents to remain together under one roof. A direct quote from their letter: “Since young men and women may be physically capable of begetting and bearing children prior to the age of 16, marriage MUST remain open to them for the sake of those children.” Left unsaid, it would seem they wouldn’t want to prosecute adults that commit statutory rape for the same reason.
https://www.newsweek.com/wyoming-ending-child-marriage-sparks-republican-outrage-1780501
A police officer in Pueblo County, Colorado, shot and killed an unarmed Black man in the car line outside a school because the man got into the wrong car by mistake. Video shows the officer gave no warning and neither he nor his partner gave the victim, 32-year-old Richard Ward, any assistance as he bled to death on the ground. The DA declined to charge the officers, saying they “justifiably feared for their lives.”
WHAT THE FUCK.
Unrelated: regarding the agriculture relief fraud, I’m assuming you meant to write “$23 MILLION mansion”?
Ugh, that horrible Utah story reminds me of a local (failed, thankfully) DA candidate. She had been a local judge, and when a prosecutor tried to charge defendants with raping a prostitute, she downgraded the charge to robbery.
She was the local candidate who really drove home the importance of Googling all the candidates for judge/local office for me; unfortunately she is back on the damn bench anyway.
Keith, have you figured out if covid was due to a lab leak or not yet?
It wasn’t.
Keith,
Here’s one for your next post:
Apparently DeSantis has passed a bill that allows him to punish Disney for criticizing him:
https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/27/politics/desantis-disney-reedy-creek/index.html