Stick to baseball, 1/13/24.

I had two posts this week for subscribers to The Athletic – a breakdown of the Michael Busch trade for prospects and another of the Cubs signing Shota Imanaga. Somehow, this brought the Matt Mervis stans back out off hiding.

At Paste, I published a full review of the game The White Castle, my top new game of 2023. Fries are extra.

I also sent out a fresh edition of my free email newsletter earlier in the week. You should sign up, as I’m posting less to Twitter these days, although you can also find me on Threads, Bluesky, and Spoutible.

A light week for links, probably because I was on the phone so much working on prospect stuff that I was offline more than usual (at least twice because my eyes hurt from so much screen time)…

  • Nigerian megachurch leader TB Joshua, who was not a drag queen, tortured, raped, and abused many of his worshippers until his death in 2021. A BBC investigation found cases of all of the above as well as forced abortions and cult-like control spanning twenty years.
  • Are fast-food prices really going up, and if so, is it because of rising wages? It’s not that simple, according to this story on Vox. Input prices have gone up substantially in the last few years as well. Also, the $18 Big Mac story that went viral was about a McDonald’s at a rest stop with a captive audience.
  • Paste profiled SPRINTS as the Irish punk band released their first full-length album Letter to Self.

Comments

  1. Interesting that a bunch of these states think nothing of accepting farm subsidies.

  2. Keith whatever you think of ilhan (I agree sometimes other times I consider her positions Pollyanna ). This scenario is virtue signaling and nothing more. She knows there is no way the us won’t support allies in middle east. Also if usa stopped supporting these countries then Iran would have even greater influence in the region. So really the vote is saying hey let’s help Iran. I think usa already did enough of that with the Iraq war.

  3. Not really a reach at all. What’s the political value of denouncing the middle eastern regimes with dubious human rights records? None. US has no choice but to work with some countries for economic and geopolitical reasons. It’s not even a controversial opinion for moderates.What’s the political risk she is taking by voicing this opinion? She is from a district that this is not a political concern to take this opinion. Even socially it isn’t a risk because she is a moderate Muslim in a democracy whose family ties are from Africa moving away from a political conservative regime. It’s moral signaling and a mere gesture. Isn’t that the definition of virtue signaling?