Stick to baseball, 5/4/24.

Two new pieces for subscribers to the Athletic this week, a breakdown of the Luis Arraez trade and scouting notes on Justin Crawford and other Phillies, Orioles, and Mets prospects. I’ve also got a draft scouting notebook going up on Sunday with notes on J.J. Wetherholt, Hagen Smith, Peyton Stovall, and Ryan Waldschmidt. And I held a Klawchat on Thursday.

I sent out a new edition of my free email newsletter last Saturday, so I should do another one in a day or two, in theory.

I’ll be back on Stadium on Monday at 2 pm ET for Diamond Dreams and then for one segment of Unpacked at 2:30 pm. The shows re-air throughout the week, roughly twice a day, as far as I can tell. You can watch via the app or with certain subscriptions to Youtube, Fubo, Roku, etc.

And now, the links…

  • Amos Goldberg, a Holocaust and genocide researcher at Hebrew University, writes about the assault on Gaza: “Yes, it is genocide.”
  • Sam Thorpe, a Jewish economist who works as a Senior Research Assistant for the Brookings Institute’s Tax Policy Center, wrote in a series of tweets that it is possible to be Jewish and oppose the actions of Israel in Gaza. He argues that it is imperative for believers to do so, as his faith teaches that all humans are made in the image of God.
  • Of course, the American media are more caught up in covering campus protests, and not even getting the angle right, such as the Indiana State Police’s excessive use of force – including setting up a sniper on a nearby building! – against protesters at IU. This link has an interview with ISP Superintendent Doug Carter, who doesn’t seem to have the foggiest idea of what freedom of speech means.
  • Arizona’s Kari Lake, running as a Republican for the seat that Krysten Sinema is vacating, is touting State Sen. Sonny Borrelli’s endorsement of her, even though Borrelli – the Arizona Senate Majority Leader has a history of domestic violence allegations against him and said just this March that women should put an aspirin between their knees as a method of birth control.
  • A second Boeing whistleblower has died. Joshua Dean, who was 45, died of a MRSA infection this week; John Barnett, 62, died in March in an apparent suicide, although friends and family have raised doubts that he took his own life.
  • I thought Netflix’s Baby Reindeer was outstanding, and am pulling for the two stars to earn Emmy nominations for their work, especially Jessica Gunning (who plays Martha). NPR’s Glenn Weldon argued that the series bungled its depiction of queerness; I didn’t interpret it this way, but I’m also straight and perhaps not the right person to answer this question.
  • Two new studies on the economics of sports and sport stadium financing: One that showed that policing becomes more aggressive where there are public subsidies of sports facilities, apparently to help make up for budget shortfalls; the other showed that sporting events lead to an increase in crime, and thus to an increase in spending on policing, two ways in which public subsidies for sports stadiums negatively impact the local economy.

Comments

  1. I am not sure that Vox article about Huberman actually shows his podcast to be “rife with misinformation”. That seems rather hyperbolic. Granted, Lustig spouts a lot of nonsense, but Huberman is not an endocrinologist. Huberman should be held accountable for bringing Lustig on his podcast, and he was. In the YouTube fitness space, Lusting was heavily criticized for what he said during that episode, and many of Huberman’s fans were critical of Huberman for having Lustig on the podcast.

    The very slanted New York Magazine hit piece really has no relevance to this Vox article, and it diminishes the integrity of the Vox article to refer to it multiple times.

    • I think that article made a convincing case that Huberman is spreading a ton of misinformation. He did it again about cannabis, another popular target for wellness grifters.

      I’m curious how the New York piece on his toxic relationships with women was “very slanted” and a “hit piece.” That article even noted that “There is an argument to be made that it does not matter how a helpful podcaster conducts himself outside of the studio.”

  2. All I can say about the Chicago police story is that Rage Against the Machine called it in the 90’s. Also kudos to Thorpe for making the nuanced point I was hoping someone would make. Finally in regards to the protests, I think even ignoring the BDS movement there is a point to be made about how universities are operating with endowments. The 5% rule needs to be changed because it’s now being used by the larger universities to just horde the money and get awesome returns. Also the notion of keeping 95% for perpetuity is kind of gross when there are issues now and tuition gets increased every year by the same universities with multi billion dollar endowments. Currently there are 135 universities/university systems with endowments over the 1 billion mark. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_colleges_and_universities_in_the_United_States_by_endowment To me, the students would have a great argument if they went after that issue.

  3. Hey Keith, I can’t get to today’s Athletic article about Hagen Smith et. al., when I click on the link it takes me directly back to the Athletic’s home page.

  4. It really is amazing that a mediocrity like Bash has made it this far up the mountain.

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