Stick to baseball, 7/13/24.

I posted a third projection for Sunday’s first round of the MLB draft, and updated my Big Board of the top 100 prospects in the draft class, both for subscribers to the Athletic. I also took your questions here in a Klawchat on Thursday. On Saturday, I’ll have a new post with smaller scouting reports on about 20-25 more players in the draft class, guys whose names you might hear Sunday or Monday but who didn’t make the cut for the top 100.

At Paste, I reviewed Neotopia, a perfectly cromulent filler game for family play that didn’t bring anything new to the tabletop. I do like the way the scoring forces players to think about balance throughout the game, though.

And now, the links…

  • Longreads first: Gateway Church founder Robert Morris blamed his 12-year-old victim for the sexual abuse he inflicted on her. And so did Morris’s wife, according to the victim, Cindy Clemishere, who courageously came forward a month ago with the story, leading to Morris’s abdication and the resignations of four other Church leaders. No drag queens, no trans people, just a pastor and the leaders of a giant, tax-exempt religious organization.
  • Also in Texas – what a great government they have down there! – the state has spent years siphoning public funds to so-called “pregnancy crisis centers,” usually religious groups that try to convince pregnant women not to have abortions, but there’s no evidence it has had any effect at all, aside from violating the principle of separation of church and state.
  • Vaccine denialist and antisemite Robert F. Kennedy Jr. helped spawn a measles outbreak in Samoa that killed several children. He’s denying that, too.
  • It doesn’t matter what Trump says or does, though. His supporters don’t waver. If they think an action is bad, and Trump does it, they change their opinion of the action. If that’s not cultlike behavior, well, I don’t have a better word for it – and the media needs to cover his campaign accordingly.
  • Meanwhile, Arizona’s public schools chief is trying to push the right-wing PragerU materials into classrooms, promoting the misinformation group’s content on the department website, by claiming that teachers have only been presenting the “extreme left side” in classrooms. I’m very glad I didn’t raise my daughter there.
  • Voters in Jackson County, Missouri, resoundingly rejected a sales tax hike to use taxpayer funds for stadium projects for the privately-owned Chiefs and Royals just three months ago, so, of course, the owners are just going to try to put it up for another vote and threaten to move the teams out of state.

Comments

  1. Daren Magady

    Jackson County, Missouri. And it is kind of interesting as a long time fan of the teams that Johnson County, KS, right across State Line Road, is trying to get the Chiefs. I wonder if they will change their Marijuana laws if that is a sticking point.

    Oh, and Oklahoma Superintendent is also on the Prager U train.

  2. Keith I think your summary of two articles gets right to the heart of the issue – even when the media like the NY Times does the right thing by describing him as unfit to lead, it does nothing to change the hearts or minds of his voters. I agree that ultimately the media could do a better job in calling out his bad behavior, but I don’t see it changing a thing in terms of his electability.

  3. ~30% of public teacher positions remain unfilled in Arizona. Literally thousands of jobs. The linked article isn’t the only reason why, but it’s the same people who’ve been systematically dismantling of public education whenever they’ve gotten the chance since the ’08 recession (not that it was great before then either), and we’ve been seeing the consequences for over the decade now. The only respite as an AZ teacher now is to get the fuck out.