The draft is over, let us go in peace. I wrote a lot of words about it this week, including an analysis of every first-round pick, some general thoughts on Day One of the draft, and team-by-team draft recaps for all American League clubs and all National League clubs. Prior to the draft, I posted a final mock (where I got 9 of the 30 picks right, and am still mad about two I changed from the previous version) and updated my ranking of the top 100 prospects in the class while also posting 25-odd more scouting capsules for guys outside of the top 100. I also wrote up some thoughts on last Saturday’s Futures Game. That’s all for subscribers to the Athletic. On this site, I held a Klawchat on the Thursday before the draft.
I sent out a new edition of my free email newsletter on draft day. You can sign up here for more words from me.
I’ll be back in Chicago on Monday to appear on Stadium’s Diamond Dreams and other programming. You can watch via the Stadium app (visit watchstadium.com to download) or if you have the sports package on Youtube TV, Roku, etc.
And now, the links…
- Longreads first: This LA Times article frames a good story very oddly. There’s a mentally ill man living in a million-dollar home in the north San Fernando Valley, strewing his property with all manner of junk, including over 100 vehicles, posing an environmental hazard to the area and obviously creating an eyesore and a safety issue for neighbors. The story centers the neighbors who bought their home for $1.2 million, unaware of the hoarder next door, and local authorities are unable or unwilling to help. The real issue here is that there’s a person here in dire need of mental health treatment, not that the neighbors can’t sell their house.
- Three (!) excellent pieces from ProPublica this week. A secretive organization of wealthy Christians called Ziklag is pouring money into elections to help push their vision of theocracy. Members include the Uihleins, the owners of the U-Line company and major backers of the Federalist, and the owners of Hobby Lobby. Arizona Republicans told voters allowing school vouchers to pay for private-school tuition would save taxpayer money, but instead they’ve destroyed the state’s education budget that’s being covered by cuts to water conservation programs and other essential initiatives. Many judges decline to recuse themselves from cases where family members have financial interests and there’s no real way to force them to do so.
- I saw this Foreign Affairs editorial, on how the U.S. President has always been above the law in the eyes of the rest of the world (and not in a good way), before realizing it written by a college classmate of mine, Yale Law Prof. Oona Hathaway.
- An L.A. journalist who wrote about officer gangs within the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department found himself the subject of surveillance and harassment from the LASD in apparent retaliation for his work.
- This summary of what you need to know about J.D. Vance comes from Teen Vogue, which appears to once again be one of the few outlets willing to cover this election and the threat to our democracy honestly.
- Texas Monthly looks at Major League Rugby’s plans to grow the sport – at least in Texas.
- First it was crypto, now it’s AI, but one new technology after another is driving huge upticks in energy consumption. The solution is a use tax – if Meta wants to force AI search on all of its users, make them pay more for the energy they’re consuming.
- A Senate committee report on working conditions at Amazon found that 45% of Amazon warehouse workers were injured on Prime Day 2019 as they tried to cope with the massive volume of sales. When I pulled this story up, there were three links to other stories on CNN on the right side of this column pushing deals on amazon, so … yeah. (Full disclosure: I did purchase about six items on Prime Day.)
- Political violence in America is not new; serving in public office comes with it the constant threat of people who want to kill you.
- The Wall Street Journal’s Lindsey Adler wrote about Paul Skenes’s splinker, the pitch that has made Skenes one of the best pitchers in baseball and a huge sensation beyond the sport’s core fans.
- Scientific American weighed in on how the need for speed is driving an increase in Tommy John surgeries. I’m with Brian Bannister here, firmly.
- Bad-faith politicians and pundits, mostly on the right, have attacked California Democrats for “watering down” a sex-trafficking bill, but Reason explains why these changes are good policy and not, as the opponents claim, about protecting sex criminals.
- Rep. Cori Bush wrote about SCOTUS’s right-wing coup and how to fight back, although 1) that would require that Democrats gain control of both houses of Congress and hold the White House, and 2) the Court has held power to invalidate certain laws for over 200 years, since 1803’s Marbury vs. Madison, and undoing that seems like a large undertaking.
- Repairing the hole in the ozone layer remains one of the great achievements in global science policy of the last 50 years, so of course we’re now about to screw it up through pollution from all of the satellites that are falling back to earth as they run out of juice.
- Influential Portland chef and restaurateur Naomi Pomeroy, a James Beard winner who competed on Top Chef Masters back when I used to watch the show, drowned while inner-tubing near Corvallis.
- Workers at Bethesda Game Studios, publishers of Fallout and Elder Scrolls, voted to unionize this week.
- Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg was on Real Time with Bill Maher and offered a two-minute takedown of Vance.
- A St. Louis-area woman made a false sex-abuse claim against her son-in-law’s political rival to try to sink his primary campaign for a state House seat.
- Three board game-related Kickstarters of note: Lucky Duck Games, publisher of Chronicles of Crime and Tang Garden, has a KS up for The Flames of Fafnir, a “competitive tower-defense game, with a traitor mechanism” that promises a “physics-based” element.
- Sinister Fish has a has a Kickstarter up for Yonder, a “fantasy worker-placement game” from the designer of Villagers and last year’s Moon.
- And another Kickstarter to help fund the 8th African Boardgames Convention (AB Con) in Abuja, Nigeria. AB Con 7 was self-funded and held over two days, a first for the convention, and their goal is to build out to a four-day con with space for at least 3000 attendees.
You’ve completely mischaracterized that L.A. Times article. It’s not framed around the couple’s inability to sell the house, and the article explains in great detail the parameters of the neighbor’s apparent mental illness, including extensively quoting his own mother on the subject. The article explains that the couple’s lives have been made into a living hell by a neighbor who puts their safety and that of their children at risk with his illegal and dangerous behavior, and how they have been frustrated at every turn by trying to get anyone in authority to address the problem, not to mention the man’s mother who owns the property and seems to think that the fact that he got an A+ on a high-school assignment somehow justifies not stepping in to address the problem. (Note: The man was arrested on an outstanding warrant the other day, after the article was published.) The point about the couple’s inability to sell their home is there to illustrate that they don’t even have the option to leave, at least not without losing an enormous amount of money that they can’t afford to lose. They bought the home for $1.2 million, which might make it sound like they’re living high on the hog, but they live in a county where the median home price is over $900,000. They almost certainly put all their savings into the down-payment on that house and are still responsible for a hefty mortgage. They’re not rich fat cats insensitive to their neighbor’s problems. They’re schoolteachers who are at their wit’s end after years of suffering and who find themselves trapped in a desperate, dangerous situation. I hope the neighbor gets the help he obviously needs, but my reaction upon reading the article in the paper last week was first and foremost sympathy for this family, and then frustration with the dead ends reached with the local authorities and the mother who admits that she is enabling her son to torment these people.
I watched the Pete Buttigieg video.
He’s young, handsome, charismatic, intelligent, articulate, and funny. Maybe the democrats should have run him for President? I think he’d win easily.
The article on JD Vance had a great tidbit here:
A recent JD Vance interview.
Collins: So you agree that people who break in and vandalize a building should be prosecuted?
Vance: Yes
Collins: Ok, I’m just checking, because you helped raise money for people who did so on January 6.
That Collins bit with Vance had me rolling too. He walked right into it.