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Everything posted by chasfh
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I guess I see what you mean. I mean, sure Avila did put losers on the field for a bunch of years running, but it's already been three years and Harris hasn't put a winner on the field with this team y ... wait ... uhh ... I mean, he hasn't led this team to the playoffs or anyt ... errr ... I guess what I mean is, we haven't actually won any playoff ser ... Maybe I don't really see what you mean after all.
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I think I see what you're going for here, but I would stress that we're not those being deranged by Trump. We are still within normal range. He and his MAGA elite operate completely out of range.
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If you're thinking about people of color here, I'm not so sure, at least until they perfect the manufacture of robot janitors and crop-pickers and slaughterhouse workers.
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Better than nothing, but that's a super low bar. This is still far less than halfway what it should be.
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Betcha five bucks?
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MLB is not unlike the Premier League. They have their own "Big Six" there—Man City, Man U, Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, and Tottenham—which draw in the elite soccer players of the world. Certain clubs pop up the table and generate consideration occasionally, like Leicester City or Newcastle United or Aston Villa or West Ham. But year in, year out, it's that Big Six, and those teams ended up at the top of the table five years ago, ten years ago, 15 and 20 and 25 years ago—just as they will this May. All the other teams bob in and out of the League, and essentially serve as chum for the Big Six, which use the others to sharpen themselves up for Champions League play. If an elite soccer player wants to both get super paid and help their personal brand, those are the six teams they will focus on. Superstars are not going to end up signing with Brentford or Burnley or Wolverhampton Wanderers, because that would be career death. I mean, yeah, those clubs are in the Premier League, but let's be real: they are not premier teams. This is allowed to happen in England, and really, most soccer countries, because those systems are truly capitalist, with teams being promoted and relegated based on where they land in the table, and if a team is financially struggling, I mean really struggling, they'll be allowed to simply "wind up", meaning go out of business. C'est la vie. There is no meaningful revenue share, or any other aid teams receive to maintain competitive balance. The lords of the Premier League couldn't give less of a **** about competitive balance, because six teams make the lion's share of the money for them, so that's where they focus all the eggs, and they lean into that and hard. And so Baseball has also evolved to become similar. The difference between Baseball's Big Six situation and that of the Premier League is not as stark, but it is there. We won't see the Texas Rangers suddenly get their act together and become dominant year after year like the San Antonio Spurs were for a quarter of a century; or the Kansas City Royals become an elite team like the Kansas City Chiefs did for a decade running; and flip side, the New York Yankees and New York Mets could never become league ciphers like the New York Jets or Brooklyn Nets have, because those leagues operate their businesses to spread out the competitive balance in a way Baseball has practically refused to consider, at least thus far. As long as Baseball runs its business like so, things are not going to magically change. The Tigers will never become an elite team year in and year out because we don't simply have the market size or national media cachet that the Big Six do, but also, we do not have the geographical/divisional proximity of a Philadelphia or Baltimore or Toronto or San Diego, who serve as a sort of Next Six level, that can help us get the occasional Pete Alonso or Kyle Schwarber or Fernando Tatis or Shohei Ohtani. We are a second tier market toiling away in flyover country. Elite players simply won't consider coming here as long as there is even a hint of interest from those other teams. We don't have the resources or cachet to out-zig those teams, so we have to focus on out-zagging them. It's our only chance. That's what the Ilitch/Harris front office is working on at the moment, and I am comfortable rooting for that instead of pining away for something that will never happen, like a Soto or Ohtani or Snell or Japanese superstar signing here. I think we have basically one chance to crack the Next Six level that could last for half a decade or more, and that's re-signing Tarik Skubal. If we miss out on him, though, I think we are going to have to remain basically The Little Engine That Could, zagging our way to occasional relevance now and then.
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I think you have a pretty good idea of that.
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Sounds good on paper.
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I think people underestimate the difference between baseball in any given year and baseball 20 years later. The players are invariably bigger, stronger, better-trained, and better-informed in any year+20 vs year.
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I'm pretty sure that won't get it done. The desired currency of free agency is years plus dollars, rather than just dollars. The only exception is in cases such as Bregman, who took the shorter deal with higher AAV specifically to go back on the market the following season. That's why I'm positive Skubal would not take 6/275 from Detroit if someone else were to offer him, say, 9/350. We might be able to get him to accept 9/330 from Detroit over a strange team's 9/350, because moving is a pain, but that's probably as much of a discount as we could expect from him.
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Let's be clear on what's happening here: Donald Trump is President of the United States of America, something which he is 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and from which there is no break. That's just the way the job goes, and nothing he says while president can be regarded as reflecting his personal point of view irrespective of that—and that goes double for when he is speaking from the White House. Therefore, what Trump posted, and what he is saying here, reflects the official position of the United States government on Rob Reiner.
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It is so precious that (1) GingerGirl777 apparently believes Trump is an empathetic human being who misspoke or something; (2) she believes he said this only because he gets bad advice from Susie Trump; and (3) someone else must be writing his posts for him so he can't really be held responsible for it, and gee, if he only knew about this he would certainly put a stop to it.
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"Trump Derangement Syndrome" sounds like nothing more than a punchline with which to ... ahem ... trump someone in a debate. What does it even mean? Can anyone who actually believes this is a real thing explain in detail how it works and what makes it valid?
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I can't remember whether I have articulated this idea here yet, but I would bet money that reducing the surplus population to ease the demand on finite and dwindling resources is on the bingo cards of some of the people of the MAGA elite.
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you don't say.
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Isn't that what this whole born-again nonsense is all about? The idea that all the good works of your entire life matters not a whit when it comes to your salvation, but you merely have only to say you "accept Jesus Christ as your personal Lord and Savior" to earn eternal salvation? Doesn't this idea explicitly let them off the hook for being actual good people? After all, under a regime like this, they don't have to do anything like helping people or other good works—in fact, as it relates to going to heaven, doing that would be a complete waste of time and energy. Instead, they have only to make a claim of being "saved", something which exists in only their minds and can't be checked or verified. Just tell other people they're saved, that's it, and everyone is supposed to believe them and regards them as holy. On its face, that seems like the absolute laziest way anyone has ever come up with sell the idea of earning one's way into heaven. It seems to me that if someone like Satan were to ever design a false theology to lead an entire nation of people down the road to perdition, it would look exactly like that brand of Christianity.
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This is a fine distinction to make as opposed to simply "Christians". To people who make as big show of professing their Christianity with their rhetoric (as opposed to demonstrating their faith with their actions), the self-designation "Christians" has evolved to be no more than a political label that serves to highlight their bull**** toughness and selective lack of empathy and mercy—exactly the opposite of Jesus, and not for nothing.
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To like him when he was the charming You're Fired guy on TV was one thing. To continue to like him today, and support what he's doing? You put it as directly, succinctly, and honestly as possible.
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As this post aptly demonstrates, use by MAGA and the Red Hats of the phrase "Trump Derangement Syndrome" (or 'TRUMP DERANGEMENT SYNDROME", if you prefer) is itself a projection, since Trump's behavior routinely falls beyond any reasonable definition of what constitutes normal range.
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Finishing this post with "May Rob and Michele rot in pieces" instead would have been 😘👌.
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This might make some logical sense from the standpoint that perhaps people living in these red states live in a great undercurrent of violence already, so they they respond to kind of tough-on-crime rhetoric that Republicans specialize in. The world looks violent and tough and broken to them so they want a tough-talking daddy to fix it? Just spitballing a little here.
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Well, part of Michigan, anyway. Denmark fits perfectly in Michigan
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Interesting how the hot/warm dividing line diagonally cuts right through the center of Oakland County, which all of Wayne and practically all of Macomb are on the hot side.
