NBC Sports: MLB 1980-World Series-Game 6-Kansas City Royals @ Philadelphia Phillies: Full Game

NBC Sports_ MLB 1980- World Series Game 7-Kansas City Royals @ Philadelphia Phillies_ Full GameSource:NBC Sports– Philadelphia Phillies closer Tug McGraw.

Source:The New Democrat

“Kansas City Royals 1 at Philadelphia Phillies 4, F — With the Phillies just one tantalizing out away from a Championship, Tug McGraw got ahead on Willie Wilson, then struck him out swinging at a 1-2 fastball. McGraw threw his arms up, his teammates jumped all over each other, and the franchise had its first baseball championship.”

From MLB Vault

1980 might have been the best Kansas Royals team that they ever had. They had a very good lineup offensively, good defense, good pitching both starting and in the bullpen, Jim Fry was their manager. Unlike the 85 team that was really just George Brett and Hal McRae offensively. Steve Balboni hit a lot of home runs for them, but drove in under ninety runs, which isn’t much for a guy who hits thirty-six home runs and also hit around 240 and struck out a lot. But the 80 Royals had balance offensively, defensively and in their pitching. But couldn’t even force the Phillies into a game 7.

The 1980 Phillies were just very good everywhere. Not a great lineup with a lot of great players, but very good hitters up and down the lineup. They were very good defensively and had excellent pitching. With Steve Carlton as their ace and Tug McGraw in the bullpen. Not a team with any clear weakness’ and they were just the best team in the National League throughout the 1980 season. And a team that finally put it all together after getting to the NL Playoffs in 76 and 78, but losing both NL Championships to the Los Angeles Dodgers. So 1980 was a year that the Phillies believed they had something to prove and came through.

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CBS Sports: NBA 1975- Washington Wizards @ Buffalo Braves: Bob McAdoo’s 50 Points

Lamar Matic: Bob McAdoo (50pts) vs_ Bullets (1975 Playoffs)Source:CBS Sports– the Wizards and Braves in the 1975 NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs.

Source:The New Democrat

“Bob McAdoo puts up one of the best playoffs scoring performances ever. He scores 50 points, despite the fact that the Bullets have a four defender rotation on Big Mac. McAdoo also crashed the boards as he had 10 in the 3rd quarter, I don’t know how much he could have had for the whole game. A well-deserved standing ovation from the noisy Buffalo crowd, an out-of-his-mind Oscar Robertson screaming while announcing the game and the series tied at 2-2 after McAdoo’s career game. April 18, 1975.”

From Lamar Matic

Anytime there’s a choice between having the player who scored the most points in a game and the team that scored the most points in a game, especially a playoff game, I would always take the team.

When one player scores fifty points and his team loses, it generally means he was doing most of the scoring for his team in that game. And that his teammates weren’t doing much damage to the other team. Classic example of Michael Jordan vs. the Boston Celtics in the 1986 Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, where he scored sixty points in back-to-back games, but the Celtics beat the Chicago Bulls in both games and beat them badly.

That is how you defended Bob McAdoo when he was with the Buffalo Braves. You guarded him tough and you tried to stop him. But not to the point where it would free up other Braves to beat you with open shots and layups.

Now it so happens that the Braves won this game and Big Bob was able to put the Braves on his back. But the Bullets won this series, because they had a better team, even if the Braves had the better player in the series.

Good teams, or in the Bullets case very good teams, if not great teams, generally beat teams that have a great player, if that player doesn’t have a very good supporting cast around him.

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Foreign Affairs: Michael Kazin: ‘The Tea Party is Special, Just Not in The Way it Thinks’

Foreign Affairs_ Michael Kazin_ ‘The Tea Party is Special, Just Not in The Way it Thinks’ _ FRS FreeStateSource:Foreign Affairs– Yes, the Tea Party loves Sarah Palin. Also in the news: it snows in the winter, in Wisconsin.

“As proudly patriotic as it is, the Tea Party is not exceptional — or at least not in the ways it likes to think. The angry conservative group, which accuses U.S. President Barack Obama of betraying the constitution and driving the United States toward “European-style” socialism, epitomizes a libertarian strain of thought and action with deep roots in its country’s past. The same alarm — that the United States needs protecting from a leviathan state supposedly alien to the cherished values handed down by the Founding Fathers — has been raised by the Liberty League in the 1930s,”

From Foreign Affairs

I guess my response to Michael Kazin would be: which Tea Party is he talking about?

I agree that in the last year or so, even 3 years, the Tea Party is now mostly the Christian-Right from the 1990s, with an economic message, that at times sounds Libertarian. But they can also sound populist, if not nationalist, on trade issues and organized labor, sort of like 1930s and 1940s blue-collar Democrats. And if you just look at the health care reform debate from 2009-10, they would say they don’t want socialized medicine, but hands off their damn Medicare.  So which Tea Party is Michael Kazin referring too.

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Mometrix Academy: What is Social Liberalism

Social Liberals

Source:Monetrix Academy– Not socialism.

“Learn more about social liberalism and its roots. Know what social liberals believe and why. Make sure you are prepared for your exam.

Mometrix Academy is the world’s most comprehensive test preparation company. This channel will provide you with videos that will help you learn about many different subjects.”

Source:Mometrix Academy

In this post, I’m just going to get into what social liberalism is and what it isn’t. What it really is and what it really isn’t and I’m writing this especially this weekend when I hear people who are called ‘college Liberals’ who want to control speech they disagree with on campus. And have it eliminated, or outlawed as if these people are Liberals, or even Social Liberals. Because they want to eliminate speech that may offend people they want to protect. When the fact is for anyone who understands liberalism social, or otherwise knows that one of the key elements of liberalism is free speech and the right to free assembly.

Just look at the First Amendment which is one of the most liberal things ever written. Paraphrase- Congress shall make no law that fringes on free speech in America. So when talking about liberalism social, or otherwise, or studying it, make sure you are actually talking about liberalism and not fascism. Like these politically correct speech codes by the Far-Left in America that want to eliminate speech in America that they find offensive. Because these people aren’t Liberals, but Fascists, or leftist statists. Which is a bit different.

So free speech is a big part of social liberalism, but it is certainly not the only part. And when Americans tend to think of social liberalism, they tend to think of people are pro-choice on abortion and other women’s healthcare issues. And that even the state meaning government in general should have to fund these things for women who can’t afford them in general. As well as being pro-women’s rights in general and pro-gay rights and pro-minority rights. And that none of these groups should be discriminated against at all. When the fact is these things aren’t true. Liberals, are pro-individual rights which is different.

That we are all created equal with certain basic fundamental rights that can’t be taken away from us unless we hurt other people’s freedom. And being pro-individual rights covers everything from abortion to homosexuality. But also things like marijuana. But also gambling and pornography. And again free speech which even covers an individual’s right to quite frankly be an asshole and say and do offensive things. And that everyone is treated equally under law. And are not denied things based on race, ethnicity, gender, religion, nationality or sexuality.

A good way to think of social liberalism, or a Social Liberal is someone whose pro-choice. Literally pro-choice across the board regardless of the issue. As long as people aren’t hurting innocent people with the choices that they are making. That people should have the right to make their own bed in life and make their own way. But then are also responsible for sleeping in their own beds. In other words, individual freedom and responsibility. And not being able to force others to pay for one’s bad choices in life.

As for what the women in this video had to say about social liberalism, who will go nameless simply, because she didn’t give out her name and I don’t personally know her, or know of her. She nailed the definition of liberalism in the broader context. And perfectly laid out how liberalism, or how she called it social liberalism is different from libertarianism, or what is called classical liberalism. Or even democratic socialism, even though she didn’t mention that. That liberalism, is about individual liberty and individual rights. But that those rights are for everybody and that where government in is not to manage our lives for us. But to help people in need be able to get by in the short-term and help them be able to live in freedom as well. And not need to be taken care of.

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Brookings Institution: Michael E. O’Hanlon & Kay B. Hutchinson: ‘Saving Defense Dollars: From Base Realignment to Overhead Realignment & Closure’

Brookings Institution: Saving Defense Dollars_ From Base Realignment and Closure to Overhead Realignment and ClosureSource:Brookings Institution with a look at the United States defense budget.

“Editor’s Note: In the midst of the federal shutdown, which finally ended after Congress passed legislation to fund the government through mid-January, Michael O’Hanlon and Kay Bailey Hutchinson highlighted the need to address long-term budget issues, such as reducing the deficit by cutting military spending.

While the government shutdown continues because of the Democrats’ and Republicans’ profound disagreement, the real issue facing the nation is something that both parties agree on, in principle: the need to reduce the size of the federal deficit.

The Budget Control Act of 2011 and sequestration have made some steps in this direction, though aiming indiscriminately at certain parts of government far more than others. Half of all cuts, for example, come from the Defense Department.

There are a wide range of options for domestic spending reduction. But military spending cuts are more narrow and difficult. They can be done responsibly, however. Sequestration’s reductions are severe, perhaps excessive (especially early on), with $500 billion in 10-year cuts, on top of the $500 billion already accepted back in 2011. That said, tens of billions can undoubtedly be saved through smart economies and business practices — without cutting muscle or breaking faith with the men and women in uniform.

The administration and Congress should pursue a two-pronged effort– revitalizing the Base Realignment and Closure (“BRAC”) process while convening a similar, but new, Overhead Realignment and Closure Commission (“ORAC”) to make the Defense Department a less wasteful organization.

We could begin with base closings. This process worked reasonably well for four rounds — as the Cold War ended and then into the 1990s.

We relied on an independent commission, using input from experts and local communities, to produce a list of proposed base closures that Congress then had to approve or disapprove as a whole. This addressed the fact that members of Congress and the Senate have inherent difficulties in voting to close bases in their districts and states.

The 2005 base closure round unfortunately squandered the political momentum of the first four rounds. Originally expected to yield a net of $35 billion in savings over 20 years, it is now expected to yield just $10 billion — with most of those savings toward the end of the process. Initial implementation costs, projected at $21 billion, wound up closer to $35 billion. Some of these unfavorable revisions may have been because the fifth round of closures had fewer obvious targets; some of it, frankly, could have been due to questionable analyses of environmental remediation costs and other implementation expenses.

Given that history, Congress frowned on the Defense Department’s recent requests for additional base closure rounds. Yet they are probably a good idea if, in fact, troop numbers decline. Another round, done right, could yield eventual savings of $2 billion to $3 billion a year, comparable to each of the first four rounds.

As we consider domestic base closures, however, assessing foreign base requirements is also essential. In places such as Germany and South Korea, for example, a large number of facilities remain, despite downsizing in recent decades. Add to this the roughly 25 percent of North Atlantic Treaty Organization military construction and operations that Washington pays for. This is hundreds of millions annually that must be studied for efficiency and true need.

Our second basic idea is this: There could be another commission, similar to the BRAC, that looks specifically for cost savings by reviewing overhead in the same way the BRAC looks at bases. Let’s call it the Overhead Realignment and Closure Commission, or ORAC.

To understand the motivation for an ORAC, consider that a recent Defense Business Board study noted that roughly 340,000 military personnel perform non-military functions. Many could be carried out more inexpensively in other ways. With the post- September 11, 2001 exponential growth of both the Defense Department civilian workforce and the contractor workforce, there is surely much that can be done.

Consider these examples of what ORAC could examine before creating a package of reforms for Congress to vote up or down. The Government Accountability Office recently considered whether the Defense Department could use “strategic sourcing” more frequently to buy supplies in bulk and at a discount across the department. The GAO savings estimates ran into the billions per year.

GAO also analyzed possible advantages to having long-term contracts with private contractors for maintaining weapons and other hardware.

Many high-level military headquarters have expanded in recent decades. The military uses larger staffs than most organizations, and it could impose a uniform cut in Defense Department administrative costs — perhaps 20 percent to 30 percent. This is in line with what then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates instituted for civilian contractors when he was running the Pentagon early in the Obama administration, and what Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel now favors for high-ranking officer staff.

There are also more mundane efficiencies to be pursued. One suggestion: the Pentagon should revamp military perquisites — including business jets for senior officers. They often travel in their own dedicated planes. Yes, commanders in the field need mobility, but officers running most domestic commands do not.

A final example of possible savings, championed by Senator Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), is to close military grade schools in places where public schools — generally more cost-efficient — are available. Paying a fee to the local school district would provide cost savings, since close to 20,000 students could be involved nationwide. Millions of dollars in annual savings may eventually become possible.

Indeed, it has been wisely suggested that in times like these, “everything” needs to be on the table — how the Defense Department manages healthcare, retirement and personal benefits, as well as commissaries PX’s and maintenance for maximum efficiency.

Realistically, given the time needed to phase in such changes, it will be an accomplishment to achieve close to $100 billion in savings over 10 years. Much of that could be required simply to achieve the $60 billion goal in efficiencies that the Pentagon has already counted on. So this is no prescription for an easy way to implement sequestration, which, as noted, probably goes too far.

But the best should not be the enemy of the good — and there is a great deal of money to be saved, and faith in U.S. government to be restored, by this kind of revised BRAC and ORAC process, with the high-level commissions giving reform ideas added visibility and importance. Perhaps that approach is something on which Congress and the president can agree in these otherwise politically contentious times.”

From the Brookings Institution

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NBC Sports: MLB 1984- St. Louis Cardinals @ Chicago Cubs: Game of The Week

NBC Sports_ MLB 1984- St_ Louis Cardinals @ Chicago Cubs_ Game of The Week _ The Daily PressSource:NBC Sports with the MLB Game of The Week.

Source:The Daily Press

“MLB 1984 06 23 84 Cardinals at Cubs”

From Larry’s Classic Sports Videos

The baseball game that seemed like it would never end. A classic game in this great Cardinals-Cubs rivalry, great rivalry even though the Cardinals are traditional winners and champions. And the Cubs generally are not only losers, but tend to finish way out of contention.

This was a great game, if you hate pitching and perhaps see pitching as an inconvenience to slugfests and perhaps as a necessary evil that is necessary so that baseball games actually come to conclusion at some point.

This game was essentially a home run derby where the team that could find away to get more outs and scored last was going to win. But not a great game in the sense that it was a great all around played game with good pitching, defense, and with timely hitting, that went down to last outs and into the ninth inning not knowing who was going to win at the end.

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The Washington Post: Chris Cillizza: Third Party Time?

The Washington Post: Chris Cillizza: Third Party Time?Source:The Washington Post talking about what a third political party would need to be successful in America.

“A new Gallup poll shows Americans are frustrated with both the Democratic and Republican parties — so is it time for a major third party? Chris Cillizza has the one number you need to know today.”

From The Washington Post

If we just decided as a country that both the Republican Party and the Democratic Party (which I’m still technically a member of) both sucked so much (to be frank) and was so incompetent, that you wouldn’t want them feeding your dog or cat, let alone running the United States Government, then I could support the concept of a multi-party (meaning more than 2) system in this country, conditionally.

If you are going to have a multiple party system in America, you really need to have runoffs as well. Otherwise, you would see U.S. representatives and senators, as well as the President of the United States, with just 30% of the vote. And that would also make the system more partisan, along with gerrymandering in the House, because you would would incumbents thinking that they only need 30-35% of the vote, perhaps not even that much, of the vote in order to win. With no incentive whatsoever to appeal to voters outside of their base.

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Senate Democrats: Majority Leader Harry Reid To Republicans: ‘It’s Not Too Late To Do The Right Thing’

Senate Democrats_ Majority Leader Harry Reid To Republicans_ ‘It’s Not Too Late To Do The Right Thing’ _ FRS FreeStateSource:Senate Democrats– Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Democrat, Nevada)

“Reid to Republicans: It’s Not Too Late To Do The Right Thing. Senate floor speech, October 12, 2013”

From Senate Democrats

Looks like Leader Harry Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell have a compromise in the Senate that would not only reopen the government and extend the debt ceiling without having ObamaCare language in it, (no defunding or no repeal, no delay) but the compromise is that the medical device tax will be repealed. Which is a small price to pay for Democrats since both Democrats and Republicans are against the MDT and it doesn’t really have anything to do with the Affordable Care Act as far as enforcing it or funding it.

So the ACA is still intact even without he MDT and the country is saved from a tax increase. Senate Democrats should take this deal and pass it overwhelmingly and send it to the House with a bipartisan vote. And put more pressure on the House Republican Leadership and moderate House Republicans to vote on this agreement and end the shutdown and avoid a default.

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ABC News: ‘This Week’s Powerhouse Roundtable Takes on the Government Shutdown Showdown’

ABC News: 'This Week'_ Powerhouse Roundtable Takes on the Government Shutdown ShowdownSource:ABC News– left to right: Dan Senor & Paul Krugman.

“Paul Krugman, Dan Senor, Peggy Noonan, and David Plouffe on the government shutdown.”

From ABC News

As I’ve already written about this:

“I wouldn’t say that the Tea Party House government shutdown is a political suicide mission, because this plan (if you want to call it that) doesn’t even seem to have a mission, or even a pilot. It’s more like drunk people at a pool with a group of them going up on the high dive, blindfolded, and one of them falls off and never makes it to the water. And that’s assuming that House Republicans are politically suicidal to go through with this. Or, are they just doing this for their right-wing-populist base and trying to tell them that they’re doing whatever they can to try to end the Affordable Care Act. (Also known as ObamaCare)”

From FRS FreeState

If the Democratic Senate comes up with a bipartisan agreement led by Leader Harry Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and it passes with around seventy votes or more with only Tea Party Republicans voting against it (for the most part) and perhaps a few senators on the Far-Left like Bernie Sanders voting against it and this agreement opens the government and raises the debt ceiling with ObamaCare off the table, but has debt relief and deficit reduction in it, these are big ifs. But that is what Harry Reid and Mitch McConnell are talking about and they’ve come up with bipartisan agreement in the past.

And if they pull this off, House Republicans will look even worst and probably be forced to at least vote on the Senate past bipartisan agreement. And perhaps that is how the Tea Party made chaos over the government and debt ceiling is resolved. And then we’ll see how much damage this does to Congressional Republicans House and Senate the Tea Party did to them for 2014.

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The White House: ‘Lets’s Get Back To The Work of The American People’

The White House: Weekly Address_ Let's Get Back to the Work of the American PeopleSource:The White House– President Barack H. Obama (Democrat, Illinois) 44th President of the United States, at The White House.

“In this week’s address, President Obama discussed his meetings with members of Congress of both parties and the ongoing effort to reopen the government and remove the danger of default from our economy. The President urged Congress to pass a budget, put people back to work, and end this shutdown. In his message, the President also called for paying our bills to prevent an economic shutdown.”

From The White House

President Obama actually hit all of the notes and laid it out exactly as it is. By saying this is not how you govern referring to the House Tea Party Caucus saying: “Gives us what we want on a particular piece of legislation, or we’ll shut the government down and even shut the economy down by defaulting.”

Governing by extortion is not the way you govern in a liberal democracy of three hundred twenty million people. The most important and developed country in the world, especially when you only represent around twenty percent of that country.

What you do instead, if you are in power, want to remain in power and you want to govern., is to look out for the best interests of the entire country and what should we be doing as a country. Not just roughly twenty percent of it that represent the Bible Belt and the Libertarian West. But what do we do for the entire country including the Bible Belt and Libertarians who tend to be anti-government all together. And right now are loving the government shutdown.

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