Michael, Kobe, . . . Big Baby????

May 11, 2009

When he was at LSU, Glenn “Big Baby” Davis just struck me as one more guy with a good year in college who thought too much of his talent and was headed for a nondescript career in the NBA.  Nothing from him since led me to reconsider . . . until he put the Celtics on his shoulders and carried them to victory in the fourth quarter last night.

Don’t believe me?  Take a look at the numbers, courtesy of ESPN (about halfway down).

Boston had sixteen points in the final quarter; Big Baby had seven of them. The Celtics had ten rebounds in the fourth, half of which were from Davis.  Of Boston’s seven field goals in the last twelve minutes, Davis had three of them, including the last two (with less than one minute to go and as time ran out respectively).

OK, so Big Baby won’t be up there with Michael or Kobe, but keep this up (for, say, a half-dozen years), and he could end up with Robert Horry.

More importantly (for now), he’s the reason the Celtics still have a shot to be the next sacrifical lamb for LeBron defend their title.


That was not a flagrant foul

May 8, 2009

Yes, it was Ron Artest.

Yes, Pau Gasol fell hard.

Yes, it looked like a hard foul.

However, when the fellow who commits the foul plays the ball, it’s usually not a flagrant foul, let alone “flagrant two.”

Not only did Artest play the ball, he hit the ball and blocked the shot as he fouled Gasol.

Even Kobe Bryant didn’t thought it was “just a hard foul.”

Meanwhile, the Lakers win Game 3 (and make no mistake, they deserved to win Game 3, the foul call did nothing to change that), take back home court, and set us once more on the inevitable collision between LeBron and Kobe.


Before we all beat up on Manny Ramirez (UPDATED: OK, have at him)

May 7, 2009

I guess I’m in some weird, forgiving mood. I only hope the tax-hikers in Augusta and Richmond don’t notice.

Anyhow, as the Yankee fans in me was preparing for the guilty pleasure of schadenfreude while reading about Man-Ram’s suspension, this caught my eye (CNNSI, emphasis added):

 The source said the substance was not classified as a steroid but was clearly defined as a banned performance enhancer according to the drug agreement between baseball and its players association.

Wait a minute, “not classified as a steroid”?  What does that mean?

Man-Ram hinself says he got something from a doctor that was presumed to be OK and wasn’t.  Again, normally this would be laughed out of the room, but I’m still hung up on “not classified as a steroid.”

If this is something where Ramirez simply forgot to clue MLB in on what was going on (and given Man-Ram’s nonchalant attitude on, well, everything, would that really surprise anyone?), then he’s in for an unfair shaft.  Still, it’s always best to come clean with everything, which Man-Ram hasn’t quite done yet.

We will see, but I’m willing to wait a (short) while before throwing him to the wolves.

UPDATE: Tim Watson points out in the comments that the substance in question was a women’s fertility drug.  That shifts the default position.  Until someone can explain to me what medicinal reason Man-Ram would have for taking that, let the ridicule recommence!


Don’t rip apart the UK over Michael Savage

May 7, 2009

James Bowden hits the UK fairly hard today over its ridiculous decision to ban Michael Savage entry into the British Isles.  I’ll bet he’s not alone.

Before we go consigning Britain to the dustbin of history, however, I would like to make sure we all remember a few things.

First, nobody in Britain elected this Prime Minister (Gordon Brown).  Sure, the Parliament was elected in 2005; I don’t mean to say Brown is illegitimate in some way.  However, the fellow who did manage to lead the Labour Party to victory that year (Tony Blair) has had it with Brown, and apparently given his (Blair’s) allies the go-ahead to get rid of him (Brown) at the first opportunity (Telegraph, UK).

Secondly, the voters are practically aching to send Brown into retirement (assuming Blair’s people don’t do it first).  The last time Labour led in the polls, Walter Stosch was still Senate Majority Leader.   It is impossible to overestimate how unpopular the Brown government is – not even the painful snubs handed out by the Obama Administration could bring Britons to come to Brown’s defense.

Finally, the opposition is having a field day over this, led by the man who is arguably Britain’s most important journalist: the blogger Guido Fawkes (just Google “UK Government expenses” and “Damian McBride” to see what I mean).

So, by all means, take good aim the Prime Minister known as the Clunking Fist, but I’m not prepared to give up on the entire country on account of a PM marking time while said country seethes with anger and desperation wishing to see him turfed.


The dangerous rehabilitation of Chiang Kai-shek

May 7, 2009

Of all the historical figures for the Chinese Communist Party to exploit, the most unlikely would be Chiang Kai-hsek, the man who led the fight against it for over nearly fifty years. However, the CCP – while being brutal, cruel, corrupt, and devious – is also the shrewdest tyrannical regime on earth. Thus, anti-Communists are in the highly unusual position of being wary over the historical rehabilitation of the CCP’s most well-known enemy.

Chiang’s memory is riding the latest revisionist wave of history. Jay Taylor’s The Generalissimo: Chiang Kai-shek and the Struggle for Modern China (reviewed in the Washington Post) is leading the way on this side of the Pacific, but as John Pomfret notes, “Mainland scholars of the Nationalist period have also written essays intimating that China would probably have been better off if Chiang had stayed in charge.”

On some level, this is a dramatic admission from the Communist regime, impossible at any point before 1976. However, this is 2009, meaning the newfound appreciation for the Nationalist leader is much less than meets the eye.

For starters, Chiang is almost always compared to Mao Zedong, rather than Hu Jintao or Jiang Zemin. For historical purposes, this makes a lot of sense. However, when attempting to use the past to explain the present, it falls woefully short for four reasons.

First, neither Chiang nor Mao were genuine democrats in any way, shape, or form. Both men were tyrannical rulers who merely different on the nature of the tyranny. Because Chiang sided with the anti-Communists during the first Cold War, too many assume that Hu and Jiang, by hewing closer to Chiang’s tyrant model, have surrendered the argument. This is far from true. Chiang’s brutality, his insistence on the Nationalists dominating the state and the economy, and his tolerance for corruption would make him quite comfortable in today’s CCP. In fact, Chiang himself managed to convince Joe Stalin that he was a dedicated Communist – to the point that the Soviets actually designated the Nationalists as their allies for much of the 1920s.

Secondly, Chiang and Mao shared an absolute refusal to accept Taiwanese self-determination. During their time, given the deep disagreement over who should control the mainland, that seemed a secondary issue. Today, with the Nationalist/Kuomintang Party having accepted Communist domination of the mainland, Taiwanese self-determination (which is not to say formal independence per se, but could include it) is the only protection the island democracy has left now.

Which bring us to the third reason Chiang’s newfound acceptance is problematic: Taiwan (or, for those who prefer it, the Republic of China) is now a vibrant democracy, something Chiang would never accept. What has inspired mainlanders was not Chiang’s rule over Formosa, but its transition away from Chiang’s rule.

If Taiwan is to have any hero, it should be Lee Teng-hui, but the cadres can’t stand him, so instead they encourage a Chiang boomlet. This has the added bonus of aiding the current Nationalist Party on the island, so as to block the return to popularity of Lee’s anti-Communist allies, the Democratic Progressive Party.

Finally, the Chiang boomlet does nothing to alleviate concern over the CCP’s continuing adventurism abroad. That Hu Jintao may be closer to the Chiang model doesn’t make the military he now commands any less dangerous (The Australian and the BBC). Nor does it lighten the dark shadow the regime casts around the globe (Brisbane Times and The Malaysian Insider). It certainly doesn’t mean improvement in the areas where Chiang and Mao were equally terrible, be it corruption (Agence France Presse via Yahoo and the Los Angeles Times) or cruelty to dissidents (AFP via Yahoo and Deutsche Presse-Agentur via Hispanic Business).

The CCP, contrary to what they would like us to believe, is still in serious trouble. American investors, fed up with tales of profits that never materialize (Forbes), are finally beginning to look to India as a profitable alternative (New York Times). The tainted export meme has shifted to drywall found in tens of thousands of American homes (CNN). Finally, the rural interior continues to be impoverished and plundered by the regime itself (BBC). In this context, it’s easy to see why the regime would want the world (and the Chinese people) to believe the Mao-Chiang conflict was all about semantics – and for those two men, it may very well have been just that.

For the rest of us, however, it is about freedom and tyranny – and which will prevail. The more we focus on how close Mao’s heirs have moved to Chiang, the less we notice that the people of the mainland and the island democracy have moved beyond both of them to demand (and in the case of the island, achieve) genuine freedom. Therein lies the danger of Chiang’s rehabilitation.

Cross-posted to the China e-Lobby


In politics, timing is everything . . .

May 6, 2009

. . . and there is no better example of that today than HHS Secretary Kathy Sebelius, long touted by Democrats as the kind of gal who can show them the way to win in deep-blush-red states like Kansas.

Well, if this Survey USA poll is of any indication (h/t Denis Boyles, but his link is broken), the Secretary made it to Oz just ahead of the tornado.

Boyles wonders if “all the unpleasant abortion-related publicity surrounding her relationship with George Tiller finally penetrated a few of those stylish seed caps.”  The poll doesn’t answer the question directly, but it certainly hints to the affirmative: the now ex-Governor’s highest disapproval number came from Hispanics (52%), while African-Americans, who also tend to be more pro-life than whites, were split evenly at 49-49, notwithstanding the fellow who picked her for the HHS job.

I can’t think of a better example of “falling upward.”


Republicans score two wins in Alexandria

May 5, 2009

We can now add to Joe Murray’s near miss, Pat Herrity’s near miss, and John Cook’s victory the elections of Frank Fannon and Alicia Hughes (Washington Post).

With all 27 precincts counted last night, supporters of Republican challenger Frank Fannon IV, a banker at SunTrust Mortgage, were jubilant about breaking the Democratic stranglehold on the council.

Another Republican-backed candidate won a seat on the council. Alicia R. Hughes is active in Republican circles but could not seek the party’s formal endorsement because she is employed by the federal government, as a patent examiner. She ran as an independent.

In other words, Hughes is a RIABN (my term: Republican In All But Name), forced to run as an independent due to the Hatch Act (Spotsylvania has its own RIABN on its Board of Supervisors: Gary Jackson of Salem, a determined budget-cutter and opponent of tax increases who actually had to relinquish the Republican nomination in 2007 due to Hatch).

So Alexandria’s city council moves from six Dems to four Dems, a Republican, and a RIABN.

Light Horse at VV has more on the latest banner night for the Virginia GOP.


Republicans still lead in Rasmussen poll

May 5, 2009

The Republican Party lost a Senator, giving MSM and Democrats yet another opportunity to dance on its figurative grave.

Rasmussen’s monthly party ID poll (which he uses to weight his political preference polls) has the GOP down from last month.

Yet despite all this, the Republicans still hold a scant lead in Rasmussen’s Congressional horserace poll - the first time since at least 2004 that they’ve had a lead for two consecutive weeks.

Now, as Rasmussen himself notes, this is due in no small part due to “a lack of enthusiasm for either party.”  Still, if you believe MSM, the GOP shouldn’t even be in the same time zone as the Dems, let alone on the plus side of a statistical tie.


Jack Kemp, RIP

May 4, 2009

Rick Sincere and Leslie Carbone both beat me to the punch in mourning Jack Kemp (1935-2009), but I still feel compelled to join them in expressing my deep, deep sorrow.

In late 1987, then-Congressman Jack Kemp completely reshuffled my worldview.  At the time, I was a teenage geek who had only recently decided to support the Republican Party – and the decision was almost entirely based on national security issues.  I still had the “default” view that conservatives and Republicans were, by and large, less caring about their fellow Americans than Democrats and liberals – except when it came to keep them out of the clutches of the Soviet Union, which trumped everything else.

Then, sometime around Christmas 1987, I saw one of Kemp’s speeches (C-SPAN was re-running it, if memory serves).  It was an eye and ear-opener.  I had never heard a Republican or a conservative talk like he did (I was too young to remember Reagan’s 1970′s radio addresses or anything from his 1980 and 1984 campaigns).  It was a message of hope and opportunity that hit home.  No one before (or since, for that matter) was so eloquent in explaining why getting government out of the people’s way was so important.

Thus, Jack Kemp became the first presidential candidate I ever supported.  I like to say I backed him three times (1988, 1992, and 1996) even though he only ran once (1988).  In many respects, he was the best president we never had.

Additionally, however, Kemp’s passing – and the remembrance it has caused – has an important relevance to what conservatives and Republicans face today.  There has been much discussion about how – or even if – the wisdom and magic of Ronald Reagan can be translated into the present.  Well, Kemp actually did that for 1988 and beyond.  Reagan himself never heard of school choice, or enterprise zones, or most of the other reforms that Kemp championed.  Yet everyone knew Reagan’s spirit flowed through Kemp’s ideas, which themselves inspired Steve Forbes, Newt Gingrich, and a slew of others – all of whom would tell you they could never come close to Kemp (Gingrich once tearfully referred to him as “my older brother”).

So, as we mourn Kemp’s death and celebrate his life, let us also remember the lesson he leaves us: the principles of limited government that Reagan championed can be fine tuned for the present – because he (Kemp) already did that twenty years ago.


Barack Who’s-same Obama – again

May 2, 2009

Yet another Bush idea suddenly looks not so despicable now that he’s gone (New York Times via Jules Crittenden, emphasis added):

US May Revive Military Courts at Guantanamo

The Obama administration is moving toward reviving the military commission system for prosecuting Guantánamodetainees, which was a target of critics during the Bush administration, including Mr. Obama himself.

. . .

Officials who work on the Guantánamo issue say administration lawyers have become concerned that they would face significant obstacles to trying some terrorism suspects in federal courts.

. . . 

When President Obama suspended Guantánamo cases after his inauguration on Jan. 20, many participants said the military commission system appeared dead.But in recent days a variety of officials involved in the deliberations say that after administration lawyers examined many of the cases, the mood shifted toward using military commissions to prosecute some detainees, perhaps including those charged with coordinating the Sept. 11 attacks.

“The more they look at it,” said one official, “the more commissions don’t look as bad as they did on Jan. 20.”

I eagerly await the left’s howling rage at this, but I won’t hold my breath.


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.