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Great Expectations

To paraphrase Rick Pitino, Jim Harbaugh ain’t walkin’ through that door.
The University of Michigan must finally come to the conclusion the rest of the world did some time ago – it’s football program isn’t quite as prestigious as it once was, but for reasons other than Rich Rodriguez.
It’s a different college sports world now. It’s not 1985 or even 1997.
Other schools have realized this, accepted it and moved on to rebuild. Some who haven’t, like Notre Dame, continue to struggle with unrealistic expectations and dreams of multiple national championships.
In fact, you could say that are only a handful of college programs that are perennial contenders. The rest are simply pretenders, lying to themselves about the cyclical nature of sports, and more importantly, missing parity punctuation at the end of each season.
Texas and USC went through down years this season, as did Florida. Florida won two titles in three seasons, but with a new coaching staff, it’s not a guarantee the Gators are a top five program for the next decade.
Those schools will certainly rebound, but Michigan will never be the program it once was. To some, it looks an awful lot like Indiana University basketball.
Legendary coach leaves. Program struggles to find identity, fails to accept its new spot in the hierarchy, loses in-state recruits and it’s base, bottoms out, flounders as it tries to find its place in the new world of college sports, where young athletes care more about weather, professional prospects and TV time than they do about prestige.
Reality is that many athletes do not want to attend college for academics. And they certainly don’t want to spend what little free time they have in a weather climate that features rain, snow or cold wins out of Canada for six months a year. I hear summertime in Michigan is beautiful. Sadly, that’s when college sports are on a hiatus.
Wonder why Duke, North Carolina, Florida, Arizona, Texas have been so successful in college basketball over the last 20 years? Recruiting. And nothing helps recruiting like sunshine and scenery. All of the aforementioned schools stole players from Midwestern states. It’s like a formula. Good coaching, pipeline to the pros, great weather equals a hotbed of activity.
How does Stanford compete in football and basketball with the rigorous academic requirements, while a school like Notre Dame with similar standards struggles? Location, location, location.
Theoretically, athletes aren’t being paid to play in college. So you have to tap into the other resources. How is a school like Michigan or Indiana going to lure a kid from California, Florida or Texas to play at their school and move away from home?
Prestige? Please.
Most of these kids have only heard the name Bo Schembechler. He retired in 1989. To have any memory of watching Michigan during the end of his coaching career, you’d have to be at least 25.
Schembechler brought Michigan its prestige, it’s glory days. He compiled a 194-48-5 record in 21 seasons that included 13 Big Ten titles and despite not winning a national championship, finished in the top 10 16 times. It wasn’t under Lloyd Carr that Michigan captured the national title in 1997.
But like all good things, Michigan has struggled in recent years. Under Carr, the Wolverines went 122-40 with five Big Ten titles and that national title in ’97. Carr was 19-8 against top 10 ranked opponents and his teams were ranked in the top 25 for all but nine games during his tenure. Yet the administration grew restless that Michigan wasn’t winning national titles or beating Ohio State, so they hired Rich Rodriguez.
RichRod overhauled the system from the long-held pro-style to the shotgun spread, brought in his kind of players, paid little attention to defense and despite efforts to practice all the time, went 15-22 in three seasons. His .405 win percentage in the lowest in Michigan football history.
Is it all Rodriguez’ fault? Well, perhaps. You can’t go 0-6 against Michigan State and Ohio State and expect to keep your job.
But the times are a changing. Even Carr fell victim to the mid-major upset, as Appalachian State beat No. 5 Michigan in September of 2008. TCU, Boise State and Utah have all beaten teams that were “powers.” It happens.
Now Michigan searches for a new coach and you know they want Jim Harbaugh, a former Michigan quarterback, who’s done great things at Stanford.
As mentioned before, this all looks a little familiar. Reminds me a little of Indiana basketball and Steve Alford.
Indiana never formally offered Alford the job during two different coaching searches post-Bob Knight. At one time, it appeared Alford wanted it, but Alford learned what Harbaugh probably already knows: you can never live up to the expectations. Hometown boy comes home to return a once proud school to glory is the stuff of movies, not reality.
The reality is that the expectations in every fan’s mind can never be realized, not in the current era. Too much media coverage, not enough time. Twenty years ago, athletes didn’t want to leave Michigan and Indiana. They stayed three and four years and cared more about their school and the program than the weather.
It’s just not the same.
It took Indiana a decade, Mike Davis and Kelvin Sampson to realize that. It’s taken Tom Crean nearly three years to get the basketball program to a level that it’s at the very least competitive in every game again.
Coaches have changed too. Knight and Schembelcher are a rare breed in today’s sports. Most young athletes just won’t stay at a program and take the criticism and be pushed like that. That’s why coaches like Jim Harbaugh, Pete Carroll and Urban Meyer are so popular with players – they relate to them and are friendly with them, to the point they believe the coach likes them as a son.
When Rick Pitino took over the Boston Celtics in 1997, he famously said, “Larry Bird ain’t walkin’ through that door. Kevin McHale and Robert Parish aren’t walking through that door.” It was an attempt to lower the expectations, though the local media and fans killed him for it.
In essence, all Pitino tried to do was make people realize this wasn’t the 1960s or the 1980s and the NBA was a different league by the late 1990s. It was going to be harder to build a dynasty from the bottom.
The same has happened to college sports. 
A lot of diversity, a lot of parity, a lot of hard-working talented kids at less prestigious schools causing upsets and firings, less committed studs at the prestigious schools who only stay for a few years means that it’s harder and harder for a program to become what Florida State, Penn State, Michigan, Miami and others used to be for so long. 
Michigan may play in the biggest stadium in the country and be the all-time winningest college football program, but honestly, if you were a high school sophomore, junior or senior, would they even be in your top five?
That’s what Michigan should realize: we will “Hail to the Victors” sometimes, but it’s not going to happen every two or three seasons.
Face it, Bo Schembechler ain’t walking through that door.
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The Tao of Quarterbacks

One minute, you are the star, the savior and everybody’s hero.
Sometimes, literally the next minute you’re a buffoon, a joke, a quitter, a loser and no one wants to be in the same room as you.
Such is the life of an NFL quarterback.
Take Vince Young, for example. Once upon a time, he led the Texas Longhorns to the BCS National Title over highly touted USC. After being drafted by Tennessee, the Titans enjoyed some initial success with Young. Then came the well-documented meltdown where Young reportedly was in a deep depression and left the team for a short time.
Returning to the starting lineup in Week 8 last season, Young led the Titans on an incredible 8-2 run to finish 8-8 after a 0-6 start. He hadn’t started a game in a year and a half, yet his intangibles and gutty performances brought him back from the depths of despair, both of the NFL and real-life variety.
This summer, he had a cover and full-spread in ESPN The Magazine, talking about his rebirth. It seemed genuine.
Then it all came crashing down. Following yesterday’s 19-16 loss to the Washington Redskins, Titans coach Jeff Fisher informed the media Young had lost his starting job. The comments followed a game in which Young was booed, injured his thumb and then ended with him throwing his shoulder pads into the stands, storming without talking to the media and reportedly verbally quitting on his coach following the game.
When the team gathered in the locker room following the loss, Young began muttering and cursing under his breath as Fisher addressed the team, the Tennessean reported Sunday night.
After Fisher asked Young to be quiet, the paper said, the quarterback finished dressing and prepared to leave the room. Fisher told Young to stop and not to “run out on your teammates,” sources told The Tennessean. Young told Fisher, “I’m not running out on my teammates, I’m running out on you,” the paper said.
Well, this just got awkward.
Look, when you’re reborn and claim your older, better prepared and more mature than you were before, wouldn’t you think the first time you face real adversity you would, I don’t know, maybe not mutter, curse and bad-mouth your coach during his post-game chat? How about not walking out on your team? Why fuel the fire by leaving this all up in the air, to the point we’re wondering if he’s going AWOL again?
Peter King commented today that it’s known that Young is a 9-to-5 quarterback who doesn’t work his craft or show the same commitment and dedication as his teammates.
What is it about quarterbacks, or maybe Young in general, that make them seem so needy? It seems Young and Fisher have had a soap opera quality to their relationship for the last few years.
Is it the pressure? The situations? The media induced pressure and situations? Sometimes, it feels like these guys need CAT scans.
But even then, we might not figure them out.
Take Brett Favre for instance. Once upon a time, Favre was the wildly popular quarterback of the Green Bay Packers. The Ironman of the NFL. The old gunslinger (and that wasn’t said with a derogatory tone).
Then he went all “Hell hath no fury like a QB scorned” on Green Bay and played for the New York Jets, then the last two seasons with the Minnesota Vikings. People clearly grew tired of the drama from a 40-year-old grown man with gray hair. His yearly retirement sagas have left us bitter at Brett and now his accomplishments are an after-thought.
At least that’s what I was thinking watching his press conference following yesterday’s 31-3 loss to the Packers.
Here was a man who’s started more games than anyone in NFL history at the most crucial position.
Here was a man who’s thrown for more yards and touchdowns than any player before him.
And here was a man who appeared to be bitter himself, tired and mostly stunned it didn’t work out.
For all intent and purposes, the Vikings are done and so is Favre. And he seemed genuinely shocked by this. Even when he said he knew when he came back this season there was a much better chance the Vikings didn’t make the Super Bowl or even the NFC Championship, as they had last season, the way the words rolled off the tongue and the way you read his body language and his eyes, you couldn’t tell if he really believed it.
Now Favre is caught in a scandal that’s died down (the phone pics) only because the woman in question wouldn’t work with the NFL on the investigation. And he’s remembered more the past few seasons as the old gunslinger (in a negative way) – too many times throwing away winnable games or close ones because he tried to thread the needle or missed his target or misread the coverage.
Is it ego? What makes a man believe that the Football Gods are always going to smile down on him? Because they always did before? Favre comes off as someone who thought they loved and enjoyed their life and the game, but hit 35 and suddenly realized they hadn’t appreciated it and it was slipping away.
The problem with sports and especially the NFL for these guys is that it isn’t real life. You have a window, a shelf life and that’s it. If you screw up a relationship with a family member or friends, there’s always time until the very end of your life or theirs to reconcile those emotions. With sports, it’s just not that way. In a flash, it’s over.
That’s not to make sports or the NFL bigger than they are – it’s not our problem stars can’t realize how great they have it, but it can be marginalized in the “vast scheme of things” category.
One day, Favre will be revered for his time in the NFL. His game will go up in the ring of honor at Lambeau and he’ll be in the Hall of Fame. Right now, however, he just looks like an old dude who can’t give it up and who clearly wants the Sunday lights without needing to work out with his teammates in the spring and summer.
I couldn’t help but think, watching him yesterday, he got what he deserved this season. And yet I still felt bad for him.
Almost the complete opposite reaction occurred watching Peyton Manning’s post-game presser. Strained look, veins bulging out of his forehead, wiping his brow – Manning looked beyond frustrated.
His Indianapolis Colts had thought they buried the New England Patriots. In some ways, they had. The Colts were 5-1 in their last six games against Belichick and Brady’s team, including 2-0 in Foxboro.
Yet there was Manning, on a cold November Sunday in New England, throwing three interceptions and failing to beat the Patriots on the road. You could hear the excuses: too many injuries for the Colts, a bad defense, terrible officiating. But for once, Peyton didn’t buy it.
And he shouldn’t.
These weren’t the diabolical, mastermind Patriots just eviscerating the Colts. It was a similar team – banged out, young or old receivers, rookie tight ends, a wishy-wash defense that comes and goes.
After the game, Manning admitted his last interception, the one that sealed it for New England as the Colts were driving into the Red Zone and could have at least kicked the game-tying field goal, was his fault. He said he was mad at himself.
Good.
Too many times in the past, it’s appeared to be everyone else’s fault – either the officials, the weather, the idiot kicker or the offensive line’s protection.
Did the Colts beat the Patriots in historic fashion to reach and eventually win their first Super Bowl four years ago? Absolutely. But history is a funny thing and despite that one great moment, for the most part, Manning still has trouble with Belichick.
As someone who isn’t a Colts fan, or a particular fan of Manning’s, for the first time, I felt bad for him. As he stood there and had to hear more questions about Tom Brady, about their legacies, about who was better…it just looked like the guy could use a break.
After all, Manning had thrown for nearly 400 yards, brought his team back from a huge deficit and just came up short because he missed his target (much like Favre).
But at the end of the day, the Patriots won. Brady only threw for 186 yards and it looked like the Patriots were a more complete team – in some ways, the same old story. And that’s what we all remember – who won, right? You play to win the game, in the illustrious words of Herm Edwards.
Well, some guys do anyway. I can’t figure these quarterbacks out.
Problem is, I’m not sure they can figure themselves out, either.
One minute you’re a king, the next you’re a court jester.
(Sigh.)
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Sudden Impact

The NFL could soon start suspending players for dangerous helmet-to-helmet hits, vice president of football operations Ray Anderson told The Associated Press on Monday.
After a Sunday of violent hits and concussion inducing collisions, Anderson said the league might need to do more than fining players to prevent such hits.
“There’s strong testimonial for looking readily at evaluating discipline, especially in the areas of egregious and elevated dangerous hits,” he said in a phone interview. “Going forward there are certain hits that occurred that will be more susceptible to suspension. There are some that could bring suspensions for what are flagrant and egregious situations.”
Anderson said the NFL could make changes in its approach immediately, with Commissioner Roger Goodell having the final say. League officials will consult with the union, but he didn’t expect any opposition.
Philadelphia Eagles’ wide receiver DeSean Jackson and Dunta Robinson of the Atlanta Falcons’ were knocked out on the same play after a helmet-to-helmet collision, while Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker James Harrison sidelined two Cleveland Browns players with head injuries after jarring hits.
“The fundamentally old way of wrapping up and tackling seems to have faded away,” Anderson said. “A lot of the increase is from hits to blow guys up. That has become a more popular way of doing it. Yes, we are concerned they are getting away from the fundamentals of tackling, and maybe it has been coached that way. We’re going to have to look into talking to our coaches.”
Retired safety Rodney Harrison, now an analyst for NBC, was fined more than $200,000 during his career and was suspended for one game in 2002 for a helmet-to-helmet hit.
“You didn’t get my attention when you fined me 5 grand, 10 grand, 15 grand,” he said during the “Sunday Night Football” broadcast. “You got my attention when I got suspended and I had to get away from my teammates and I disappointed my teammates from not being there. But you have to suspend these guys. These guys are making millions of dollars.”
If no one else will say it, Hall of Fame wide receiver Cris Carter will: how do you want the players to hit, then? In the knees? In the chest? They already are.
If you watch most of – repeat, most of – the hits that have caused a stir or drawn a fine over the last decade, most players lowered their shoulders and hit for the chest, in order to separate the man from the ball – as they had been taught. Yes, some players lead with their helmet – and those players are fined and suspended, rightfully.
But a player hitting the same way as they always have doesn’t beg legislation from the league. Something wrong happened that rarely does – a bad angle, too much or too little speed by one of the players involved. Carter said on ESPN’s Mike & Mike In The Morning that perhaps Jackson’s concussion was caused by him going too fast across the middle against a zone defense.
So should we have a no speeding zone in the middle of the field?
I, for one, never got riled up during the big push to protect quarterbacks in recent years. Stationary players standing upright and unprepared while someone tees off on them at full speed is just dumb. But moving players are going to collide.
Here’s the dirty little secret over the not-so-new issue regarding hard hits and concussions in football: we really don’t care, and kind of like it, as long as it’s not us or one of our favorite players.
There’s really no denying it. It’s one of the joys of football – hard hits.
Sound crass? C’mon, get off your high horse.
Tell me, how many of you haven’t shrieked in delight or let out an “OOOOHHHHHH” watching a replay of some guy getting de-cleated? There’s a segment on ESPN’s “Monday Night Football” pregame show called “Jacked Up!” where the studio crew watch some plays, laugh and shout, “You got jacked up!”
And you’re telling me we don’t celebrate the big hit?
There was an NFL video game for year’s called “Blitz.” The very premise of the game was hits. The sounds from the game were always bone-crushing noises and grunts on every play. Late hits and pass interference were allowed. Players often performed wrestling moves during the tackles. Literally. Like, body slams, leg drops, elbow drops, flying kicks to the face and DDTs. “Blitz” was basically made as a cross between Mortal Kombat, the NFL and NBA Jam’s video game series.
It was also one of the most popular and successful sports video game chains.
What relevance does this have to the discussion? Well, for decades we’ve celebrated football’s violence and gladiator style combat, while turning around and displaying shock and sadness when something bad inevitably happens.
They same guys jovially conversing about who got “Jacked up!” worse suddenly get somber and stoic when the topic turns to those same violent hits ending careers or the players suffering concussions. There is concern in their voices and it’s often addressed in hushed tones.
Many former players, like Carter, say it’s just a part of the game and a football reality. Carter’s suggestion: widen the field. Give the bigger, stronger, faster athletes of the modern area more freedom to move and create space.
You know what the next discussion would be, right? How much scoring is up, how it is too hard to tackle anyone and how football has lost some of its edge.
Watching replays at halftime of Indianapolis Colts – Washington Redskins game on “Sunday Night Football,” you could have heard me laughing three houses down as the kicker for the Seattle Seahawks got whacked like he’d wiped out on a wake board during Devin Hester’s return for a touchdown.
My son was watching the highlights with me. He just completed his first year of tackle football – and he played quite well, earning a selection to the All-Star team. He laughed at the silly kicker flying backward, too.
Just about an hour later, after my son had long been in bed, I wasn’t laughing anymore.
The Colts Joseph Addai had just taken a nasty hit (about the 10th NFL player of the day to take one). Addai’s was one of those where the player falls straight to the ground without moving on the way down, resembling the Apollo Creed death scene in “Rocky IV.”
He didn’t move for what felt like an eternity. When he finally did and the training staff had Addai back on his feet, he had that look of a stumbling drunk, eyes dazed and lids slowly moving up and down. Redskins linebacker London Fletcher, who had delivered the hit, tried to check on Addai the entire time he was being helped off the field.
NBC cameras showed Fletcher’s face perfectly clear: scared and regretful. You could tell he felt terrible.
So did I.
Down the hall slept an eight-year-old boy with some bruises on his arms and legs from two months of football, who hit hard and always got up. He still has six games left for All-Stars. Terrified, I thought about what if my son was the one on the receiving end. What if he was the one “jacked up”? I certainly wouldn’t be laughing.
I want him to play football as long as he wants to.
But, I’m too afraid we’re going to have to watch someone die on the field. Too afraid my son would see it and it would somehow affect the way he plays or approaches the game. Too afraid, of something I can’t even write.
You always hear there’s no room for fear in the game of football. And there isn’t.
But the room left absent by fear shouldn’t be filled with the darkness of disabilities, concussions and life-altering hits.
We can find some kind of room in the middle, can’t we?
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Wake Up, America

As Americans, we’re sleeping through the biggest war in United States history.

Except it is not being fought on foreign soil, in Afghanistan, Iraq, Europe or Vietnam.

It’s closer.

Except it does not involve soldiers, guns, nuclear weapons, planes, tanks or warships. In fact, there’s nothing physical about the greatest war in United States history.

It’s a war of philosophies, of minds and of sheer will.

And we are asleep. We’re asleep in our foreclosed homes and reduced salary positions as our very infrastructure crumbles around us. If we’re not careful, we will wake up one day to find that the United States are gone, living on in name only.

Remember that we must learn from the lessons of history or be doomed to repeat them?

We could be already.

Many speculate the Roman Empire fell, over the period of 300-plus years, due to overexpansion and inflation.

Due to the growing size of the empire, a massive budget was required to maintain many key components essential to its survival. This included roads (required for communication, transportation, and the moving of armies) and aqueducts ( as many of Rome’s cities relied on the water that it provided).

At the time the empire was fighting enemies on all sides due to its expansion into its territories, it was also contributing huge sums of silver and gold to keep up its armies. To try to combat both problems, the empire was forced to raise taxes frequently, causing inflation to skyrocket. This in turn caused the major economic stress that some scholars attribute as one of the causes for Rome’s decline.

Um, anything seem vaguely familiar here?

Projecting ourselves as the world’s watchdog and beacon of light has left us with enemies on all sides. This is not a product of President Bush alone, or President Clinton before him, whose policies placed a great deal of venom into the minds of the Middle East.

When you look out for everyone else, often you lose sight of your own problems and issues. By growing our national debt so much in the last 10 years that it equals what it took 250 years to build up, we have become that guy – you know, the one who goes ahead and buys stuff they can’t afford, puts it on the charge card and figures they will deal with it later?

Well, it’s later.

We’ve ignored our infrastructure – our educations and our economy, namely. The BP oil spill happened because we quit paying attention. Katrina happened because we ignored the fortification of New Orleans to natural disasters. Naturally, the first reaction is to blame what was not done to fix it – but that is America’s biggest problem, we want things fixed, not solved. There’s a big difference between the two.

Early on, and part of the philosophy that this country was found upon, American political leaders and average citizens logically thought through issues that faced us. We identified the problem, noted multiple options for solution, implemented, then tweaked those solutions as necessary.

Was it perfect? No, as anything rarely is perfect. But it was an enlighted, educated and rational method of republican (small r) values. We’re not a democracy – we’re a republic, or have we forgotten the pledge of allegiance?

Perhaps that is the biggest problem facing the United States – we’re forgotten our pledge, most likely because we can’t repeat it out loud anymore. We’ve become so concerned with being politically correct, we’ve become apathetic to everything.

It’s not about health insurance and gay marriage or equal rights, it’s about the entitlement that people feel. It’s about what’s mine, not what’s ours.

We always shared very little in common with each other, but now, we don’t even share the same concept of liberty, freedom and what American Revolution stood for.

We’re at a tipping point. It’s the point in the roller coaster ride where you’re just about to drop. And the crazy carnie with the drop lever is our current President.

While it’s tactically and fatefully wrong to blame one person – you just can’t – it’s hard to notice there’s a drastic difference in the philosophy of President Obama and pretty much everyone who took the oath of office before him.

Obama promised change, and for certain, he is making good on that promise. It took a while, but his landmark change, the healthcare reform, must be looked at through a different scope. It goes beyond just revamping the healthcare industry in the United States and directly to core values of the Constitution and Bill of Rights, to the depths of the principles and foundation of this country.

President Obama is a huge practitioner of the Alinsky Method. He spent years teaching workshops on it.

Basically, the Alinksy Method is concerned with how to create mass organizations to seize power and give it to the people. It’s core idea is to realize the democratic dream of equality, justice, peace through revolution.

Remember Michelle Obama’s speech at the Democratic National Convention in 2008?

She said, ‘Barack stood up that day,’ (talking about a visit to Chicago neighborhoods), ‘and spoke words that have stayed with me ever since. He talked about ‘The world as it is’ and ‘The world as it should be…’ and, ‘All of us driven by a simple belief that the world as it is just won’t do – that we have an obligation to, fight for the world as it should be.”

They are powerful, moving and motivating words. Remember carefully that we are a nation of problems and we want those problems fixed. What we need is problems solved.

The larger question from Michelle Obama’s quote is simple: who and whose values determine the world as it should be?

The Alinsky Method, a form of Neo-Marxism, suggests that a “Marxist begins with his prime truth that all evils are caused by the exploitation of the proletariat by the capitalists. From this he logically proceeds to the revolution to end capitalism, then into the third stage of reorganization into a new social order of the dictatorship of the proletariat, and finally the last stage – the political paradise of communism.” (1)

President Obama is currently doing this, first with healthcare reform – it’s a guise to end capitalism by taking healthcare into the hands of the government. But it doesn’t stop there.

Obama constantly blames the current Washington landscape for lack of change. He blamed the system for not reacting quickly enough to the BP oil spill. How is this crisis any different than Hurrican Katrina, in terms of how quickly it was dealt with?

It’s easier for most citizens to forgive President Obama because he’s so likable. He says all the right things, wears all the right clothes. He smiles and is engaging. He fills out NCAA tournament brackets, knows his sports and pop culture and even petitions on where he would like to see LeBron James play next season. He’s adept at dealing with the media and crisis and has a strong vocabulary.

In other words, he’s the opposite of President Bush, who lacked the verbal skills and was not as strong in crisis. Heck, when Bush owned the Texas Rangers, he even traded Sammy Sosa, losing major sports points there.

None of that matters or makes one a better or worse leader of a nation, though.

What matters is how well that leader upholds our values and the Constitution of the United States. That’s what they were elected to do. Every President was brought in to monitor and mitigate issues, to use those core documents as a way to solve problems.

And so what’s frightening is this:

“The means-and-ends moralists, constantly obsessed with the ethics of the means used by the Have-Nots against the Haves, should search themselves as to their real political position. In fact, they are passive — but real — allies of the Haves….The most unethical of all means is the non-use of any means…The standards of judgment must be rooted in the whys and wherefores of life as it is lived, the world as it is, not our wished-for fantasy of the world as it should be.” (1)

That statement is found on pages 25 and 26 of Sal Alinsky’s book. Notice anything, say, about the world as it is or the world as it should be?

Rationing from some to give to all teaches nothing. The only thing gained from that approach is a lazy, apathetic society that expects things to be handed and given to them. Once upon a time, we had to fight to gain our freedom. Now, we take that freedom so literal that we’re blindly giving it up.

President Obama has us right he wants us. We’re awake, but we’re oblivious to the infiltration. He wants to makes us feel as if we know him and we can trust him. In turn, that builds up his innate ability to communicate the unreasonable into the believable. The slogan “Change We Can Believe In” takes on new meaning. It’s not the change part – it’s the belief part.

He wants us to believe. In other words, put faith in him.

That is more than a slightly dangerous proposition, as true faith is and has always been reserved for religion. The simple fact is, President Obama is becoming a kind of cult, a religion if you will.

That was never the intent of the President of the United States, the office or the one holding it.

During moments like this, and there have been several in the past 20 months, I’m reminded of this:

“Whether by innate character or the oath you took to defend the Constitution or the weight of history that falls upon you, I believe you to be an honorable man, sir.” – Ben Gates to The President in “National Treasure 2: Book of Secrets.”

That’s not even the best quote of that scene really. The follow-up is even better:

The President: “Gates, people don’t believe that stuff anymore.”
Gates: “They want to believe it, sir.”

And we do want to believe it, as in oaths and innate character. Not in a person, but in ideals and principles that ground us and unite us.

Alinsky’s tactics were based, not on Stalin’s principles, but on the Neo-Marxist strategies of Antonio Gramsci, an Italian Communist. Relying on gradualism, infiltration and the dialectic process rather than a bloody revolution, Gramsci’s transformational Marxism was so subtle that few even noticed the deliberate changes.

And that’s the fear.

Or it should be.

We’re asleep – and it’s time to wake up.

  ** Citations – (1) Pg. 10, Sal Alinsky, “Rules for Radicals.” 1971.

(Note: This was originally written June 4, 2010.)
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Favre Pic-d Off

Brett Favre seems to have been intercepted again.
This time it was a different kind of pick though, one that will and should cost him his already tarnished image. Deadspin.com broke another part of a story today about an alleged set of incidents where Favre sent text messages of his junk to former Jets sideline reporter Jenn Sterger.
According to Deadspin and Sterger’s comments to the Web site, Favre began to call her early on during his 2008 season with the Jets and leaving strange, friendly messages. Apparently Sterger didn’t want to act on it because Favre is Favre, he was married and Sterger worked for the Jets, so she was afraid she’d lose her job.
Then things got a little weird. And by a little weird, I mean Woogie’s foot fetish from “Something About Mary” weird. In an ironic twist, Favre was in that movie.
Sterger started receiving picture texts, of um, certain areas Brett shouldn’t really be exposing. Apparently, he knew all about “Pants on the Ground” before he started doing that ridiculous locker room act with the Vikings last year.
Again, according to Deadspin’s report, the pictures kept coming, one of Brett taking care of some personal business, another of him holding his junk in one hand, his wristwatch he wore during his first retirement in the other.
Now, the problem is no one can actually confirm if it’s Brett. The Jets won’t talk and apparently Brett got Sterger’s number for an intermediary. And Sterger won’t comment on it, the voicemails and pictures Deadspin has were acquired through a third party. Basically, the story is breaking, but not to the national media like ESPN. It’s possible it could be someone trying very hard to appear like Brett Favre – which, as Deadspin points out, would require voice lessons, a Mississippi cell phone number and implicate people with the Jets for no other reason than to mess with a sideline reporter who worked Jets games but wasn’t employed by the Jets?
I wanted to cover all that (to give proper credit and cover my rear) before I got to this: If it’s indeed Brett, prepare for a scandal of epic proportions. Tiger Woods scandal got so big, involved so many women and so much weird information about his preferences and quirks we became numb to it.
Oh, Tiger’s number might be triple digits? Huh, interesting. Can you pass the sugar?
But Mr. Wrangler? He’s comfortable in Wranglers and apparently comfortable sending naked pictures of himself to a 25-year-old who’s just a few years older than his oldest daughter. His wife had breast cancer a few years back. And even weirder? Jenn Sterger looks a lot like a younger Deanna Favre.
This could ruin Favre’s season. It could ruin Randy Moss’ return to the Vikings. It could turn the whole Brett Favre saga into something more than just his indecisiveness. And certainly, that’s a story in and of itself.
It could also ruin his family, his children’s lives and his marriage.
Hey Brett, Bumblebee Tuna.
Is it our business? Is it our job to care that a nearly 40-year-old man sent pictures of his twig and berries to a young sideline reporter two years ago? I really don’t know. But you put a story like that out there, for a nation of sports fans and consumers, we’re going to laugh for a few minutes (c’mon, it’s just funny Favre would even do it), before we turn our internal thoughts to how weird it is. And stupid.
It’s not necessarily to debate if you can get away with it, but why you’d even contemplate it?
Jason Whitlock said on Twitter, “Think about it: do we really wanna live n a society in which a middle-aged man can’t showcase his junk n pursuit of a younger woman?”
Perhaps Whitlock was being sarcastic, which I would imagine. But in the larger scheme of things, what’s going on here? Why is this even a discussion. Yes, it’s inappropriate. Don’t give me this nonsense about the old days and how many athletes cheated on their spouses or got drunk and made bad decisions. It’s not 1960. You can’t tip a bellman $20 to keep it quiet. Everyone’s got a cellphone. Messages are saved, sent and posted.
A lot of my friends could have cared less about Tiger Woods extramarital affairs. It was a joke. Woods gave new meaning to the word “foursome.” We’re just numb to it because we hear it all the time, right? It’s not so much about morals and values as it is common decency and common sense. Well, it may be about those things to me, but I’m not getting on a soapbox and proclaiming they behave.
Just do us a favor: just stop getting caught so we, in turn, can stop hearing about it and having to explain to children younger than 12 why everyone’s now weirded out by these guys.
My son, who’s 8-years-old, asked me if I liked Tiger Woods during Ryder Cup highlights last week.
“He’s a talented golfer,” I said.
“Do you still like playing his video games, Daddy?” he replied.
“Um…haven’t bought one in a while, bud,” I answered.
“Why not?” he continued.
“Just haven’t…hey, let’s hustle up, we gotta get to school,” I said, doing my best to change the subject.
If you don’t have kids, you might not get it. It’s just that it becomes our business when the media break the story and then cover it like it’s the only thing to talk about for three weeks. Word gets around and suddenly your kid’s asking why you don’t play Tiger Woods Golf anymore.
And it’s not just the seedy sexual stuff. We live in a world where Daunte Stallworth can run over and kill another human being and spend less than a month in prison. And we’re all OK with it. Now I’ve got to explain to the boy why the TV announcers are talking about how this wide receiver for the Ravens ran over a guy, killed him and is still playing football.
There’s no right and wrong, morally or just in general, anymore. It’s all just various shades of gray.
We shrug this stuff off, but then get mad, bitter and angry when it seeps into youth athletics or just high school. Why cry foul at coaches who yell at our kids and don’t coddle them on the playing field or in practice, but it doesn’t bother us when Latrell Sprewell chokes his coach and simply gets traded to another team?
Go look up how many NFL players have DUIs or DWIs in the past 12 months. Then go tell your kids or if you’re a coach, tell your players, “don’t drink and drive.”
Yeah, but they do it – and nothing bad happened.
We tell our kids to be honest, to do the right thing and then laugh when Derek Jeter pretends to get hit by a pitch so he can get on base. That’s just good baseball, right?
Is there a difference, or is it all just various shades of gray?
Let’s find out and see what happens with Favre. And let’s watch how America reacts.
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