Friday, August 31, 2007

Crazy post...but you know what??.....

NOTE: I AM NOT A DEMOCRAT/LIBERAL. I am a moderate who believes that both parties have a lot good and a lot more bad in what they think. This post today brought some interesting thoughts up, so I snatched it from Noted Leftist site Daily Kos and posted it here. All credit to the original poster, username Kos. All views in the following post reflect the original poster and may not be the views of the writers of this blog.


A couple of years ago I stirred up the wingnutosphere into a frothy rage arguing that while Republicans like to accuse Democrats of being "terrorist sympathizers", Islamic fundamentalism was more in tune with conservatism than progressive values.

Once upon a time, it was easy for the American Right to smear its opponents on the left -- they could simply equate them with the nation's communist enemies. It didn't matter that the American "left" (Democrats) had more in common with the Right than international communism, the smear was useful.
Now, however, our international enemy -- Islamic radicalism -- is actually the polar opposite of what liberals stand for -- their actions on women rights are deplorable, they insist on theocracy, they loooveee torture and the death penalty, they demand to control the culture (TV, movies, music), they rail against rampant sexuality, they seek to spread their ideology via force, and they have a well-defined black-and-white sense of truth.

Remind you of a certain American party?

That's why hysterical assertions by the wingers that liberals hate America and want the terrorists to win are so absurd. As absurd as it would've been to claim that Reagan wanted the Communists to win the Cold War. The Taliban/Al Qaida/Hezbollah/Jihadists of the world are the exact embodiment of evil in the liberal mind. They are everything we are against, and against everything we are for.

In fact, they are exactly what we see in the Republican Party as the GOP continues to consolidate power -- creeping theocracy, moralizing, us versus them, embrace of torture, the need to constantly declare jihad on someone, hysterics over football-game nipples, control over "decency" on the airwaves, lyrics censorship, hostility to women freedoms, curtaling of civil liberties, and so on.

So it's pretty obvious -- we don't love terrorists. We don't want them to win. For them to win would be to realize our greatest fears. The muslim terrorist is truly the anti-liberal. Like matter and anti-matter.

Republicans, on the other hand, hate the terrorists because they're Muslim. But aside from that, they've got far more in common than they'll ever admit to themselves.

I then took this thought further, comparing how conservatives are like our Islamic enemies here and here. A few samples:

Tolerance

Al Qaida/Taliban: Death to the infidels
American Taliban: Kill their leaders and convert them to Christianity
Liberals: Live and let live

Marriage

Al Qaida/Taliban: Marriage is only between a man and a woman
American Taliban: Marriage is only between a man and a woman
Liberals: Marriage is between any two people who love each other

God

Al Qaida/Taliban: God is on our side and will help us kill our enemies
American Taliban: God is on our side and will help us kill our enemies
Liberals: God may or may not exist and will not help us kill anyone

You get the point.

Now there was a ton of whining about these posts from the usual suspects. But ultimately, this is the bottom line reason we don't like Islamic Fundamentalist AND the GOP -- their moral absolutism, their militarism, and their oppressive efforts to impose their rigid morality on the rest of us.

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Top Ten players of the 90's

In no particular order:

1) Michael Jordan- The greatest player of all time. He would have been number 1 in any era. Just in case you forgot though, 6 nba rings, 6 nba finals mvps, 10 scoring titles, Defensive player of the year, and, once again the template by which any superstar that emerges in the NBA will be judged.

2) Reggie Miller- Surprised? Don't be. The number 3 most clutch player in NBA history (Michael and Jerry West) never had a truly great team around him, but almost always found a way if the score was close to pull it out, normally with a long distance bomb to break the opposing crowd's hearts. New York fans still get upset when you bring his name up.

3) Hakeem Olajuwon- David Robinson still has nightmares about the 95 Western Conference finals. The best big man of the 90's. Marv Albert:" Olajuwon just BAMBOOZLED David Robinson!"

4) Shawn Kemp- No explanation needed. THE best dunker over 6'8 in NBA history, he put a super wack Sonics team on his back and took them to the finals against Mike. Damn donuts....

5) Scottie Pippen- Not only because he was a catalyst for all the rings in Chicago, but because he will go down as one of the top 5 defensive players of all time and the best defender EVER at Small Forward.

6) Penny Hardaway- All NBA first team for 3 seasons during the 90's, he was everything you see now in the play of Tracy McGrady. A do it all big point guard with the handle and court vision of someone a foot shorter. Cool shoes, too.

7) Allen Iverson- Changed the way the game is played at the point guard position. Took the games of Isiah Thomas and Tiny Archibald and added street flavor as well as super speed to it. One of the fastest players with the ball to ever play. The most violent crossover dribble in NBA history.

8) Karl Malone- No, the mailman doesn't deliver on Sunday, but he is still the consensus top 3 power forward of all time, only behind Tim Duncan.

9) Charles Barkley-The shortest man to ever win the Rebounding title, sir charles was a force at both ends of the floor and should have had a ring if it wasn't for the Bulls (come to think of it, 4 other players on this list would have probably gotten rings if it wasn't for the Bulls.) Also the only man to ever lift and body slam Shaquille O'neal in NBA history.

10) Shaquille O'neal- although no rings during this era, he came in and went on a ridiculous statistical run, breaking backboards and forcing the league to change how they officiate the post position.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Ranking the East after the Big Garnett Trade

1. PISTONS

NUCLEUS

Sheed, Rip, Tayshawn, and Chauncey return from their title team 3 years ago

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

Maxiel & Rookie Rodney Stuckey will frontline one of the most improved benches in the league this year – will provide offense AND defense, keep the aged starters minutes low

STRENGTH

This team has experience, talent, depth, and the mental edge needed to be champions

WEAKNESS

Might be the most poorly coached of the NBA’s elite teams – anything less than a finals berth this year should be the end of The Flip Saunders Show in D-Town

2. BULLS

NUCLEUS

Big Ben leads the young and experienced core of Deng-Gordon-Hinrich back for another season

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

Duhon, Noah, Nocioni, Tyrus Thomas, Khryapa, Sefalosha… this team’s greatest strength is its depth. While their starters aren’t quite as good as Detroit’s, their bench is vastly deeper

STRENGTH

Versatile, young team with players that have spent a couple of years together… looks like their patience may pay off this year

WEAKNESS

Lack of a superstar or #1 player makes it tough for them to come from behind in games. If Deng makes that jump for them, and Gordon and Hinrich are willing to give up shots, they are defensively and offensively strong enough to win a title

3. CELTICS

NUCLEUS

KG, Paul Pierce, and Ray Allen… WOW.

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

It’s best to just say “I don’t know,” because the Celtics are about to plug as many holes in their roster as best they can to get this team off and running quickly

STRENGTH

That the other team only has 5 players. Even if they double-team two of the 3 All-Stars, one of them will still be in single coverage and will likely score. Being serious, I can’t imagine a tougher team for the entire league to match up with. Duncan-Parker-Ginobili was bad enough…

WEAKNESS

The lack of $$$ after signing three players who each make close to $20 million will require some ridiculous sacrifices to be made… or will leave this team with a lot of holes to be exploited. Also, with the East being a younger conference, the Celtics need some young guys to spell the veteran All-Stars (as Detroit has pulled off this offseason) so they have gas left for the playoffs.

4. HEAT

NUCLEUS

DWade & Shaq – Along with Parker and Duncan the only two Finals MVPs playing on the same team

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

A group of solid veterans, a group of average young guys, and a number of past-their-prime stars

STRENGTH

Wade is the future. He’s still young, and he can just about do anything on the basketball court. He’s a consummate teammate, and he can singlehandedly make whatever team Miami plays with competitive.

WEAKNESS

Shaq’s getting old, Antoine Walker & Jason Williams are getting Old, and Gary Payton IS old. If these are the players among your top-8 rotation, you need to make some moves… quickly

5. RAPTORS

NUCLEUS

Bosh, Bargnani, Ford/Calderon has potential to be a very team-first nucleus on a team that has a number of gifted role players to utilize

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

Garbajosa, Kapono, and Anthony Parker are the best of the bunch, each having a number of skills to make this a very versatile team

STRENGTH

With a star like Bosh, and guards like Calderon & Ford, this team is able to play a faster pace than most teams are capable of. Also, it has a number of guys who have experience in Euroleagues & overseas play, which will benefit the Raptors in the playoffs

WEAKNESS

Can’t say there’s an overwhelming amount of talent on this team. They play hard, but they still need one or two pieces (likely at shooting guard or small forward) to be top 3 in the league

6. WIZARDS

NUCLEUS

Arenas-Butler-Jamison – the most dynamic OFFENSIVE trio in the NBA today

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

An array of solid-to-average talent; from Etan Thomas to Calvin Booth

STRENGTH

Gilbert Arenas. He’s got that intangible will to be the best (on TOP of the chip on his shoulder that already drives him), and yet he’s also a fun-loving guy, a guy who won’t run teammates away like SOME superstar I won’t name… who wears purple and gold…

WEAKNESS

Depth is almost nonexistent & their big men can’t score. Luckily, continuity gives them a chemistry that will help against some of the less experienced clubs

7. CAVALIERS

NUCLEUS

Lebron James IS the nucleus… sadly for him

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

On any given night, Ilgauskas, Gooden, Hughes, and now Gibson will help him out… but none of them show up every night, which is what he needs

STRENGTH

Lebron James is an incredible teammate, and he can get something out of whoever the Cavs put next to him – just ask Anderson Varejao, who they suddenly think is worth $30 million, although he pretty much lost a finals game for them

WEAKNESS

Sadly, although Lebron still isn’t a prolific scorer or shooter, he’s the best option they have, so his shooting is bringing their offense down. Until his jumper is consistent, or until someone actually plays every night, the Cavs will suffer

8. BOBCATS

NUCLEUS

Okafor-Wallace-Felton-May… they’ve got a few years of experience together, and they look ready to make a playoff run

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

Jason Richardson, Adam Morrison, Walter Hermann… it’s up to this group of guys to determine how far the Bobcats go this year

STRENGTH

They’re young AND they’ve played together for a few years. Fans won’t be patient forever, but the Bobcats look ready to at least take one step forward, after last year’s 33-win season

WEAKNESS

They still don’t have a star player, which Chicago has already shown us can be difficult. And if they really want to make some noise, they need to rent a few veterans who can show the young guys how it’s done

9. NETS

NUCLEUS

Kidd-Jefferson-Carter part III – One hall of fame point guard, a mildly overrated slasher, and a guy who could’ve become the greatest but chose to just be… a finisher

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

Krstic & Sean Williams are the best of the rest… but both are rather inexperienced… makes it tough to get into the playoffs

STRENGTH

Jason Kidd is an instant chemistry maker. Even though this team has 30-win talent, he keeps them in the 40-win group each year

WEAKNESS

The nucleus is getting older, and the surrounding players are getting younger… what direction is this team trying to head in? looks like the Minnesota of the east…

10. MAGIC

NUCLEUS

Howard, Lewis… and that’s all they’ll be able to afford for the next 6 years

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

Jameer Nelson, JJ Reddick, Trevor Ariza, Carlos Arroyo- a few nice wing players, but not enough size or experience

STRENGTH

The sheer physical presence of Dwight Howard is going to open things up for the numerous shooters on the Magic roster

WEAKNESS

Howard’s offensive game has matured slowly so far. If they take any more steps forward with this team, it will have to be after he takes a couple of LEAPS forward offensively

11. HAWKS

NUCLEUS

Joe Johnson, Josh Smith, Al Horford, Acie Law IV. By far the youngest nucleus in the eastern conference, but a talented group

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

Josh Childress, Tyronn Lue, Shelden & Marvin Williams… a bunch of tweeners who were picked higher than they should’ve been

STRENGTH

Their young nucleus gives them some time to find the right veteran combination and also draft a few additional talents to build this team into a dynasty. I don’t think they’ll be in the playoffs this year or next, but they’re moving forward for sure

WEAKNESS

Total lack of experience. Acie & Horford will each go against some of the best players in the league out east – Billups, Bosh, D Howard, DWade, Jason Kidd—so they’ll probably have to take this as a “learning experience”-type season

12. KNICKS

NUCLEUS

Curry-Marbury-Randolph-Crawford – 4 guys whose #1 attribute is scoring! Well designed, Isiah

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

David Lee, Renaldo Balkman, and Nate Robinson might be the three players that hold this team together. Each of them will need to play a significant role for this team to win ANY games

STRENGTH

TALENT. Boy, they’ve got lots of that!

WEAKNESS

COHESION. The Knicks are being assembled in the same way the USA Teams were a few years ago—without thought for chemistry or production, just stats. And on defense, I don’t exactly know what they plan to do…

13. 76ERS

NUCLEUS

Iquodala-Miller-Korver-Carney – Really, their nucleus is a bunch of 2 or 3 players for quality teams, but they are forced to be the #1 options on a lacking Sixers squad

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

A very, very, very young supporting cast—almost as young as the Hawks, but not quite. There is a good amount of potential there, however.

STRENGTH

They have a team full of players who know their role. They can look to Korver for shooting, Iquodala for defense & slashing, and Andre Miller keeps the ball moving.

WEAKNESS

They’re a young, inexperienced team with very little experience playing together. Outside of pure competitive will, they don’t have much going for them.

14. BUCKS

NUCLEUS

Michael Redd, Andrew Bogut, and the oft-injured Charlie Villanueva

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

Mo Williams, Bobby Simmons, Desmond Mason, and *HOPEFULLY* Yi Jianlian (I don’t know where I’d rate them if he came—I don’t know what I think about him!)

STRENGTH

Many of these guys have spent the last two years on this squad, so they’ve got some continuity. However, there aren’t many groups of players more prone to injury than this Bucks squad… I wouldn’t bet on them finishing their season with everyone intact

WEAKNESS

Oh… I guess I put their weakness in the strength box… ah well!

15. PACERS

NUCLEUS

Jermaine O’Neal, Danny Grainger, and Jamal Tinsley…??? I don’t know how they can explain this one…

SURROUNDING PLAYERS

Marquis Daniels, Ike Diogu, Mike Dunleavy, Kareem Rush, Troy Murphy, and an All-Star cast of guys who have not and will likely NEVER fulfill their potential

STRENGTH

Uh… hmmm… they have Darrell Armstrong in their locker room?

WEAKNESS

O’Neal is NOT a #1 player, but they think he is, Grainger is grossly misused, Tinsley is a headcase, O’Brien hasn’t EVER really coached well, the bench is shoddy, the experienced players aren’t talented, the talented players aren’t experienced, and the rest of the eastern conference is just flat-out better… but otherwise, a promising season awaits them!