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Everything posted by chasfh
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Wow, the way Malloy showed up the home plate umpire by lurching toward first on that 3-and-0 that clipped the corner, he's lucky he got the call on that 3-and-1 that clipped the top of the zone.
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Wow, so I had to go at the pitching change to do my dirty sinful business and I come back to having missed a grand slam?! Blurgh!! At least I saw Ibanez single Javy home.
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So you did it on a laptop and not on a phone? I haven't seen it happen on my laptop yet. But yeah it took me a couple times to get the idea.
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Are you on iOS and you pressed Submit and you saw it didn't go through, then you pressed Submit again and saw it didn't go through again, then you pressed Submit a third time and it still didn't go through, so then you just refreshed the page?
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Ibanez with a sharp eye ended up taking third on the double after he saw Varsho bobble the ball in the LF corner. It didn't get us an extra run, though. Varsho coming up second this inning will be motivated to redeem himself.
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Rogers is definitely earning his keep behind the plate, despite his sub-.600 OPS.
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I laughed.
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Oh, Jesus, now Resse Olson is hurt? ****ing A!
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I agree the last three are very valuable. I would simply argue these are not exclusively or even primarily Christian values, but broadly human values. Many religious people and atheists embrace these values, and many other religious people and atheists pay them only lip service or active ignore them. Probably similar percentages of each. The one about nurturing and taking care of your nation: it is good to have some people who are dedicated to that, but I don't believe God requires that of everybody, or even of anybody. I believe it's something you do if it happens to interest you, such as being a nurse practitioner or working in advertising or being a baseball researcher. My religious education left me with the idea that God doesn't care about nations, because they are temporal earthly constructs, not eternal divine constructs, and a data point in support of that is there are no longer any nations that were here when Jesus roamed the Earth that are still here today. Nations are almost the very definition of worldliness, which most Christian sects eschew.
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2024 Trade Deadline Rumors and Discussion
chasfh replied to LongLiveMaroth's topic in Detroit Tigers
Based on nothing more than gut, I have a feeling Hao-Yu will be a starter on playoff teams for us and will be hailed as one of Harris's savviest moves. -
If you seriously can't see how the debate was a bright dividing line for the Biden campaign, then we'll just have to agree to disagree.
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2024 Trade Deadline Rumors and Discussion
chasfh replied to LongLiveMaroth's topic in Detroit Tigers
Yes, of course we're supposed to trust Harris, because what's our alternative? Seems like the only real alternative is to quit following the Tigers. You're talking as though Harris has already failed us on multiple occasions as Avila did. In fact, you are strongly implying that Harris is Avila. If you're not willing to give Harris even one deadline chance, then how can you ever be satisfied with anything? I mean, I get the self-flagellating attraction of fatalism, but doesn't there have to be a limit to it at some point? -
The primary vote happened before things changed, obviously. If the Democrats know what they're doing and have their **** together, they will get the delegates on board for whoever the replacement is.
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2024 Trade Deadline Rumors and Discussion
chasfh replied to LongLiveMaroth's topic in Detroit Tigers
I don't think Harris see a target date of 27-28, either. I think he saw/he sees this team as a possible playoff contender this year if everything breaks the right way and appropriate development occurs, but it's not at the stage of development at which we can start emptying out the top of our system to fill holes. That['s why I don't think we will be buying at all this season, even if we go 11-0 and stand at 58-50 on deadline day. I think we all saw this year that the system had been gutted even more than we thought it was and that it was going to take more time to put right than we'd hoped, but I would imagine that Harris sees 2025 as a step-forward year, one which might lead to a halfway decent free agent this offseason we can bring aboard for more than two years. There are a few available. But I wouldn't be surprised if he doesn't bring one abord, either. But this should be the last offseason for one-year stopgaps, or else something has gone horribly wrong. I would bet that Harris now sees 2026 as the year we can start contending for a title, again, assume we don't see multiple things going upside-down for us during that season. -
2024 Trade Deadline Rumors and Discussion
chasfh replied to LongLiveMaroth's topic in Detroit Tigers
Tigers apparently saw something in Maton they thought they could fix and they did everything they could to try to fix it and once they saw it wasn't going to work the way they wanted to they let him go -
2024 Trade Deadline Rumors and Discussion
chasfh replied to LongLiveMaroth's topic in Detroit Tigers
TBF, some of us knew Willi was potentially pretty good, and even thought we would/should hang onto him. -
2024 Trade Deadline Rumors and Discussion
chasfh replied to LongLiveMaroth's topic in Detroit Tigers
Although Skubal is buying himself a pretty good arb payday for next year. probably close to a record, maybe even something pushing 20 bills. -
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I don't think it's millions of voters' votes. I think it's more like 3,896 delegates' votes. And they are not even votes yet—they are pledges to vote at the convention in August. So, technically speaking, no votes are being taken away if Biden is replaced before the convention. But it is still a **** move to some.
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I know you said you're a big Hawley fan so you like what he says, but I don't know where "love of country" shows up anywhere in Jesus's teaching, outside of you should pay the taxes you owe to Rome, which as any taxpayer knows is nothing like love of country.
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After I posted this, I started thinking about it a little more, and it may have taken an embarrassingly long time to arrive at this, but I think I finally figured out why the evangelicals and other staunch Christians gravitate to Trump: their core identities revolve around being martyrs who are constantly persecuted. Christianity itself has a very basic persecution origin story: God Himself sent his Son to Earth to spread His message of peace and love, and the apostates, aided by the Jews, God’s once-chosen people, persecuted Him literally to Death. The early history of Christianity is littered with persecution stories: how the Romans fed them to the lions; how the Jews and Persians drove the Christians out of Jerusalem in the 7th Century; how the Muslims tried to wipe out the Christians in the Crusade. This history of persecution is crucial to how Christians understand themselves and their place in the world. (Of course, their history doesn’t include how the Christians set up the Inquisitions to murder millions of unbelievers, but that’s neither here nor there for this post.) Even today, Christians love to regale anyone who might listen with tales of how their fellow believers are still being persecuted or even genocided today, in places like communist countries or Africa or Asia or any number of other places where Christians do not predominate. Even in this country, Christians constantly rail against certain parts of the culture, such as the media or Hollywood or academia, that do not elevate them and their beliefs to the privileged status they feel they deserve as being persecution on a cultural level. To maintain the fiction that the entire world is constantly trying to persecute them out of existence is vital to their self-identification. Trump, of course, has his own persecution story: he grew up ostracized by his peers, shunned by the polite society he craved attention and approval from, and worst of all, was given the cold shoulder by the father he adored. He has spent his entire adult life raging against “elites”, and fighting against what he perceives as the persecution of him, and he just. Won’t. Shut. The ****. Up. About it. And the ironic thing about all this, of course, is how both Trump and the Christians have succeeded almost beyond belief: Trump has been widely-considered one of the greater business tycoons of the 20th and 21st centuries and spent that entire period at least flirting with billionairehood; and the Christians have become a supermajority in the most powerful country in this history of the world, with large swaths of their believers controlling the government and constantly angling to use the machinations of what is supposed to be a secular government to legally privilege themselves and codify their beliefs into law. So how can two entities with such a core belief in their own persecution mythology not gravitate toward one another?
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Out of all these, though, Christianity is the most privileged belief system in this country, the one system you’re ill-advised say anything about—whether you’re talking about the tenets of true-believerism or, really, about anything else—unless it’s either with effusive praise, or else you’re ready to withstand the withering snowflakey responses you get.
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Interesting part of Vance’s Wikipedia page is the description of his military service: After graduating from Middletown High School in 2003,[12] Vance enlisted in the US Marine Corps. He was deployed to Iraq as a combat correspondent for six months in late 2005.[13][14] There, he was assigned to the Public Affairs section of the 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing.[15][16] About his service, he commented that it "taught me how to live like an adult" and he was "lucky to escape any real fighting".[17] So, to paraphrase Full Metal Jacket (h/t romad), he wasn’t at the front with the grunts—he was in the rear with the gear. I’ll be interested to see whether he reshapes the narrative to remake himself as a military badass.
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I too think it will help.
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That’s because hitting got out ahead of pitching early, but now pitching is blowing out hitting.