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WNBA upgrades foul on Caitlin Clark to Flagrant 1 . . . the day after the game

You read that right. Here's what the Chicago Sun-Times story says today:

"Chennedy Carter’s foul on Clark came as both players stood waiting for the ball to be inbounded, and officials did not review it in the moment. Had officials reviewed Carter’s foul in the moment and upgraded it to a Flagrant 1, Clark would have shot two free throws instead of one."

The upgrade still does matter though, because players who accrue enough flagrant 1 fouls can be suspended for a game or two, so that's something. But to not make the call at the moment and to not review one of the most thuggish intentional fouls you'll ever see is still another egregious indictment of the WNBA and the incompetence of the league and, especially, its so-called "officials." And because it was such a physical takedown and because Carter can be seen calling CC "a bitch," it also should have been a technical foul. That aspect wasn't addressed by the WNBA. I guess their officials are deaf as well as blind, and no one there can read lips.

And the fact remains that if you did to a person on the street what Carter did to Clark on the basketball court, you'd be facing an assault charge. And I'm gonna go ahead and say this too, because it's true: What do you think the reaction would have been if a white player had said that and done that to a black player? Exactly . . . there would have been a riot on the floor.

Again, gotta respect the integrity and saavy of CC who keeps taking the cheapest shots the WNBA can muster, aided and abetted by a biased and incompetent set of officials. I'm sure I wouldn't have such grace and composure.

WNBA Cleanup

The ONLY way for the WNBA to stop the anti-Clark behavior (i.e, hard screens, cheap shots and Referee bias) is to start with this Carter thug and impose a significant fine$$.

Most of these players are not making that much money and a fine would perhaps jar their limited brains into behaving like civilized adults playing a ruled game.

Secondly, this problem was hatched from the first Fever game when it became clear that the WNBA referees were locked and loaded with an anti-Clark attitude where they ignore all these instances of hard screens, constant shoves and grabs on Clark...meanwhile aggressively calling nit pick fouls on her. The players aren't dumb enough to not realize the officials seem to be allies in this anti-Clark behavior. In general they are biased against the Fever and double that with Clark.

One game a player stuck her foot out and block a Clark pass and then got ball and ran down for a layup ....and not one Referee made the call of kicking the ball. That just goes down as a turnover!

I don't trust the WNBA Commissioner at this point. She should have been out in front of thise and had direct conversations with the Officials group to monitor the situation. The scheduling of Fever games already is suspicious that those in charge of WNBA condone and at very least turn a blind eye to it.


BTW, it's not just Black players beating on Clark...White players like butt-hurt Stewart coward that flattened Clark with a screen have done thier share.

At the end of this year, Clark needs to demand a trade from this awful team that...otherwise move on to better things than WNBA cesspool.

Opinion: Biden should stop passing the buck on the Afghanistan debacle

It's hard to disagree with Boot on this:

By Max Boot
Columnist
Today at 12:09 p.m. EST


After the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion in April 1961, President John F. Kennedy did not insist that the operation actually went about as well as expected or try to shift the blame to the Cuban exiles. Instead, the White House issued this statement: “President Kennedy has stated from the beginning that as President he bears sole responsibility. ... The President is strongly opposed to anyone within or without the administration attempting to shift the responsibility.”
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Because of JFK’s willingness to take ownership of a debacle, his public standing went up, not down. “The worse I do, the more popular I get,” he marveled.
That is a lesson President Biden should take to heart in how to handle the continuing fallout of the disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan in August, which seared into our collective memory horrifying images of desperate Afghans clinging to the landing gear of U.S. aircraft in a desperate bid to escape Taliban tyranny. Even as more than 20 million Afghans stand on the brink of starvation, he continues to engage in unseemly buck-passing that only hurts his popularity and undermines his credibility.















Biden’s most complete statement on Afghanistan was an Aug. 31 speech in which he accepted “responsibility” for the decision yet insisted, incredibly enough, that the evacuation was an “extraordinary success.” He focused on the 120,000 people evacuated from Kabul, even though, by some estimates, 90 percent of the interpreters and other Afghans holding special immigrant visas were left behind.
Biden blamed Afghan troops for not holding on “as long as anyone expected” after they had been abandoned by their U.S. allies, but he claimed, despite all evidence to the contrary, that the administration was “ready” when Kabul fell. “The bottom line,” he said, “is there is no evacuation from the end of a war that you can run without the kinds of complexities, challenges, and threats we faced.”

Politico aptly headlined its story on the speech “Biden tries to shift blame on Afghanistan.” The president’s unwillingness to grapple with his own failures contributed, I believe, to the precipitous decline in his popularity that began in August and has continued to the present day.







Also continuing to the present day is Biden’s blame-shifting on Afghanistan. Last week, in an interview with NBC News’s Lester Holt, he refused to accept the accounts of U.S. military commanders who said that the administration failed to prepare for the rapid rise of the Taliban and the resulting need to evacuate so many people. “No,” Biden said. “No, that’s not what I was told.” Asked whether he was rejecting the commanders’ testimony, he said, “Yes, I am. I am rejecting them.”
Biden can reject what the officers said, but their accounts — released to my Post colleagues Dan Lamothe and Alex Horton under a Freedom of Information Act request — have the ring of truth, and it is insulting to the military to pretend otherwise. Navy Rear Adm. Peter Vasely, the top U.S. commander on the ground during the August evacuation, told Army investigators that the military would have been “much better prepared to conduct a more orderly” evacuation “if policymakers had paid attention to the indicators of what was happening on the ground.” Marine Brig. Gen. Farrell J. Sullivan, who commanded the Marines at the airport, said, “In my opinion, the NSC [National Security Council] was not seriously planning for an evacuation,” and that until early August it was “like pulling teeth” to get the U.S. Embassy to discuss the subject.
Their accounts comport with the findings of George Packer, whose Atlantic article “The Betrayal” offers the fullest and most depressing chronicle of the shambolic exit from Afghanistan. Refugee advocates begged the administration to begin airlifting vulnerable Afghans to Guam for asylum processing in early 2021, when the United States still controlled air bases all over the country. White House officials responded, according to Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), “We’re on it. Don’t worry. We know what we’re doing.” But they weren’t on it, and they didn’t know what they were doing.


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Packer paints a devastating picture of a White House more concerned with “optics” — it would look bad, officials feared, to begin a large-scale evacuation — than about saving Afghans who had risked their lives to help U.S. forces. “This sluggishness in the face of impending calamity,” Packer writes, “continued the same self-deception, prevarication, and groupthink — the same inability to grasp the hard truths of Afghanistan — that had plagued the entire 20-year war.”
It is easy to blame staffers for this debacle, but the buck stops with the president. While showing empathy for fellow Americans, Biden has consistently displayed indifference to the fate of Afghans. (Some argue that Biden again displayed his indifference when he decided to give the families of 9/11 victims half of the $7 billion in frozen Afghan central bank funds, rather than using the entire amount to relieve that country’s humanitarian disaster.) In early 2020, when Biden was asked whether would bear some responsibility for the loss of rights that Afghan women would suffer after a U.S. pullout, he responded, “Do I bear responsibility? Zero responsibility.”
I suspect Biden’s approval ratings might improve if he would rethink his Trump-like attempt to dodge responsibility for the biggest fiasco on his watch — so far.

I've traveled to two lib cities recently, Atlanta and DC. These nutjobs are still wearing masks in stores...outside...in cars....ALONE!!!!

Someone needs to tell them THAT THEY DON'T WORK!!! ZERO science supports any efficacy for masks against Covid. More science exists they didn't work at all!!! It was all control, political theatre. A real shit show on the American people.

Chun named for NWCA Trailblazer Award







It is great to be an Iowa Wrestling fan.

Go Hawks!

Frontline - NETANYAHU, AMERICA & THE ROAD TO WAR IN GAZA

I highly recommend watching Frontline's comprehensive summary on the historical and ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinians. This insightful documentary delves deep into the complex and often tumultuous history, providing a nuanced understanding of how both sides have arrived at their current circumstances. It’s an essential viewing for anyone looking to gain a well-rounded perspective on the conflict.

https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/documentary/netanyahu-america-the-road-to-war-in-gaza/
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