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I’ve been trying to live by this lesson since my mom passed

Many of you know that my mother passed almost two years ago. She was diagnosed with AML in early March of 2023 and was gone by Labor Day. We started planning a trip to Fenway and Boston. She always wanted to go. Unfortunately, she got too sick too fast. Since her passing, I’ve been to Arizona, the College World Series, Ireland, Spring Training and a few other places and events. Even after saying I’d wait until 13, I got my son involved in travel ball. I watched this story tonight by the fire with a nice glass of wine and it reminded me that I have more to do this year. @alaskanseminole thread also reminded me. Despite our political differences, I hope all will hear me out. Take the trip! Book the flight!

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  • Poll
POLL: What Grade Would You Give Iowa's Transfer Portal Work So Far?

What Grade Would You Give Iowa's Transfer Portal Work So Far?

  • A

    Votes: 2 2.9%
  • A-

    Votes: 7 10.1%
  • B+

    Votes: 14 20.3%
  • B

    Votes: 20 29.0%
  • B-

    Votes: 14 20.3%
  • C+

    Votes: 8 11.6%
  • C

    Votes: 2 2.9%
  • C-

    Votes: 2 2.9%
  • D or worse

    Votes: 0 0.0%

The transfer portal is slowing down, at least until April -- what grade would you give the job Iowa has done in the portal so far?

Pickin' on the Big Ten: Postseason Part 1 + Part 2 + Part 3 + Part 4

Bowl season is underway and Pickin' on the Big Ten is back with winners, losers, and observations on the first set of bowls (and Playoff games) involving Big Ten squads.

The picks:
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Trump said to plan blanket pardons for Jan. 6 defendants on Day 1

Utterly Deplorable, but it's what you'd expect from our POS felon president

:
President Donald Trump is poised to pardon all nonviolent Jan. 6 defendants and commute the sentences of most or all of those convicted of the most serious charges, according to people briefed on the plans. The plans could change before the pardons are announced.

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Declining a case-by-case review sought by some top advisers, Trump would grant some form of clemency to virtually everyone prosecuted by the Justice Department, from the plotters imprisoned for seditious conspiracy and felons convicted of assaulting police officers to those who merely trespassed on the restricted grounds on Jan. 6, 2021.

The department would also dismiss about 300 cases that have not yet gone to trial, including people charged with violent assaults, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss pending plans.


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Trump had repeatedly promised the pardons before and after voters returned him to office in November, as early as “the first nine minutes” of taking office, he told Time magazine.
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Overall, more than 1,580 defendants have been charged and more than 1,270 convicted in the Capitol riot investigation, on charges ranging from misdemeanor parading to seditious conspiracy. More than 700 of 1,100 people sentenced so far have received no prison time or have completed their sentence, and would receive limited immediate impact from a Trump pardon. But about 400 others remain incarcerated, serving sentences after admitting they committed the crimes they were charged with or being found guilty by a jury or judge. A small number of others are being held on court orders pending trial or sentencing.
Such a blanket action for Jan. 6 defendants would be an extraordinary statement about one of the most divisive chapters of recent U.S. history. In recent days, Vice President JD Vance, attorney general-nominee Pam Bondi and lawmakers including Sen. Thom Tillis (R-North Carolina), have strongly condemned rioters who attacked police.


Even in late November, Trump told Time magazine he would not use a blanket approach: “I’m going to do case-by-case, and if they were nonviolent, I think they’ve been greatly punished.”
But core parts of his base have made clear they want everyone accused in the riot to be cleared, with Joey Mannarino, a podcast host with a large social media following, calling for the defendants to be honored as well.
“Not only should the J6ers be pardoned in a mass blanket pardon, they should be given Presidential Medals of Freedom for standing up when the country needed fighters the most,” Mannarino wrote on X this month. “Yes, the violent ones too.”

MBB: Who should start?

Had this discussion on HawkCast this morning.

In my opinion, it should've been

Thelwell, Dix, Sandfort, Traore and Freeman from the start of the season. Knew it wouldn't happen, but that's the best starting lineup, imo.

I know there's some dislike for Dembele on this board, but even throwing him in instead of Traore -- who Fran clearly hasn't loved to play much as of late -- would be better for this teams' defense and getting the starts they want, as opposed to being forced to attempt a comeback in the second half. Putting Pryce at the three and Payton at the four would be an upgrade, too, imo.

Harding is getting hunted too much defensively, in my opinion. Having a bigger guard at PG and then having the rest of the lineup be bigger, sturdier guys would help Owen from being forced to rotate and leave somebody open for layups.

There are a lot of issues with this team defensively, but that starting lineup could help eliminate some of the issues.

May have an article on this after Fran's availability today.

Who do you think should start?
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“I was saved by God to make America great again,”

Still the POS he always has been:

“Those who wish to stop our cause have tried to take my freedom and indeed, to take my life,” Donald Trump says, referencing a July 2024 assassination attempt when he was rushed bleeding from a Pennsylvania stage.
The president credited divine intervention for saving his life. “I was saved by God to make America great again,” he says, echoing the phrase he used often in the closing months of the campaign.

  • Poll
Ohio State or Notre Dame?

NC Game

  • Ohio State wins

    Votes: 41 75.9%
  • Notre Dame wins

    Votes: 2 3.7%
  • rooting for Ohio State

    Votes: 22 40.7%
  • rooting for Notre Dame

    Votes: 11 20.4%

I just don't see ND getting over 14 without a turnovers or special teams. Notre Dame has a defense to keep the game relatively close & is really the only reason they have a chance. I think Ohio State wins 24-10 in a game that isn't as close as the score.

More interested to see who Hawkeye {& Seminole LoL} fans are rooting for

Big Ten Players of the Week (1/20)

Player of the Week
Trey Kaufman-Renn, Purdue
F – Jr. – 6-9 – Sellersburg, Ind. – Silver Creek


  • Averaged 21.0 points, 8.5 rebounds and 2.0 assists per game, leading No. 11 Purdue to a pair of road victories
  • Paired 23 points, including 9-for-9 from the free throw line, and 11 rebounds in a 65-58 win at then-No 13 Oregon
  • Scored 19 points, including six in the second half, in a come-from-behind 69-58 win over Washington
  • Claims second Player of the Week honor this season
  • Last Purdue Player of the Week: Braden Smith (January 6, 2025)


Freshman of the Week
Ace Bailey, Rutgers
G – 6-10 – Chattanooga, Tenn. – McEachern


  • Averaged 22 points, 10.5 rebounds. 3.0 assists, and 3.0 blocked shots, as Rutgers scored a pair of wins
  • Posted 24 points, 11 rebounds, four assists, three blocks, and a game-sealing steal in the final minute of an 85-82 win at Nebraska
  • Led the Scarlet Knights with 20 points and 10 rebounds in a 75-68 win over UCLA
  • Earns his second Freshman of the Week award
  • Last Rutgers Player of the Week: Ace Bailey (January 6, 2025)

Trump to Begin Large-Scale Deportations Tuesday (Chicago will be an early target)


The incoming Trump administration is planning a large-scale immigration raid in Chicago next week, according to four people familiar with the planning, the first move in President-Elect Donald Trump's promised mass deportation campaign.

The raid is expected to begin on Tuesday morning, a day after Trump is inaugurated, and will last all week, the people said. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement will send between 100 and 200 officers to carry out the operation.
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The incoming Trump team intends to target immigrants in the country illegally with criminal backgrounds—many of whose offenses, like driving violations, made them too minor for the Biden administration to pursue. But, the people cautioned, if anyone else in the country illegally is present during an arrest, they will be taken too.

The transition team had been contemplating cities to target in a day-one operation as a way of making an example of so-called sanctuary cities, which adopt policies limiting cooperation with federal immigration authorities. They settled on Chicago both because of the large number of immigrants who could be possible targets, and because of the Trump team's high-profile feud with the city's Democratic Mayor Brandon Johnson.

Though it isn't clear how many people the operation will actually target, Trump's team is planning to work with several right-leaning media outlets to amplify its efforts.
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Trump's team is contemplating other ways they can targetblue cities too. They have been pursuing new spaces they can repurpose into short-term detention centers to open near large cities, where most illegal immigrants in the country live.

They are also hoping to condition some federal grants on cities and states' cooperation with ICE, and even weighing lawsuits against some cities that don't comply. Homan, for example, has publicly threatened to throw the mayor of Denver—who has also loudly protested Trump's immigration plans—in prison.
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Pope Francis calls Trump’s mass deportation plan a ‘disgrace’

ROME — Pope Francis on Sunday called plans by President-elect Donald Trump for the mass deportation of undocumented immigrants a “disgrace,” signaling the return of the rocky relationship that defined the pontiff’s ties with the first Trump White House.

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Speaking on the eve of Trump’s inauguration in an Italian television interview, Francis responded to a question about the incoming president’s immigration plans by saying: “This, if it’s true, will be a disgrace, because it will make poor unfortunates who have nothing foot the bill for [global] imbalances.

“That doesn’t work,” Francis said. “You don’t solve things that way. You just don’t.”
The comments provided the latest indication of a potential renewal of frictions between the Vatican and the next Trump White House.

Francis, who has made migrant rights a guiding light of his papacy, stands in stark contrast to Trump, who has called for sweeping changes in U.S. immigration policy to implement mass deportations. On Monday, the pontiff said he would pray that God grants Trump “wisdom, strength and protection” as he returns to the White House.

“It is my hope that under your leadership the American people will prosper and always strive to build a more just society, where there is no room for hatred, discrimination or exclusion,” the pope said.
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Yet the comments broadcast Sunday appeared to echo the kind of criticism Francis voiced during the U.S. presidential campaign in 2016. Then, speaking to reporters after a papal visit to Mexico, Francis described Trump as “not Christian” when asked about his plans for a border wall.

Subsequently, ties were strained between the Vatican and the first Trump administration, with the two standing at odds on a host of global issues, including migrant rights and the battle against global warming. The Vatican took umbrage at Trump administration criticism of a 2018 deal struck with China that gave authorities in Beijing a measure of input in the naming of Catholic bishops there. A visit between Trump and Francis in May 2017 resulted in a photo opportunity where a beaming Trump stood beside a visibly glum pontiff.

In 2018, Francis agreed with U.S. bishops who called the Trump administration policy of separating migrant children from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border “immoral” and “contrary to our Catholic values.” In other comments, Francis has appeared to reference Trump when denouncing the politics of division.
Ahead of the U.S. election in November, Francis described the choice for Americans as the “lesser of two evils” — noting Trump’s anti-migrant policies and the abortion rights stance of Vice President Kamala Harris. Ultimately, American Catholic voters backed Trump by a 20-point margin, according to exit polls, reversing a trend that saw Joe Biden, the nation’s second Catholic president, win Catholic voters by a five-point margin.

Eyebrows were raised last month when Trump announced that Francis critic Brian Burch would be the next U.S. ambassador to the Holy See. Burch, co-founder of the lay Catholic advocacy group Catholic Vote, said in 2023 that Francis had sown “confusion” by allowing priests to offer short blessings of people in same-sex couples. He also has criticized the pope’s removal of a conservative bishop in Texas who had openly criticized Francis.

This month, the Vatican named Cardinal Robert McElroy, one of the church’s leading liberal voices, to lead the prominent Washington-area archdiocese. McElroy for a decade headed the diocese in San Diego, standing out during those years as a champion of migrant rights. During a Jan. 6 news conference, he asked Americans to “hope and pray” that the next White House administration is successful in “helping to enhance our society, our country, our life and the whole of our nation.” But he acknowledged a possible “contrast” with the next administration’s priorities on immigration.
“The Catholic Church teaches that a nation has the right to control its borders, and our nation’s desire to do that is a legitimate effort,” he continued. “At the same time, we are called always to have a sense of the dignity of every human person. And thus, plans that have been talked about at some levels of having a wider, indiscriminate, massive deportation across the country would be something that would be incompatible with Catholic doctrine.”

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