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HostelAlfalfaWilcoxKeto’s Abortion Thoughts Thread

Recording (some of) my extended thoughts, first, a few links that are pretty informative and pretty non-political:

https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2022/06/24/what-the-data-says-about-abortion-in-the-u-s-2/

https://qz.com/1910532/the-reasons-why-us-abortion-rates-are-falling/amp/

I have always maintained that I want abortion to be legal because:
  1. Safety. We know laws don’t tend to affect demand for a thing that history demonstrates simply doesn’t go away, and abortion is no different. We’ll now have more issues with unsafe, dangerous, shady “providers”.
  2. The abortion rate has dropped steadily since 1973. As access to women’s reproductive care increases, abortion rate decreases. As access to contraception increases, abortion rate decreases. Providers like the vilified Planned Parenthood have helped with the lowering of the abortion rate. Now, watch as “pro-life” “Christian” and most definitely private women’s care providers pop up and most assuredly have public money funneled their way. There’s always a money grab in this. Always. And guess what, while the services provided might mirror those of planned parenthood (minus abortion procedures and medications), they will not erase demand, meaning as well-intentioned as they may be, a woman who wants an abortion just became a woman more likely to seek an option less safe.
  3. Again, the rate has declined, and before we change laws, understanding why should be paramount in the discussion. To my mind, this is the point of separation of church and state—to ensure the guaranteed “space” for flat, unemotional pragmatism unroofed to whatever extent possible in wide-varyingly-interpretable faith-based stuff. Studies show that abortion rate lowering coincides with democratic leadership. Okay, why? Well, it seems that access to basic healthcare increases as does access to contraception—thus lowering the demand. There are many factors, of course, but access to preventative care in any area of health—dietary care for example reducing blood-pressure and cardiovascular-related issues.
  4. It is alarming, simply terrifying, how many women in our society are raped. And we know most rapes go unreported for myriad reasons. I have some very personal insights into this that I’m going to refrain from expanding on here, but I think they’re informative and consistent with studies on the issue.
  5. I’ll pass along what happened just two days ago, though. While I was at work, my partner took our 9 month-old girl for a walk to a park five blocks from our home. A pickup truck occupied by two men passed by them and catcalled my partner. That, alone, can be terrifying for a woman. But that wasn’t the end of it. The men circled the block to pass by again, this time very slowly, again catcalling, asked her name, asking if she’d like “another baby”. Thankfully that was the end of it. But what if it wasn’t? What if they raped her? What if the rape resulted in pregnancy, in part because she couldn’t access immediate care including an abortion pill option?
  6. Relating to above… one of the central arguments for legal and safe abortion is to allow a woman to have agency over her body. Men have full agency. There really is no decision a man is unable to make about his body. That’s a privilege women would like to have as well. I realize privilege is a loaded word for a lot of people, but think of the definition in the most benign, flat terms. Affording a group of people LESS privilege than another group effectively lowers their perceived (and real) power in society. Women just became even more—arguably—second-class citizens. And the moment that become clear—consciously or subconsciously, they tend to become even more targeted for sexual violence. Roe afforded women greater agency over their body, closing the gap between a man’s agency over his body and a woman’s over hers. This is something. I think men, speaking general which is always risky for the expectant triggered reaction, could try harder to understand.

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NYT: As Kids, They Thought They Were Trans. They No Longer Do.

Roast china or roast power bird

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    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Combo powerbird

    Votes: 1 100.0%


@Urohawk @Gimmered @SocraticIshmael

Grace Powell was 12 or 13 when she discovered she could be a boy.
Growing up in a relatively conservative community in Grand Rapids, Mich., Powell, like many teenagers, didn’t feel comfortable in her own skin. She was unpopular and frequently bullied. Puberty made everything worse. She suffered from depression and was in and out of therapy.
“I felt so detached from my body, and the way it was developing felt hostile to me,” Powell told me. It was classic gender dysphoria, a feeling of discomfort with your sex.
Reading about transgender people online, Powell believed that the reason she didn’t feel comfortable in her body was that she was in the wrong body. Transitioning seemed like the obvious solution. The narrative she had heard and absorbed was that if you don’t transition, you’ll kill yourself.
Related
Kathleen Kingsbury, the Opinion editor, wrote about this column in an edition of the Opinion Today newsletter.
At 17, desperate to begin hormone therapy, Powell broke the news to her parents. They sent her to a gender specialist to make sure she was serious. In the fall of her senior year of high school, she started cross-sex hormones. She had a double mastectomy the summer before college, then went off as a transgender man named Grayson to Sarah Lawrence College, where she was paired with a male roommate on a men’s floor. At 5-foot-3, she felt she came across as a very effeminate gay man.


At no point during her medical or surgical transition, Powell says, did anyone ask her about the reasons behind her gender dysphoria or her depression. At no point was she asked about her sexual orientation. And at no point was she asked about any previous trauma, and so neither the therapists nor the doctors ever learned that she’d been sexually abused as a child.
“I wish there had been more open conversations,” Powell, now 23 and detransitioned, told me. “But I was told there is one cure and one thing to do if this is your problem, and this will help you.”
Progressives often portray the heated debate over childhood transgender care as a clash between those who are trying to help growing numbers of children express what they believe their genders to be and conservative politicians who won’t let kids be themselves.
But right-wing demagogues are not the only ones who have inflamed this debate. Transgender activists have pushed their own ideological extremism, especially by pressing for a treatment orthodoxy that has faced increased scrutiny in recent years. Under that model of care, clinicians are expected to affirm a young person’s assertion of gender identity and even provide medical treatment before, or even without, exploring other possible sources of distress.


Many who think there needs to be a more cautious approach — including well-meaning liberal parents, doctors and people who have undergone gender transition and subsequently regretted their procedures — have been attacked as anti-trans and intimidated into silencing their concerns.
And while Donald Trump denounces “left-wing gender insanity” and many trans activists describe any opposition as transphobic, parents in America’s vast ideological middle can find little dispassionate discussion of the genuine risks or trade-offs involved in what proponents call gender-affirming care.
Powell’s story shows how easy it is for young people to get caught up by the pull of ideology in this atmosphere.
“What should be a medical and psychological issue has been morphed into a political one,” Powell lamented during our conversation. “It’s a mess.”

A New and Growing Group of Patients​

Many transgender adults are happy with their transitions and, whether they began to transition as adults or adolescents, feel it was life changing, even lifesaving. The small but rapidly growing number of children who express gender dysphoria and who transition at an early age, according to clinicians, is a recent and more controversial phenomenon.

Laura Edwards-Leeper, the founding psychologist of the first pediatric gender clinic in the United States, said that when she started her practice in 2007, most of her patients had longstanding and deep-seated gender dysphoria. Transitioning clearly made sense for almost all of them, and any mental health issues they had were generally resolved through gender transition.
“But that is just not the case anymore,” she told me recently. While she doesn’t regret transitioning the earlier cohort of patients and opposes government bans on transgender medical care, she said, “As far as I can tell, there are no professional organizations who are stepping in to regulate what’s going on.”

Most of her patients now, she said, have no history of childhood gender dysphoria. Others refer to this phenomenon, with some controversy, as rapid onset gender dysphoria, in which adolescents, particularly tween and teenage girls, express gender dysphoria despite never having done so when they were younger. Frequently, they have mental health issues unrelated to gender. While professional associations say there is a lack of quality research on rapid onset gender dysphoria, several researchers have documented the phenomenon, and many health care providers have seen evidence of it in their practices.

“The population has changed drastically,” said Edwards-Leeper, a former head of the Child and Adolescent Committee for the World Professional Association for Transgender Health, the organization responsible for setting gender transition guidelines for medical professionals.

Tomorrow: Pastrami Time!

I have a three pound brisket flat that has been sitting in a curing solution for 6 days. That has now been transformed into corned beef.

So, I could boil that tomorrow with potatoes, carrots and cabbage for the traditional St. Patty's Day meal, but I'm taking that slab o' meat to the next level:

SMOKED PASTRAMI!

Bright and early tomorrow morning, I will rinse and soak that wee hunk o' meat for about an hour, changing the water twice to get the excess saltiness out.

Then I will apply a rub based primarily of course ground pepper and crushed coriander seeds. Apply that rub thick! There's no salt in it. The meat already has all the salt you need. You want to have a nice barky crust!

This will go on the Webber Kettle over a water pan with the coals running around the pan in a thick snake method. Cherry and oak chunks will be buried along the charcoal trail.

Because this wee lad only weighs about three pounds, I expect the cook time will only take about six hours max, but I don't really care when it's done. I will rest it in a cooler until it falls below 145 degrees, then I'll have a little bit, but what I really want to do is chill it down, then run it through the meat slicer to get that really thin deli meat for the ultimate Reuben sandwich!

Wish me the luck o' the Irish, laddies!

2024 NCAA Wrestling Tournament Brackets Released

2024 NCAA Wrestling Tourney brackets released

125: #3 Drake Ayala
133: #15 Brody Teske
141: #3 Real Woods
149: #13 Caleb Rathjen
157: #10 Jared Franek
165: #6 Mike Caliendo
174: #12 Patrick Kennedy
184: n/a
197: #7 Zach Glazier
285: #25 Bradley Hill

More analysis on each weight coming soon.

Full brackets:
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Iowa Sweeps Western Illinois in Dramatic Weekend

In the top of the fifth inning on Friday night, Iowa was in deep trouble. The Hawks held a narrow 3-1 lead over Western Illinois, but the bases were loaded with none out. Ace Brody Brecht had just been chased from the game after allowing a double and two walks to start the inning. Iowa's bullpen would need to come in and slam the door, something it has rarely done in Iowa's difficult start to the season.

This was a series that Iowa needed to sweep for many reasons. Western Illinois entered the series at just 4-11. The Hawkeyes need to add wins to their NCAA Tournament resume and need to build momentum heading into the start of Big Ten conference play next Friday.

Luckily for Iowa, its bullpen was up to the task Friday night. Jack Young came in and recorded the three outs Iowa needed in the fifth in 10 pitches. Iowa escaped the inning without allowing a run, and the bats finally came to life. Iowa ultimately won Friday night 11-1 in eight innings.

Approximately 19 hours later, Young entered the second game of the series in the fifth inning in very similar circumstances. Iowa had taken a 4-0 lead in the game, but Western Illinois scored three runs in the fifth to chase starter Cade Obermueller. This time, Iowa called on Young to preserve a one run lead with runners on first and third and one out.

Young briefly looked like he would repeat history, getting a strikeout on three pitches. Then Western Illinois' Brock Lummus lifted a high fly ball to right-center. The wind was blowing hard out in that direction, and the ball rode the wind all the way out of the ballpark for a homer. Suddenly Western Illinois had a 6-4 lead and Iowa was on the ropes.

This time, it was the Iowa bats to the rescue. The Hawkeye hitters pummeled Leatherneck pitching from there, scoring 13! runs in the fifth through eighth innings to coast to a 17-7 victory.

The final game of the series looked like it might be the least dramatic of the three for all the wrong reasons. The Leatherneck offense scored five runs in the first three innings, then tacked on four more in the top of the fifth to take a 9-4 lead. Iowa couldn't muster anything in the bottom of the fifth, and it looked like Iowa might drop another game.

Then Iowa's offense exploded again. Eight of Iowa's first nine batters scored in the bottom of the sixth, and Iowa tacked on six more runs in the seventh for good measure. That gave Iowa an 18-9 lead, and the Hawks closed out a 19-9 victory in the eighth.

By Saturday night, Iowa had three wins in three games, but none of them came easy.

More here: https://iowa.rivals.com/news/iowa-sweeps-western-illinois-in-dramatic-weekend

Perfect time for Fran to move on?

A perfect storm of considerations may get Fran thinking it’s time to move on:

- If he’s honest, he has to see the relationship between his family and Iowa fan base has cooled considerably (if it ever was that warm to begin with.)
- His coaching at Iowa has plateaued. He picked up the pieces from two disastrous hires and restored the program to respectability. But middle of the conference finish seems to be his teams’ ceiling at Iowa. Selection to the (expanded) NCAA tournament is never a given; advancement beyond the first round unlikely.
- He’s unable to recruit and to coach physical and mental toughness at this level to compete day in and day out in the B1G. His teams are soft.
- Four programs will be joining the B1G next season, including traditional powers UCLA and USC. Another newcomer, Oregon, just dismantled No. 1 seed Arizona in the final PAC-12 championship. Wins are going to be harder to come by.
- In only three years at cross-state rival Iowa State, TJ Otzelberger has eclipsed Fran in terms of building athletic teams and W-L record. There is an excitement in Ames that is missing with MBB in Iowa City.
- The success of the Iowa WBB program is proof it is possible to fill Carver Hawkeye — as bad as it is — with passionate screaming supporters. Why can’t Fran’s teams do that? Certainly he has to notice and wonder.
- How does Fran like working with a new AD? What input will she have now that the season is over?
- His second oldest son, Patrick, does not appear to have his head or his heart in playing basketball at this level. Certainly Fran has to see and hear the criticism of PMac’s play and the minutes he gets compared to other, perceivably better players. Would Patrick be more comfortable elsewhere? Or not playing?
- Youngest son Jack won’t play at Iowa, seeing the kind of criticisms leveled at his brothers. There’s also that legal matter that may make it difficult to stick around.
- Fran himself doesn’t seem to be having much fun. His mood and demeanor during interviews and post-game news conferences seem downright dour at times.

He comes across as a coach who could use a break and a fresh start in a new environment, for himself and for his family.

CBB OT- These are your NCAAT National Championship contenders

ACC-
(Regular Season champ)
North Carolina
(Conference Tournament champ)
North Carolina State

(CT Semifinalists)
North Carolina
Virginia

**Pittsburgh n/s

Big 12-
(Regular Season champ)
Houston
(Conference Tournament champ)
Iowa State

(CT Semifinalists)
Houston
Baylor
Texas Tech

Big East-
(Regular Season & Conference Tournament champ)
Connecticut

(CT Semifinalists)
Marquette

**St. John's n/s
**Providence n/s


Big Ten-
(Regular Season champ)
Purdue
(Conference Tournament champ)
Illinois

(CT Semifinalists)
Wisconsin
Purdue
Nebraska

Pac 12-
(Regular Season champ)
Arizona
(Conference Tournament champ)
Oregon

(CT Semifinalists)
Colorado
Arizona
Washington State

SEC-
(Regular Season champ)
*Tennessee
(Conference Tournament champ)
Auburn

(CT Semifinalists)
Florida
Texas A&M
Mississippi State



Why, you are probably asking?.........Well, that's because no team in the modern conference tournament era of CBB has ever won the NCAA Tournament after failing to at least reach the semifinals of their respective conference tournament.

Only 3 teams in that time frame failed to win either their regular season or conference tournament title:

2014 UConn, 2015 Duke, 2023 UConn

(All 3 at least made their CT semies)

This also means that regular season SEC champ Tennessee is a sneaky pick to be upset at some point, as they were knocked off in the SEC Qtrs by Mississippi State.

Bluder deserves more pay than Fran.

With what she has accomplished, she deserves to make as much if not more money as FM. She has done something rarely seen in women's basketball, put butts in the seats and sell out stadiums across the country. I understand that CC has a lot to do with this, but LB has been solid as Iowa's coach.

BG- do your job and bump her pay, big time.
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