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When places like The University of Chickenscratch BFE

can have more competent offenses and the related skill positions (QB, WR, etc.), when does IOWA’s AD, in examining her breadwinning program, start asking poignant questions of exactly why that is the case, with follow-up questions to any platitudes, that arrive in actionable, measurable solutions?

It happens everyday in business everywhere. FBS football is now undeniably a business, and frankly has been, albeit not as overtly as now, so time to address the glaring challenges accordingly. Nothing changes by complaining, however nothing changes by avoiding challenging conversations, seeking to understand and planning strategies for future success.

Additionally, If the program wants to continue building successful skill sets for their athletes, that benefits their success in life, then this would be excellent role modeling of cross-functional leadership, not just top-down management. It may not be comfortable, but it can be accomplished in a respectful manner, with an eye on curiosity, learning, and improvement.

How an Ohio Town Landed in the Middle of the Immigration Debate

Jobs attracted thousands of Haitians to Springfield, and employers were ecstatic. But then an immigrant driver was involved in a fatal school bus crash. And JD Vance entered the fray.



It has been more than a year since the fateful morning last August when, outside Springfield in southwestern Ohio, a minivan veered into oncoming traffic and rammed into a school bus on the first day of class, killing an 11-year-old boy and injuring 23 other children.
Soon, it emerged that the driver of the minivan was not a longtime resident but one of the thousands of immigrants from Haiti who had recently settled in the area. He was driving with a foreign license not valid in Ohio.
The stage was set for another fraught chapter in the debate over immigration in America, this one magnified because JD Vance, the state’s junior senator, would soon become the Republican vice-presidential nominee.
Haitians were new to the region. During the last census, in 2020, a little more than 58,000 people lived in Springfield, a town at the crossroads of America that had fallen on hard times and shed population as opportunity slipped away. But it has changed dramatically in recent years, as a boom in manufacturing and warehouse jobs attracted a swelling wave of immigrants, mainly from Haiti. City officials estimate that as many as 20,000 Haitians have arrived, most of them since the pandemic.


At the first City Commission meeting after the bus crash, angry residents packed the chambers and demanded answers.
“How do you know we aren’t getting criminals, rapists?” a man in a blue Harley Davidson T-shirt asked. “Who can stop them from coming here?” someone else wanted to know. Had they been screened? Were they going to use their driver’s licenses to vote?
The city manager, Bryan Heck, explained that the Haitians were lawfully in the country. The police chief, Allison Elliott, said that Haitians were not responsible for the city’s yearslong struggle with crime such as retail theft. Commissioners said that they had come for job opportunities.
But nothing could quell the outrage.
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A yellow bus sits on its side on a grassy patch of ground. Several people are nearby, many of them law enforcement officials wearing hats and yellow vests. In the foreground is a strip of yellow police tape.

Authorities work at the scene of a bus crash outside Springfield last year that killed an 11-year-old boy. Credit...Bill Lackey/The Springfield News-Sun via AP
The arrival of successive streams of immigrants has created friction throughout America’s history. In recent years, especially, people from all over the world have settled in places, like Springfield, unaccustomed to high levels of immigration.

The issue has become even more politicized this year, as the presidential election campaign focuses on the record number of crossings on the southern border in 2023. So it came as no surprise that the influx of Haitians to Springfield would become a talking point for Mr. Vance.
In a speech at the National Conservatism Conference in July, he described Springfield as a town that was nearly a carbon copy of Middletown, where he grew up, except that it had now been “overwhelmed” by Haitians who were pushing up housing costs and collecting benefits.
“And you don’t have to believe, of course, that the 20,000, at least most of the 20,000 newcomers, are bad people” to recognize it as a problem, he said.
By most accounts, the Haitians have helped revitalize Springfield.
They are assembling car engines at Honda, running vegetable-packing machines at Dole and loading boxes at distribution centers. They are paying taxes on their wages and spending money at Walmart. On Sundays they gather at churches for boisterous, joyful services in Haitian Creole.
But the speed and volume of arrivals have put pressure on housing, schools and hospitals. The community health clinic saw a 13-fold increase in Haitian patients between 2021 and 2023, from 115 to 1,500, overwhelming its staff and budget.

The bus crash, which killed Aiden Clark, the son of two teachers, touched off resentment that had been building for months or longer, many residents said.
“Aiden’s death was the match on the tinder bundle,” said Chris Cook, the Clark County health commissioner.

A City’s Revitalization​

For decades, Springfield had been another shrinking Midwestern town with an uncertain future.
Manufacturing plants had shuttered, fueling an exodus. Empty Victorian mansions on Fountain Avenue, erected for industrial barons, stood as relics of the town’s heyday.
The population dwindled to less than 60,000 by 2014, from more than 80,000 in 1960.
Around that time, Springfield crafted a strategic plan to attract business. City leaders pitched the town’s affordability, its work force development programs and its location, smack-dab between Columbus and Dayton and accessible to two interstates.
In 2017, Topre, a major Japanese auto parts manufacturer, picked Springfield for a new plant in a decaying part of town that had been the site of International Harvester, a farm equipment manufacturer that was once the biggest employer.

By 2020, Springfield had lured food-service firms, logistics companies and a microchip maker, among others, creating an estimated 8,000 new jobs and optimism for the future.
“It was incredible to witness the transformation of our community,” said Horton Hobbs, vice president of economic development for the Greater Springfield Partnership, which executed the plan.
But soon there were not enough workers. Many young, working-age people had descended into addiction. Others shunned entry-level, rote work altogether, employers said.
Haitians who heard that the Springfield area boasted well-paying, blue-collar jobs and a low cost of living poured in, and employers were eager to hire and train the new work force.
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A man wearing a ballcap and a T-shirt that says “McGregor Metal” walks amid small and large metal parts and machinery.

Daniel Campere, a Haitian immigrant who works at McGregor Metal in Springfield Ohio, moved to the city after friends urged him to give it a try. Credit...Maddie McGarvey for The New York Times
The Haitians had Social Security numbers and work permits, thanks to a federal program that offered them temporary protection in the United States. Some had been living for years in places like Florida, where there is a thriving Haitian community.

McGregor Metal, a family-owned business in Springfield that makes parts for cars, trucks and tractors, was short of workers after investing millions to boost production.
The business needed machine operators, forklift drivers and quality inspectors, said Jamie McGregor, the chief executive.
“The Haitians were there to fill those positions,” he said. The immigrants now comprise about 10 percent of his work force.
“They come to work every day. They don’t cause drama. They’re on time,” he said.
Among the Haitians recently on the second shift, which stretched to 1 a.m., was Daniel Campere, operating a robotic welder that makes axle components for Toyota trucks.

Mr. Campere, who arrived in the United States in 2013, for years earned his keep shuttling workers between the tomato fields in Florida and Georgia. Then some friends who had moved to Springfield urged him to give it a try.

He started at McGregor in June 2021 and now makes $19 an hour, with a 401(k) and health insurance.
He has been able to buy a house in Miami, which he rents out. In Springfield, he shares a house with three other Haitian men, who together pay $2,400 in rent.
Mr. Campere said that he was aware of the criticism leveled at his community. “We can’t say anything. The Americans are chez eux,” he said, using the French words for “in their home.”
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Jamie McGregor, right, chief executive of McGregor Metal, talking with Mr. Campere during his shift.Credit...Maddie McGarvey for The New York Times
After a pause, he added, “We pay bills and taxes like everybody else.”
Vickie Stevens, an American worker, overheard the conversation in the break room, and shared her two cents.
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“I can tell you, Daniel’s a real good worker,” she said. “He works as many hours as he can get.” She added: “We, the Americans, are just a little jealous of them.”

In Defense of Sides

OK, some of her substitution patterns are still questionable, but I am starting to come around a little bit on Sides
  • After going 1-8 in May, they are 14-8 since. That's a 64% clip, which would be 4th highest in the league.
  • Their defense started out horrible, but they are improving. Probably up to slightly below average now.
  • Good team chemistry (stark contrast to the Sky). With all the attention that Clark gets, this could have easily gone sideways.
  • Boston has figured out the high post role. Setting better screens and she is a LOT better at passing to open shooters.
  • Mitchell and Clark both want the ball in their hands. It just wasn't working early in the year. Still a ways to go, but they a working together much better now.
  • Regarding the occasional questionable substitution patterns, you have to remember that other than Clark/Mitchell/Boston (and sometimes Hull), she does not have a lot to work with.
Discuss amongst yourselves....

How will Donald Trump deport 20 million people?

I've asked this question to my Trump friends, and to some of the most rabid Trump supporters on HBOT, but nobody provides an answer. They just talk past the question. Trump repeatedly has said he will deport 20 million people. Now, the real number of undocumented, or illegals, you use whatever term you want, is probably around 11 million. What is the plan?
What mechanisms will Trump utilize to legally deport 11-20 million people? How will he pay for this action? What manpower will he tap to complete this mission? If a nation refuses to accept back some citizens, what will he do to that nation, and to the people?

Chad Wolf & Robert Law: New audit reveals Harris - Biden latest immigration nightmare

While the media was largely focused this week on Chicago as Vice President Kamala Harris officially accepted the Democratic Party’s nomination for president, an alarming new Department of Homeland Security inspector general’s report should have been the main news story across the country.

The primary takeaway is that the Biden-Harris administration has lost track of approximately 32,000 unaccompanied alien children within the immigration enforcement system after releasing them from federal custody.

This is the equivalent of filling the University of Michigan’s football stadium, known as the "Big House," and our nation’s largest stadium, three times with vulnerable migrant children. This alarming finding is unacceptable and contrary to American values.

But you likely have not heard about this because the administration is not confronting the problem head on and the liberal legacy media is largely ignoring the report.

As we have been warning for years, the Biden-Harris administration’s open borders policies and refusal to enforce immigration law created the unprecedented humanitarian and security crisis at the southern border. Of the more than 10 million illegal aliens encountered at the border, more than 500,000 have been trafficked or smuggled vulnerable migrant children.

The physical, mental, and sexual abuse that migrant children are subjected to during the trip to our border has been extensively documented.

Last year, the New York Times published a series of gut-wrenching articles that detailed the life of sex trafficking and forced labor many are subjected to in the U.S. to pay off their smuggling debts. The Times also reported that the administration had lost track of 85,000 unaccompanied alien children, but that shocking revelation was barely covered by the press and no administration officials were dismissed.

Now we know the severity of the problem is degrees of magnitude worse, but it is doubtful the Biden-Harris administration will be held accountable before Americans go to the polls.

Here is a breakdown of the Biden-Harris administration policies that are responsible for handing over 32,000 vulnerable migrant children back to their traffickers within our borders.

First, it is important to understand that unaccompanied alien children are an extremely difficult population to deal with because of loopholes in the law that impose onerous and misguided restrictions on the government’s ability to quickly return the migrant children to their families in their home countries.

The Biden-Harris administration’s day one decision to end the Migrant Protection Protocols and exempt unaccompanied alien children from immediate border expulsion under Title 42 guaranteed that they would be released into American communities.

As a result, transfers of migrant children from Homeland Security custody to Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) custody, as required by law, increased from 15,128 in Fiscal Year 2020 during the Trump administration to 120,859 in Fiscal Year 2021 during the Biden-Harris Administration. The numbers have remained high ever since.

Unable to house the growing number of migrant children in HHS facilities, the Biden-Harris administration made the misguided decision to speed up their release to adult sponsors.

First, the administration started releasing unaccompanied alien children without issuing them a Notice to Appear, the charging document that places them in removal proceedings. When they still could not keep up with the inflow, they discontinued the Trump administration’s policy of pre-release site visits to inspect where the minors would live and then began handing over migrant children to unvetted adults who showed up to claim them.

So, while the inspector general’s report is alarming, it is entirely predictable. The audit found that nearly 30,000 unaccompanied alien children who received a Notice to Appear failed to show up to immigration court.

Additionally, 291,000 migrant children who did not receive the necessary paperwork have completely disappeared and the administration has no way of knowing where they are.

As the inspector general put it, "by not issuing NTAs to all [unaccompanied alien children], ICE limits its chances of having contact with [them] when they are released from HHS’ custody, which reduces opportunities to verify their safety."

It goes on to say that "without an ability to monitor the location and status of [migrant children], ICE has no assurance [they] are safe from trafficking, exploitation or forced labor."

The timing of this report should be particularly eye-opening. It was published just one day after the left endorsed its latest policy platform that endorsed amnesty for nearly every illegal alien in the country, including human traffickers.

The Biden-Harris administration campaigned in 2020 on a "compassionate" immigration policy, but the result of their failed strategy over the last three and a half years paints a dramatically different reality.

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Praying Mantids

I’ve been seeing a lot of Praying Mantids in one of our restored prairies the last week or so. This is the first time I’ve ever seen them in our prairies, they could have been there and I just didn’t notice them. I counted 13 in just one little area yesterday. I was just wondering if anyone else has noticed an uptick in Mantids?

Mine are the Chinese Mantids, not native but still really cool looking and big, 3 to 4 inches long. They are amazing creatures and it’s fun watching them eat, I got a nice video of one eating a grasshopper. CSB


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