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You'd think that with the amount of "both sides" and "what about..." that goes on in every single political thread...

...more people would realize that both sides are terrible and neither side is good.

Unless you're a billionaire or a corporation or a rich foreign interest, none of them care about you, or the environment, or the immigrants, or the debt, or the unborn babies, or [insert every other issue here].

The only thing they care about is staying in power so they can continue to enrich themselves and their friends/donors. Everything else is just to keep people taking sides and fighting amongst themselves, and ignoring what's happening.


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Georgia judge considers eligibility of Fani Willis

The separate hearing in Atlanta centers on allegations that Willis engaged in an improper relationship with Nathan Wade, a special prosecutor she named to lead the case. A Willis friend testified Thursday that the relationship began before Wade was hired, but Wade followed her on the stand and disputed that.

WBB Top 25 Polls (3/18)

Women's AP Top 25 (3/18)
1. South Carolina (35) (32-0)
2. Iowa (29-4)
3. USC (26-5)
4. Texas (30-4)
5. Stanford (28-5)
6. UCLA (25-6)
7. Ohio State (25-5)
8. LSU (28-5)
9. Notre Dame (26-6)
10. Connecticut (29-5)
11. North Carolina State (27-6)
12. Oregon State (24-7)
13. Virginia Tech (24-7)
14. Indiana (24-5)
15. Kansas State (25-7)
16. Gonzaga (30-3)
17. Colorado (22-9)
18. Oklahoma (22-9)
19. Baylor (24-7)
20. UNLV (30-2)
21. Utah (22-10)
22. Syracuse (23-7)
23. Louisville (24-9)
24. Creighton (25-5)
25. Fairfield (31-1)

Others Receiving Votes
Princeton, Nebraska, Mississippi, Iowa State, West Virginia, Duke, Richmond, Columbia, Tennessee, Florida State, Kansas, Drake
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Mason Woods Recruitment Note

Exchanged some messages with Mason last night regarding his recruitment.

Considering Iowa has filled it's two scholarships at the tight end position, the Hawkeyes are recruiting him as an ATH now, as opposed to dropping off on his recruitment or still pursuing him as a tight end.

He's currently working to get spring practice visits scheduled -- If I had to guess, he visits Kansas, Missouri and Kansas State. Maybe another school or two in there, but I don't imagine his offer list will continue to grow that much over the coming months.

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Baseball Polls (3/18)

Link: D1Baseball

1. Arkansas (17-2)
2. Oregon State (17-2)
3. Vanderbilt (18-3)
4. Clemson (17-2)
5. LSU (17-4)
6. Florida (12-7)
7. Texas A&M (18-2)
8. Tennessee (18-3)
9. Duke (15-5)
10. East Carolina (14-4)
11. Alabama (17-3)
12. Florida State (18-0)
13. Coastal Carolina (17-3)
14. Virginia (16-4)
15. Dallas Baptist (16-3)
16. Wake Forest (13-6)
17. Oklahoma (13-6)
18. TCU (15-5)
19. Virginia Tech (14-4)
20. North Carolina (17-4)
21. Mississippi State (15-6)
22. Campbell (15-4)
23. Auburn (13-6)
24. UC-Irvine (15-3)
25. UC-Santa Barbara (12-5)

Dropped Out
North Carolina State (#13), South Carolina (#20), Texas (#23), Texas Tech (#24)

===============================

Link: Baseball America

1. Arkansas (17-2)
2. Vanderbilt (18-3)
3. Clemson (17-2)
4. Oregon State (17-2)
5. LSU (17-4)
6. Duke (15-5)
7. Florida State (18-0)
8. Florida (12-7)
9. Alabama (17-3)
10. Texas A&M (18-2)
11. Tennessee (18-3)
12. East Carolina (14-4)
13. Virginia (15-4)
14. Oklahoma (13-6)
15. Wake Forest (13-6)
16. Mississippi State (15-6)
17. Mississippi (15-6)
18. TCU (15-5)
19. UC-Irvine (15-3)
20. Dallas Baptist (16-3)
21. South Carolina (15-5)
22. Coastal Carolina (17-3)
23. North Carolina (17-4)
24. Campbell (15-4)
25. Southern Mississippi (14-6)

===============================

Link: Perfect Game

1. Arkansas (17-2)
2. Oregon State (17-2)
3. Vanderbilt (18-3)
4. Clemson (17-2)
5. LSU (17-4)
6. Florida (12-7)
7. Texas A&M (18-2)
8. Florida State (18-0)
9. Duke (15-5)
10. Dallas Baptist (16-3)
11. Alabama (17-3)
12. Tennessee (18-3)
13. East Carolina (14-4)
14. Coastal Carolina (17-3)
15. Virginia (16-4)
16. Wake Forest (13-6)
17. Auburn (13-6)
18. Oklahoma (13-6)
19. Campbell (15-4)
20. UC-Santa Barbara (12-5)
21. TCU (15-5)
22. North Carolina (17-4)
23. UC-Irvine (15-3)
24. Kentucky (17-3)
25. Southern Mississippi (14-6)

Also Considered
Indiana State, Maryland, Miami (FL), Oregon, Virginia Tech

Dropped Out
Texas, South Carolina, North Carolina State, California

===============================

Link: NCBWA

1. Arkansas (17-2)
2. Oregon State (17-2)
3. Clemson (17-2)
4. Vanderbilt (18-3)
5. LSU (17-4)
6. Texas A&M (18-2)
7. Tennessee (18-3)
8. Alabama (17-3)
9. Duke (13-2)
10. Florida (12-7)
11. Florida State (18-0)
12. Virginia (16-4)
13. Coastal Carolina (17-3)
14. East Carolina (14-4)
15. Wake Forest (13-6)
16. Dallas Baptist (16-3)
17. North Carolina (17-4)
18. TCU (15-5)
19. Campbell (15-4)
20. UC-Irvine (15-3)
21. Kentucky (17-3)
22. UC-Santa Barbara (12-5)
23. Oklahoma (13-6)
24. Mississippi State (15-6)
25. South Carolina (15-5)

Others Receiving Votes (listed alphabetically)
Auburn, California, Central Florida, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Indiana State, Jackson State, Kansas State, Long Beach State, Maryland, Miami (FL), Mississippi, Nebraska, North Carolina A&T, North Carolina State, Northeastern, Oregon, St. Louis, Southern Mississippi, Texas, Texas Tech, Troy, UC-San Diego, Virginia Tech

Dropped Out
North Carolina State (#12), Auburn (#20), Texas Tech (#23), Texas (#24), Georgia (#25)

===============================

Link: USA Today Coaches Poll

1. Arkansas (31) (17-2)
2. Oregon State (17-2)
3. Vanderbilt (18-3)
4. LSU (17-4)
5. Clemson (17-2)
6. Texas A&M (18-2)
7. Tennessee (18-3)
8. Florida (12-7)
9. Duke (15-5)
10. Alabama (17-3)
11. Virginia (16-4)
12. Florida State (18-0)
13. East Carolina (14-4)
14. Wake Forest (13-6)
15. Coastal Carolina (17-3)
16. Dallas Baptist (16-3)
17. North Carolina (17-4)
18. TCU (15-5)
19. Campbell (15-4)
20. Oklahoma (13-6)
21. UC-Irvine (15-3)
22. UC-Santa Barbara (12-5)
23. Virginia Tech (14-4)
24. Auburn (13-6)
25. Kentucky (17-3)

Others Receiving Votes
Mississippi State, South Carolina, North Carolina State, Georgia Tech, Texas Tech, Southern Mississippi, Miami (FL), Mississippi, Central Florida, Texas, Nebraska, Oregon, Indiana State, Georgia, Louisiana Tech, Troy, Oklahoma State, Northeastern, Maryland

Dropped Out
North Carolina State (#14), South Carolina (#20), Texas (#24), Texas Tech (#25)

Hope Springs Eternal

With spring football on the horizon, it is always a time of great optimism.

Thwre are many things to be excited about:

- Defense with most of its returning pieces should be very good. Will be interesting to see how some of the newer players fill open spots.

- With a new offensive coordinator and wr coach, it will be exciting to see how the new offense performs. Line could be very good, with the addition of Proctor and a lot of pieces returning. RB and TE positulions should be solid. WR cabinet isn't bare and several young talented redshirts could help out. Now to the QB position, the biggest ??? on the team. Has Deacon (donut role) lost any weight and improved his quickness? Will Lainez show the ability to move into the #2 slot? And finally will Cade be healthy and stay healthy to lead this team in the fall?

- T Taylor is gone as well as super Cooper. Will be interesting to see how Rys develops as the new punter.

With the addition of USC, Oregon, Washington and UCLA the BIG just got alot tougher. Games at OSU and UCLA will not be easy. Washington, Wisconsin and Nebraska at home will be a challenge. Maryland continues to get better and it is on the road. What will the NW and MSU coaches do with their teams? The schedule will be more difficult than last year but we should be better.

So Hope Springs Eternal once again for all Hawk fans. Would love for us to make the college football playoffs this upcoming year. We'll need to stay healthy, have an improved offense and our D needs to get more turn-overs, always a team strength. Only time will tell.

Peyton Manning’s new docuseries captures Caitlin Clark’s historic season

A year ago, Omaha Productions, the entertainment studio founded by former NFL quarterback Peyton Manning, was wrapping up production of “Quarterback,” a Netflix series that followed Patrick Mahomes, Kirk Cousins and Marcus Mariota through an NFL season.

But he was also watching women’s basketball. Manning was close friends with Pat Summit from his college years at Tennessee. Now, along with much of the country, he was being introduced to Iowa star Caitlin Clark as she tore through the NCAA tournament. He saw Iowa upset South Carolina in an epic Final Four game, and he watched Clark lose an action-packed final against Angel Reese and LSU. And, he said, he wondered: If there’s interest in going behind the scenes with Mahomes and Cousins, might there be a thirst for a similar window into women’s basketball?

A few months later Manning was on a Zoom with Clark, he said, pitching her on sending cameras to follow her through what would become her historic senior season. Clark agreed. So did South Carolina’s Kamilla Cardoso and UCLA’s Kiki Rice. The result is a new four-episode docuseries, “Full Court Press,” that will premiere on May 11 and 12 on ABC and then be available on ESPN Plus.

Trailer: 'Full Court Press'
1:0


The series is a testament to the star power of Clark, not that she needs more datapoints. She became the all-time leading scorer in college basketball this season. Ticket prices spiked hundreds of dollars when she came to town, and she was crucial in helping women’s college basketball deliver larger TV audiences than her male counterparts on Fox this season.



But it’s also a moment for her sport. The NCAA recently signed a new TV contract with ESPN that valued the women’s tournament at $65 million per year, a more than tenfold increase on the previous rate. Viewership of the WNBA is rising, too.
Throughout the season, Omaha sent cameras to follow the players at practices, their biggest games and to capture intimate moments away from the court. Like with “Quarterback,” “Full Court Press” will deliver three distinct storylines.
It will track Cardozo, a native of Brazil, and South Carolina’s second consecutive undefeated regular season, as the team looks to avenge last year’s Final Four loss behind a stacked roster and Coach Dawn Staley. The series had cameras at the SEC tournament where Cardoso was involved in a bench-clearing fight against LSU and also hit a game-winning three-pointer at the buzzer against Tennessee.


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Rice is a sophomore point guard who came to UCLA from across the country (she went to high school at Sidwell Friends in Northwest D.C.) and helped the Bruins to a top-10 ranking this season, while battling another young phenom in Los Angeles, USC’s Juju Watkins. And, of course, the series will chronicle the various records Clark set, as well as the circuslike atmosphere that followed her all season.

The docuseries genre has exploded in popularity since “The Last Dance,” a documentary about Michael Jordan’s Chicago Bulls, was a hit for ESPN, and the real time Netflix behind-the-scenes show “Drive to Survive,” which has provided a look into Formula 1’s success. Carlos Alcaraz, the winner at Wimbledon last year and the U.S. Open in 2022, is also set to get the docuseries treatment.
“Full Court Press” is Omaha’s latest foray into the genre. After “Quarterback,” the company is reportedly working on an NBA-themed version for Netflix that will include LeBron James and Jimmy Butler, among others.
“All of [the players] ask me a very good question,” Manning said. “They say, ‘Peyton, would you have done this if you were my age?’ It’s very fair and my answer has been, ‘No,’ because there was probably nobody that I trusted that would have my back and would do this with the player being the number one priority. Being a former player, I know how hard it is to be a pro QB, how hard it is to be a D-1 athlete.”

Press," along with Iowa's Caitlin Clark and UCLA's Kiki Rice (Eakin Howard/Getty Images)
Clark, Cardoso and Rice have editorial input in the series, Omaha said, but not final cut. Omaha also made a donation to the NIL collectives at each of the schools taking part, but didn’t offer more financial details of the deal. Manning said there was nothing Omaha wanted to film that the players didn’t allow. The idea, he said, was to collaborate with the players on what their stories should be.



“Kirk [Cousins] wanted the cameras in his sport psychologist sessions, for example,” Manning said. “He wanted his kids to be able to see what that was like. This is guided by the players, and we want this to be a positive piece, to show them in their best light. So that’s what I told Caitlin. ‘You’ll find we’re not a distraction, and you’ll have ideas for what we could witness.’ The whole goal is to have this be a memento for them.”

More on March Madness


Five can’t-miss stars in the NCAA women’s basketball tournament

http://www.washingtonpost.com/sport...magnet-college-basketball_inline_collection_6
Peyton Manning’s new docuseries captures Caitlin Clark’s historic season
Peyton Manning’s new docuseries captures Caitlin Clark’s historic season

Maryland women return to NCAA tournament, will face Iowa State in first round
Maryland women return to NCAA tournament, will face Iowa State in first rou...

http://www.washingtonpost.com/sport...magnet-college-basketball_inline_collection_9
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sport...agnet-college-basketball_inline_collection_17
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/sport...agnet-college-basketball_inline_collection_19
http://www.washingtonpost.com/sport...agnet-college-basketball_inline_collection_20

Manning founded Omaha — named for his famous audible call — in 2020, along with former ESPN and Fox Sports executive Jamie Horowitz and with help from Josh Pyatt, an agent at William Morris Endeavor. “Full Court Press” was produced in conjunction with Words + Pictures, which was launched by another former ESPN executive, Connor Schell. Both companies have investments from Peter Chernin’s media investment firm, and both feature former ESPN executives selling content back to their former network.
Brian Lockhart, ESPN’s senior vice president of original content, said he couldn’t imagine a series like this 15 years ago and noted that its premiering on ABC “speaks to the importance of [women’s basketball] to our business.”
Manning has spent the season exchanging emails with Clark but said he’ll be happy as long as any of the series’ three stars brings home a national championship. (Iowa and UCLA are the top two seeds in their region .)
“It can’t happen for all three of them,” he said. “But I’m rooting for all three.”

MBB Top 25 Polls (3/18)

AP Top 25 (3/18)
1. Connecticut (61) (31-3)
2. Houston (1) (30-4)
3. Purdue (29-4)
4. Iowa State (27-7)
5. North Carolina (27-7)
6. Tennessee (24-8)
7. Auburn (27-7)
8. Marquette (25-9)
9. Arizona (25-8)
10. Illinois (26-8)
11. Creighton (23-9)
12. Kentucky (23-9)
13. Duke (24-8)
14. Baylor (23-10)
15. St. Mary's (26-7)
16. South Carolina (26-7)
17. Kansas (22-10)
18. Gonzaga (25-7)
19. Alabama (21-11)
20. Utah State (27-6)
21. BYU (23-10)
22. Texas Tech (23-10)
23. Wisconsin (22-13)
24. San Diego State (24-10)
25. Washington State (24-9)

Others Receiving Votes
New Mexico, Florida, Nevada, North Carolina State, James Madison, Dayton, Drake, Oregon, Colorado, Texas, Nebraska, McNeese State, Boise State, Mississippi State, Clemson, South Florida, Colorado State, Florida Atlantic

Dropped Out
Nevada (#23), Dayton (#24)

=============================

Coaches Top 25 (3/18)
1. Connecticut (32) (31-3)
2. Houston (30-4)
3. Purdue (29-4)
4. Iowa State (27-7)
5. North Carolina (27-7)
6. Tennessee (24-8)
7. Auburn (27-7)
8. Marquette (25-9)
9. Arizona (25-8)
10. Illinois (26-8)
11. Creighton (23-9)
12. Kentucky (23-9)
13. Baylor (23-10)
14. Duke (24-8)
15. St. Mary's (26-7)
16. Gonzaga (25-7)
17. South Carolina (26-7)
18. Alabama (21-11)
19. Utah State (27-6)
20. Kansas (22-10)
21. BYU (23-10)
22. Texas Tech (23-10)
23. Florida (24-11)
24. Wisconsin (22-13)
25. San Diego State (24-10)

Others Receiving Votes
New Mexico, Washington State, Dayton, James Madison, Nevada, Drake, Nebraska, North Carolina State, Colorado, Indiana State, Boise State, McNeese State, Grand Canyon, Pittsburgh, Michigan State

Dropped Out

Nevada (#22), Dayton (#24), Washington State (#25)

RNC Files Bombshell Swing-State Lawsuit, Says Over Half of Counties Have More Registered Voters Than Adults!!!

We're constantly assured by both the Democrats and the establishment media that the voting system in the United States of America is safe, secure and well-maintained. In fact, it's a bit too safe, secure and well-maintained for their liking; they would prefer that there was more mail-in voting and less voter ID requirements and voter-roll maintenance.

It's contingent upon the Republicans to shock American voters back into the reality of the matter: Voting in the U.S. is far too messy and needs to be cleaned up. A lawsuit in one of the biggest swing states in the 2024 election highlights just how bad the problem is.

According to The Hill, the Republican National Committee filed a lawsuit last week against Democratic Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson alleging that the state had been remiss in keeping up with who should be voting where.

"At least 53 Michigan counties have more active registered voters than they have adult citizens who are over the age of 18. That number of voters is impossibly high," the lawsuit said.

"An additional 23 counties have active-voter registration rates that exceed 90 percent of adult citizens over the age of 18. That figure far eclipses the national and statewide voter registration rate in recent elections."

By not actively keeping up with the voter rolls, the suit said, Michigan officials have violated the National Voter Registration Act of 1993.

"Section 8 of the NVRA contains requirements with respect to the administration of voter registration by States and requires States to implement procedures to maintain accurate and current voter registration lists," a fact-sheet on the law from the U.S. Department of Justice said.

"Section 8 permits States to remove the name of a person from the voter registration rolls upon the request of the registrant, and, if State law so provides, for mental incapacity or for criminal conviction.

"The Act also requires States to conduct a general voter registration list maintenance program that makes a reasonable effort to remove ineligible persons from the voter rolls by reason of the person’s death, or a change in the residence of the registrant outside of the jurisdiction, in accordance with procedures set forth in the NVRA. The list maintenance program must be uniform, nondiscriminatory and in compliance with the Voting Rights Act."

The RNC said that this wasn't "the first time Michigan has failed to abide by the NVRA’s requirements." They cited a similar lawsuit against Michigan which was dismissed in 2020.

However, as the new suit noted, when that motion was filed, "Michigan had one county with registration rates in excess of 100 percent of the voting-age population, and 15 counties with rates above 90 percent."

Furthermore, it's not as if the old case didn't have positive repercussions for electoral security.

"Soon after the Court denied the motions to dismiss, the Secretary of State publicly announced that election officials would cancel the registration of 177,000 former voters who either surrendered a Michigan driver’s license to another state or had election mail returned undeliverable to an election official before the 2018 election," the suit said.

"In addition, the Bureau of Elections declared it would provide local election clerks the absentee ballot applications returned undeliverable to the Bureau for the 2020 election, and it would mail additional notifications requiring verification to voters listed as registered in other states by the Electronic Registration Information Center. Based on these representations, the plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed the case."

Since that suit, the RNC claimed, "Michigan’s voter rolls have gotten exponentially worse."

So, you naturally know what Michigan Secretary of State Benson's response was, being that she's a Democrat: This is an attack on our democracy, natch.

“Let’s call this what it is: a PR campaign masquerading as a meritless lawsuit filled with baseless accusations that seek to diminish people’s faith in the security of our elections,” Benson said in a statement, according to The Hill.

“Shame on anyone who abuses the legal process to sow seeds of doubt in our democracy.”

Yeah, shame on Republicans for pointing out the bloody obvious: Michigan, like many states, has voter rolls that are a mess and no appetite to clean them up from Democrats.

Michigan is arguably one of the biggest prizes up for grabs this November. It grants the winner 15 electoral votes and, according to the RealClearPolitics polling aggregate as of Monday morning, Donald Trump is up over Joe Biden by a 46.5 to 43.0 margin. In addition, the Cook Political Report lists several of state's seats in the House of Representatives as potentials to flip, in addition to a Democrat-held Senate seat that may be in play thanks to the retirement of Sen. Debbie Stabenow.

Given the stakes, Michigan residents deserve honest voter rolls. The same can be said for every state, but that's doubly true when the state could determine who controls the White House and both houses of Congress. If the secretary of state isn't willing to do the housecleaning that, according to the RNC, the last lawsuit precipitated, the courts ought to force her and her state to do it. This isn't an attack on democracy, but a vital part of it.


Trump told us this week...

1. He will seriously considered cutting Social Security. 2. He will try to free all those criminals convicted of the J6 insurrection. Even those that pled guilty. 3. He calls for a bloodbath when he loses the election. 4. He will not fund any more of the Ukraine war. Pleasing his love buddy dictator Putin. Quite the platform for Lying Donnie Sexual Abuser and the Republican party.
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