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The Frankish Reich

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Everything posted by The Frankish Reich

  1. Injury, Cam Newton throwing to him, pre-Ozempic era = fail.
  2. He may just have one good season right before free agency, just in time for the Bears to sign him and watch him suck again. Did you know Tremaine Edmunds was only 19 when we drafted him?
  3. I get the jokes, but ... what the hell would be wrong with finding a new young Kelvin Benjamin with the 33rd overall pick? He was pretty damn good until he ate himself out of the league. You really can't expect more than that at 33.
  4. McD likes WRs who block too. It is overlooked, but it matters. Not sure who Xavier Worthy is blocking.
  5. I have to assume Beane/McD really, really like what they saw from Shakir late last season (what's not to like?) and they're confident that he fills that role, which now becomes the Diggs role. So they went for another Gabe. Look, it makes sense to me. Other than Harrison I don't think there was a can't miss pro bowler type in the draft. So they got one of the B grade runners up.
  6. Yep. The Beane/McD type. Actually had his moment (the singular is on purpose). Just didn't last. Wiki page says he's pursuing his dream of playing in the NBA. Still a distant dream - he's 29 and playing in the Philippines.
  7. I just looked back at Kelvin Benjamin's scouting report. Guess what his 40 time was? 4.61. Guess what the report said? "Plays faster" It's a Beane/McD thing. They've been trying to find that big receiver since they came to Buffalo. One epic fail (Benjamin), one moderate success (Gabe). Third time is a Hall of Famer.
  8. I'd take that. Or a prime/young Kelvin Benjamin. Or a 2nd year Gabe Davis. Not exciting, but seems like a high floor, medium ceiling guy.
  9. Kelvin Benjamin. But the one that was in his prime. After all is said and done, it seems that we had one guy head and tails over all other WRs (Harrison), and then about 8 guys that you could order whatever way you want. So the trade down made sense if you look at it that way.
  10. Here's a good interview with Paul Volcker about presidents and the Fed: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/23/business/dealbook/paul-volcker-federal-reserve.html while President Trump has complained in recent months about the Fed’s plan to raise interest rates, he isn’t the first to try to influence the independent Federal Reserve. Mr. Volcker recounts being summoned to meet with President Ronald Reagan and his chief of staff, James Baker, in the president’s library next to the Oval Office in 1984. Reagan “didn’t say a word,” Mr. Volcker wrote. “Instead Baker delivered a message: ‘The president is ordering you not to raise interest rates before the election.’” Mr. Volcker wasn’t planning to raise rates at the time. “I was stunned,” he wrote. “I later surmised that the library location had been chosen because, unlike the Oval Office, it probably lacked a taping system.” So it happens, and I don't know if anything forbids it. But making some kind of consultation mandatory nevertheless impacts the independence of the Fed in a way that isn't good for stability.
  11. I'm no scout, but this reminds me of what we see when MLB scouts talk about "projectability." Worthy just looks like a guy who will always be skinny, not the guy who may fill out and gain strength/weight as he matures. Franklin seems to have more of a projectable frame. So if they were pitching prospects, I think we'd see something like "Franklin has the frame to fill out and add 2-3 mph to his fastball."
  12. Hidden behind all the silly "it's TDS" comments is the actual policy changes being cooked up by people and groups waiting to pounce in a new Trump presidency. And so far, this is one of the scariest - Trump with a say in monetary policy. Say what you want about the Fed, but having an independent central bank has been one of the most critical factors in sustained economic growth, and as a preventative against political manipulation of the currency. It is an awful, stupid, dangerous idea. And it's in play if Trump wins.
  13. He HAD 4.4 speed. He actually flashed some potential with the Broncos, but he just couldn't stay on the field. As for Worthy: after sleeping on it, I'm fine with the trade and passing on him. A lot of talk here about how he's 165 pounds (o.k., I'll give him 170) and how he'll get beat up in the NFL. I'm not so worried about getting beat up running routes. But receivers do need to block too, and I can't see him having the ability to do that. So everything is kind of screaming situational speed guy, not primary X receiver. Andy Reid no doubt feels that he can make that work. With our current WR room, I don't think the Bills could make it work.
  14. It's not the trading down that bothers me. It's the fact that I got suckered into watching the most boring two hours on TV since Geraldo opened Al Capone's vault.
  15. Breaking: RG3 pissed that Washington drafted Cousins in the same year as him.
  16. If Andy Reid wanted him, that's good enough for me to turn down the trade and draft him myself.
  17. Why does Quinyon Mitchell look 34 and JJ McCarthy looks 14?
  18. She’s smart and seems to have an occasional pragmatic streak. Alito just seems angry and bitter now, becoming more and more doctrinaire as the years go by. Usually the opposite happens with some experience.
  19. Does it matter whether it was solely as a bargaining chip? That's how they used her to extract something they wanted.
  20. On a serious note - I can't find the underlying poll questions/data. If you dig into what Axios did give us, yes, the majority favor "mass deportations." But what does that mean? Does it mean rounding up people and sending them home without due process? Maybe not: 58% favor "increased pathways" for legal immigration. Would that include the spouse of a U.S. citizen who's here illegally? 65% say we should create new mechanisms for legal immigration so people don't have to enter illegally (not sure in what way this is different than the "legal pathways" question). 46% want to make sure people with legitimate asylum claims are protected, but how do we separate legitimate from illegitimate without due process (court hearings, etc)? My takeaway: Americans largely agree that the current situation is chaotic and unsustainable. I agree too. But they are also fundamentally decent people who see a role for immigrants - an increased legal role - and protections for people claiming asylum. So that's how we got here. "Mass deportations while assessing each case on its merits" is really a contradiction in terms. EDIT: I think I'd interpret it this way - "American people believe that those who are subject to deportation under the law should be expeditiously deported." Which is an indictment of Biden's policies, which by their own terms allow a lot of people who are here illegally and have no means of legalizing their status to stay here anyway.
  21. Thanks - I've said before that one reason I still hang out here is once in a while someone has actual knowledge/experience that helps me learn something or understand something better. So with that in mind: privatize air traffic control? Have privately-owned airports on the European model? Completely deregulate airline pricing and go with an open competition on fares and perks is the best way to ensure the passenger gets what he pays for? What about new models like JSX (a great customer experience, by the way), ostensibly operating charter flights and avoiding major airports and TSA?
  22. I get your point on the border crisis. Most of the reporting is really poor. But some of the mainstream media reporting is superb, and that's not because it's pro-Biden. For example: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/29/us/us-border-arizona-migrant-crossings.html https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/31/us/us-immigration-asylum-border.html From the second one, on the pull of loose asylum laws and the overwhelmed system: The United States is trying to run an immigration system with a fraction of the judges, asylum officers, interpreters and other personnel that it needs to handle the hundreds of thousands of migrants crossing the border and flocking to cities around the country each year. That dysfunction has made it impossible for the nation to expeditiously decide who can remain in the country and who should be sent back to their homeland. “I don’t know anyone who has been deported,” Carolina Ortiz, a migrant from Colombia, said in an interview in late December at an encampment outside Jacumba Hot Springs, about 60 miles southeast of San Diego and a stone’s throw from the hulking rust-colored barrier that separates the United States from Mexico. Or this: https://www.wsj.com/articles/masses-of-migrants-overwhelm-panamas-darien-gap-73d032d7 There is a good depth of reporting out there. Yes, in the Opinion sections the liberal approach dominates. But there is also actual reporting - sending a reporter to Panama, to the SW border, talking to people, analyzing statistics. I'll give some credit to Fox's Bill Melugin too for actually being there and asking some hard questions, but I guess now even Fox counts as "mainstream." Thank goodness that this type of actual reporting still happens in the mainstream media. The Alt Media is all hot takes and sloganeering. It's ok I guess for what it is, but for many people that kind of thing is their sole source of news. That's a bad thing.
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