Friday, June 26, 2009

And, never to die...

I have long believed that there was something in the body which "told" it when it was time to start dying. An old study with the pituitary glands of mice which increased the average life-span made me think that maybe it was hormone induced.

But, whatever the reason, I believe that, if you're under the age of 30 or so today, there's a significant likelihood that you'll never die -- of old age anyway (and if you're in a Western society).

I saw this today.

Interesting.

Immortality. Ennui. Zelazny.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Say It Ain't Sosa!

The NYT reports that Sammy Sosa tested positive for a banned substance (which is not reported) in 2003, one of the 104 positive results which resulted in the current MLB stringent testing rules.

We now know two of those 104 -- Sammy Sosa and Alex Rodriguez. Who are the remaining 102? We don't yet know, but, I'm fairly certain that other "big names" will slowly leak out.

Anyone surprised?

Anyone?

Nah.

What does this do to the Hall of Fame prospects of not only Sammy Sosa but of anyone in the "Steroid Era?"

It's hard to tell at this point. Mark McGwire has received less than 25% of the required 75% of Hall of Fame voters in each of his three years of eligibility. And, there's no "smoking gun" in McGwire's case, just what we saw on the field and his refusal to answer questions about his drug use when testifying in front of Congress.

Ivan Rodriguez will soon pass Carlton Fisk for most games by a catcher, probably today. He's won ten golden gloves. He, Bench, and Berra are said to have the best arms behind the plate in the history of the game. He has a .300 lifetime batting average with 300 home runs. He was the AL MVP in 1999. Offensively and defensively, he clearly is one of the top five catchers of all time. Yet, he likely won't go into the Hall of Fame.

Why?

Because he was named in Jose Canseco's book.

That's all. And, apparently, in this steroid era, it's enough.

But...

What if most of the current crop of potential Hall of Famers ultimately are found on that list of those 104 who tested positive in 2003?

What do we do then?

The Hall of Fame is supposed to enshrine the most dominant players of a particular era. If all or most of the players in a particular era were "juiced up," then we will have only two choices: 1) Just black out the past 20 years or so and not enshrine anyone; or 2) Compare like to like and enshrine the best of the era regardless of whether they used drugs to enhance their performance or not (with a sad nod to those who played by the rules and came up just a bit short...).

I think that we should just assume that Canseco was right and accept that the vast majority of major league baseball players were "juiced" and simply enshrine the best of this era, but with an asterisk.

The Health Care Debate. Do we need more socialized medicine?

I have mixed feelings about this issue.

We have a screwed up system.

For example, I pay around five grand a year for my health care insurance. Just mine. In order to keep my premiums down (!), I have to have a very high deductible -- fifteen hundred bucks.

This results in me essentially not having insurance for anything other than major medical disasters since I'm going to have to go out of pocket for anything which isn't a serious medical problem, and if I have a serious medical problem, I would be able to receive medical care for it whether or not I had insurance.

Huh.

And, in the event that I had a major medical disaster, having insurance isn't going to prevent the inevitable financial disaster, since, like most, I don't have any "nest-egg" to pay my other bills while I'm in the hospital or rendered incapable of working. (Of course, if I didn't have to pay five grand a year, perhaps I could have, over the past several decades of paying that sum, I could have saved enough to tide me over, but, then I wouldn't have insurance and the medical disaster would kill me financially.)

So, in the event of a major medical disaster, I'm pretty well financially doomed with or without insurance.

Huh.

Private insurance spreads risk. People like me who never make claims but pay premiums pay for those who make claims. Private insurance companies (in general) make their profits by taking in more in premiums than they pay out in claims. This provides incentive to delay or deny claims which are properly promptly paid. (Anyone who has had to fight with their insurance company over whether or how much to pay on a claim is familiar with this truth.)

Public insurance doesn't spread risk. Public insurance has a budget. Public insurance, accordingly, rations care. It is the inevitable outgrowth of having a limited budget.

So, no matter if you have insurance or if you're on public insurance (such as Medicaid), you're at the mercy of your insurance provider as to when or whether your particular medical needs will be paid for from a source other than out of your pocket. In the end, both are run by accountants.

Huh.

We all know (or should know) that the government doesn't do anything especially well. Trusting our medical care (a.k.a. our lives and the lives of our loved ones) to the government seems a chancy choice. But, we know that the government will be there tomorrow. (And, if it's not, our medical care is the least of our worries...)

We all know (or should know) that competition between private enterprises results in lowered costs and better service. Of course, it also results in extinction of those who cannot compete or who make bad business decisions. (Ask A.I.G.) We can wake up tomorrow in the hospital staring at an unpaid hospital bill because our former insurance carrier no longer exists.

Huh.

In the end, I have to come down (marginally) on the side of private medical insurance with the "safety net" of public insurance for those who cannot afford private medical insurance -- essentially what we have now.

What "tips" it for me is this: when the bean-counters count their beans and ration care in a public insurance model, they tend to concentrate on rationing (or eliminating) the most expensive care for those who will, if they receive the care, least benefit from it, i.e., those in the last six months of their lives. Further, those bean-counters will ration testing, since much testing results in no medical benefit other than ruling out medical conditions. (Pittsburgh has more MRI machines than exist in the entire country of Canada for example.) Public insurance isn't a fan of "experimental" medical procedures or medicine.

Private insurance companies don't like to pay for testing any more than the government, but, unlike the government, they can be sued in an effort to force them to adhere to the terms of the insurance contract. Private insurers can be forced to pay the huge costs associated with a person in the final stages of their lives -- the government can't. Whether a medical procedure or drug is "experimental" can be decided by a judge or jury rather than a bureaucrat.

So, what tips things for me?

Lawyers.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Phil Jackson -- Greatest Basketball Coach of All Time?

This is a tough question. By the objective standard of playoff appearances, playoff wins, playoff win percentages, and Titles, it would seem a no-brainer.

So, why the question?

Because of who he coached, of course. He won six with Michael Jordan and Scottie Pipen, the greatest player of all time (according to most) and one of the top 50 greatest players of all time.

He won three with Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant, two of the top 50 greatest players of all time.

He won this last one with Kobe Bryant, but didn't win it until he had assembled a team with one of the best centers in the game (Pau Gasol) and a 6th man forward who would be a starter on any other team (Lamar Odom).

But, the same is true of Red Auerbach. He had more than his share of top 50 all-time players (Bill Russell, Bob Cousy, Sam Jones.)

The same is true of Pat Riley and his six rings. He had Magic Johnson, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and James Worthy.

Seems it's hard to be in the discussion for "best coach of all time" without having a fistful of "best players of all time," doesn't it?

In fact, a review of the rosters of the Finals winners over the history of the NBA is almost a recitation of the names of the top 50 players of all time. And, when multiple titles are won, you see multiple players who are in the top 50 players of all time (and/or ones who are certainly the best of their era).

Deeper review shows that winners of the NBA finals are almost entirely teams with a dominant big man -- one of the top 50 players of all time -- Bill Russell, Bill Walton, Shaquille O'Neal, Wilt Chamberlain, Robert Parish, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Hakeem Olajuwon, Tim Duncan, and George Mikan.

This theme, multiple titles won by a coach with a handful of all-time greats along with a dominant big man, is quite consistent throughout NBA history.

Except for Phil Jackson's SIX without a memorable big man.

Red had Russell. Riley had Jabbar. Phil had Horace Grant and Luc Longley.

Each had fistfuls of all-time greats (two or more) on their teams. But ONLY Phil was able to win multiple titles (six) WITHOUT a dominant big man.

For me, that settles the question.

Obama's (Latest) Foreign Policy Failure

It just doesn't seem like the brightest move to deposit four people allegedly trained by the Taliban or Al Qaeda in a dependency of the U.K. (Bermuda) without, you know, letting them know.

Maybe the Queen can find the reason in one of Obama's speeches in her redundant I-Pod.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Lakers Win....

Sigh.

Today's Ebay Listings!

Today's listings are modern-day comic books, including Preacher, Poison Elves, JSA, Ultimate Fantastic Four, Fantastic Four (Volume Three) and three X-Men Graphic Novels (Trade Paperbacks). I also posted an early Thor (#190) and Batman (#124).

Can Sarah Palin save the GOP?

Yes.

Do you remember the first time you heard Sarah Palin speak? How it made you feel?

I do. Electrified. Spellbound. Hanging on every word, every syllable, wondering "Who in the hell is this sudden star?" I immediately took a liking to this new voice.

Then began the relentless, vicious attacks from the left, the condescension of the right's intelligentsia (the Parkers and Wills). They attempted to diminish her, to marginalize her. And, to an extent, they succeeded. But, even with that constant barrage of undeserved attacks from all sides, the faithful flocked to hear her, this new voice that sounded so much like themselves coming from a woman whose life's experiences so resembled their own.

The faithful recognized one of their own. They sensed the genuineness of Sarah Palin.

She didn't just say what people wanted to hear; she said what she wanted to say. She, as governor, didn't do just what people wanted her to do; she did what she was compelled by her fundamental beliefs to do. In the common parlance, she "walked the walk."

Some "conservatives," especially the beltway intelligentsia, decided to essentially ignore Sarah Palin's history of accomplishment in favor of remarking disparagingly about the way she speaks which is, at times, scattershot to the point of being almost unintelligible.

But, even in those moments of meandering mazes of half-finished sentences, for the faithful, there isn't any question as to what Sarah Palin believes -- just a desire that she could articulate it better.

For them, and for me, a President we know to be a conservative is far superior to one who is merely talks like one.

As this remarkable woman becomes more comfortable in her fresh national skin, she will develop the skills necessary to better articulate her positions, positions informed by her fundamental beliefs, and like Reagan, her essential likeability will come through and more people will find themselves willing to listen to her ideas with more open minds. When this happens, those other Republican Presidential hopefuls who are more informed by polls than beliefs will find themselves jockeying for position as her Vice Presidential nominee.

The GOP needs desperately an unifying voice, a voice around which the party faithful can rally. There simply isn't any other voice in the GOP which engenders such support -- support springing almost as much from the belief in her as the ideas she champions.

This is called "trust." The faithful believes in Sarah Palin as we do no other "politician" in the Republican party. We believe that she believes in the ideas and values she champions, ideas and values that we believe in. As importantly, we believe that, if elected, she'll actually do what she says that she will.

That is a powerful combination of forces.

Perhaps powerful enough to save the fractured GOP.

Shaq going to Cleveland? LeBron said to be in tears.

Tears of joy, of anticipation, that is.

Shaquille O'Neal looked great last year, having his best year since leaving Miami and Dwayne Wade. He has a couple of good years left in him where he can be one of the top two or three dominant big men in the game.

LeBron James is, without question, one of the top three players in the game today. (Kobe Bryant and Dwayne Wade being the other two, if you were confused...)

With Shaquille O'Neal, LeBron James has a big man to play the game as LeBron James is built to play it -- inside out and outside in -- and a big man who is both willing and able to fulfill his role at the highest level. (Shaquille O'Neal is one of the best passing big men in the game.)

Will the trade go through? I think so. Phoenix needs the cap room and Shaquille O'Neal never really fit into the gesalt of the Suns to begin with. And, if Cleveland wants LeBron James to be a Cleveland Cavalier after next year when his contract runs out, they must win NOW. Lebron wants it; Shaq wants it; the Suns need the cap room; Cleveland needs a dominant inside force.

All the stars are aligned -- full speed ahead!

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Today's Ebay Listings!

Today, I posted around 80 items, all baseball cards. This batch included some 1959 and 1960 Topps (mostly commons of St. Louis Cardinals, Los Angeles Dodgers, and Philadelphia Phillies). I posted some 1977 star cards (Joe Morgan, Steve Garvey, Fergie Jenkins, Jim Rice, Willie McCovey). I also posted a small selection of Alex Rodriguez, Barry Bonds, Chipper Jones, Roger Clemens, Ken Griffey, Jr., and Tony Gwynn inserts along with two factory sets of 2006 Topps.

Leave Brett Favre Alone!

I keep hearing the pundits on television and on the radio giving poor Brett Favre a hard time for his seeming indecision about whether or not he is going to play for the Vikings this year. Some give him a hard time based on his timing of his surgery, alleging that he is trying to escape mandatory work-outs. Others slam him for being a prima donna. Some slam him because they think that his sole reason for even wanting to play for the Vikings is so that he can get "revenge" on Green Bay twice a year.

They're all wrong.

First, we have to look at the timing. He wasn't released from the Jets until April 28th. Prior to his release, he simply wasn't free to even communicate with the Vikings. He told us last year that he wouldn't ask for his release from the Jets. He didn't. They released him gratis.

So, it hasn't been even two months since Favre could seek other teams upon which to play.

Second, we have to consider what happened last year -- from Brett's perspective. He had a hell of a good season until he got injured. He hadn't been released by the Jets, so he had no reason to undergo surgery to repair the injury. The injury is one which might "repair" itself through use or might not (a partially torn right (throwing arm) bicep tendon). A little more than two weeks after his release, after the Vikings expressed interest, Brett consulted renowned sports surgeon, Dr. James Andrews. A little more than two weeks later, he had the surgery.

So, Brett, who had an amazing first 11 games of last season and 5 terrible games to end the season, doesn't yet know whether or not he's physically capable of playing the position.

Third, we have to look at things from the Vikings perspective. They don't know whether or not Brett Favre is the Brett Favre of last season's first 11 games or last 5.

So, what do we have? A prima donna who is milking his time in the spotlight? A Hall of Famer who put off his surgery just to avoid training camp?

No.

What we have is a quarterback who thinks he can still play at the highest level -- if he's healthy -- but doesn't know if he's healthy. We have a Super Bowl caliber team lacking a Super Bowl caliber quarterback who thinks that Brett Favre can be that quarterback -- if he's healthy -- but doesn't know if he's healthy.

So, both are in the process of finding out to their individual satisfaction whether he is healthy, and if so, can he play at the level that can get the Vikings over the hump.

So...Leave Brett Favre alone!