Tears Shed For Villanova

Tears Shed For Villanova
By Chris Freind

Dear North Carolina State:

Really? Did you really have to rip our hearts out by beating our Number One seed Villanova?

Congratulations. We hope you’re proud. You single-handedly kicked eight million Philadelphia sports fans in the teeth, sending us right back into our perpetual state of depression. We may be one of the nation’s biggest cities, but somehow, we are dead last in championships.

Sixers? Horrendous. Twenty-two years since their last title. And for good measure, the franchise owns the NBA record for fewest wins in a season. Flyers? Do we even have a hockey team anymore? (Gerry Ford was President the last time we won the Stanley Cup). Phils? Most losses of any team, in any sport, in American history (over 10,000). And our beloved Iggles? Always close, but zero Super Bowl trophies.

Our last true hope was Villanova. Sure, they made history once before as a Cinderella, but this was a powerhouse team. This time it would be different. This was the year that would finally be ours, with the dynamic Wildcats surely advancing to the Championship game, then knocking off those other Wildcats. It was so close, almost in our grasp.
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But instead, you just made ‘Nova coach Jay Wright the next Andy Reid. Great regular season leader, but underachiever when it counts most. And so our mammoth inferiority complex continues. So thanks —- and maybe we’ll see you next year, when our Groundhog Day in the NCAA’s will no doubt continue.

Yours in Suffering,

Philadelphia

****

March Madness.

It is, without a doubt, the best sporting event on the planet.

Sure, the Olympics stoke nationalistic fervor, and Americans sometimes excel in sports where they aren’t favored (who can forget the Miracle on Ice?), but America is virtually never the underdog, because we almost always lead the world in the medal count.

And stop right there. No, the World Cup absolutely, positively, cannot compare. First, soccer isn’t a sport; it’s a recreational activity. Second, enough with the theatrics of players writhing on the turf for ten minutes because they injured a nail. Third, what’s up with that running clock and the fact that we really don’t know when the game will end? Even worse is the offsides rule, which kills the .001 percent excitement level in professional soccer by stifling aggressiveness and encouraging pansy play. A rule, by the way, that virtually no American understands.

Finally, can we just admit that all those “cards” —- which come in more colors than the Homeland Security threat-level chart —- are really dumb? Refs don’t warn basketball players not to hack a guy after the fact. They actually call the foul. A simple concept, yet one lost on the soccer fanatics.

But the NCAA Tournament is different, in so many ways. And when it comes our way each spring, some miraculous things occur throughout America.

March Madness teaches us that anything can happen, and that miracles do occur. Its lesson that sportsmanship, confidence, and work ethic can achieve the impossible are timeless for young and old alike.

On game days, very little work gets done. And you know what? That’s okay, even with most bosses. Americans work harder than anyone else on earth. Hell, we’re still being productive while the Europeans are taking a siesta —- from their earlier siesta. If there was ever something to which we can legitimately feel “entitled,” it’s taking a little time to watch the tournament together.

And that is the most important thing: being together. For a few short weeks, Americans suddenly become blind to our prejudices. Political partisanship and the management-labor caste go out the window. The only colors we care about are those worn by our favorite teams.

No longer do we see ourselves, and each other, as black and white, male and female, liberal and conservative. Instead, we become friends, neighbors, and countrymen, all side-by-side, cheering in unity. In lunchrooms, bars, and cubicles, even crowded around cellphones, we huddle. Screaming. Smiling. And sometimes even crying.

We come together to cheer for our teams —- some of whom we’ve never heard of, hailing from places we don’t know —- watching breathlessly as a Number 14 seed comes agonizingly close to slaying a giant.

We experience the unbelievable moments, sometimes forgetting to breathe, as seniors —-some destined for the NBA, but most for an “ordinary” life —- play their hearts out, knowing that one misstep will end their collegiate career. And just as often, we see 18-year-old freshmen step to the foul line with the game literally in their hands, as an entire nation —- including the President of the United States —- watches.

And alma maters and home teams notwithstanding, the vast majority of Americans always pull for the underdogs, the teams that the “experts” don’t give a snowball’s chance in hell to win. Yet year after year, many find a way to knock out Goliath. We find this endearing not just because it’s fun, but because it personifies who we are as Americans.

From our very beginnings, the odds have always been stacked against us:

-Defeat the British, merely the most powerful nation the world had even known? Dream on. But we did, making the dream of liberty and freedom a reality, on an unprecedented scale, for hundreds of millions.

-Win the Civil War? Forget it. Even if Lincoln’s army prevailed, the defeated South’s resentment would never subside, and its people would never, could never, assimilate into a northern-dominated America. If Vegas had odds, it would have been a sure bet that the tattered Union would not prevail. But it did.

-Save the world from the tyranny of the Axis Powers? With an under-equipped army and industrial base not suited for defense production? Not for decades could victory be expected. And to engineer a weapon so awesome that it could end the war after just one or two uses? Forget about it. And yet, the Greatest Generation not only accomplished those things, but provided the blueprint for America’s postwar mega-boom.

-Put a man on the moon? Save the Apollo 13 astronauts? Beat the Soviet Union and defeat communism? End segregation? Elect a black man to the presidency? The list goes on.

And yet despite America’s track record of beating the odds, the naysayers are still out in full force, predicting gloom and doom. Maybe they’re right this time. Maybe America really is in its twilight, as the country’s seemingly insurmountable problems —- and the politicians’ inability to solve them in a civil manner —- attests.

Maybe.

But no matter how many times America has fallen, and how often its back has been to the wall, it has always —- always —- prevailed. For the record, my money’s on the world’s biggest underdog coming through in the clutch once again, turning it on when it has to, and finishing the game stronger than anyone else. It’s what we’ve always done, and it’s what we must do now.

And why? Because that’s what a true champion does.

Now back to my bracket….

Tears Shed For Villanova

Matt Brown Faces Human Trafficking Charges

Matt Brown Faces Human Trafficking Charges
Matt Brown, former Temple star

Lara Witt of the Philadelphia Daily News has a story concerning the arrest of former Temple University football star Matt Brown on human trafficking charges.

Brown, 25, allegedly received money for procuring  girls ages 14, 16 and 17 for sex.

He was arrested in Baltimore.

At Temple, Brown was a kick return specialist and the Big East Conference’s special team player of the year in 2012. He signed a contract with the NFL’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers the next year but was released.

Jeffrey Epstein Matt Brown Faces Human Trafficking Charges
Jeffrey Epstein, billionaire with private island.

Ms. Witt notes that human trafficking i.e. slavery generates $32 billion per year and involves tens of millions of people.

Bill Clinton Portrait Matt Brown Faces Human Trafficking Charges
Presidential buddy.

We’d just like to point out that small fish like Brown are not the real problem. The real problem is billionaires with private islands and their presidential buddies.

 

 

Matt Brown Faces Human Trafficking Charges

Chuck Bednarik Loved Slim Jims

Joe Ball, president of American News Service, has sent us this  personal experience memory of an advertising-related contact with  Philadelphia Eagles legend Chuck Bednarik who died March 21: Chuck Bednarik Loved Slim Jims

As owner of a small advertising agency in the early 1960’s one of my clients was Cherry-Levis, manufacturers of the spicy “Slim Jim” meat sticks.

I suggested to owner Al Levis, now also deceased, that he use Chuck Bednarik in his marketing.

He agreed- -on the basis that Mr. Bednarik would be paid with company products.

The arrangement was he would receive all the products he could carry on one trip out of the warehouse.

Mr. Bednarik agreed.

In my mind/memory I can still see him leaving the warehouse with huge cartons of Slim Jim’s on each shoulder and placing them in the trunk of his car. 
 

Chuck Bednarik Loved Slim Jims

#90 Scam Still Around Says FCC

#90 Scam Still Around Says FCC
Our staff hard at work investigating tales of the ancient internet.

The warning regarding #90 that has been circulating since the dawn of the world wide web remains with us.

It contains a nugget of truth but it doesn’t effect most telephones including cellphones.

Here is the  claim we have been asked to investigate by Judy M.

90# on your telephone
 
I dialed ‘0’ to check this out, and the operator confirmed that this was correct, so please pass it on.. (l also checked out snopes.com and truthorfiction.com This is true, and also applies to cell phones!)
 
PASS ON TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW
 
I received a telephone call last evening from an individual identifying
himself as an AT&T Service Technician (could also be Telus) who was
conducting a test on the telephone lines. He stated that to complete the test  I should touch nine (9), zero (0), the pound sign (#), and then hang up.  Luckily, I was suspicious and refused.
 
Upon contacting the telephone company, I was informed that by pushing 90#, you give the requesting individual full access to your telephone line, which enables them to place long distance calls billed to your home phone number.  I was further informed that this scam has been originating from many local jails/prisons. DO NOT press 90# for ANYONE…
 
After checking with Verizon they also said it was true, so
do not dial 90# for anyone !!!!! PLEASE HIT THAT FORWARD
BUTTON AND PASS THIS ON TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW!!!

So what does the FCC say about it?

The old traditional (wired) phone scam involving the 90# buttons on your business telephone is still around.. . . This scam only works if your telephone is served by a private branch exchange (PBX) or private automatic branch exchange (PABX). 

Just the same if an unsolicited caller asks you to do something it is always wise to just hang up.

#90 Scam Still Around Says FCC

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 3-27-15

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 3-27-15

Farmers feed cows magnets. Magnets sit in the stomachs and attract all the small sharp metal objects cows swallow since they don’t chew. It keeps the small bits of metal from doing real damage. How do you know if a cow already has a magnet? Check it with a compass.

Automatic Payroll Deductions For Senate Elections?

Automatic Payroll Deductions For GOP?
Sen. Don White, who is brilliantly illustrating the absurdity of automatic payroll deductions for political causes.

Pennsylvania State Sen. Don White (R-41) is circulating a memo among his Harrisburg peers proposing that money be automatically be deducted from the paychecks of senate staffers and placed directly in the coffers of the campaign committees respective parties.

Some are expressing outrage, OUTRAGE, we say.

Which is kind of White’s point. He does not want this — seriously or not. His goal is to illustrate that the remarkably unfair, authoritarian, banana republic policy he is suggesting is no different than what is in place regarding automatic payroll deductions for members of Pennsylvania public employee unions, whose leaders then use the money to support political candidates who  more often than not proponents of policies in direct conflict with the true interest of those in private labor force

Really, is shutting down refineries and mines, and  importing cheap Mexican labor in the interest of Pennsylvania workers? Well, that’s what the candidates that get the public union money support.

So how about it Sen. Tom McGarrigle? Are you getting behind Don White’s plan?  Doesn’t not having such a law  deprive choice from workers who want a (political party) with an effective political voice. 

Hat tip Matt Brouilette.

Diamond Begs House To Remember Workers

Diamond Begs House To Remember Workers
State Rep. Russ Diamond

State Rep. Russ Diamond (R-102) was the last person to testify before the State House Appropriations Committee concerning this year’s Pennsylvania budget.

“I just want to remind you as we go forward that every dollar we spend here is a dollar a hard-working Pennsylvanian first had to earn. We are talking about the dollars of truck drivers who spend maybe days, weeks away from their homes providing for their children, a single mom who works two jobs, the garbage man who risks his life and limb every day jumping up and down on the truck.”

Diamond is a truck driver in real life.

Here is his short speech. Springfield’s Bill Adolph makes a quick cameo.

Diamond Begs House To Remember Workers

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 3-26-15

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 3-26-15

You’re a tad overweight so you go on diet and drop a few inches from your waistline. Eighty-four percent of the fat was exhaled as CO2 and 16 percent was excreted as water.

Delco Disenfranchised Dems Removed

Delco Disenfranchised Dems Removed
Bob Guzzardi, whose case was cited by Delaware County Common Pleas Court Judge James Proud in removing three Democrats from the Delaware County Council Primary ballot.

Jack Evans of Norwood, Richard Womack of Darby Township, and Christine Reuther of Wallingford were removed from the Delaware County Council (Pa) Democrat primary ballot for failing to file the proper report with the proper bureaucrat.

The three filed statements of financial disclosure with the Board of Elections but failed to provide a copy to the County Clerk.

Common Pleas Court Judge James Proud said because of that “no ballot for you”.

Proud cited the infamous Bob Guzzardi ruling handed down May 20 in which the state Supreme Court ruled that Guzzardi  could not appear on last spring’s Republican gubernatorial primary ballot because his paperwork was not perfect.

What the Democrats did was a technical mistake. As they are accused of neither acquiring enough signatures nor presenting false ones, it is obvious that enough people want them on the ballot for there to be an election.

As they filed statements of financial interest publicly, they obviously were not trying to avoid scrutiny.

The proper recourse would have been for Proud to tell Evans et al to file the documents correctly and in the case of Evans to sign it and get it notarized. The only deadline that should be immutable is the presentation of signatures. Technical stuff should always take a backseat to democracy.

Delaware County Daily Times editor Phil Heron, however, notes that only 250 write-in signatures are needed for them to get on the ballot. You don’t think there are 250 Democrats in this county willing to do that? You don’t think this is going to make the Democrats more motivated and not less, and  nominal Republicans more suspicious of those now holding power hence sympathetic to the Dems.

Don’t assume party loyalty is the force it once was. See Scott Wagner.

The people really are getting sick of sneakiness.

Bob Guzzardi did not have a prayer of beating Tom Corbett last spring. Because Corbett played dirty, though, he burned all his bridges with the anti-corruption activists supporting Guzzardi and went from having a tiny, smidgen of a chance to win the general to none.

Vote fraud is bad and must be punished severely. Technical errors are not vote fraud. It’s sickly ironic that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court which shot down a sensible photo voter ID law upholds these banana republic  games.

For the record, County Democratic Party Chairman David Landau has vowed to appeal to the higher courts.

The Democrats were represented by J. Manly Parks, of Duane & Morris

 Delco Disenfranchised Dems Removed