Thursday, August 27, 2009

Camelot? You Can't Be Serious

I've heard it until I want to pout cotton in my ears. "Camelot." It foolishly portrayed the Kennedy clan in a glorious fashion that was as calculating as the family that bore this insane overview of a family of greed and things too numerous to print. The passing of Teddy Kennedy to a brain tumor has brought the focus again to "Camelot." The most liberal -- by far -- of the Kennedy boys left Teddy not knowing if his beloved health care became fact. Many now say this will speed the certainty of a health care overhaul. I hope not. It's as bad an idea now as it was before his death. And now I fully anticipate more outrage by the libs because of this post who blindly looked past the sordid side of Teddy and his brothers. I've gone through this before, but facts and the umbrella of a false cover of "Camelot" doesn't change the overview of this family to me, even when death visits and the media goes overboard. "Camelot?" That's too much and you know it.

Doctors Get Slammed, So Change The Debate

One of the things that bugs me the most about the health care debate is something that isn't even on the table. And it's shameful.
The debate about health care reform in this country better wake up, because the liability question that doctors have to deal with could be a major point for discussion, but, alas, it is not part of the debate. I'm talking about liability targeting doctors. Right now doctors have to pay, collectively, for liability insurance and it is a staggering amount. It's why doctors operate out of fear and the cost in savings if this fear abates is also staggering. It seems to me to be clear that doctors need this issue to be a part of the debate and until it is, well, the discussion is meaningless. Doctors by the thousands are now operating in fear, fear that is damaging to say the least. I'd like to hear from you on this part of the debate which, unbelievably, isn't on the table. How can this be? It's unhealthy.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Moans And Growns...And Who Is Lying?

Most of us seem to be all in a dither about the NCAA's handling of Derrick Rose being ineligible while playing basketball at the University of Memphis.
I've covered numerous NCAA investigations during my journalistic career and this one is really not hard to explain: Somebody's lying, maybe several, depending on the gullibility factor. For example: It borders on being stupid to believe that all of the denials have a stink attached to them.
But, consider this: What if the Tigers had WON the national championship against Kansas, instead of losing a game they should have won, blowing a big lead down the stretch? Talk about explosions! Would the penalty have been more tougher? Undoubtedly so. Now for what you already know: I don't know how people can say the ruling of losing all 38 games last season because Rose played in every one of them, including two regular-season games and that last game against Kansas, is all wet. It is entirely appropriate, as I see it.
Now, there was other news yesterday: The Tiger golf team also suffered in the NCAA findings, but that pales beside the basketball wallop. The basketball team will also have to return a bunch of money to the NCAA and former coach John Calipari could -- COULD -- have to return some $300,000-plus in bonuses for advancing to the championship game. We'll know more after the NCAA considers the university's appeal. But let us return to the central core of this embarrassing mess: Who is lying? Do you believe Calipari that he knew nothing about it. What about using the plausible deniability defense? That's a phrase used by many Presidents of the United States in knowing, but not knowning. What about Rose, who is now beyond the reach of the NCAA; he's playing for the Chicago Bulls and making millions. Let us return, though, my dear, gullible, friends reading this. Who lied? Will we ever know? The Tiger defense surely is going to be based on the NCAA clearinghouse giving the go-ahead for Rose to compete. He certainly qualified for a lot of doubt by failing the test three times before "passing " it. Fail it three times and then, voila, success. Not likely. And the site of that final test? We've got to consider this: It happened in Detroit, we're told. Detroit? DETROIT? What's up with that? Maybe Rose felt more at ease instead of in his own backyard. So many questions, so few answers. OK, until we find out whose lying, you have to look for something tangible: I submit to you that the problem with grades and transcripts and the need to recruit less-than-eligible young guys who came out of the womb bouncing a basketball, we will have these moments of shaking our collective heads. I will close at this time with something I've asked for, oh, maybe a million times: Clean up this mess and if poor students in that ill-placed belief that they are student-athletes, forget it. Hogwash. They are athletes. Period. Forget the student deal. Now, we've gotten this far and there is still no conclusion: Who was lying?

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Tigers To Appeal NCAA Ruling

The University of Memphis basketball record of last season -- 38 wins and a close loss to Kansas for the national championship -- has been invalidated by the NCAA Committee on Infractions.
The university has said it will appeal, but in my experience in covering NCAA infractions is that appeals rarely work. In fact, the NCAA can add on penalties if a university chooses to appeal and that's because the NCAA is judge, jury and executioner. In today's press release, the Tiger basketball program was found guilty of major violations. The most serious violation centered around former Tiger point guard Derrick Rose had some one take his SAT for him. Rose vehemently denied the charge. The university's president, university counsel and athletic director appeared in a press conference shortly after the NCAA announced the penalties and each looked stunned at the ruling. Rose, from Chicago, is now with the Chicago Bulls in the NBA. He was never going to play more than one season with the Tigers, opting as many outstanding players now do, to go "one-and-done." He was one of the most coveted players in the country before settling on the Tigers, a recruiting coup for former Tiger coach John Calipari. Calipari, now the head coach at the University of Kentucky, was cleared of any wrongdoing by the NCAA investigation. Calipari now has been at two universities where the NCAA has been the head coach where an entire season has been taken away. His UMass team in 1996 when it was found that the team's star, Marcus Camby, had taken money from an agent.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

The Pressure Is On

News comes to the Memphis City Schools that it is a finalist of a grant of $100 million from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. If the Memphis school system wins, it would use the money to improve U.S. teacher quality. Goodness knows it is needed in a system that has way too many incompetent teachers. MCS Supt. Kriner Cash called it "extraordinarily good news." Cash said this "only means that we are moving forward" in the process. Other school systems in the running are Atlanta, Hillsborough, Fla., Prince George's County, Md., West Palm Beach, Fla., Omaha, Neb., Denver, Los Angeles Charter School Management Corp., and Pittsburgh. The pressure is on Memphis' troubled system and it would be a hard pill to swallow. Saying we made the final cut isn't good enough, is it? It would be devastating on a national scale.

Great Line!

One of the best lines I've seen recently was this newspaper line saying Brett Farve is returning to the NFL: "The Ego Has Landed." Favre has this habit of saying he's coming back, then not. Back and forth. It's a little ridiculous. Anyway, Favre will apparently suit up soon with the Minnesota Vikings. The Ego line is a take-off of that bigger line, in my opinion, of the words of a U.S. astronaut saying "The Eagle Has Landed"on the moon.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

What's Left To Say?

Please say it isn't so. But, sadly, it is. "King" Willie Herenton is on the prowl again and he's testing what little understanding to hit the sidelines. Game over. But here he goes again, changing his mind, doing things that leave us to say, collectively, we're all nuts. I have come to the point to say he's definitely nuts. I think most people have come to this conclusion. He's pulled a petition to run for his old job, Mayor of the City of Memphis. He resigned that position recently and there was fanfare all all of that stuff about his 18 years in office. There were some good things in those 18 years, but, overwhelming, it was a downhill slide. I have said it before and I'll say it again: Historians will be a harsh judge of His Majesty. Extremely harsh. And let me say it with force: Memphians will spend years recovering from his tenure. The position he has put on the city is spending $1 million dollars for a special election, to find, of all things, a successor to Herenton......and he might end up holding the position once again. What's left to say? He's driven all of us nuts.

Friday, August 7, 2009

Let's Do Some Snitching Ourselves

Oh, no. Say it isn't so.
Liberals apparently are telling their clones out in the Hinterlands to e-mail them and tattle on those who are trying to "undermine" proposals that are coming out of the White House at the speed of light. I am stunned that liberals would do this, but it's a sure sign -- isn't it? -- that the American people, large numbers of them, are not buying that toothy grin of our President. Oh, there are plenty of liberals who believe that Obama is the Chosen One, but if this is true about the Snitch Detail then you might want to review your blind support. I suggest you snitch on those you find out are snitching. It's the least we can do and maybe our wonderful liberal media will have enough -- uh, you know what part of our anatomy I'm talking about -- to expose what the White House is doing.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

What Did It Cost Us? I Want To Know

There comes a time when one has to stand back from the crowd and do the right thing. This is one of those times. Two American journalists stupidly were captured by the North Koreans. Naturally, the trumped-up charge against them was they were spying for the United States. I doubt it was true but it created an international furor. After months of negotiating for their release, in came the posse -- former President Bill Clinton and a lot of Democrats who now have sprained hands from patting themselves on the back. Enough already. I want to know what we had to give to this sordid, worthless country? I'm serious. I still hold to what this country's policy on terrorists was you don't deal with terrorists.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Mr. Mom Is Doing Fine

"How you doin', Mr. Mom?"
It's the overwhelming question I am asked since experiencing the loss of my radio show.
The other one that's close is "we sure miss you on the radio," or, "how can we get you back, you left such a hole?......."
Well, first things first.
I've settled into a routine and let me tell you something -- I have a new appreciation for the traditional role of women.
My daily routine, with some exceptions, includes doing the wash, in both the kitchen and utility room. How many clothes can one woman wear? Well, that's going to get me into trouble because my wife works a full-time job and I'm a stay-at-home Mom. Oh, well, next comes dinner. Thank goodness I don't have to worry about breakfast or lunch, that is unless
my wife is home. I've now been looking for some kind of lotion because washing and cooking can leave you with dry hands.
The toughest thing about preparing dinner is the choices. My wife set me up a long time agi, at least a year or so, when she came home looking for a glass of wine and a soft chair. "What a day!" she said. I whispered about her "tough" day. "Yeah," I said to myself, "tell me about it...."
Well, I've been proud of myself and I'm beginning to branch out in the selection of the meals. Look, spaghetti or chili tends to draw looks again of "oh, no, not again," all the while not hurting my feelings with those silent looks.
I finally made the connection and I blurted out, "Okay, I know what you're thinking. I do. You want more variation, don't you? Go ahead, say it.:
My wife finally rescued me -- and our daughter -- that it was only fair to come up with other selections. They've been very helpful, but I have to admit anything I cook doesn't have the experience that Margaret has (hint, hint because I know she will get around to reading this when I'm not looking.
I'm also big in grocery shopping.
Now this is a real challenge, even though Margaret leaves a detailed note, one I couldn't read if my life depended on it. She doesn't know it until now, but I've met some of the nicest people at Kroger. They seem to know the code of lists put in the hands of hubby.
This confession is sometimes good because I can make choices and the wife just smiles. See, those lists confirming what you purchase doesn't allow for cheating. What the heck, I slip in a doughnut here or there. I also spend a lot of time not shopping at Kroger. People who by now know me ask about sports and the Obama administration, the University of Memphis basketball team. I've started to worry that I might get some of the Kroger staff in trouble, that's why I've asked them to move along with me under the cover of me now knowing that the heck I'm looking for.
I have come to the conclusion that shopping for food is punishment for any number of things. What have I done wrong? That's especially tough because I don't keep count; women, believe me, do.
So, I guess that about covers it for now. I've learned an awful lot since changing my life. I've really gotten into this thing. My wife is complimenting me a lot; that's helps. If you see me wobbling around Kroger or Wal-Mart, say hello.
I'm Mr. Mom and proud of it.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Herenton: Can We Live Without Him?

I was sitting in the Hall of Mayors recently when "King" Willie Herenton was saying good-bye.
It was, as usual, all about him. Some things we can credit with this odd, hard-to-read, self-serving public figure that is tryly the most controversial fellows we ever seen. Or will see.
He's bombastic, he's sold on his self, and one of his comments was how Memphis has benefitted from his almost 18 years of service.
Is that true?
I don't think so.
As a matter of fact, I don't think he has tackled any of the major problems from taking office to the present. Unfair? Again, I don't think so. He's personally responsible for driving a lot of people -- and businesses -- out of Memphis and they almost certainly will not return, even with a more moderate, less bombastic leader.
We can go on and on and we need to say he's the first black superintendent of Memphis City Schools and the first black Mayor of the City of Memphis. But here's where you -- and historians -- come into play. There will be mixed reports of good and bad. My report card will be heavier on the negative side. What could have been isn't. And never will be.
I can't help but believe that Herenton will primarily be judged in the matter of this racially-torn city during his tenure. You cannot deny Herenton's report card will be mixed at best in this area because he pulled on race to get him where he's ended up, at least until his congressional race against Steve Cohen is over. Even here, Herenton has used the red-hot race issue. It will be come again because it's the core of his support.
Other factors in the endless analysis of "King" Willie Herenton will go on and on and on. The "Toy Towns" issue, one of 10 areas Memphis annexed in Herenton's tenure. It prevented he ennexed area from incorporating and leaving Memphis; the battle for control of the political landscape in Memphis and the fact that Herenton single-handidly beat the Ford Machine. As we've said, there is plenty to digest.
The burning question that Herenton embraced was he was ordained by God to serve Memphis. Do you believe that? I don't.
Now let the analysis begin.

Say It Ain't So (But It Is)

I wonder how many U.S. Senators and House Representatives have read any or all parts of the government-controlled health offerings in Washington?
One, two, none. I'm betting on none.
And they want us to trust them?