Blogging about life, sports, news, books or literature, faith, and many other things.
Tuesday, August 30, 2022
Mikhail Gorbachev: A Good Russian that I Never Met - Rest in Peace
Home School Fans Episode 2: Week 0 in 2022 - Indicators
Home School Fans Episode 2: Week 0 in 2022 - Indicators
Sunday, August 28, 2022
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Sizing Up Competition JMU - 2022 Pt. 8
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Sizing Up Competition JMU - 2022 Pt. 8
Controversial Issues: Racial Epithet, Feminine Identity, Mass Shooter Trigger
Controversial Issues: Racial Epithet, Feminine Identity, Mass Shooter Trigger
Saturday, August 27, 2022
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Sizing Up Competition IU - 2022 Pt. 7
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Sizing Up Competition IU - 2022 Pt. 7
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Sizing Up Competition FSU - 2022 Pt. 6
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Sizing Up Competition FSU - 2022 Pt. 6
Friday, August 26, 2022
My Preferred Teams to Win the World Series in 2022
My Preferred Teams to Win the World Series in 2022
Thursday, August 25, 2022
2100: A Short Story Part 1
2100: A Short Story [Twenty One Hundred]
Jared was working his way up the secret society of thought. "The Secret Society of Thinking", a better translation. They would refer to it in short code names, because the very knowledge of it threatened it and its members their very existence. The Central Government, Chinese-dominated, ran most things, or so they thought.
But most people knew that you could not control most of the people most of the time, and the people in their own spare time, which was meant to be observed and "educated" for the sake of the masses, by the CG (Central Government). Jared and his associates, who it was hard to number, and like illegal terrorist cells did not know who else were associated, so that if caught, plausible deniability would save all the others. Which likely was numbered in the millions, almost no one knew how many.
One would make their way up through the thought lessons step by step, and there was not only way to learn. One could choose the method of learning, the focus, the depth. If Islam appealed, then go with it.
China first made its move on Taiwan back in the 2030s, and it was not bloody at first. The weaponized bio-agents got out of control, and then the nuclear mishaps between South Africa and Pakistan turned everything on its head. Luckily for most, it was contained to those two countries and Tanzania. And Yemen. And some tiny islands close to the aftermath down range.
The world moved on, and China infiltrated more of the poorer countries, and some quite naive incels and socialists worldwide. Many of them, even relatively wealthy ones, were so convinced or fooled that the world economies were inherently unfair, that they fell prey to Confucius-Maoist dogma, and they infected their fellow capitalist citizens, and fell prey to the great awakening of the Central Government. The CG killed off those that they could not re-educate, and the U.S. and all sovereign powers collapsed by 2075. Many never gave up, but many could not last.
By 2100, as Jared was now 35, so many could not remember times of freedom, or fighting for freedom other than surreptitious classes on religion and other historical novelties.
Revolutions of yore. Castro was highlighted, Washington was pilloried.
The new math of CG. Chinese (Mandarin) was compelled to learn upon all, but pockets still kept their old languages, especially the romance languages.
To be continued.
Andrew Tate: You Need Some Religion - Preferably a True One
Andrew Tate: You Need Some Religion - Preferably a True One
Complexities of Syria Fighting and Parties’ Participation and Interests
Complexities of Syria Fighting and Parties’ Participation and Interests
Despite the fall of the Soviet
Union in the early 1990s, the Russian government, perhaps more than China, is
the single biggest opponent to U.S. interests and Western liberalism in the
2020s. China may end up being a greater threat in a few years, but for now it
is Russia. Both Russia and China, as all globalizing powers, have heavy or
intrinsic stakes in the liberal world economy. Money is life.
Syria is one flashpoint for real
rub-up entities of geo-political realism, which many social scientists view, more
or less, as over-governed by the two or three (maybe five or seven?) world
powers. For much of the 20th century after WWII, the two powers were
the U.S.A and U.S.S.R. A bi-polar structure. Perhaps as suggested, today’s
world is multi-polar, based on the subsequent rise of the People’s Republic of
China, and the consolidation of the European powers, as in the European Union.
Other countries and organizations wield real power and influence, of course,
like OPEC (mostly Arab oil-rich nations), or Japan, Brazil, or India; these
places and their governments exert large quantities of influence. One could say
Mexico and Colombia do too. Turkey is powerful, and others.
Where does the rubber meet the road
in the world today when it comes to the biggest world participants? Apart from
the now half year war fought in Ukraine, there is Syria. Who are the actors?
On one side we have: The United
States, U.S. allies, Turkey (has its own place among NATO partners), anti-Assad
Arab forces, Israel, anti-Assad Kurds, the Arab nations of Iraq, Saudi Arabia,
and others, like U.A.E. and Qatar. On the other side there is Russia, the
Syrian Assad regime, Shia militants, to include pro-Irani Shia militias and
proxies, and the outlier of ISIS, and a few other designated terrorist
organizations, like the Nusra Front and those that espouse Islamic sharia over
secular governments.
In the wake of the Arab Spring of
2011, many thought a fait accompli was the removal of the traditional Alawite Arab
dictator in Damascus, Bashar Al-Assad. Pro-U.S. freedom forces, as well as pro-jihadi
groups were on their way to change the old regime of the Al-Assad legacy, the
de facto monarchy of this ancient land, more recently aligned with the
Soviet/Russian socialist cause. We thought he was gone, but Russian military
forces intervened in the fall of 2015, stopping that apparent eventuality.
Russia has stepped in militarily,
as they did in Chechnya in the 1990s, Georgia in 2008, Crimea (Ukraine) in
2014. We do see a pattern. Syria 2015, Ukraine 2022. They have mercenaries and
troops throughout the world, similar in some ways to the United States. They,
as others, see us as the threat.
Al-Assad and his Alawite, pro-Shia
group receives aid from Russia, to spite U.S. and other allied forces in the
Middle East with their intentions to promote democracy. Assad allows the
proliferation of Shia militant groups, like Iraq-based Kata’ib Hezbollah, and
other pro-Irani forces mobilized as forces to assert power, but who still claim
opposition to Sunni based militias and groups, to include ISIS, Nusra, and the
Kurds.
The Kurds are sandwiched between
international powers and interests. As usual. They try to stake out places to
survive in Syria, Turkiye, Iraq, and Iran. They are in constant battle with the
Turkish government, as this is an insurgency or quasi-civil war that has
occurred for decades. The Kurds are not united, as they have differing
organizations with different goals, some of them considered communist or
socialist.
Israel watches what it considers
existential threats to its equities, to include anyone who sides with Iran,
which includes Lebanese Hezbollah and Sunni groups within Palestine, to
included Hamas and Islamic Jihad, and sometimes more traditional Palestinian parties
like Fatah, which is the normal power within the West Bank.
Do we see the mess that Syria is?
Can we wrap our heads around the vested interests of the United States and
Russia? Both want power, influence, money, leverage, territory. Like the times
of the Cold War, people in dirtier or poorer climes are fighting over the stakes
and policies of the bigger powers. From 1945 to 1991, the Cold War meant
millions of lives impacted in almost every continent.
The fighting has not stopped.
Perhaps it never will. Syria, in a biblical setting, perhaps is a fulcrum of
global, political, religious, economic, and cultural battles and wars.
Each party has their own interests.
1)
The U.S.: a hegemony of liberal trade and democratic
institutions, giving political exceptions to monarchies that maintain friendly
stances in the Arab Middle East. Some more cynically accuse the U.S. “war machine”
of wanting what it wants: primacy and profits.
2)
Russia: a stronger base of its own influence of
territorial, cultural, military, and financial interests. Prop up the Assad-controlled
Syria
3)
U.S. NATO partners and coalition allies: To have their own liberal economies and
agendas bolstered regionally and worldwide. Also, to not be bullied or cowed by
fossil fuel giant Russia, of which many depend on for their energy.
4)
Turkiye (current preferred spelling): the more autocratic Turkish,
(Erdogan ensconcing himself politically), want to quell the Kurdish threat to
their way of life, and assert more control over their borders. Turkiye takes in
more Syrian refugees than any other country. They also want to maintain healthy
trade with all nations, even Israel.
5)
Iran: seeks to assert its cultural, economic,
and religious claims upon the Middle East. As the primary custodian of Shia
legitimacy, it wants to take the holy cities of Saudi Arabia from the royal
Saud family, who are Sunni, and the holy city of Jerusalem, which is shared by
Jewish Israelis and Palestinian Sunni
6)
Iraq: Has Shia/Sunni/Christian populations that
do not favor Iran, and participate with U.S./Coalition Forces
7)
Assad Syria- Proper: Maintain its capital,
Damascus, and as much of the former country as possible, with aid from Russia, Iran,
Shia Militias from Iraq
8)
Israel: Maintain primacy over itself, to include
Eretz Israel (Palestinian territories); eliminate existential threats,
especially Iran and its supporters
9)
Shia Militant groups: Mostly based out of Iraq,
with colleagues in Lebanon, Syria, Iran
10)
Anti-Assad Arabs: Interested in taking Damascus
and Syria, turn it into a more democratic country
11)
ISIS/Nusra/Jihadi violent extremists: impose
their idea of sharia, Islamic government over as much territory as possible
12)
Anti-Assad Kurds: establish their own sovereign
space and government among the five nations that they straddle; follow their
own language and traditions
Wednesday, August 24, 2022
Fresno State, Indiana, and James Madison
Fresno State, Indiana, and James Madison
My Map of Indiana
My Map of Indiana
State of the World August 2022
State of the World: August 2022
Sunday, August 21, 2022
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Sizing Up Competition UVA - 2022 Pt. 5
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Sizing Up Competition - 2022 Pt. 5
What Lindy's (x) and Athlon [y] have rated them pre-season, which magazines I own.
Thursday, August 18, 2022
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Sizing Up BYU Competition - 2022 Pt. 4
I am writing about expectations for the 7 teams that I wish to follow and report on this fall of 2022. They are Utah, Texas A&M, BYU, Fresno State, Virginia, Indiana, and James Madison. I believe that they will finish in that order of rank.
I already scouted Utah's and A&M's schedules. Now for number three, the Cougars of Provo.
So, the third holiday season unblemished team, BYU, will have the following schedule and Lindy's predicted rankings. Oh, yeah, I have presaged that Utah, Texas A&M, and BYU will be undefeated by Christmas.
Lindy's has BYU as 19th best for 2022. Last year, many magazines did not have them ranked at all, and they finished in the top 25, despite losing their bowl disappointedly at the end. To a hyped up UAB. The Cougs were nearly top ten throughout the season.
I am expecting better things than 2021. We will avenge Boise State, hopefully Baylor. Arkansas and Oregon are huge tests. Should be fun. Yeah, a Bronco fan gloated over me last October or so when they got the best of BYU. Four or five turnovers doomed it. But, the season was overall very good, as said: we went 5-0 against the PAC-12. Got outrun by the Baylor Bears in Texas, where some family and friends attended, but even withe season ending loss, it was a positive result. Many guys were hurt and scrapping at the end.
Here is who BYU will play, according to Lindy's Sports:
U South Florida (102)
Baylor (12)
Oregon (11)
Wyoming (100)
Utah State (68)
Notre Dame (8)
Arkansas (13)
Liberty (75)
East Carolina (80)
Boise State (41)
Utah Tech (FCS, picked 7th of 8 in the WAC)
Stanford (65)
There are some top 15 back-to-back challenges in there. Brigham Young has its work cut out, which will be a combination of solid offense, defense, and no dumb turnovers. And hopefully stellar special teams.
I plan on seeing the Cougs in person in October, and we should come away champs of that one. In 2013 I took some family to UVA and the lightning delayed game was lost by a fumbled pass in the rain. Some payback there, as well as opponents that I have seen BYU lose to in their home stadiums, Stanfor and East Carolina.
If we lose to the big boys, Baylor, Oregon, Notre Dame, and the Razorbacks, 8-4 could still earn them a ranking. We cannot lose to Boise State or anyone less favored.
But of course, this team is going all the way!
See you in the CFP, Utah or Texas A&M!
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Sizing Up Competition - 2022 Pt. 3
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Sizing Up Competition - 2022 Pt. 3
Wednesday, August 17, 2022
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Predictions - 2022 Pt. 2
Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Predictions - 2022 Pt.2
Texas A&M and the Y. --- Football presences. Powers? The next two programs that I will track weekly out of seven. One is recalled from last year, of these two, because I am BYU fan. Fanatic. yeah, I get hyped.
A, M, Y. So many acronyms! Agriculture and ... I cannot remember. Mechanical! (college). I looked it up. Sure, I knew it was technically related, regarding a practical science or vocation. And "Y", for Young, as in Brigham.
Texas A&M Aggies: They have a coach in College Station, Jimbo Fisher, who lives up to the grandiosity of his name when it comes to recruiting. And oh, they can and will be the mighty Crimson Tide. The two coaches have had some wars of words, which has increased the temperature across the land of football greatness, which is the South. Which has the ever growing, powerful Southeastern Conference. OK and TX coming soon.
Looking at their opponents, they will get big wins and I think, if they handle Alabama, they may run the gamut and join Utah in the CFP. Undefeated till then. BOTHS! Sure, I will go with that. I had originally tacked them losing to Alabama, but now I just want them to run the table and push the other Biggies out. Hard to do, as I have mentioned before. Of course, Vegas money will have 'Bama, or Georgia, and certainly Ohio State, being there again.
If BYU were to go undefeated, then the universe would be coming to an end. They are super talented, and are capable of achieving such things, with stronger defense against Baylor. Oregon and Arkansas, even Stanford are formidable obstacles.
The Aggies have a likely better than last year Miami Hurricanes opponent, then an SEC slate that does not involve all the killers, but lacks Kentucky, Missouri, Vanderbilt... They avoid Georgia, too, probably until the SEC Championship game. Which would be an amazing thing if they arrived there.
Why not? Aggies and Cougars, undefeated against pretty tough schedules.
For Utah, A&M, and BYU to go perfect till Christmas would be one in a nillion, A number that may not exist.
But again, why not?
I will enjoy seeing all three trying.
Next: teams BYU wants to pass in winning percentage. Bronco's old team, UVA, and Fresno State, Indiana, and James Madison.