Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Mikhail Gorbachev: A Good Russian that I Never Met - Rest in Peace

Mikhail Gorbachev: A Good Russian that I Never Met

    A great man has died, and he was Russian, and once a Soviet. Perhaps current Russians, especially the despot at present, Vladimir Putin, think ill of him, for helping the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics dissolve. He allowed millions upon millions of people have freedom again. Ukraine was the biggest of the former S.S.R.s to gain its independence and sovereignty. There were 13 other countries that became more or less free with the break up of the autocratic and repressive Soviet Union. Today, there are secular, Christian, Muslim, Buddhists, and millions of all backgrounds that are still free today deep into the 21st century because of the wisdom, foresight, and benevolence of this great man. 
    I hail him, as should we all.

    Vlad, take a step back. You are more like Adolph Hitler than anyone else I can compare to. Ok, Joseph Stalin, but many seem to revere him. Just as bad.

    Back to Gorbachev. I never met him. He came and spoke to the people of my hometown in Indiana around 1998, about seven years after Russia became free and independent. I think he earned 50,000 U.S. dollars to do that. I hope he paid it forward and helped others that need it.

    I have met many Russians. Most of them seemed to be excellent people. I like the Russian people, in general, and I find it a shame that their government and some of their leaders have been so dastardly. That is an English term for terrible. Michail was the opposite. He was good. Here are the Soviet Republics freed by him and his process;

Ukraine
Belarus
Moldova
Estonia
Latvia
Lithuania
Georgia
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Kazakhstan
Turkmenistan
Uzbekistan
Tajikistan
Kyrgyzstan

And that is not the end of it. Countries that enjoyed their freedom because the Soviet presence and control left their lands, under Gorbachev:

Poland
East Germany
Czechia
Slovakia
Hungary
Romania
Bulgaria
former Yugoslav nations and Albania

Yeah.

Gorbachev, you will go down in history as one of the great ones.

Thank you. Ochen spasibo.

May God bless you, your family, and all that knew you.

Rest in peace, man of peace and freedom. The freed world salutes you. And millions of former and fellow countrymen.





Home School Fans Episode 2: Week 0 in 2022 - Indicators

Home School Fans Episode 2: Week 0 in 2022 - Indicators

    College football in August. There were a few good games, headlined by the once great Nebraska Cornhuskers versus the Northwestern Wildcats. Played in Dublin, Ireland. It looked like a good crowd. Perhaps there are a few U.S. college football fanatics in Ireland. I have met a few from Germany. T.V. is ubiquitous, and many of us find the game fun or thrilling, so it is possible Europe has its share of admirers. Or, maybe just the novelty brought the watchers. We'll take the good crowd, no matter what. And, it did look as though some Americans made their way across the ocean. College football in Europe. Week 0, before the real season gets in full swing. It was fun.

    Not so fun for the beleaguered Nebraska coach Scott Frost. In his 5th, and now seemingly final season, he lost an ill-advised squib kick after going up in the 3rd quarter. The Huskers lost momentum, and eventually lost the game. Nebraska was picked by Lindy's to be 48th in the nation to Northwestern's 66th, preseason ranked pick, so this was not the right team to lose to. The coach owned the poor choice of onside kicks, and now he owns another close loss, as he did all season last year, which is not looking good for him, or his program. Tom Allen at IU is looking for wins, too.

    IU will play the Cornhuskers in another month in Lincoln. Could the Hoosiers be so lucky? The Wildcats provided some good defensive turnovers. Maybe IU can find enough offense and keep the Huskers down, with the victory in the TO column as well. Nebraska will be their 5th challenge.

    Speaking of IU opponents in 2022, Illinois whipped the Wyoming Cowboys. The Hoosiers host the Illini this Friday night in B-town. This might be the true indicator if Indiana has a chance this year. Maybe the Cowboys of the Equality State are not that good? The score was a gaping 38-6. Perhaps Illinois is really good? Maybe it was just a disparate day on the field for both teams. Illinois is picked 78th, while IU is pegged as 71st. So, you are saying we got a chance. The Cowboys are only ranked 100th, by Lindy's Sports. 95th by Athlon.

    Other future opponents of my seven 2022 teams include Western Kentucky, which struggled to overcome FCS Austin Peay. The Governors. The Hilltoppers prevailed, but there looks to be some concern. WKU also play IU, so there were three Week 0 teams to scout on for Indiana. Two of three winners, Nebraska being the least impressive. But probably the toughest competition of the three.

    Utah State struggled to beat lowly UConn. The Huskies have a new, but very experienced coach, Jim Mora. The Aggies are picked to be 68. BYU should handle them, week 5. After Wyoming, week 4. Brigham Young opens it up this Saturday afternoon against the low ranked U South Florida Bulls. That should be a Y victory, despite the humidity and never having won in the Sunshine State after nine or so tries.

    We expect BYU to be good. Maybe great. What do I or anyone know? 

    In other Week 0 games, Vanderbilt killed Hawai'i, UNLV crushed their Idaho St. FCS foes, Florida Atlantic crushed UNC-Charlotte, Florida State and UNC scored a lot against weaker competition... And, Nevada held on against New Mexico State, and North Texas edged UTEP by twenty or so. 31-13. That was it.

    Not a big week, but I counted at least five future teams that my boys will play. And the Nebraska result will be the costliest of all, long term. No major injuries that I am tracking; the new Washington Commander shot twice in DC in a carjacking should be okay. We wish him a speedy recovery and we know he will get a hero's welcome in the pros. You are not in Alabama anymore.

    The season awaits! More week 1 previews soon.
Utah, Texas A&M, BYU, UVA, Fresno State, Indiana, and the JMU Dukes.


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

Last one! Eight for eight! This season will be great. Maybe.

I am tracking the developments of seven teams more closely this season. I have predicted crazy things, like Utah, Texas A&M, and BYU all going undefeated. This would be sheer mayhem madness, very welcomed by me. but not very likely. The other four teams are UVA of Charlottesville, Fresno State of the very same, Indiana of Bloomington, and James Madison of Harrisonburg.

Previous blog posts have shown who the opponents of those other teams will be, now in this last of 8 parts for the preseason forecasts we will focus on the newest members of the FBS top 131 schools, none other than the Dukes of James Madison. They are done beating up the lower tier FCS Colonial Athletic Association; the Dukes are joining the up and coming Sub Belt Conference.

    Due to the shenanigans of the richest and most powerful conferences, the SEC poaching Texas and Oklahoma and the Big Ten unthinkingly stealing the two PAC-12 powers from the City of Angels (California? in the Midwest?), lower conferences like the flagging Big 12 have expanded from Florida to Ohio and Utah, and other conferences even with smaller economies are poaching and replacing, and thus moves the world of college football. Not to mention all the NIL contracts making a lot of money for these athletes. New times, new money, ever progressing to help the little guys get ahead. We hope. More money, more opportunities, more education, more equity for athletes and students and their families.

    Enter JMU. The Dukes. Lindy's Sports has them at 110 pre-season, and finishing 9th of 14 newly expanding teams in the Sun Belt, predicted 5th in their 7 team division, Appalachian State and Coastal Carolina leading the way there. Let's see opponent rankings according to Lindy's Sports. Athlon Sports has them picked 98th nationally, finishing 6th in the Sun Belt, 4-4. 

Middle Tennessee State (105)

Norfolk State (FCS, 3rd of six in the Mid Eastern Conference)

Appalachian State (52, 1st in the Sun Belt)

Texas State (126, 14th in the Sun Belt)

Arkansas State (101, 7th in the Sun Belt)

Georgia Southern (120, 12th in Sun Belt)

Marshall (73, 4th in the Sun Belt)

Louisville (61, 11th in the Atlantic Coast Conference)

Old Dominion (111, 10th in the Sun Belt Conference)

Georgia State (96, 5th in the Sun Belt Conference)

Coastal Carolina (53, 2nd in the Sun Belt Conference)

    Five teams are better ranked, and one FCS team should be easy pickings, with a few within 10 rating picks. I want my BYU Cougars to surpass the Dukes in all-time winning percentage, which may happen if the new Sun Belt member gets some humble pie and does as some predict, not much better than .500. BYU needs to go stellar, get some top 15 teams knocked off and have a fabulous season.

    Health, execution, and luck.

    Should be fun to see how it all shakes out. Good luck, new dogs. We will report on the games throughout.







    

Controversial Issues: Racial Epithet, Feminine Identity, Mass Shooter Trigger

Controversial Issues: Racial Epithet, Feminine Identity, Mass Shooter Trigger

    I wanted to share some thoughts on three different things that are on my mind lately. One is a recent incident that occurred at my alma mater campus, a place that has been a historic venue for black and white issues. The second is about a famous author that people in my family are currently reading, who has a more controversial current take on sexual or gender identity. The third topic is about active shooters and what pushes them to homicide and suicide, which I think is marijuana.

1. The BYU (Brigham Young University) Women's volleyball played Duke in Provo last Friday, August 26, 2022. A male BYU fan, sitting in the home student section, was caught racially taunting a Black opponent player when she served and during the game with the N word, a racially charged epithet that coming from most people's mouths is an absolute offense and social taboo. The player being harassed had a police personnel placed by them; the fan in question has been banned by BYU from all events, and the religious school issued an apology through social media.

    For the record, I graduated from BYU-Provo in the mid 90s. I am part of the alumni and the common expectations that any college graduate or religion or community should share. We cannot tolerate such ugly hate, vitriol, and racial or any other hurtful epithets.

    The one part of the story that bothers me, which I have to investigate more, to fully flesh out, is whether fellow fans in the section were not able or willing to stop this hateful instigator. I read two articles about it so far, but it appears that the fans surrounding the shouter were not able to shout him down, correct him, or properly intervene. I do not know who this guy was, and I want to, but perhaps he was intimidating enough to those close to him that he scared them from stepping up. I know that I for one, an able-bodied male in my fifties, would have had some pretty strong words or actions with this alleged fan. Or, maybe I would have called law enforcement to intervene and quell such nonsense. 

    I think that this story will have a few more follow ups, but I know that some Duke people feel aggrieved, and hopefully we can all come to a better place because of this gross, unfortunate incident. For the record, I am insulted by this ugly display of terrible communication and virulent speech. For what it's worth, I am committed to stopping such words and attitudes by others. I am grateful that no violence was involved.

2. J.K. Rowling has gotten in hot water, and many famous and other collaborators and fans have disclaimed her statements about her identifying as a born woman and how she identifies as a natural female. That is my characterization of her position about being a woman, and implying how those who were not created, raised, or actually are female affects how she feels about being a female.

    People have taken her comments about being a "normal" woman or female, not a transgender person claiming to be female after being a born male, as insensitive, hateful, and wrong.

    I believe that there are generally male and female people. I think I stand with J.K. Rowling and I support her views. She grew up a girl and female, and a person who has not done that cannot claim the same identity or life experience. I know some people that claim non-binary identity, and I care for them; I do not hate them. However, I disagree with how they view themselves. I wish that they could identify with how they were born.
    This may make me a 21st century pariah; perhaps my views as a person in this age is now considered hateful, small-minded, close-minded, old fashioned, backward, wrong. I do acknowledge that there are some people naturally born as hermaphrodites, having mixed organs or genitalia, and that many people strongly identify with one gender or sex more than another.

    However, we are born the way we are, and we should accept it as much as we can. We should not discriminate or hate anyone for how they feel or act about themselves and their intrinsic identities and views, but I feel like I am with J.K. Rowling. She has said many things, and has continually been called out, but overall, from what I know and observe I agree with her sentiments. Women are women and men are men.
3.  I feel like the great majority of our mass active shooters have consumed levels of marijuana, likely the THC chemical, that has added a trigger or compulsion to their motives and brains that pushed them to such heinous and atrocious acts.
The Las Vegas mass shooter, a 62-year-old, is still a mystery to most of the law enforcement and scientific community. A colleague and I discussed that perhaps he was exposed to secondhand smoke while staying up late gambling in the Las Vegas casinos as he was known to do. He was known for drinking a lot. I read about some of his history of work in the 1970s and 1980s. I think it is likely that he consumed marijuana over the years.
I am not saying that all people who smoke and consume marijuana will become distant, hateful, and become an active shooter. But I am saying that most active shooters in the United States have added this component to their heads, and it has not turned out well.
Many, many innocent victims of their deeds have been the tragic result THC, a psycho-active chemical that has very deleterious effects on certain people, the worst of it causing a person in becoming a violent killer. In my inexpert opinion.
It is not the only answer to knowing the trigger (no pun intended) to those who go off on psychotic episodes and shoot themselves and others, but I think it is one that more people should be aware of. I do think that marijuana kills. Individually and collectively, we need to stop its usage and abuse.
Blog it.


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     

   Indiana is not expected to do well this fall. What else is new? Last year they bottomed out, and went the wrong direction from their surprisingly good season the year before, in the lockdown pandemic of 2020. That year they had a miracle upset of Penn State, beat Michigan and Wisconsin. Purdue wimped out, skerred, with the Covid.

    This season people are thinking maybe 3 or 4 wins for the boys from B-town, only. I am a die-hard Indiana Hoosier fan, so I am gambling on 7-5, but I will totally take 6-6 and any bowl. I repeat: any bowl!

    I live by optimism and hope. Not always based in the cold, hard facts of reality. The football Hoosiers struggle to win, all the time. It is always uphill. Okay, so be it.

    Here is who the Hoosiers play from September to November. I may catch a game, we shall see. I may keep you posted. IU's team under Tom Allen is ranked 72. Right? Some teams in that realm have easy enough schedules to be picked for bowls. Not Indiana.

Their twelve scheduled games, with pre-season Lindy's Sports rank picks accompanied:

Illinois (78)

Idaho (FCS, picked 10th of 12 in the Big Sky)

Western Kentucky (79)

Cincinnati (21)

Nebraska (48)

Michigan (6)

Maryland (49)

Rutgers (74)

Penn State (27)

Ohio State (2)

Michigan (6)

Purdue (32)
    

Lots of competition.

They need to play a few teams tough, obviously beating their non-conference foes Western Kentucky and Idaho, but potentially give the BearCats what they almost did last year. It was close, and Cinncy went on to a tremendous season, upsetting the Irish. They can beat Illinois, Rutgers, and Maryland, and maybe pull off upsets of Nberaska and Purdue...

It could happen.

Other upsets? What else? Why not?

Blog it...






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

    Evaluating Fresno State's strength of schedule and their chances. I predicted that they would go 10-2, or 12-2, or 10-4 this season, depending on their bowl game result, and possible conference championship game. They are picked 35th nationally and to finish 1st in the Mountain West West Division.

Here is who they play, and the pre-season rank according to Lindy's Sports:

Cal Poly (FCS, picked 11th of 12 in Big Sky)

Oregon State (43)

USC (22)

UConn (128)

Boise State (41)

San Jose State (88)

New Mexico (124)

San Diego State (69)

Hawai'i (121)

UNLV (115)

Nevada (112)

Wyoming (100)

    Whoa, a lot more teams north of double digits than I imagined. Is the Mountain West truly that weak? Five in their own conference in the 100s, plus Connecticut.

    To the San Joaquin state school's credit, they play Oregon State and the USC Trojans. Boise State should be tough, and then SDSU should be a contest.

    I wanted FSU to lose more so that BYU could catch up all-time winning percentage, but it looks as though the Bulldogs have a better chance of winning their games than the BYU Cougars. But wait, BYU will go undefeated.... BYU plays 4 top 15 teams, FSU only comes slightly close to that...

 We shall see.



Friday, August 26, 2022

My Preferred Teams to Win the World Series in 2022

My Preferred Teams to Win the World Series in 2022

1. The Chicago White Sox. 

Not likely. They are barely over .500 in late August; but their division is weak. Bu they look weaker. Need to beat out Minnesota and Cleveland, because they will not be in the Wild Card running, with such a mediocre record.

2. The San Diego Padres.

    Looking good to win a Wild Card spot. The L.A. Dodgers are the run away favorites of the N.L. West.

3. The Seattle Mariners.

    They are extending a huge contract on their rookie phenom Julio Rodriguez, and these NEVER BEEN IN THE WORLD SERIES corner of the country losers have a shot. This would be a nice thing. I have liked a lot of Mariners teams and players over the years.

    They deserve some luck, and love.

4. The Tampa Bay Rays. 

    Another team that has never won it; they got to the Fall Classic once. Sensing a theme here? Let's go underdogs! They barely lead in the Wild Card standings. Over Toronto...

5. The Milwaukee Brewers. 

    They are barely trailing in the Wild Card standings. They are within reach of the Phillies and and the Padres. I would rather the Padres make a run, and the Phillies stay out. Sorry Bryce Harper. It may not happen, but it could. 

The other teams that will likely win their divisions and the order in which I DO NOT WANT THEM TO WIN.

    1. Houston Astros. Tired of 'em.
    2. Los Angeles Dodgers. No, they just did it! Too much talent.
    3. Yankees. 2009 was a while ago, but these guys won whole decades of our history.
    4. Atlanta Braves. Too soon. Yeah, last year.
    5. Philadelphia Phillies. 2008 was not long ago, either. Or it was, but it wasn't.
    6. New York Mets. I can root for Scherzer.
    7. Toronto Blue Jays. I can root for Guerrero Jr.
    8. Who else? Cleveland would be all right. Guardians of the Galaxy!
    9. Minnesota. I would rather have Cleveland win it all than the Twins. I remember '87 and '91. Yeah
    10. The Baltimore Orioles have a chance. Can you imagine?
    11. No one else. Right? Oh yeah. The St. Louis Cardinals. They have won it lately, too. 

    I would rather have a few teams win than the Cardinals. Especially the Guardians.


Thursday, August 25, 2022

2100: A Short Story Part 1

2100: A Short Story [Twenty One Hundred]

    Jared lived in crowded conditions, because the Central Government wanted everyone to be readily controlled, somewhat smushed together. This system was meant to leave more of the Earth to its nature and relatively remote productivity. Fish farms, forests with hunting and wildlife, and the native trees, also known as autochthonous pods, to breed and to potentially grow and expand.  Trees and undergrowth were now present in many parts of the world that had never had them before: in the Artic reaches, the Antarctic continent, with its series of underground tunnels and channels, the high mountain ranges and isolated deserts all had new vegetation and animal life. Vast parts of formerly dry regions, like in Mauritania and the Gobi, were thriving with more animals and plants. The temperatures and climates were controlled, or governed, as the Chinese word implied: the Chinese had it under control. Or so they thought.


    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

    One of my sons, or both contributed, have taught me about the 1986 born Andrew Tate.

    I think that troglodyte is a proper word. 

    A man or woman needs codes to go by, and Mr. Tate qualifies. Imagine how much good and influence he could wage and spread if he had proper respect for life, for women, for girls, for men, for boys.

    Get it right, Tate. Learn something, repent, and find the truth.

    Women and men are equal, but we are different and play different roles.

    Andrew? Learn yours. Learn how to build up, not tear down and denigrate, alienate and belittle.

    You can change, I believe in you. I believe that God will teach you, and love you more and you turn to Him.

    Have you read the Bible? The Book of Mormon? Read and pray about them.



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

Who is the best among them? According to the analysts of the magazines, the Bulldogs of Fresno. But, IU should be better head to head. The Dukes will be scrapping for their FBS lives, and it should be fun.

IU has the toughest schedule. Some are predicting that they finish 3-9. Umm. And that would be an improvement from last year, 2-10. They were competitive against the CFP semifinalists Cinncy Bearcats... but they ran out of the 2020 steam... 

We shall see. They play all the Big 10 Eastern Division beasts. We have to beat Maryland and Rutgers, and Illinois to begin with.

FSU and JMU are predicted to go to bowls. IU, not. I may catch a game. We shall see.



My Map of Indiana

My Map of Indiana

    I may never live in another state or land as much as my home state of Indiana. It totals to 22 years, less than half of my present life. I have lived abroad more or less five years, nearer the West Coast over 10, and now on the East Coast more than 10. But the MidWest is my home state, the Hoosier State, the Crossroads of America.

    Hoagy Carmichael and Michael Jackson both sing of it. I dream of it, I am sure. Childhood and first impressions, subconscious and prevalent memories of yore. 

    In my house I have a bathroom with a map of Indiana by the sink. I enjoy gazing at the map of Indiana, with southern Indiana close to my eye level. I like looking at the towns, the parks, the roads, the lakes and memorials.

    It is a big detailed map, one of the best I have seen. It shows my home county, and neighboring counties where I have spent hours or days and nights, with family, friends, Scouts, and contractors.
    
    I dream about some of the places I have been, and others where I will never go. Maybe, just maybe, like Marengo Cave with my youngest daughter last April. What county? 

    Many counties of Indiana, of the 92 I have never been to. And likely never will.

    In fifth grade a couple came to my class at Elm Heights with Mrs. Daniels, a Bloomington native, a tremendous teacher; they showed a film strip of all the county courthouses in all the ninety-two counties of Indiana. Some are really small, and forgotten, and out of the away. Perhaps that is the closest that I will ever get to be in some of those isolated rural places.

    But I got my map. And it comes to me when I look to her.

    I can look at it backwards and forwards, up and down, through mists of time and spells of sun, clouds, storms, and all temperatures in between.

    This past weekend in central-east Virginia I drove on a few highways, some of which I have not passed by much before. Went through Thornberg. I commented to my fellow riders that parts of the surroundings were just like southern Indiana. I saw long rows of corn fields, and I thought nostalgically of my home state.

    I'm going back to Indiana! (Michael Jackson). On the Banks of the Wabash, far away. (Hoagy). 

    I'll be back soon.

    Monroe County. Daviess County. Brown, and Greene, and on...


State of the World August 2022

State of the World: August 2022

    Perhaps this report will be more valuable in the future. The myriad panoply of world news and other resources fill the world with their messages and information. Just a few things from me. Tonight. My blog, some 700 posts strong. Or weak.

    Start with China! They have the most people, after all. Incidentally, I just had my soon to be full-fledged sixth grader look up Bhutan. Why? Well, sometimes it is good to know that a kingdom of some 900,000 people exists between the two most populated countries on Earth. No news of Bhutan that I know of. That is probably good.

    China, according to certain Muslim officials from other Muslim countries around the world, is not abusing and or torturing and raping Chinese Uighurs, those indigenous Chines Muslims that we are pretty confident are being held in concentration camps, re-education centers, prisons and jails, and are being forced to labor, or being sexually assaulted and worse. Ugh.
    I believe that China is doing all those things. They are also quashing the rights and opportunities of millions of its citizens in Hong Kong and elsewhere. China is threatening Taiwan, "the renegade province", and being aggressive with its own local seas where there are islands disputed by multiple other countries. As far as I know China has not had a dust up with India lately, as they did last year.

    India, a massive country that will surpass China in overall population soon, is doing okay. They continue to grow, economically doing better than China, from what I know. They suffer even more poverty than China. India and China have both not condemned Russia in their invasion of Ukraine. India seems to be taking oil and other commodities that the Western world is struggling to eschew. Sanctions to show disapproval of the Russian aggressors.

    Europe is having a hard time ridding itself of Russian oil dependency. But they are conducting austere measures to do so, preparing for the cold winter. Summer is roiling many northern continents, drying up rivers, causing food problems. Speaking of food problems, some grain was allowed to leave Ukraine only recently, alleviating food supply chains, mostly to desperately hungry or poor peoples in the "southern nations".

    Latin America has voted for more leftist regimes in the last few years, to include Chile, with a very young president named Boric.

    Africa has had some terrorist issues, as always. Ethiopia has had war issues, and there have been diseases and issues in other parts. Monkey pox has followed COVID-19 worldwide. It does not kill as many people but it has alarmed many.

    Australia? It has not had as many fires this past year. They are an isolated nation, got in trouble for submarine purchases with the U.S. instead of France.

    Southeast Asia? I think they are doing well. Japan had a former Prime Minister, Shino Abe, assassinated, which was shocking. But I think Japan and South Korea are all right, despite the kooks of North Korea.

    I have family headed to that peninsula. Pretty cool.

    The Middle East? Craziness in Syria, I have not heard much of Yemen lately.

    What else? My Church is dedicating more temples; I saw the Prophet announce this lately at the re-dedication of the D.C. Temples.

    The Lord is preparing His ways. Try to see the signs and be good.



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.


A) Texas A & M ....... (5), [5] Disparity: 0
B) Utah ..................... (7), [8] Disparity: 1
C) BYU....................(19), [27] Disparity: 8
D) Virginia...............(33), [68] Disparity: 35 (!!!)
E) Fresno State.........(35), [35] Disparity: 0 
F) Indiana................ (71), [82] Disparity: 11
G) James Madison...(110),[98] Disparity: 12

Virginia, FSU, Indiana, and JMU:
Sizing up the Competition.

UVA is picked to finish 33 or 68 by the two magazines. That is a large disparity of predictions as far as strength. Speculated at 5th best in the ACC.

Who do they play? Here is their schedule with Lindy's preseason ratings. The Wahoos are predicted top 33 with Lindy's. Athlons has them at 68.

Richmond (FCS, picked 2nd of 13 in the CAA)

Illinois (78, picked 14th in Big-10)

Old Dominion (111, picked 10th in the Sun Belt)

Syracuse (89, 13th in ACC)

Duke (91, 14th in ACC)

Louisville (61, picked 11th in ACC)

Georgia Tech (85, 12th in ACC)

Miami (14, 2nd in ACC)

North Carolina (50, 9th in ACC)

Pittsburgh (34, 6th in ACC)

Coastal Carolina (53, 2nd in Sun Belt)

Virginia Tech (55, 10th in ACC)

According to Lindy's Sports, the Cavaliers are favored as a higher power against all their opponents, except for the Miami Hurricanes. Pitt is close. According to Athlon Sports, I imagine they are training teams in preseason rankings, like North Carolina, Pittsburgh, and even state rival Virginia Tech.

    Former BYU head coach Bronco Mendenhall surprisingly stepped down at the end of last season. The QB is incredibly strong, fast. His health will determine a lot of how the team does. 

    I think they will finish better than .500, but Athlon has them at 5-7.

    This team has a wide berth of possibilities in 2022. Should be interesting.


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

    Well, last post I made the insane prediction that both Texas A&M and BYU will run their schedules, going undefeated, and they would then both be fighting to enter the College Football Championship against spotless Utah. Oh, yes, the Utes will be without a loss by Christmas.     

    Should be fun! Not realistic, but it could happen... I sized up the competition for the Utes in part one of this amazing college football series (Clinch It Sooner or Later: Home School Fans Episode 1: Preseason Predictions - 2022 Pt.1 ) 
    If there is only one preseason series to read and absorb, this ought to be the one -- to not go by. Caveat emptor. I am an unrealistic homer and dreamer, especially when it comes to college football. And I might be this way when I am 80, if I can help it.

    So, what are the preseason ranks of the Aggie and Cougar opponents? When looking at the Utes' rather favorable amazing run against its adversaries, Florida (30), SDSU, and the 9 teams of the PAC-12 not UW or Cal, I used the Lindy's ranks. I will do the same for the next two.

    Texas A&M will play bully goliath Alabama (1) (midway in the season), then:
Sam Houston St. (FCS)
Appy State (52) 
the U (Miami) (14) 
Arkansas (13)
Mississippi St. (38)
the bully (see above)
Missouri (57)
South Carolina (45)
Ole Miss (17) 
Florida (31)
Auburn (46)
UMass (130!!!)
LSU (29) 
and presumably the SEC Championship (likely a top 5 team). 

That is a lot of good matches. Especially considering that the Gators and the Tigers of Auburn are ranked so low, more in the Appalachian State territory than normal SEC power. Mizzou and the Gamecocks are not highly favored, but the overall schedule will be an incredible feat of conquest if they go unscathed. Spotless.

    Time to mention that Jimbo Fisher has recruited a lot of strong talent since being in College Station, and the Aggies have upset 'Bama before, and I hope that they do it again.

    Go Aggies. Avoid the LSU Tiger upsets. Or whomever.

Next segment: BYU schedule and difficulty.
    




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. 

    As great as Georgia, Notre Dame, Clemson, Auburn, and Miami are, and I enjoyed following and commenting on their seasons in 2021, these seven will be closer to my interests, and they are my alma maters. The schools of my two bachelors, age 24 and age 28.

    So, who comes after Utah in my seven? How will they do? Will the miracles continue? (In a word, yes.)

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.