Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Football Legend Gale Sayers Passes

 


Gale Sayers, An NFL Legend


NFL Hall of Fame running back Gale Sayers has passed away at 77 years old. All I can say to today's young football fans not familiar with the name is..........Google It!

In a career shortened by injuries, Sayers became the measuring stick by which future great running backs with shifty moves would be judged. O.J. Simpson, Walter Payton, Marcus Allen, Barry Sanders, Adrian Peterson and all those greats not included here were preceded by the man who once scored six touchdowns in one game.

They said he ran like he had eyes in the back of his head. Just as a defender approached for a sure tackle from behind, Sayers would cut away to his left or right, leaving the hapless tackler grasping at air. In one interview he explained this uncanny ability of his as plain old instinct. Yes, an instinctive runner who was fast, shifty and downright untacklable, if there is such a word. That was the great Gale Sayers. A few with like skills have come after him, but none left their mark on the game of football with such permanence.

Gale Sayers made an impression on me as a young pop warner football player watching the movie "Brian's Song" in the early 1970's. It's the story about Sayers friendship with Chicago Bears teammate/ Brian Piccolo, who's diagnosed with terminal cancer. It was the first movie that made me cry and at the same time taught life lessons in friendship and teamwork (selflessness). I'm proud to say I never forgot those lessons learned from Gale and Brians' friendship. 


Bear Down, Chicago Bears


Monday, September 21, 2020

Raiders Week 2

 


Saints 24
Raiders 34


Drew Who???

The Oakland.........Oops!

The Desert Raiders took down Drew Brees and the New Orleans Saints on Monday Night Football using ball control offense. It was only fitting to have their first game in a new stadium turn out a win over a worthy opponent. 

TE Darren Waller, "The Beast," gave the Saints fits with his speed, size and outstanding catching ability. 

D. Waller  12 Rec  103 Yds  1 TD  8.6 Avg

A good win that took making adjustments early. Credit QB Derek Carr with elevating his game and coach Jon Gruden & company for excellent game planning and play calling. 

Raiders coaches prove yet again when it come to football, knowing your personnel and studying your opponent can be a winning formula; just ask Patriots coach Bill Belichick, the Raiders next opponent. He has won in many different ways. What he hasn’t done is won without Brady. Come this Sunday the Raiders face a Belichick coached team with No Brady. It’s a must see game for Raiders fans.

As for Raiders Defense, just keep grinding soldiers. Keep grinding, stay together and Don’t break.

Just Win Baby!




COVID-19 Symptoms

COVID-19 affects different people in different ways. Infected people have had a wide range of symptoms reported – from mild symptoms to severe illness.


Symptoms may appear 2-14 days after exposure to the virus. People with these symptoms may have COVID-19:
Fever or chills
Cough
Shortness of breath or difficulty breathing
Fatigue
Muscle or body aches
Headache
New loss of taste or smell
Sore throat
Congestion or runny nose
Nausea or vomiting
Diarrhea
Look for emergency warning signs for COVID-19. If someone is showing any of these signs, seek emergency medical care immediately:
Trouble breathing
Persistent pain or pressure in the chest
New confusion
Inability to wake or stay awake
Bluish lips or face


Learn more on cdc.gov

Thursday, September 17, 2020

Special Questionaire on the Negro Question

Extract from an article originally published in the fall, 1939, North Georgia Review, Clayton, Georgia, and later reprinted in numerous Southern newspapers.


I am disturbed by the fact that so few people are seriously troubled by the Negro Problem. I refer to it as the Negro Problem, but of course it is not a problem that involves or concerns only the Negro. it is, I feel, a section of the American Problem which involves all of us, white and black, old-stock white folk and people of recent-immigrant stocks. In fact, I think it is one of the things in our country's life that ought to engage our national intelligence most seriously and continously. The ultimate test of the American civilization probably will come with the success or failure of efforts to solve the Negro question. I may be wrong about what I have just said, but I throw out the observation for what it may be worth as stimulus to people from whom I hope to hear.

My sympathy for the Negro, both in the South and in the North, is rather deep, but I think it is not sentimental and personal. It is objective. But greater than this sympathy for the Negro is my concern, in connection with it, for America as a whole, for white and black America; in fact, for white almost more than the black. I shall explain this in a moment.

I have not written much about the South, but I have spent a good deal of time below the Mason-Dixon Line, looking at various conditions, including the Negro Problem, to refer to it again by that imperfect title; and my opinion is that it is as bad for the whites as it is for the Negroes, or much worse for the whites than it is for the Negroes.

Few will disagree with me if I say that the Negro is generally considered inferior to the white man, and that his social-economic-political position, both in the South and in the North, but especially in the South, is predicated on that belief. If pressed for an expression of my own view on this point, I might be disposed to grant that a great many Negroes are inferior in certain respects to some white; then I would hasten to add, "But what part of that inferiority is actual and how much of it is due to the white-imposed-white-approved situation in which the Negro finds himself?" I do not believe that, let me say, the Negro contralto, Marian Anderson; the Negro scientist, Dr. Carver; the Negro ecvonomist, Dr. Abram Harris, and the Negro actor, Rex Ingram, whom I happen to know personally, are inferior as all-around human beings to any white person. Dr. Carver probably is the most important man in the South; yet I know whites in the South (and in the North) who hold him to be an inferior being, not fit to be received as a social equal in their homes or sit with them at the same table or wait for a train in the same waiting-room.

Not that I am critical of the whites for this attitude. I understand it. Or, at least, I think I do. I know that it is not a deliberate individual attitude. Nor is it merely a deliberate official policy. It is an organic thing, which goes deep, deep, into the white human make-up. But what does it all mean to America's future? How long can we afford it? This white attitude toward the Negro, emphasized every once in a while by rope and fagot, undoubtedly helps to keep the Negro actually inferior, if he actually is inferior; it certainly helps to make him inferior if he is not actually so already. But I feel, too, that it is helping to degrade the whites who have this attitude. For one thing, this attitude is shot through with fear, and fear, expecially fear that goes through generations, has a corrosive, ruinous effect on character and personality. And there is another thing: the human organism, the human spirit, mind, ability, etc., develop and grow best amid excellent or superior persons who are willing to admit anyone to equality with them if he proves himself. In such an atmosphere the individual must strive to improve himself; and striving, he grows and develops; he is a positive man or woman, involved in a positive, creative, re-creative process. In the South, it seems to me, where a vast section of the population is popularly, collectively, officially branded inferior, the process has had the tendency to be just the opposite. To feel superior, all that a white person has to do is look in the mirror: he is white--ergo superior: there is no need for him to excel or improve himself. The effect of this is evil. I believe it was a factor in the creation of the vast "pore white trash: element. If this process continues, it is apt to be disastrous both for Negroes and whites - for the south - for America. This, as I say, is my belief: am I right or wrong? Tell me.

I find that many southerners insist that the Negro Question is a southern problem, a concern of the South alone; and they resent it if a non-Southerner interests himself in it. If you who read this happen to be one of these Southerners, I should like to hear from you and learn why you think I, or any non-Southerner, should respect your position. In this connection, I wish you would consider what I say in the paragraph immediately preceding this one; and, also, that we have large Negro populations in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Detroit, and other cities. Can the Negro question in the North be dealt with apart from the Negro question in the South? Can you isolate the so-called Negro Problem from the entire racial-cultural problem in America? Isn't it part of the same vast complexity which involves us all and is a matter of general prejudice and intolerance, of ignorance and fear? If so, how to get at the situation?

As I say, I know that the Negro Problem is something organic and frightfully difficult; I don't blame anyone very drastically for any phase of it. I do think, however, that, in view of the all-around seriousness of the problem, all of us, white and black, but perhaps especially the white South, are exerting our individual and collective intelligence far too little to get at the beginning of some solution. I may not be aware of efforts to solve or touch the problem; I should like to hear of them.

I should like to hear from you who read this on any phase of the problem, including those which I do not even suggest in the above remarks and questions. I should like to hear from both whites and Negroes.

Louis Adamic

Milford, New Jersey (1939)



In Reply To The Broadside

A Negro Teacher

I am a Negro teacher in North Carolina.

American democracy is only enjoyed by certain groups. The Negro teacher is expected to teach American democracy (to segregated negroes) just as the white teacher does. But this idealism does not exist. The student soon discovers the fallacy of this lesson. Doors of opportunity are closed in his face. He is crushed in more ways than one. He cannot even join the Army or the Navy and get ready to be able to die for his country.

In a number of places in the South when a Negro is frank enough to speak out he is styled as a radical. There are any number of problems that I would like to relate but for fear this will be published I will refrain from it now.

One question haunts my mind: Can the people of the United States afford to criticize Germany for crushing the Jews when people in America will hang Negroes up trees and cut off parts of their bodies for souvenirs? . . .

The Almighty God is not pleased. I pray that He will open the hearts of Americans so that the Negro will have the opportunity to stand in any hall  in this country and sing his heart out to the full capacity of his talent - that he will be given the chance to stand up and be a man and express to the world the God-given instincts and genius that are within him.

April, 1940

Monday, September 14, 2020

Raiders Week 1



Raiders 34
Panthers 30

Describe the game in two words: Football's back. And the Raiders looked sharp on offense, did just enough on defense and won a season opener in the Eastern Time Zone for the first time since 1983, the last time the Raiders (gulp) won a Super Bowl. 
ESPN Staff Writer Paul Gutierrez


Wednesday, September 09, 2020

MLB Roberto Clemente Day




All Puerto Rican MLB players will be allowed to wear Roberto Clemente's No. 21 during the commemoration of the 19th annual Roberto Clemente Day on Wednesday, Sept. 9. All Major League Baseball players will also be given the option to wear a patch with the No. 21 to commemorate the legacy of the late Pittsburgh Pirates star. Cont'd.....

A Proud Father of Puerto Rico - A Dutiful Native Son 


Trump, Lies and Videotape



"You're a bad man Donald Trump, You're a Very Bad Man"

President Trump knew coronavirus was "deadly" and "airborne," and yet he intentionally downplayed the pandemic's threat to the United States? 

What this so-called commander-in-chief chose to do was ignore and lie about the pandemic's threat to American lives rather than prepare the country for battle against it. As of today we stand at 190,000 American Deaths attributable to Covid-19, and counting. And still this commander continues to lie about the threat, as well as, the lack of success we are having fighting it off. 

Mendacity is a tendency to lie. Your friend might swear that he didn't eat your secret chocolate stash, but you'll find it hard to believe him if he's known for his mendacity.

Anyone in the habit of lying frequently has the characteristic of mendacity. People often accuse government officials of mendacity, or being less than honest. You're bound to get frustrated by the mendacity of your friend who's a pathological liar. Mendacity comes from the Latin root word mendacium, or "lie." Don't confuse mendacity with a similar-sounding word, audacity — which means "fearlessness, daring, or bravery."


If this latest breaking news about that man in the White House doesn't convince Americans of the threat he and his Republican administration pose to our country, then future deadly consequences we suffer due to self-serving choices they make should surprise no one.

There is a bad man in the White House, sanctioned by an American political party who excuse his bad actions while turning a blind eye to abuses of power. As a loving parent who defends your child against all threats, maybe it's time to start protecting your country as if your child's life depends on it. Because your child's life does depend on protection from bad intentions, both foreign and domestic. 

Child Protective Services (CPS) intervenes when parents behave negligently, shouldn't citizens of a country have like protection when a president and/or political party is negligent in their duties? At the least, signals of danger and distress for rescue should be dispatched, in hopes of placing the country under guardianship protection outside the home (NATO). Anyone know the international phone number for Country Protective Services? Lives are at stake. It’s way past time for an intervention.....





Saturday, September 05, 2020

Not Impressed With Raiders 2020 Roster

After today's NFL team cutdowns to 53 man rosters, I'm hoping the Raiders have something up their sleeve to pull out before kickoff next Sunday. Because right now, after such promising draft day and off season signings, their roster looks a bit suspect. 

The season ending injury to possession WR Tyrell Williams was a big blow. I like the addition of veteran WR Nelson Agholor, but 7 years experience among the remaining 5 wide receivers makes me uncomfortable. Maybe a 4 tight end set will be a goto more often this season. At least they have 31 years of experience among them and know the tricks of the trade. And Darren Waller is a beast!

I thought defense was much improved, definitely in the linebacker corps, but seeing some of the cut names makes me wonder if Raiders scouts just got it wrong or got gun shy after training camp. Questionable cuts at all positions has me second guessing the Raiders commitment to excellence this coming season.

Can they afford to kick the wheels on a 35 year old Adrian Peterson for depth at running back? I'm just thinking out loud because RB Josh Jacobs is the current star of the show, and if he misses any playtime the Raiders become sitting ducks for another losing season. 

This season  kind of reminds me of the saying from the great sports movie 'Field of Dreams', "If you build it, he will come." Except, the Raiders built a new stadium and guess what? due to a pandemic nobody's coming. The stadium will be as empty as signature shows on the Las Vegas Strip because Coronavirus is still lurking and taking down American lives. We as football fans are definitely in unchartered territory.

I'm thinking for the first season ever that maybe this is not the Raiders year. With BLM, Covid-19, Election 2020, Unemployment, Recession, Wildfires, Locusts, and a gun-toting nation ready to blow each other away for wearing or not wearing masks, this Raiders season should maybe just be wished into the cornfield son. Then again, maybe not.

It's just so hard to Keep Hope Alive when questionable decisions are made by those steering the ship. Win, Lose or Tie, I am Raider.





Let's Go Pillaging Raiders!




note: The Biblical Locust Plagues of 2020