July 30, 2021

Money Grab by the St. Louis Community College District

I live in a community that has a Junior College district which has existed for years to educate people wanting to start their college careers and earn an associate's degree.  There is nothing wrong with this and it is St. Louis Community College's mission to provide a two year college education.

The college wants to expand its programs and "train people for the future".  Nothing wrong with this either.  Just do it with what you have been given by the taxpayers.

Now the junior college, with three area campuses, wants to increase property taxes by 44 percent.  The juco board really hasn't justified the increase nor given much information to the general public as to how the additional money would specifically be used.

And to top it off the district is already getting a sales tax from the public on top of its existing property tax levy.  For this reason I encourage you to vote NO on Proposition R.  If the board really wants to go beyond its mission then it should start a trade school.  Many of these already exist in the St. Louis metropolitan area.  If the junior college district can't do it within its existing budget then it needs to cut some of its existing programs that are not well utilized.

Combine this with a 44% tax hike, and very little explanation of where the money will go, makes this a loser all the way around.  Vote no on Prop R and the next time one of the board members who proposed this money grab runs for re-election, vote them out of office.

July 19, 2021

Baseball Must Change

Image courtesy Washington Post
If you visit here regularly, you know I'm critical of the speed of play in major league baseball games.  In the past decade, games have gotten considerably longer primarily due to batters wandering in and out of the box and pitchers hiking around the mound whenever the mood strikes.  But, some of the other changes implemented by MLB have done little to make it more watchable.

Ten days ago, George Will, advocated change so the game can preserve itself.  I don't always agree with Mr. Will politically, but when he writes about baseball, I pay close attention and we usually see eye to eye.

Here is his editorial from the July 9th Washington Post titled: "Opinion: The time has come to save baseball by changing the rules."

Even if you belong in the basket of deplorables — Americans uninterested in baseball — you should be intrigued by the sport’s current problems. At the all-star break, Major League Baseball’s 2021 season is demonstrating, redundantly, that the quality of the game as entertainment is declining. Paradoxically, the problems arise from reasonable behavior based on abundant accurate information.

Improved technology generates data about pitches’ spin rates, the launch angles of batters’ swings, particular batters’ tendencies on particular pitches and much more. Improved kinesiology increases pitching velocity. The results include a slower pace of play, diminished action, fewer balls in play and more of them handled by radically repositioned infielders.

Five seasons ago, there were 3,294 more hits than strikeouts. Three seasons ago, strikeouts edged past hits. Writer Jayson Stark notes that until 2018 there had never been a month with more strikeouts than hits. This April there were almost 1,100 more strikeouts than hits, and writer Tyler Kepner says this season is on a pace for approximately 5,000 more strikeouts than hits. Twenty-four percent of plate appearances end in strikeouts (they are increasing for the 16th consecutive season, partly because today’s average fastball’s velocity is 93.8 mph, 2.7 mph more than 14 years ago. As of mid-June, the .238 collective major league batting average was 15 points below 2019. In 2015, teams shifted infielders on 9.6 percent of all pitches. This season, teams are shifting on 32 percent (usually an infielder in shallow right field), which will erase perhaps 600 hits.

With pitchers dawdling to recover between high-exertion, high-velocity pitches and with 36 percent of at-bats ending with home runs, strikeouts or walks, around four minutes pass, on average, between balls put in play. Players spend much more time with leather on their hands than with wood in their hands, but have fewer and fewer opportunities to display their athleticism as fielders. Home runs predominate because scoring by hitting a ball far over defensive shifts is more likely than hitting three singles, through shifts, off someone throwing 98 mph fastballs and 90 mph secondary pitches. This means fewer base runners. In 2021, there probably will be 1,000 fewer stolen bases than 10 years ago.

Writer Tom Verducci notes that in the last 26 minutes of 2020’s most-watched game, the final World Series game, just two balls were put in play. In this game, the ball was put in play every 6.5 minutes, and half the outs were strikeouts.

More pitches and less contact. Longer games (13 minutes 17 seconds longer than a decade ago) and less action. No wonder fans who have been neurologically rewired by their digital devices’ speeds are seeking other entertainments. Major league attendance has fallen 14 percent from its 2007 peak.

Last season, MLB made an action-creating change — a runner is placed on second base to begin each extra half-inning. And MLB is experimenting with other changes in various minor leagues.

Because pitching velocity is suffocating offense, MLB could move the pitcher’s mound back a foot (from today’s 60 feet six inches) to give batters more reaction time. The changed physiology of pitchers has, in effect, moved the mound closer to home plate: In the 1950s, the Yankee’s 5-foot 10-inch Whitey Ford had a Hall of Fame career. Today, 6-foot 4-inch pitchers, with long arms and long strides, release the ball significantly closer to the plate than Ford did.


Requiring four infielders to be on the infield dirt — or, even bolder, requiring two infielders to be on the dirt on each side of second base — as the pitch is thrown, would reduce reliance on home runs, which are four seconds of action, followed by a leisurely 360-foot trot. A 20-second pitch clock might reduce velocity by reducing pitchers’ between-pitches recovery time. And by quickening baseball’s tempo, the clock might prevent batters from wandering away from the batter’s box and ruminating between pitches. Stolen bases might increase if pitchers had to step off the rubber before throwing to first base. After a walk and then a steal, one single would produce a score.

Baseball fans, a temperamentally conservative tribe, viscerally oppose de jure changes to their game. They must, however, acknowledge the damage done to it by this century’s cumulatively momentous de facto changes in the way it is played. What Edmund Burke said of states is pertinent: “A state without the means of some change is without the means of its conservation.”

July 04, 2021

Happy Birthday United States of America

I wrote this a few years ago on the Fourth of July but it is still just as true today if not even more so.

I am blessed to live in the United States of America. It is still the richest and most powerful nation in the world. But more importantly I am allowed to worship as I please. I am able to express myself and to criticize our leaders as I see fit due to the Bill of Rights of this great nation. 

Today marks the 245th birthday of the United States of America. It is one of the longest lasting democracies in the world. This has been accomplished through the sacrifice of thousands going back to the Revolution against the British to today with our troops deployed in Afghanistan and other Middle East hot-spots. These brave men and women paid the ultimate price for our enduring freedom. I have no good way of sufficiently expressing my gratitude to them and to those who have served in conflicts such as World War I, World War II, Korea and Vietnam. Today I say thank you to all of our armed forces past and present. Because of you I am able to live in what I truly believe is the greatest nation on earth. Happy Birthday America! Long may you stand!