It’s Sunday morning, and it’s sleeting outside. My
refrigerator is full of food, church has been cancelled, and Pam is downstairs
making a breakfast casserole. Clearly, it’s time for me to pontificate on
current events.
For all of the hand wringing about how college
football needs a playoff system, once again the right two teams will be playing
for the national title. Although my gut and my eyes tell me that the two best teams are Auburn and Alabama, I do
get why Florida State is number one in the polls. Although they play in a much
weaker conference, they have destroyed everyone on their schedule, and they
have a terrific defense. Auburn played a much tougher schedule week in and week
out and their only loss came in Baton Rouge on a Saturday night where the
visitors practically never win. Regular readers of this space know of my
devotion to SEC football, of my convictions, (born out by the record of the
last ten years), that the SEC is vastly superior to any other conference in
college football. But this year, I’m thinking that their streak of dominance
may be about to end. Auburn has a virtually unstoppable running game, despite
the fact that although it’s a triple option offense, most of the running plays
end up being right up the gut, power football. Still, no one seems to have figured
out how to slow it down, let alone stop it. However, Auburn’s defense is
horrendous, especially against the pass. Florida State has a great passing game
and the one thing that all of the past SEC champs used to have, and even
greater defense. Count me among the old geezers who still believe that to win
championships, eventually you have to be able to stop somebody. My money is on
Florida State.
Nelson Mandela passed away. His death has dominated
the news for the past 48 hours and deservedly so. He was a great man precisely
because he was not a modern man. Mandela chose to reject Machiavellian schemes
of revenge and score settling when he was released from over twenty years of political
imprisonment. Instead of getting even, that most 20th century
virtue, he chose to pursue healing and reconciliation. This fact alone is
reason enough to celebrate his life.
A political joke:
Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid got together and decided
that something had to be done to improve their image with “regular, middle
class types.” So Nancy says, “I’ve got an idea, let’s go buy some regular
people clothes, you know…jeans and t-shirts and go into a working class bar
somewhere in Montana and buy everybody a round of drinks!” Harry loved the
idea, but added that as a conversation starter and to better blend in with the
local folks, they should bring along a dog. So, Nancy and Harry walk into a bar
in Bozeman, Montana with a Labrador Retriever and start buying everyone drinks.
Everything is going great for a while, then an old gnarly looking rancher walks
in, goes up to the dog, lifts its tail and stares for a minute, then shakes his
head and walks out. Not long after, another old rancher comes in and does the
same thing. Over the next 30 minutes, another ten ranchers walk in, lift the dog’s
tail, then shake their heads back and forth and leave without saying a word. Finally,
Nancy looks at the bartender and says, “Excuse me. I’ve noticed these men
lifting our dog’s tail. Is this some sort of quaint local custom?” The
bartender says, “Lord no. Someone’s out there running around town, claiming
there’s a Labrador Retriever in here with two assholes.”
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