User Comments, Suggestions, or Complaints | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Advertising
Buy MLB playoff tickets, plus 2011 World Series, 2011 ALCS tickets and NLCS game tickets. We also have Texas Rangers playoff schedule, tickets to Red Sox games and Yankees game tickets. Plus, buy Phillies baseball tickets, Tigers playoff tickets and the biggies like ALDS baseball tickets and 2011 NLDS tickets. |
Demarini, Easton and TPX Baseball Bats
|
AllianceTickets.com has cheap MLB Tickets. Get all your Colorado Rockies Tickets, Seattle Mariners Tickets, San Francisco Giants Tickets and all your favorite baseball tickets here. We also carry cheap Denver Broncos Tickets, Seattle Seahawks Tickets and Denver Nuggets Tickets. |
Page rendered in 0.9187 seconds
40 querie(s) executed

Reader Comments and Retorts
Go to end of page
Statements posted here are those of our readers and do not represent the BaseballThinkFactory. Names are provided by the poster and are not verified. We ask that posters follow our submission policy. Please report any inappropriate comments.
In the past, the Mariners front office had a choir-boys-only requirement. But first a flyer on Milton Bradley, now this.
If Rick Adair knew he was throwing Jack Zduriencik under the bus, I am surprised he shot his mouth off. It isn't a good way to get another job in MLB.
I think the kid did a smart thing for his career by taking the plea deal, even if it was better-than-even odds he could get acquitted (and I am not saying it was likely, I don't know). He got a reduced charge, a sentence of time served, and he got on with his career. Spending more time (and lawyers fees) in court, keeping him away from baseball, and keeping the reminder in the Rangers (or any team's) mind that he, at a minimum, behaved badly, would have hurt him, too.
(I'm not even an American, and yet the above lapse made me suddenly feel like a Tea Partyer).
Between Adair, Daniels and Zduriencik, someone's lying and deserves to get thrown under the bus.
And I don't mean 1 of the three is lying, maybe just one is- at a minimum, it could be all three...
Daniels and Z are coming close to calling the other a liar, but backing off... just slightly
For God's sake, at least check baseball-reference.com.
All levity aside, I am generally a big believer in forgiveness and redemption. The facts described in that article sorely test that belief, though.
From everything I've heard the last few years, choirboys tend not to be strangers to sodomy, albeit as victims.
Well, he may have thought that the alternative, admitting that he didn't give a sh!t about Luecke's record, would come off even worse- especially after his boss weighed in.
I wasn't there, but Z is obviously squirming, either he didn't do any reasonable checking into Luecke's situation- which would be bad- or he did and simply didn't think that what Luecke did was bad- or would become an issue...
The whole:
Mariner's President: "I ordered Z to send him back"
Z: Daniels refused to take him back
Daniels: "I was and am willing to take him back"
routine is priceless.
Let's say the Mariners really wanted Luecke and didn't care about the situation making them look bad, they crossed their fingers and hoped it didn't come out- it comes out, Pres throws Z under the bus- Z blames Daniels, Pres. ups the ante- "I told Z to send him back, Z "I tried but Daniels wouldn't..."
Does Baseball Reference have a "crimes committed" stat now? Felonies above Replacement?
I had no idea what Pat Lennon had been convicted of, and when I googled "Pat Lennon" convicted, this was the first result:
Upon review, it appears to be a different Pat Lennon. Still gave me quite a turn, though.
I think forgiveness is like freedom of speech. No half measures, you either believe in it or you don't.
But a person has to ask forgiveness in order to be forgiven. You can't really forgive unilaterally.
Disagree. YOU can't, and I personally am notoriously unforgiving, but there is no reason at all why someone has to ask for forgiveness in order to be forgiven.
Yes there is, it's kind of the definition of forgiveness. You can't forgive something if they're going to keep doing it.
That's not giving a #### about the behavior, it's not forgiveness.
Sure you can. It is incredibly difficult and requires a kindness that I certainly do not possess but there is no reason you cannot grant forgiveness (which is entirely in the mind of the grantor, not the grantee) to someone who has not asked for it.
If they're not sorry???
So I kick you in the nuts, and you say "I forgive you" and I say "I'm not sorry" and I kick you again?
I don't really see that as "forgiveness". Maybe you're letting go of bitterness, or forswearing vengeance, which can be admirable things, but I think for a person to actually be forgiven they have to apologize, or at least express remorse in some way.
Putting aside forgiveness for a moment, I totally believe in freedom of speech in most situations but not in all. Isn't that the conventional view?
"Slander", "Unpopular political speech" and "Women talking" are all different speech situtations that some might view as conventionally permitted or not permitted.
Last time I checked He required repentence before we could be forgiven for our sins.
Always seemed like sound policy to me.
Don't we all favor limitations on speech for slander, libel, child pornography, direct incitement to violence, etc?
This is going to sound horribly wishy-washy, but.... yes and no, hard to say. Innocent nudes of children vs. creepy exploitation; harsh editorials can be slanderous or libelous to some, truthful to others. There are true interpretation issues before those limitations can really be enacted. I mean, there are CLEAR issues where even I would. But then there are CLEAR issues to some that are like beacons, but to us illicit a "huh?", so.
Uh, no. That means you don't believe in freedom of speech, in my view. There might be a better example, though, I'm just thinking of a right that we value and consider pretty much inalienable precisely because it doesn't apply or not depending on circumstances...I think freedom of speech is pretty close to the bill.
27 - I don't think criminalizing child pornography has anything to do with free speech - exploitation is not expression. Slander, libel, incitement to violence - I don't think these are things that should be policed.
*** DISTURBING BEHAVIOR ALERT ***
According to Bakersfield Now, at http://www.bakersfieldnow.com/news/local/48562782.html
Some minor league groupies went with a bunch of Bakersfield players to a bar, where the alleged victim was reportedly making out with multiple men. She went back to Lueke and his roommate's apartment. While she was puking in the toilet, one of the guys was standing next to her and jerking off onto her. Then she passed out on the couch and when she woke up a bunch of her clothes were missing. Investigators got DNA from semen found on her shirt, in her hair, and - to answer the question posted in [10] - on an anal swab.
Re [12] - Lueke missed most of 2009 because he was in jail. Presumably the fact that he pitched fewer than 8 innings that season would have caused Jack Z., or anyone reviewing his prospect file, to wonder where he spent that season.
So you think someone should be able to directlt incite a mob to violence, directly call for them to attack someone, and go scot free as long as they don't participate in the violence themselves?
Or the NYTimes can run a totally fabricated front page story saying you are a pedophile, and you have no recourse against them?
That's a shitty society.
Why fetishize certain rights way beyond their intended purpose?
Obviously you have no idea how to evaluate a prospect who took a plea deal.
So if I'm a Mafia kingpin, and I say to my henchman "Go kill NYCTigersfan," that shouldn't be illegal, because it's speech? All the inchoate offences of "speech" like incitement, conspiracy, etc, should be done away with?
Wow.
I think even #29 would agree that you can't tell someone that rat poison is actually medicine and then hide behind the mantra of "free speech" when the po-po come calling...
Both of you are nuts, absolutely nuts, for the reasons Snapper alluded to.
#6men
I don't get this - these "civil matters" still carry government-enforced legal consequences. How are such laws compatible with the idea that freedom of speech trumps all?
In a different context, is there a meaningful difference between establishing a criminal fine for copyright infringement and allowing a private party to claim statutory damages that may massively exceed actual damages? The state doesn't prosecute the latter, of course, but it's still a legislative enactment that severely penalizes unauthorized file sharing as a form of speech.
Edit:
After all, what the First Amendment actually says is that "Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech." Not "no criminal law," but "no law."
Whether the courts have properly decided what constitutes protected speech or abridgment, I think they're 100% right that civil as well as criminal actions needs to be covered - otherwise it's a rather hollow protection, isn't it?
Got repeated cups of coffee, but never the opps his #s suggested...
Here, either SEA knew the deal or they're stupid. And they aren't stupid.
If somebody shows up wearing this at a BTF meetup, your first 6 beers are on me. (First 12 beers if your name is Dave Cameron)
Link
If you're saying that the First Amendment does not apply to civil causes of action, the Supreme Court would beg to differ - N.Y. Times v. Sullivan being the most famous but not the only example.
(In Times v. Sullivan, the Court held on First Amendment grounds that the Times could not be held liable in a civil defamantion case for publishing false statements about a public figure unless it acted with "actual malice," which here means knew, should have known, or recklessly disregarded the falsity of the statements.)
In many cases, this is a distinction without a difference: if the same act is being penalized and the penalty is the same, the fact that a private plaintiff rather than the state is bringing the case doesn't mean much.
Times v. Sullivan is again a paradigmatic example: if public figures could sue newspapers for damages whenever anything false about them was printed, newspapers would react exactly the same as they would if it were criminal to publish a false fact about a public figure: by avoiding talking about public figures at all unless they were absolutely certain as to the veracity of the story.
Or, again, copyright infringement: if an infringer is required to pay $750 to $30,000 for each act of infringement, it doesn't really matter whether he pays the government as a criminal fine or the plaintiff as civil statutory damages; it has the same basic impact on the activity either way.
Yes, but that's answering what it takes to be forgiven, not what is required to forgive.
When teaching his disciples, this situation comes to mind:
Then Peter came up and said to him, "Lord, how often will my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? As many as seven times?"
Jesus said to him, "I do not say to you seven times, but seventy times seven.
(Mat 18:21-22 ESV)
The implication is that the offending party is not genuinely repentant, because they persist in their sin. Even more pressing is Jesus' own example on the cross:
And Jesus said, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do." (Luk 23:34 ESV)
I think Jesus taught that for us to be forgiven, we must be genuinely repentant (although I join my favorite theologian, the recently deceased Donald Bloesch, in hoping for the opportunity for forgiveness after death); however, he does not teach us that we are free to withhold forgiveness until someone is genuinely repentant.
You must be Registered and Logged In to post comments.
<< Back to main