These pics of the greatest Mazzone in Oriole history should hook you.
Read More...Reader Bruce Menard recently clued me in regarding a chapter from fairly recent MLB history that I hadn’t been aware of. It involves a guy named Jay Mazzone, who worked as a batboy for the Orioles in the late 1960s. The unusual thing about Mazzone is that he’d lost his hands when he was two years old after his snow suit caught on fire, so he used metal hooks in lieu of fingers. This certainly made him an unusual sight on ...
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< 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 >And failed, apparently miserably and even with a welfare check. Free markets punish losers who plow too much money into unsuccesful businesses -- those are the rules. Stop asking for special treatment, Schilling.
In addition to setting up the conditions by which simply attending college meant accruing a massive debt, the baby boom generation has run the country utterly into the ground. The country is more punitive, more stacked in favor of the monied and privileged, and markets and people are less free.
The only real controversy is whether their actions in middle age and maturity -- the years of their power -- could have been predicted from the way they conducted themselves when they were young. I'd say yes, but the question deserves a longer treatment.
My personal, anecdotal observations tell me that older folks have a tougher time understanding how the world has changed. This is by no means universal. I'm in the same generation as you, and I certainly have no trouble seeing how things have changed with respect to student debt, but many of my contemporaries do not. Many of them also do not understand "rap" music (and mostly they mean hip-hop), and complain to each other about the way young folk don't pull up their pants.
At one point, I turned to a couple of neighbors and said, "It doesn't matter. Our opinions don't matter. Do you know what teens and twenty-somethings think when they hear people say stuff like that? They laugh to themselves. They think we're old people who are out of touch and totally irrelevant. And you know what? Advertisers are about to agree with us. We're just a few years from passing out of the 18-49 demo.
"And the most ridiculous thing is, none of you seem to remember what our parents' generation said about our hair, or our denim, or our music, or our grass. We sneered at them. Now these kids are sneering at you.
"Of course, you're entitled to your opinion, but I gotta say, hanging out in groups and ######## about kids these days seems like a horrible way to spend time. What's the point? They aren't going to change, and they especially aren't going to change because of us."
Needless to say I won't get invited to the next neighborhood party, but to be honest they've been annoyed at me since I refused to vote for the public water park.
I'd been hopeful for this game since I first heard about it years ago. Schilling enjoyed the same games that I did for the most part, and I wanted to see the game that he wanted to create. Salvatore clearly had faith in the vision to work without timely compensation. I won't hold out much hope, but I would love it if Copernicus gets resurrected somewhere.
That's still part of the economy.
This is, in fact, a great place to get all the coverage. Thanks for that.
Which can actually be boiled down to --
The head of every business that incorporates in Delaware receives a pony.
HOWEVER...
(1) Your company bounced a check for $1.1 million, and you needed a deal with a new client in order to make payroll. To put the latter a different way, you needed to Ponzi your new customers. 38 Studios was already dead.
(2) With the money you got from the public, you made the public an interested party in the solvency of your company. If you have an inability to meet your public obligations, the public can say whatever it damn well pleases, whenever it wants. If you want to believe you got the deal with RI because of your hard work instead of some kind of welfare, well, the existence of such strings in that deal means that your hard work sucked. You stared the devil in the eye and asked him to dance. Congratulations.
HEY! Which reference should Chris go with?
(A) If you want him to say, "Do you ever dance with the devil in the pale moonlight," then text YES to 57514
(B) If you want him to say, "How'd you ever get the devil to dance / Get the devil to dance like that," then text YES to 57515
(C) If you want him to make an obscure Breaking Benjamin reference, then text YES to 57516
(D) If you want him to perform a Mexican hat dance, then text YES to 57517
Vote NOW!
And now the devil knows he's dead and, well, that's not good.
One person's memories from long ago are a terrible thing to lean too heavily on; but I recall during the 1970's having several friends who, thanks to government student grants (not loans, grants) actually making a profit on going to college; as the grants they received were more than the tuition they were paying.
Yeah, times have definitely changed.
DB
Per an old friend, he said he was eligible to recieve $150K per year when he turned 45 years old, if he got 10 years of service in. (This was in the mid to late 90's) Every player also received 90K in misc royalties back then. Just some of the perks. Meal money (always distributed in cash), a ridiculously good health plan, great hotel room deals, etc.
I totally support this. Several kegs a week, a few bricks of weed a week, picking up the cost of takeout & a crash pad/studio in Stockton... How much would that possibly cost the taxpayer per month? The feds take an ownership stake in the output/music licensing that results, and they might even make $ off the deal. A bargain for the taxpayer!
How can we petition to make this happen? And can we then move on to do a deal along the same lines for the remaining members of the Replacements?
I've talked to a few people about this and they're wondering what the fuss is about. As pretty much everybody points out they'll still be extremely low in 2016.
Yeah, why won't they just bend over and let themselves get shafted like students do in the good ol' USA?
You don't bank 50 million, or any number of taxpayer money, on a video game production company that is going "all in" with an MMO. MMO's success is seemingly mostly random. The money would have been much better spent on a company that was focused on creating low cost, small team developer based gaming apps for mobile and tablets -- to give one example. That 50 million would have went a lot further, although it's not as sexy as saying "we're gonna be the next WOW".
The left is up in arms over this.
Umm, baby boomer here. Currently putting kids through college. We may be crotchety, but we ain't funking blind and stupid. Sorry if it pisses you off to get shooed off my lawn, but I damned well do notice how much economic/social conditions have changed.
And why should you? Telling the old farts that they don't "get it" is just the flip side of telling the punk kids to pull up their ####### pants.
Under that theory, a subsidy for any employer could be justified. But government isn't very good at picking winners over losers, and the subsidies end up going to the well-known, or more often, the politically connected, with all too often no public benefit flowing from the governmental subsidy. A very poor use of tax money that I would have thought Rhode Island couldn't afford.
Not that I thank that saving 50 mil of 114 is sign if poor judgment( in fact it's a pretty high savings rate) but if there is one thing I've learned from the millionaires I do know ( I only know a few and they are more of the "I could put together 5mil in cash pretty easily" type not "I make 15mil a year type") it's that the rich and smart don't pay those tax rates. They hire smart accountants that can use the tax law to their advantage and their don't pay anything close to 40%.
That being said if he really saved 50mil, that'f fairly impressive, sinking all into a AAA MMO being made by a new company is not, anyone even marginally familiar with the gaming industry could have told them it was a bad idea and I am sure some did. As others have said there are clearly way better gaming investments.
I have no idea how university tuition got so high, but I imagine it had something to do with those loans and grants. There's no ceiling on tuition, because no matter how high it goes, the middle class will borrow money to pay it. I also have no idea where all that money is going, since faculty salaries are no higher relative to inflation than they were thirty years ago, many departments are housed in old, decaying buildings, etc., etc. I can't fathom where universities are (apparently) costing so much more money to operate than they used to. They have more students, but that would be covered by having that many more tuitions paid at the former rates. Anyway, you can't cut out the loans now, because tuition is never coming back down. It's like the price of anything that way. Student debt is going to have to be treated radically differently from other kinds of debt, though, or hardly anyone from this generation is going to be able to get substantial lines of credit.
Bullshit. There's precious little you can do about the tax rate you pay on wages. Schilling's MLB income wasn't capital gains.
Also, grants do NOT lead to "profit" just because they pay for more than tuition. There's books and HOUSING and FOOD to consider. And most grants require you to take a large load of classes each semester. I know of several people who have half a college education because they just burned out taking the required class loads while working a job to support themselves because the grant would not do that. This includes people who had spent tours of duty in the armed forces, partially to get the college help, only to find out that it only covered tuition and books and required a full course load. There's a reason that a lot of college kids are still living in their parents' basements.
So there's at least one boomer out here who did work for his schooling and who still thinks that the current mess is a disaster that needs fixing yesterdecade.
I'm also not sure that MLB players count, in the government's eyes, as "employees." They may count as private contractors, in which case, a creative accountant can get the tax bill down a lot by finding odd deductions. I should know. I worked the last 30 years of my working life as a contractor, and never had to pay anything like 40% in taxes.
- Brock Hanke (geezer who has teenage friends)
I feel sorry for Curt and his money, though talking as if the state gov owe him money for starting a busniess .. is rather dubious to say the least. and it's not like his busniess was into public contract and the governmen bounced his check or something...
This is almost exactly my university experience (2003-present)
-Parents said they'd cover tuition for 4 years - living expenses I could cover.
-Working was slightly different. I cleaned toilets through my undergrad years, and some of grad school, but for the most part grad school has been paid for through scholarships that don't allow you to work (distracts from the thesis I guess...luckily there's no BTF clause in the scholarship contract).
Of course I did this partially in Canada (which as I understand it is relatively cheap in comparison to the US), and the UK...which is pricey, but I'm helped out by a bursary.
In the end I'm probably going to get out with a BA, MA and PhD (god willing) and about $4000 in debt (around $1500 of which I've already paid off).
Which obviously isn't to say that many students and grad students have it rough...I'm one of the lucky ones, most grad students I know are working full-time, studying full-time and taking on loans. To them I give the consolation of knowing that they are investing in a bright future whereas I'm coasting along now towards graduation and unemployment.
As for the Quebec protests...being out of the country I don't exactly have my finger on the pulse of Canadian political culture, but the unanimous opinions of my friends back home (mostly lefty, some right) is that the protesters are idiots for the reasons stated in #70.
I've been scratching my head ever since this story first broke, trying to figure that one out for myself. I'm getting the sinking feeling that this is one, two, many metaphors about the state of our country right about this.
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That's as non-partisan a "bingo" as I've ever seen here.
Under that theory, a subsidy for any employer could be justified. But government isn't very good at picking winners over losers, and the subsidies end up going to the well-known, or more often, the politically connected, with all too often no public benefit flowing from the governmental subsidy. A very poor use of tax money that I would have thought Rhode Island couldn't afford.
Joltin' Joe, I think you need to adjust the dial on your sarcasm detector. That was Srul who made that comment, not the Governor of Corporate Welfare.
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But going further, I really think that politics are a small part of a person unless they want to make it a larger part, and that is sometimes a bigger deal with the person's character than the actual politics themselves. If Schilling emerges from this still defending the Free Market, I'll be disappointed but unless it turns him into some sort of bitter, ranting Paulite I'll just continue to focus more on the things #6 talked about.
I've always liked Schilling in spite of his simplistic politics, but I hope that he realizes that if he talks the talk, he's gotta walk the walk. And next time he gets a brilliant idea like this, he might try kickstarter for his financing instead of the government.
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At a family gathering a few months ago, I mentioned feeling bad for the utterly ridiculous debt loads being taken out by students nowadays, especially grad students... I swear to god everyone over 50 and under 80 (except one whose daughter is in college), had the following reaction, "I don't care how much, they dam well better pay it back," some added stuff like, "It took me 7 years because I had to work dammit"- what really got me was the visceral anger some had at the very idea that I felt bad for debt loaded 20-30 somethings..
I'm nearly 68, and I have no problem sympathizing with (most) students saddled with debt**. Duke cost a total of $2,100 a year in tuition & room (or $16,000 a year in 2012 dollars) when I entered in 1962, and now it's well over three times that. Not to mention that the unemployment rate has gone up by a staggering 190% since the month I graduated.
**But only if they don't own a smartphone and a wide-screen TV!!!!! (/homage to Ray)
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In addition to setting up the conditions by which simply attending college meant accruing a massive debt, the baby boom generation has run the country utterly into the ground. The country is more punitive, more stacked in favor of the monied and privileged, and markets and people are less free.
The only real controversy is whether their actions in middle age and maturity -- the years of their power -- could have been predicted from the way they conducted themselves when they were young. I'd say yes, but the question deserves a longer treatment.
Jesus, there's no simplistic overgeneralization like a BTF simplistic overgeneralization.
So first the Boomers get blamed for draft-dodging and getting wasted on drugs, and now they're blamed for parroting the Tea Partiers, even though half the time you post here you make the Tea Partiers sound like the National Welfare Rights Organization.
Yeah, the Baby Boomers can't win. I'm sure glad I was born before 1946, or my guilt might lead me to hara-kiri.
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Kids today are mostly idiots and kids in the '60s were mostly idiots.
True, but other kids in the 60's helped bring Jim Crow to its knees, and most kids today are far less susceptible to the right wing noise machine than their parents or grandparents. Give credit where it's due.
I have no idea how university tuition got so high,
There's no one answer to that, but the auction mentality is a big part of it. Take a look at where the Supreme Court and recent cabinet members all went to college or law school, and you'll see why the Ivy League and other elite schools are pushing the demand part of the equation through the roof. When parents see that an insanely disproportionate number of visible high government officials went to those schools, they think that without degree from one of them, their children will be sweeping streets for a living. And what do you think that this hyperdemand for an elite degree does to tuition? It sure as hell doesn't lower it.
Throw in the pullback in state tuition subsidies for public universities, and you've gone quite a ways towards explaining those frightening tuition costs.
I have no doubt that they no longer do.
But I also know, for a fact, that for the time frame that I mentioned, for some that I knew, they did.
And, for the record, this is why I began my earlier post as I did:
Because I knew odds were good that someone, who doesn't know me, would come along and claim to know more about my own personal experiences than I do; and also try to tell me that what happened in regards to my friends, who he also doesn't know, didn't really happen.
But that's the internet.
Anyway, bottom line is we do agree that the cost of a college education today has far exceeded that which a reasonable person would claim it should be.
DB
Plus, he is totally blind to his own hypocrisy.
This was me during my MA. My grant covered tuition and living expenses, and a month-long vacation around Europe after it was over.
My current grant more than covers tuition, but in terms of total yearly funds I'm having to dip into my own funds a tiny bit to cover other expenses.
I'm probably the worst planner/fineprint-reader in the world, but when I was applying for PhD programs 2-3 years ago it seemed like most of them provided automatic funding. I recall having the impression that the University of Toronto provided full tuition funding and an accomodation allowance for anyone who got into the PhD program, and that this was quite normal. Does someone with a bit more knowledge on the matter have any insight?
As it turns out I finished my MA in 2008 I think with enough grant money left over to pay down a big chunk of my undergrad debt, and take the Europe holiday.
I can't imagine getting a PhD without full funding. Who the hell would borrow for 6-8 years (average is 7 years now, I think). Maybe in a STEM field you could get some return on investment, but in Social Sciences or Humanities you might as well drive a car off a cliff.
emphasis added - DB
No offense, Brock, but, based on the areas I emphasized, I'm starting to wonder just how closely you read my post. 8-)
Anyway, to answer your main question, yes, I had friends in the 1970s who received government grants to attend college, where the grants exceeded all their college costs. Their situations varied; for example, some stayed local and lived at home; many went to state colleges where tuition costs were minimal-to-non-existent; but the bottom line (if you'll pardon the pun) was that, after all was said and done, the funds they received from the government to attend college were greater than their total costs to attend college.
DB
The recent NYT article does a good job laying out the complexity of the issue, but I think the cutbacks in state funding are a stealth factor-- schools have been passing those cuts along to students via tuition hikes. Faculty salaries certainly haven't risen, while workloads in may places have spiked.
I work in higher ed, at a state school (went to a state school for my BA and MA, private for PhD but only b/c of funding, paid a total of $15K in tuition for those degrees). What amazes me on a daily basis is, for some students, how little thought goes into selecting a school. Some of our students are paying $17K in tuition alone, and they literally have no idea why they chose to come to our institution as opposed to another (beyond "the girls are hot" and "campus looks pretty"). Of course, for 80% of them it was a decision taken very seriously; for the rest, they're saddling themselves with debt without much foresight. As the NYT piece makes clear, it's not really their fault-- the bigger conversation we need to have is about how difficult a time they'll have paying off that debt, and that's where schools need to step up to the plate.
and yeah in the states and not in some backwater wiseguys.
The recent NYT article does a good job laying out the complexity of the issue, but I think the cutbacks in state funding are a stealth factor-- schools have been passing those cuts along to students via tuition hikes.
And that's exactly my point. BITD many of the best state universities were either tuition-free or had nominal rates of a few hundred dollars a year, and the auction mentality surrounding universities today wasn't even a factor.
Conservatives will often counter by stating the obvious, that there's no such thing as "free tuition". And of course they're right, but as usual they avoid the key question: Does society have a legitimate interest in seeing that costs become a non-factor, or at least a relatively trivial factor, in deciding who gets to go to college? Scholarships and grants can help applicants whose families are below a certain cutoff point, but they do little or nothing for those from middle income families who aren't prodigies in either sports or other specialized fields. It's students like that who become prey to the loan sharks.
And in this case, the critics of the Baby Boomers have a point, since the Baby Boomers themselves were the ones who were the chief beneficiaries of a far more enlightened policy that was a legacy handed down from previous generations. It's sad to see so many of these former students turn into latterday Ronald Reagans now that their own college days are well behind them.
My program paid full everything plus stipend. $14k when I started, up to $18 k now. That was baerly enough to make ends meet in Boston.
That was the advantage of a standard national grant. I'm assuming the $20,000 was designed for living in Toronto. In Saskatchewan it was like being a millionaire.
That's the debate, but we're not having it-- instead we've just shifted the burden to families without having any sort of public conversation about it. Our public college system in this country is amazing, but it didn't build itself, and it won't last without funding. I've been at my current job for 3 years, and in that time our support from the state has dropped from around 12% to 8%.
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