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Arne sez,
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Raines probably got dinged a bit in the MVP voting because of him using cocaine; similarly, Dave Parker did not do well in the HOF voting. It's part of the interesting question of how much players should be penalized for using illegal performance non-enhancing drugs, and other criminal actions.
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Well, the writers LIKED Tim Raines.
Sometimes it is difficult to make a truly fair judgment when comparing one criminal action vs. another. In the 1960's and 1970's, "speed" was eaten like candy according to several of the autobiographies of the era. How do you WEIGHT your "moral outrage" at speed vs steroids vs cocaine vs alcoholism vs adultery vs Babe Ruth's top 20 vices?
Here in our Konspiracy Korners we assume that the Gentle Denizens are interested in fairness rather than hypocrisy, in judging our friends by the same standards we would judge our foes. By the time you put Babe Ruth into the Hall of Fame, haven't you pretty well established that you're going to smile politely, nod, and look the other way on personal vices? -or- failing that, we could compile a Top 10 Outrages in the NFL, NBA, and MLB Halls of Fame...
"Dinged a bit for cocaine." True. Is that your own response to your daughter's use of cocaine, that it dings her reputation a bit? Like, what, 8%? Good questions all...
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Curt Schilling claims that he'd have gotten a 90% vote if he'd published a "Lynch Trump" meme and no others. The sportswriters hate Schilling's guts on two counts: (1) he is defiantly and openly conservative, and (2) he defiantly and openly hates the press. Steve Carlton, who has the same career WAR as Schilling, was guilty of only the second of these; he feuded with the media much more than Schilling ever did. Lefty was elected to the HOF with 95.6% of the vote. I flunked logic in college, as you have surmised :- ) but I'll take a wild guess that count (1) weighs heavily against Schilling.
Here is an article from this week, "Curt Schilling pitched his way into the Hall of Fame and TALKED his way out of it." Not, committed crimes and felonies to get out of it. Not, shaved points to get out of it. Not, was caught with underage girls to get out of it. Rather, TALKED his way out of it.
I know nobody asked me, but if anybody did, I am completely opposed to punishing people for what they say. USA Today makes the issue very clear. It's a single issue. Schilling deserves the HOF, but his privileges are revoked because beat writers don't like him. That's all there is to the matter, and writers cheerfully attest to that.
What integrity on the writers' part! :- )
I don't think that this is advanced ethics. I think that it is Ethics 101. If Mike Piazza had been a communist and if he had campaigned to make Christianity illegal, you can bet your last nickel that Jeff Clarke would have voted him into Baseball's Hall of Fame. And then written op-ed's arguing with Piazza.
One reason? Because it would be a simple LIE on my part to declare that Mike Piazza was not a baseball legend. If a person is truly reprehensible, in politics or baseball or blogging, you don't have to lie to prove him a fool. There will be other ways, legitimate ways, to prove him a fool.
When detractors of public figures use dubious means to attack their targets, it proves on the face of it that the actual arguments are weak. Else, the attackers wouldn't be "reaching" the way they do. Every single time the rhetoric (or punishments) against a public target become disproportionate, it counts one point in the target's favor.
Each time that an enemy attacked Barack Obama over his "closet Islamism" or over his birth certificate, it was a form of concession - it underlined that President Obama was not actually as bad as his enemies imagined him to be. Else, why not just calmly point to the facts of your case? Similarly, for the sportswriters to attack Schilling's HOF designation, speaks badly of them. Not of him.
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The movement toward censorship and suppression in this country is gaining ever-more momentum. Many Americans are proud of suppressing their fellow citizens' speech.
But even for those disagree with that, even if they approve of censorship-in-spirit, in those cases where they are offended by the words in question ...
... I'm guessing they would still prefer the BBWAA to represent the interests of 100,000,000 baseball fans rather than their own interests.
It is simply appalling to watch beat writers preen about the fact that they can keep our Hall of Famers out of the Hall, if the HOF'er didn't treat the writers well. It is outrageous for them to brag about the fact that WE FANS don't get Curt Schilling's HOF ceremony if the WRITERS didn't like him.
Regards,
Jeff