Thierry Henry Is Innocent: Perspective From A Real Football Fan

Media, Sport

Thierry Henry Is Innocent: Perspective From A Real Football Fan

1 Comment 18 November 2009

Footballish.net is still under construction-therefore I have posted this Football related article here. Enjoy!

There has been a very negative-perhaps too negative, if you will, of a reaction to Ireland’s defeat to the French at the Stade de France in yesterdays World Cup Qualifying playoff.

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The Resident Hometown-Team Complex

Sport

The Resident Hometown-Team Complex

1 Comment 14 November 2009

It’s that all too familiar time of year. The Red Sox are the “October team” pushing their way to victory in the MLB playoffs. Last year at this time I was only a few months into college in Boston, and the Sox were tied 3-3 in the ALCS series versus

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Sport

An Attempt to Watch American “Soccer”

No Comments 14 November 2009

I am sitting at work watching the MLS quarterfinal game between the Chicago Fire and the New England Revolution. The MLS is a bigger joke than Sarah Palin-and I need to address that. Soccer in America has no prestige and it never will.

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Media, Sport

The American Sport

No Comments 14 November 2009

Months ago I watched the Rangers play the Bruins. Beyond the fact that the Rangers pwned the conference rivals, and beyond the fact that the game was a roller coaster ride of intense hockey, the game went to a shootout,

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Sport

Midwest Rivalry Sparks Fantastic Display of Talent

No Comments 14 November 2009

Must watch hockey

That’s the highlight reel/news story for one of the most exciting games of the NHL thus far this season.

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  • Mom: You better hide your stuff.
    Me: What stuff?
    Mom: Your little doo-dads.
    Me: What doo-dads?
    Mom: You know…
    Me: What? My weed paraphernalia?
    Mom: Yeah.
    Me: Why?
    Mom: People can see it in your apartment
    Me: Who’s going to see it in my apartment? My friends?
    Mom: It could be anyone, you never know who’s going to be in your apartment
    Me: I’ll never know who’s in my apartment?
    Phone Conversation

    09/07/10

  • Patting myself on the back

    After finishing Matt taibbi’s great derangement, I feel so validated about my attitude toward politics. 

    There are certain beliefs I have about politics that people easily dismiss because they come off nihilistic, overly negative, and well, easy to dismiss. I have, since 2008, believed:

    1. The American political system is solely a business of businessmen, with money the number 1 priority, always.
    2. American foreign involvement in war or occupation in third world nations will never stop, it is embedded into the economy and always will be.
    3. The candidates are the same, other than small social issue debates. Both Democrats and Republicans support the war regardless of what they say, and the President has little power to make drastic changes to a system that already produces massive wealth for the upper class.

    In The Great Derangement Taibbi explores American politics and the right wing religious culture, only to discover that everything in this country can be whittled down to one key concept: $

    So when people argue with me about NOT voting for the candidate who will bring “CHANGE,” or try and make me feel like an asshole for not partaking in the hype/buildup/debate or the 08 election, I can now simply say- you are not on my level on knowledge and understanding.

    You don’t have a choice, you don’t win, and you can’t change it. You live in a terrible country (unless you like both buying new products and working 9-5).

    07/29/10

  • Here I have a confession to make. It’s not something that’s easy to explain, but here goes. After two days of nearly constant religious instruction, songs, worship, and praise— two days that for me meant an unending regimen of forced and fake responses— a funny thing started to happen to my head. There is a transformational quality in these external demonstrations of faith and belief. The more you shout out praising the Lord, singing along to those awful acoustic tunes, telling people how blessed you feel, and so on, the more a sort of mechanical Christian skin starts to grow all over your real self. Even if you’re a degenerate Rolling Stone reporter inwardly chuckling and busting on the whole scene-even if you’re intellectually enraged by the ignorance and arrogant prejudice flowing from the mouth of a terminal ambition case like Phil Fortenberry— outwardly you’re swaying to the gospel and singing and praising and acting the part, and those outward ministrations assume a kind of sincerity in themselves. And at the same time, that “inner you” begins to get tired of the whole spectacle and sometimes forgets to protest—in my case checking out into baseball reveries and other daydreams while the outer me did the “work” of singing and praising. At any given moment, which one is the real you?
    Matt Taibbi, The Great Derangement

    07/27/10


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