Wednesday, March 12, 2003




The Sorry State of the Knicks

I read an interesting article posted on Yahoo by the NYPost.com in which Don Chaney, the current Knicks coach, criticized the fans at Madison Square Garden for not supporting the team during Michael Jordan's recent "farewell" game.

"New Yorkers, for the most part, want to be entertained," Chaney said last night before the Knicks' 87-85 loss to Memphis. "I'd like to see them attach themselves to a team where they live and die with that team. But it's more entertainment than anything. They're more critical of their home team than any [fans] I've ever seen. But at the same time, if you do well, they're for you."

"I'd like to see mentality change a little bit in New York where you have a true love for your teams when they're down and also when they're up. The true love is there [in New York] when they're up. I'd like to see it also there when they're down.

I really have to differ with Chaney. New York basketball fans are some of the most knowledgeable around. What they've been treated to since management gutted the heart and soul of this team in search of a "quick fix" has been some horrible basketball. While there are some obstructed view seats in the nosebleed section for $10 (I've never seen them available), courtside seats go for $289.50 per game. To get a halfway decent seat costs $61.50 per game at a minimum. Add to that the overpriced food and drink, and the outrageous cost of parking in New York, and Knicks fans have every reason to complain about this inferior product. Where else would the fans put up with this?


11:49:58 PM    Go Ahead, make my day  []

The Social Credit List

The Social Credit List

I received an interesting email from Curtis Priest through the Post-Careerist newsgroup:

"Around 1920, C.H. Douglas (of England) wrote a famous book entitled Social Credit. There is a 'social credit' list

The cross-over to this list? Douglas thought that workers were forever in a loop, perhaps he would say "rat-race." And, he recognized the spirtual side of mankind, and wondered why, with so many "labor saving" technological advances, that people still had to work 40-60 hours a week!  (I don't think he even imagined the "double-income family."  :)

So, he imagines a world where time, above that required for subsistence, might serve more spiritual uses -- whether fishing for the challenge of it, or what."

Sounds a bit utopian to me, but you can dream I guess.


11:21:26 PM    Go Ahead, make my day  []

Time For A Change

I just got tired of the old look of the site and decided to try something different. Plus, I screwed things up so I couldn't go back to the old look anyway! Well, not unless I stay up another two or three hours to figure it out.
1:56:46 AM    Go Ahead, make my day  []