Baltimore Orioles in the American League Playoffs

I’m not a big baseball fan. However, since the Orioles are in the playoffs and the games are underway, I’m enjoying the orange and black clothes people around Baltimore are sporting every chance they get. The level of fun, in any sport, increases exponentially when the home town is excited about the home team. Plus, since this is the “post season” the season is dramatically shortened and every game is meaningful.

Last night, about the time when the Orioles began playing the Detroit Tigers in the American League Division Series, I decided to go downstairs and watch the game on TV. My family watches very little TV and so we don’t pay for cable. I was disappointed to find that the game was being broadcast on TBS (a cable channel) effectively locking me out. I made a comment on Social Media about my disappointment and how money ruins everything (grumble, grumble). Several contacts, including my friend sportswriter Charlie Vascellaro, noted that baseball was better on radio anyway.

I didn’t read those comments until this morning though. When I did, I entertained a brief memory of my father, sitting on the porch of our house, listening to the Orioles on a tiny transistor radio. I spend a lot of time on my porch when the weather permits and I could see myself listening to the game out there.

Then, I realized that the only working radio in the house is our alarm clock. Today’s game began at a little after noon. Since I’m working downstairs on the computer (and I didn’t want to lie in bed listening to the game anyway), I thought I’d try live streaming the game on my desktop. I found the list of stations that broadcast Orioles games and which provide live streaming audio. Everyone I tried, even WBAL — the Baltimore voice of the Orioles — had alternate programming rather than the game.

Then I realized what the problem was.

Even though the game is being broadcast on the radio for free, live streaming audio of the games on the internet is a subscription based service. Moreover, as far as I could tell, you couldn’t just buy access to one game, you needed to buy access for the entire post season. I didn’t check to see how much said access would cost; I’m sure that the cost is reasonably negligible and that I would be able to afford it. On the other hand, it’s just annoying as hell to have someone with their hand out at every turn.

Some years ago, after I gave up watching most television programming, I used to watch a fair number of college football and basketball games. Gradually, the number of games available on broadcast TV dwindled to the point that I stopped looking to determine if a game of interest was available to me.

Now, if I watch any college sports, I spend a few hours in a bar. At least the money I spend there has a quid pro quo: a few good beers and an environment in which they can be enjoyed. And, that environment provides access to whatever game interests me.

That said, today’s game is half over. The Orioles are down 5 runs to 3. I’m feeling thirsty. I’m outta here.

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New Resolve to Write More

I’ve just read Anil Dash’s excellent post 15 Lessons From 15 Years of Blogging. It has inspired me to try to write here every day. One of these lessons indicates that the scroll bar is a blogger’s friend. If you’re unhappy with a post, simply post something a little better. The offending post will be pushed down the page and, well, forgotten. I’ve always been a little self conscious about what I write here. Perhaps, along with the occasional (somewhat) crafted essay, it’s a good idea to write a bit every day about anything.

This morning, I also read an interview with Lorrie Moore who is one of my favorite writers. Among the many humorous and intelligent insights recounted in the interview, Moore notes that she has had to arrange her life in ways that allow her to write. At the time of the interview, she was teaching and had a small child to deal with, she was having a difficult time managing her life to facilitate writing. I have always wanted to write and promised myself that I would if I ever had time. Well, I lost my job a few years ago and the kids are pretty much grown up, so my life is arranged in a way that allows me to write. So, why aren’t I doing more of it?

Some time ago, I started a “Morning Melody” feature here. I had noticed that, while doing the morning rituals, coffee, newspaper, sudoku in the newspaper, I often had a particular song rattling around in my head. So, I resolved to have a daily post with a link to the particular song and a brief comment. As soon as I started this practice, I began to either have the same song in my head, or I’d be mentally humming some tune that wasn’t available anywhere on the web (like the ones my friend Mel and I play each week). I do have some recordings and it’s my intention to put a few of the good recordings here, too.

Does anyone want to bet how long a streak I can accomplish writing here everyday? Fortunately, I’m pretty much just talking to myself here and I won’t take the bet.

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When We Keep Doing Things That Don’t Work . . .

Yesterday, the United States began bombing targets in Syria initiating its campaign to “degrade” and “destroy” ISIS (the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria). In addition to bombing, the US strategy for combatting ISIS is to locate, train and arm “moderate” fighters to enable those fighters to resist and repel the Islamic State. It is hard to believe that these methods will produce the outcome the US claims it is seeking.

For one thing, the US has spent nearly a decade arming and training the Iraqi army. Despite the fact that we were working with the Iraqi government and could effect training in the open, ISIS was able to capture and control large swaths of Iraq in a few weeks, scattering the army and seizing their weapons. It is hard to understand how the same approach, without a sponsor, will create an army capable of destroying the Islamic State.

Thirty years ago, after the USSR invaded Afghanistan, US policy focused on arming and covertly training the Mujahadeen — that is creating a local force to resist and disrupt the Soviet occupation. It is widely accepted that the remnants of that resistance force became Al Qaeda and the Taliban — forces with whom we are at war today. Similarly, ISIS is the bastard child of the illegitimate US invasion of Iraq. Tensions between Sunni and Shia Muslims were largely contained by the authoritarian government of Saddam Hussein (and the authoritarian rule in neighboring Iran and Syria). When the US invaded Iraq and deposed Saddam sectarian tensions escalated into near civil war. In a few years, ISIS emerged and began its attempt to form an Islamic caliphate in the region.

At this point, the most visible component of the US “War on Terror” is the execution of dangerous, terrorist masterminds by unleashing hellfire missiles from the drones that seek and locate them. Even if I believed that this sort of warfare is proper and that these human beings are best disposed of in this way, I would still question the corollary practice of returning to the scene in a short while to fire another missile at people who are trying to retrieve bodies from the wreckage. It seems unlikely that other dangerous terrorists in the vicinity would rush to the scene to facilitate proper burial of the dead.

Given the above — none of which is particularly controversial — it is no wonder that a number of bloggers wonder whether the drone war produces more terrorists than it consumes. It’s not surprising that bloggers are asking “Hasn’t the US learned anything in the last decade or so?”

We who were raised and schooled in the US are predisposed to think that the US is a force for good in the world, that we never initiate a war that isn’t necessary (except, perhaps, through error or faulty intelligence), and that we always win. Certainly, I believed this when I was in school. Even jaded as we are from US adventures over the last 10 or 15 years (and perhaps all the way back to the end of World War II), the narrative that we cling to is that the US is a good nation and tries to accomplish good things.

In light of US actions in Iraq and Afghanistan (and Syria, Yemen, Somalia, etc.), perhaps it’s time to reframe the obvious questions. Instead of asking whether US policy exacerbates rather than quells the problem of terrorism, instead of asking if the US has learned nothing from its recent history, perhaps it’s time to ask what, in fact, are the outcomes that our government is trying to effect. It’s an uncomfortable question because we are not apt to like the answer.

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Morning Melody

This morning’s song is a more contemporary tune than I usually put up.

Your Little Hoodrat Friend

by The Hold Steady

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Morning Melody

A great song from one of my favorite local bands.

I Don’t Have a Tie

by Crack the Sky

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Morning Melody

This morning, another great tune has been spinning in my brain.

Either or Both

by Phoebe Snow

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Morning Melody

I really like it when the song that pops into my head while I’m doing my morning reading is an old song I haven’t heard or thought of in a while.

This morning it’s Awaiting On You All

by George Harrison

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Morning Melody

This morning, it’s

Ding Dong

by Nellie McKay

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Morning Melody

Well, I got busy and haven’t posted a song for awhile. This morning, this bit of 80s pop was in my head so here you go.

Safety Dance

by Men Without Hats

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Morning Melody

This morning, it’s a really nice tune from a great concert album:

Superstar

by Rita Coolidge and the Mad Dogs & Englishmen band

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