Thursday, March 23, 2006

Supreme Court and Obscene Art

"'If I had to guess, I believe they did not wish to revisit the substantive issue, in large part because I think that there's a great discomfort with sexually themed speech and a reluctance to tinker with Miller v. California because prior to Miller the court had 20 years of chaos where they essentially had to act as a trial court, deciding in every case what was and what was not obscene.'

'I'm appalled,' Nitke said of the Supreme Court's decision Monday. 'I really think that the courts have become very politicized. I think it was a political decision, I don't think it was based on the Constitution. It's upsetting to me, and I hope that we'll find other ways to continue fighting this.'"

Link

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Remembering Kirby Puckett.

"Now he's dead at 45, and the obituaries mention but don't lead with his 'troubles.' In fact, they give the story a nice arc. We like our athletes flawed. They so obviously belong on the field that they can't cope off it. Darryl Strawberry and Doc Gooden used drugs, Pete Rose gambled, and Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams were mean-spirited jerks. Puckett's former teammate Jeff Reardon, the great closer, was arrested for robbing a jewelry store last December after losing his mind on anti-depressants. These human frailties prove that athletes were meant to play sports, not live in society. The story, then, is that a broken-hearted Puckett ate himself to death trying to fill the gaping hole left by the end of his playing days."

Link


Well said.