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The Wrap-up

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For both Yankee and Met fans, it sure was a disappointing season. Both teams battled injuries throughout the year and just couldn’t recover. There will be no October baseball for any New York team. The Mets will miss the playoffs for the seventh straight year, while the Yanks will miss the postseason for just the second time since 1995. There are many question marks both teams will have going into the off-season. It is more than certain that both the Yanks and Mets will have a different look come the 2014 campaign.

One thing we know about the Mets so far is that they have decided to stick with their skipper Terry Collins. The team announced on Monday that Collins has agreed to a 2-year extension with the ball club. Now the team must address how they are going to make their team better. On offense, the Mets are in desperate need of a power bat to complement their franchise player David Wright.  They must address their needs in the outfield as well. I’m thinking a player like Rangers’ slugger Nelson Cruz. Even though Cruz was suspended 50 games by Major League Baseball for performance-enhancing drugs, he still is a great player and a solid outfielder as well. Cruz will be a free agent this year and the Mets should be all in to inquire about his services for their team. Outfielder Shin-Soo Choo could fit in nicely as well in Citi Field. The team has nearly $50 million dollars coming off the books by season’s end from the expiring contracts of Johan Santana, Jason Bay and Frank Francisco. Their only long-term contracts belong to David Wright and Jonathon Niese, so they will have money to work with. The Mets finished in fourth place in the National League East with a win-loss record of 73-89.

As for the Bronx Bombers, things are much more complicated for them. Nearly 20 players had spent time on the disabled list including Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriguez, Curtis Granderson, Mark Teixeira and Kevin Youkilis. On offense, the team may have to break the bank when it comes to re-signing second baseman Robinson Cano. According to reports, Cano is seeking a 10-year deal worth about $305 million. With A-Rod appealing his 211-game suspension, Jeter on the decline and Granderson being a free agent as well, the team may have to do whatever it takes to re-sign their best player in Cano. Pitching is a concern too for the Yanks. C.C. Sabathia had his worst season as a pro and Hiroki Kuroda is a free agent. In the pitching rotation, it’s sure to have Sabathia penciled in at one, and Ivan Nova at two. Andy Pettitte and Mariano Rivera will no longer be there as the two decided to call it a career after this season. Even Joe Girardi has not fully committed to coming back as manager for the Yanks. It may become one big mess in the Bronx. The team will hope and pray Michael Pineda can resume his baseball career and help out with the pitching because it is more than certain that pitchers Phil Hughes and Joba Chamberlain are on their way out of New York.

Sports Notes: (Football) The New York Giants are 0-4. You’d have to go all the way back to 1979 the last time they went 0-5. The team looks to get their 1st win of the season when they welcome in the division rival Philadelphia Eagles and their high-tempo offense of coach Chip Kelly. Jets quarterback Geno Smith looks to get back on track after a terrible performance which saw him do some Mark Sanchez-like miscues. Smith and the Jets take their 2-2 record as they head to the Georgia Dome to battle with the Atlanta Falcons on Monday Night Football.

 

Descendants of Enslaved Africans Being Forced Off Their Land on Sapelo Island Due to Soaring Tax Hikes

The Gullah-Geechee community off the coast of southern Georgia is appealing tax hikes which they believe may run them off the land their families have owned since slavery ended.

Brandon Dixon fishes on Sapelo Island. Courtesy: New York Times

Affluent buyers who’ve taken an interest in Sapelo Island (where the Gullah community lives) are driving up property values. The African-American property owners in the small communities were shocked when their tax bills arrived and now many have racked up tax bills due to the increases.

Appraisals for property in the community are hitting record levels as wealthy buyers who want a piece of the coastal community drive up prices. But members of the Gullah-Geechee community claim that the tax bills violate protections which are intended to preserve indigenous populations.

The slave descendants in Hog Hammock have preserved their African culture more than any other group in the U.S. As it stands, there are less than 50 members of the Gullah community in the area and if the tax hikes remain, they will be dispersed.

Here’s an example from the Associated Press of how property taxes are skyrocketing in the community:

Julius and Cornelia Bailey saw the appraised value of the single acre on which they have a home, a convenience store and a small inn shoot from $220,285 in 2011 to $327,063 last year. Appraisers in Georgia’s McIntosh County held firm on the new value after being ordered to take a second look in January by local authorities.

Even though the area receives no city services such as schools or trash pickup, the taxes are being raised, causing many to wonder what’s behind the tax increases.

Since there are virtually no city services, resident Comelia Bailey wonders, “So what are we paying taxes for?” Her tax bill increased from $800 to $3000 dollars.

One resident whose land had been appraised at $10,000 was appraised at $181, 250 this year.

The Appeals Board has thus far stood by the higher tax appraisals, but the Geechee community intends to keep fighting.

Opinion: Vine Deloria, Jr on the whiteness of American history

By abagond

Note: This post is based on “We Talk, You Listen” (1970) by Vine Deloria, Jr (pictured), a Native American (Sioux) writer. His ideas, my words:

By 1970 it was clear to most people that American history was too white as commonly taught at schools and universities. There were two main schools of thought about how to set it right:

1.       The cameo theory of history – or tokenism. Throw in some worthy people of colour, like Crispus Attucks. Attucks was the first person to die in the American Revolution and, as it turns out, he was black. Yet the American Revolution was about the freedom of white people, not blacks, something made crystal clear by the fact that many of its top figures were white slave owners. Adding black, brown, yellow and red faces to the framework of white history – the Pilgrims, the American Revolution, the Alamo, Manifest Destiny, the California Gold Rush, etc – does not make it any less white. It is just window dressing.

2.           The contributions school – This is where we value people of colour because they have made life more comfortable and enjoyable for present-day middle-class White Americans. We should love Native Americans because they “gave” “us” squash, tobacco, potatoes, chocolate and maple syrup. Royalty-free, no less. It is where we learn about George Washington Carver because of his work on peanuts.

In both cases people of colour are valued only to the degree that they have helped (or hurt) white interests. That is still white history – even if people of colour appear in demographically correct proportions. It is just like those Black Best Friends in Hollywood films whose love life, family, house and goldfish we never see. Like them, people of colour are not fleshed out – they have no history or interests or value of their own. Their only value is in service to white people.

Nor does it help us to understand history that much better. Deloria:

Certainly there is more to the story of the American Indian than providing cocoa and popcorn for Columbus’s landing party. When the clashes of history are smoothed over in favor of a mushy togetherness feeling, then people begin to wonder what has happened in the recent past that has created the conditions of today.

It means people of colour are fed the delusions of white people.

It means white people are fed a narrow view of humanity.

Deloria:

There must be a drive within each minority group to understand its own uniqueness. This can only be done by examining what experiences were relevant to the group, not what experiences of white America the group wishes itself to be represented in.

Each group has to write its own American history. To fully understand America you have to understand its main histories, plural – Black, Native, Chicano, etc – not just the White American one. You must understand them from the inside, on their own terms, not as a flat stereotype viewed from the outside.

Herman Wallace Released from Prison After Being Held in Solitary For 40+ Years

UPDATE: Angola 3 member Herman Wallace has been released from prison in Louisiana after 42 years in solitary confinement. Supporters say he is en route to New Orleans to live out his days in hospice. Watch Democracy Now! for an update on Wednesday when we will be joined by fellow freed Angola 3 member Robert King, and by Wallace’s defense attorney, George Kendall.

We received this statement from Wallace’s legal team:

“Tonight, Herman Wallace has left the walls of Louisiana prisons and will be able to receive the medical care that his advanced liver cancer requires. It took the order of a federal judge to address the clear constitutional violations present in Mr. Wallace’s 1974 trial and grant him relief. The state of Louisiana has had many opportunities to address this injustice and has repeatedly and utterly failed to do so.

“Mr. Wallace has been granted a new trial, but his illness is terminal and advanced. However, the unfathomable punishment of more than four decades which Mr. Wallace spent in solitary confinement conditions will be the subject of litigation which will continue even after Mr. Wallace passes away. It is Mr. Wallace’s hope that this litigation will help ensure that others, including his lifelong friend and fellow ‘Angola 3’ member, Albert Woodfox, do not continue to suffer such cruel and unusual confinement even after Mr. Wallace is gone.”

A federal judge has ordered the immediate release of Herman Wallace, a member of the so-called Angola 3, who was held in solitary confinement for more than 40 years. The judge ordered his release because women were excluded from the grand jury in his case four decades ago, and called for “the State immediately release Mr. Wallace from custody.” The decision comes as Wallace is dying of liver cancer. Wallace’s supporters say he has just days to live, but his requests for compassionate release has so far gone unanswered.

Wallace reportedly received the news today from his two fellow members of the Angola 3, Albert Woodfox and Robert King, who had a previously scheduled visit. His lawyers are working now to secure his release as soon as possible.

Wallace’s legal team said today:

“With today’s ruling, at long last, Herman Wallace has been afforded some measure of justice after a lifetime of injustice. We ask that the Department of Corrections honor Judge Jackson’s order and immediately release Herman Wallace so that he can spend his final days as a free man.”

“In addition, litigation challenging Mr. Wallace’s unconstitutional confinement in solitary confinement for four decades will continue in his name. It is Mr. Wallace’s hope that this litigation will help ensure that others, including his lifelong friend and fellow ‘Angola 3’ member, Albert Woodfox, do not continue to suffer such cruel and unusual confinement even after Mr. Wallace is gone.”

The Core Four

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There are currently three of the four players left who were a part of the mid-90s Yankee Championship teams.  Two of them will be calling it a career after this season. Andy Pettitte has been a part of the Yankee organization since 1995. Jorge Posada (retired in 2009), Mariano Rivera and Derek Jeter came up from the minors a year later. On Sunday, Pettitte announced that he will retire at season’s end. He made his last start at home against the San Francisco Giants and it sure looked like it was going to be a storybook-like ending to his career as he took a perfect game into the fifth inning. Despite the team losing 2-1, Pettitte sure has the numbers to be in the Hall of Fame conversations. He has a career win-loss record of 255-152 with a 3.87 ERA (earned run average), to go along with 2,415 strikeouts putting him as the all-time leader in Yankee history. He was a 3-time All-Star in 1996, 2001 and 2010. He ranks as the Major League Baseball’s all-time leader  in postseason wins with 19. Indeed, Pettitte should be a first-ballot Hall of Famer and the five championships he won during his illustrious career should back that up.

The other player who will also call it a career after the season is Mariano Rivera. On Sunday afternoon, the team honored Rivera with appearances that included Jackie Robinson’s widow, Rachel, and daughter Sharon, along with some of his former teammates such as Jorge Posada, Bernie Williams, David Cone and Joe Torre. The ceremony was then followed up by a thunderous performance by the rock band Metallica. It was the ultimate “enter sandman ” tribute for Rivera. He has jogged into the game from center field to that song since 1999. Rivera’s number 42 was retired in Yankee Stadium’s Monument Park.  Rivera has a win-loss record of 82-60. He currently has 652 saves as a closer (all with the Yankees ), which is the most all-time. He was a 13-time All-Star, World Series MVP in 1999, and just like Pettitte he will go down as a 5-time World Series Champion. There will never be another like the great Mariano Rivera.

It would have been like a cherry on top to know that both Pettitte and Rivera will get one more chance to display their talents in October. With the team being 4 games back from the last wild card spot with 4 games to go, it is almost certain the Yankees will miss the playoffs for just the second time in the era of the “Core Four” ( Rivera, Posada, Pettitte, Jeter). Congratulations to both Andy Pettitte and Mariano Rivera on 2 tremendous careers.

Sports Notes: (Football) Don’t look now, but it is the team in green who has the better winning record so far. Quarterback  Geno Smith continues to impress and progress week in and out. After a nail-biting win against the Buffalo Bills, the Jets travel to Tennessee to play Chris Johnson and the Titans. The Giants are wondering what’s going on. They were just manhandled by the Panthers by a score of 38-0 in a game were Eli Manning was sacked 7 times. The Giants have not started a season 0-3 since 1996. Indeed, it is panic time for the New York Giants as they look for their first win of the season at home against the undefeated Kansas City Chiefs.