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April 7 · Issue #51 · View online
A newsletter of observations about life, sports, and/or anything else that comes to mind
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Sports leagues continue to find themselves at the center of flashpoint political discourse, which says a lot more about the state of politics than anything else.
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Hello and welcome to another edition of The Good Press, a newsletter of observations about life, sports, and/or anything else that comes to mind. Thanks for reading. I hope you find this issue to be worth your time. Comments and reader suggestions are always welcome. You can reply to the newsletter right from your email if you would like to share your feedback.
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Atlanta's newly patched over sleeve, with my own enhancement for comparative purposes (Original photo: AP Photo/Laurence Kesterson; All-Star logo patch: MLB)
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In the interest of keeping things fresh, I had been planning on using this week’s issue, #51, to touch on the potential political ripple effects of the movement for statehood for Washington D.C. (51, get it?). So, naturally, since I had intended to bench the baseball talk for a week, Major League Baseball found itself in the middle of one of the biggest political stories of the week!
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MLB Pulls All-Star Game From Atlanta, Georgia, in Response to Voting Restrictions | The NY Times
The move served as a warning to Republicans in other states who are trying to restrict voting in the aftermath of losing big in 2020
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Last week, MLB boldly announced a decision to move their July 2021 All-Star Game to Denver from its original location of Atlanta, in direct response to the state of Georgia’s recent election law overhaul, which has been rightfully decried as an outright act of undemocratic voter suppression. After Georgia voters turned out in record numbers both in the 2020 election and the Senate runoff elections in January 2021, it produced big victories for the Democratic party. In response, the Georgia state government, largely Republican-run, passed this new sweeping legislation in an attempt to wind the clock back to its slave state roots and ensure that it never happens again.
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What Georgia’s Voting Law Does | The NY Times
The Times analyzed the state’s new 98-page voting law and identified 16 key provisions that will limit ballot access, potentially confuse voters and give more power to Republican lawmakers
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AP Explainer: Inside Georgia's new election laws
The sweeping rewrite of Georgia’s election laws is based on the former president’s repeated, baseless claims of “voter fraud”
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Among the many new provisions:
- Less time to request absentee ballots
- Strict new identification requirements
- Empowering the Republican-controlled state legislature to suspend county election officials (especially if they don’t like the results of the voting) and allow them to exert outsized influence over the state election board
- And this fun provision: making it a crime to offer food and water to people waiting in long lines to vote. It’s enough to make you recoil in disgust.
Why, pray tell, is the Republican party so afraid of American democracy? Perhaps it’s for the same reason they gerrymander their districts: because they would rather have career politicians selecting their voters rather than the fair and democratic way: having voters vote to choose their representatives.
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How do you spell ‘gerrymandering is bad?’ With a font made out of preposterous districts | WaPo
Three Chicago designers thought of a clever way to use gerrymandered districts as an argument against the practice
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Some sports fans may say, “leave the politics out of this and stick to sports,” but it’s myopic to pretend that there’s no overlap between politics and sports. Are we really going to pretend that Jackie Robinson was not influential in our politics? That Hank Aaron, who will be honored during the All-Star festivities, didn’t deal with prejudice? I think Aaron would be proud of MLB’s decision.
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How the activist athletes of the WNBA helped the Democrats win the Senate | The Guardian
The latest chapter in the WNBA’s history of shared urgency around social causes was written in January when a now-former team co-owner was unseated from her Senate seat in Georgia
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Others in sports followed the WNBA’s lead this past summer and fall, and we saw athletes and sports leagues as major agents of change in the crucial fight for American democracy in a major way in 2020. It’s wonderful to see these young athletes realizing the power of their platform and using it for good. Standing up for what’s right and what’s just; it’s inherently political, especially when an influential major political party is hellbent on injustice. Remember when many of these sports arenas were converted into voting sites this past fall? Who’s to say how much of an effect that had on voter turnout in many of these metropolitan areas all across the country? I imagine it had a big impact, and it was a brilliant idea by the athletes that pushed for it and the sports teams and leagues that volunteered to make it easier to vote. Atlanta’s baseball stadium in Cobb County, Georgia, a symbol of white flight away from Atlanta, notably did not participate in those voting efforts. Now, Georgia’s voter suppression efforts will likely cost the state a ton of expected revenue, beyond just the MLB All-Star Game, and Georgia has no one to blame but themselves. This is recoil from their deeply undemocratic actions.
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Baseball Joins Other Sports in Flexing Its Activist Muscles, Moving Its All-Star Game | The NY Times
Pulled by public opinion and sometimes their own players, many sports leagues and teams are wading further and further into major issues around race and social issues as never before
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Georgia sports teams and major companies such as Coca-Cola and Delta Air Lines condemn Georgia's new state voting laws | WaPo
Voting-rights advocates, who pushed for corporate responses before the new law was signed, now say that recent statements from Delta Air Lines, Coca-Cola, and other companies have come too late, unless and until they’re backed up by serious action
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When Arizona lost the Super Bowl because the state didn’t recognize Martin Luther King Jr. Day
In 1991, NFL owners voted to remove the 1993 Super Bowl from Phoenix after Arizona voters failed to make MLK Day a holiday
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With the public outcry over Georgia Republicans’ recycling of Jim Crow racism (and Republicans in other states trying to follow suit), corporate America is feeling the heat as activists and everyday citizens hold them to account.
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Corporate America scrambles to get behind voting rights as public pressure continues to mount | Axios
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What Georgia can learn from North Carolina about corporate backlash from legislation | Axios
Corporate leaders around the U.S. are speaking out against Georgia’s new law, which many say will disproportionately impact Black voters. Not so far away, North Carolina sees shades of 2016
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“Recoil” was the word that came to mind this week because of the immediate reaction from Americans that have come out and made their voices heard, condemning the injustice of these undemocratic power grabs. This, and other flashpoint issues, reverberate and have ripple effects that recoil far and wide. It’s precisely why sweeping political reforms are urgent and necessary for this current administration. All future elections, including next November’s midterm elections, are in grave peril if major political reforms aren’t enacted. That goes most especially for the sweeping, comprehensive legislation in the bicameral For the People Act that congressional Democrats have introduced.
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Congress Must Pass the For the People Act of 2021
| Brennan Center for Justice
Bold legislation introduced in the House (H.R. 1) and in the Senate (S. 1) would ensure that American democracy works for everyone
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Annotated Guide to the For the People Act of 2021 | Brennan Center for Justice
The “For the People Act” would transform American democracy by making it fairer, stronger, and more inclusive. The Brennan Center explains the key provisions of this historic proposed bill
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With the Senate split evenly at 50 Senators from each party (and no elected Republicans willing to stand for anything but culture war whining, seemingly) the margin for error could not be thinner when it comes to passing legislation. Currently, it takes 60 votes to get a bill passed in the Senate, though the quirky Senate rules allow for a simple majority vote for certain legislation. (For example, the American Rescue Plan, passed last month by a majority vote.)
I don’t want to get so bogged down in the minutiae of the rules of Congress. The heart of the matter is that even with so many other pressing issues at hand, Republicans seem to be focused primarily on disenfranchising as many Americans as they can, as opposed to actually trying to earn as many votes as they can from as many people as they can. Or perhaps, oh I don’t know, maybe passing some legislation that would actually help make Americans’ lives better?
The case for D.C. statehood, this issue’s erstwhile topic, is a compelling one. There are 700,000 residents in Washington D.C., but D.C. doesn’t have any political representation in Congress. More Americans live in D.C. than in Vermont or Wyoming, two states with two Senators apiece, compared to D.C’s zero. Not only that, but D.C. residents also pay some of the highest taxes in the country. If only there were a catchy, rhyming mnemonic for that…
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"No Taxation Without Representation"
The Boston Tea Party was a major political protest in 1773, in which American colonists, frustrated at Britain for imposing “taxation without representation,” dumped 342 chests of British tea into the harbor. The event was the first major act of defiance to British rule over the American colonists, and it set the stage for U.S. independence
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Frankly, America is long overdue for another star (or two) on its flag. What stands out to me is that there aren’t many good arguments against potential D.C. statehood. All Americans deserve to have their voices heard. Period.
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The battle against D.C. statehood is rooted in anti-Black racism | by Kyla Sommers, Washington Post
Understanding the history of campaigns for and against statehood for particular Americans helps make the case for D.C. as state 51
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This 51-star flag represents a better and more just America (Photo: FOX 5 DC)
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Political gridlock is always a major obstacle to progress, but with more states attempting to go Georgia’s route of blatant, in-your-face voter suppression, it’s not surprising that the recoil and retorts to the new laws have been so forceful. The groundswell of public pressure means companies who often donate to political parties all willy-nilly are now getting a lot more scrutiny. Being able to “keep politics out” is a privilege that many Americans aren’t able to do, especially when “politics” are oppressing their inalienable rights. So the next time you hear someone complain about people sticking their nose into political waters that they “don’t belong in,” consider the source. Politics affects all of us, and you shouldn’t let anyone ever tell you otherwise.
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More than half of Vancouver Canucks hockey players test positive for COVID-19 | ESPN
A source told ESPN that more than half the players on the Canucks have tested positive for COVID-19, with several players reportedly in “rough shape” and dealing with “intense” symptoms
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According to Emily Kaplan’s story for ESPN linked above, more than half of the players on the team have tested positive for the coronavirus, and some of them are reportedly symptomatic and in “rough shape,” as a new variant originating in Brazil has ravaged the Vancouver region in western Canada. One Canucks player told ESPN he hadn’t heard from a team representative about any players going to the hospital, but he had heard of teammates receiving IV treatments for severe dehydration, presumably at their homes. A source told ESPN that at least three Canucks coaches have tested positive for the virus as well. In addition, many family members of players have tested positive and are experiencing symptoms, according to sources. … “The symptoms are intense,” one agent of a Canucks player told ESPN. “It’s knocked a lot of guys out. Some can’t even get out of bed.” It’s just another reminder that even with the United States government vaccinating upwards of four million people a day now, we are still not out of the woods yet. Please stay safe out there, get your vaccine as soon as you can, and continue to employ the same safety measures that have worked throughout the last 14 months: masks, social distancing, and hand washing. Next week, perhaps more fun facts and haikus for the 20 teams that were not previewed in Issue #50. I certainly don’t want to leave any fanbase hanging. For 51 straight weeks, thanks again for joining me here in The Good Press. Till next time,
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-Jon Previously in The Good Press
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The Good Press - Issue #50: Baseball Fun for 2021
The gold edition of The Good Press is dedicated to some fun baseball things, including haikus for each team featured today March 31, 2021
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The Good Press - Issue #49: Rally
The exuberance of a good rally isn’t limited to just a baseball field, considering the so many ways that we rally throughout our lives. March 24, 2021
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The Good Press - Issue #48: Spring Forward
As we spring forward each day ever closer to a “post-pandemic” America, sports will once again attempt to show us a way forward March 17, 2021
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