The NBA’s Cuban Problem

Mark Cuban is probably America’s most famous lottery winner. At the start of the tech boom, he made a million dollars selling software. He used some of that money to start a company that broadcast sports events over the Internet. The company had a lot of success and was generating $13 million in revenue. The main reason was it could shift the cost to others, but he deserves credit for seeing a market and finding a way to profitably meeting it. Broadcast.com was a great idea.

That’s when he hit the lottery. Yahoo, drunk with dotcom cash, paid Cuban $6 billion for his company. The company turned out to be worthless to Yahoo. Within a couple of years a slew of others started broadcasting radio over the Internet and licensing issues made the concept unworkable. For his part, Cuban used his billions to buy a basketball team and make a fool of himself on TV. There’s nothing wrong with it as he is not harming anyone, but it is why he is America’s most famous lottery winner.

Like a movie star impressed with his own clippings, Cuban no longer understands this fact about himself. He really thinks he is a genius. He was clever, but he was mostly lucky, but the does not see it that way. As a result, he likes to go on TV and show the world he is a genius, which usually results in him saying ridiculous things that often get him in trouble. Recently, he made some crazy statements about the value of college as a development league for the NBA.

Mark Cuban thinks the next Kevin Durant would be better off in the NBA Development League rather than the college of his choice.

The outspoken Dallas Mavericks owner said he can envision scenarios where the country’s top basketball prospects would get drafted and play in the D-League rather than spend one season at an NCAA school.

Cuban said there’s no reason for a player to attend college as a freshman “because he’s not going to class, he’s actually not even able to take advantage of all the fun because the first semester he starts playing basketball.”

The billionaire owner said his idea is not yet a well-researched proposal, just an opinion. He said agreements with colleges could still give players a shot at an education.

“A major college has to pretend that they’re treating them like a student-athlete,” Cuban said. “It’s a big lie and we all know it’s a big lie. We can do all kinds of things that the NCAA doesn’t allow schools to do that would really put the individual first.”

I’ve long contended that the NBA is the worst run sports league on the planet. They are also the the best argument against the Zionist conspiracy stuff. All but a few owners are Jewish and the league office is run by Jews. Yet, they manage to screw up what should be one of the easiest businesses to run in sports entertainment. If the Tribe can’t run a sports league, they are not running the world. I guess the counter to that is the world is so screwed up it must be run by Jewish basketball executives.

Anyway, the league survives despite the best efforts of guys like Cuban. Football and hockey let others develop their players, thus minimizing their investment. Baseball has actually figured out how to make their development league profitable. The NBA, in contrast, drafts players nowhere near ready to play in the league and then pays them millions to learn. Many never learn or contribute very much to the teams that drafted them. The result is millions are wasted on bad players.

It has been known for a long time that basketball is the major sport requiring the least amount of learned skill. By high school, players have 70-80% of the learned skills, like shooting, dribbling, passing and defense.  It is not that complicated, even for the people most likely to take up the sport. The physical development is in place by the early twenties, leaving the emotional maturity. That’s why a player’s peak years are between 25 and 32. Michael Jordan won his first title at 28. Lebron James won his first at 27.

The physical side is a such a major part of the game, injuries can easily alter the trajectory of a young player. Derrick Rose is a good example of why investing in youth can be foolish. The Bulls have $56 million invested in a  guy who has missed the last two seasons with knee problems. They are committed to paying him close to $80 million more, when it is unlikely he ever lives up to their hopes. This is why the other sports have low cost development systems for their young players.

Those leagues, however, tend be more selective with their owners. Mark Cuban has been rejected by baseball and football, simply because he is an idiot. Those leagues also lack the tribal blind spot you see with basketball. The NBA owners protect Cuban out of tribal loyalty, because there are not gentiles around to tell them otherwise. It’s the Achilles heel of clannishness. The tendency of the tribe is to protect the tribe, even when it is bad for the tribe. Cuban is bad for the tribe and the Tribe.

The War on Druidism

We don’t know a whole lot about the Druids. What we know about them comes from the Roman conquerors, who hated the druids. The Romans invested a great deal of men and material to stamp out the druidism. They associated druidism with a sense of self they thought was antithetical to the Roman way. This was largely true, but what motivated the Romans was the resistance. They hated it because it refused to yield.

The Welsh, for example, clung to druidism into the fourth century, despite regularly being slaughtered by Roman legions. All they had to do was humor the Romans and they could have avoided slaughter, but they could betray themselves. That sense of self, that identity was tough and the Romans were never able to stamp it out. Druidism, however, did die out. Christianity eventually became the religion of the island, overwhelming all of the pagan faiths, but it was not easy.

There’s an important lesson there if you are a Christian in 21st century America. Church attendance has plummeted in the Progressive controlled areas of the country.  This Gallup poll shows that church attendance in the Old North is down near European levels. This is a five year old study so the numbers are probably now below 20% in most of these states. Massachusetts, after the homosexual priest scandal, has seen church attendance plummet.

The Old South, on the other hand, has church attendance well above 50%. The Cold Civil War is and always has been a religious war in addition to a culture war. The new religion of the Old North is post-national Progressivism and it is a very aggressive. It is an intolerant religion. This column by Ross Douthat makes clear that the homosexual marriage fad is more about the war on Christianity than a celebration of homosexuality.

IT now seems certain that before too many years elapse, the Supreme Court will be forced to acknowledge the logic of its own jurisprudence on same-sex marriage and redefine marriage to include gay couples in all 50 states.

Once this happens, the national debate essentially will be finished, but the country will remain divided, with a substantial minority of Americans, most of them religious, still committed to the older view of marriage.

So what then? One possibility is that this division will recede into the cultural background, with marriage joining the long list of topics on which Americans disagree without making a political issue out of it.

In this scenario, religious conservatives would essentially be left to promote their view of wedlock within their own institutions, as a kind of dissenting subculture emphasizing gender differences and procreation, while the wider culture declares that love and commitment are enough to make a marriage. And where conflicts arise — in a case where, say, a Mormon caterer or a Catholic photographer objected to working at a same-sex wedding — gay rights supporters would heed the advice of gay marriage’s intellectual progenitor, Andrew Sullivan, and let the dissenters opt out “in the name of their freedom — and ours.”

But there’s another possibility, in which the oft-invoked analogy between opposition to gay marriage and support for segregation in the 1960s South is pushed to its logical public-policy conclusion. In this scenario, the unwilling photographer or caterer would be treated like the proprietor of a segregated lunch counter, and face fines or lose his business — which is the intent of recent legal actions against a wedding photographer in New Mexico, a florist in Washington State, and a baker in Colorado.

This is why the Left always wins. They don’t play politics by a set of rules that prevent them from winning the fight. They begin with the end in mind. Then they construct the term of engagement in such a way that they have the advantage. They know the Right will assiduously abide by those rules, which the Left will violate as necessary. The Left has one principle, which is winning, while the Right has a long list of principles that are more often than not imposed on them by the Left.

Meanwhile, pressure would be brought to bear wherever the religious subculture brushed up against state power. Religious-affiliated adoption agencies would be closed if they declined to place children with same-sex couples. (This has happened in Massachusetts and Illinois.) Organizations and businesses that promoted the older definition of marriage would face constant procedural harassment, along the lines suggested by the mayors who battled with Chick-fil-A. And, eventually, religious schools and colleges would receive the same treatment as racist holdouts like Bob Jones University, losing access to public funds and seeing their tax-exempt status revoked.

In the past, this constant-pressure scenario has seemed the less-likely one, since Americans are better at agreeing to disagree than the culture war would suggest. But it feels a little bit more likely after last week’s “debate” in Arizona, over a bill that was designed to clarify whether existing religious freedom protections can be invoked by defendants like the florist or the photographer.

If you don’t recognize my description of the bill, then you probably followed the press coverage, which was mendacious and hysterical — evincing no familiarity with the legal issues, and endlessly parroting the line that the bill would institute “Jim Crow” for gays. (Never mind that in Arizona it’s currently legal to discriminate based on sexual orientation — and mass discrimination isn’t exactly breaking out.) Allegedly sensible centrists compared the bill’s supporters to segregationist politicians, liberals invoked the Bob Jones precedent to dismiss religious-liberty concerns, and Republican politicians behaved as though the law had been written by David Duke.

What makes this response particularly instructive is that such bills have been seen, in the past, as a way for religious conservatives to negotiate surrender — to accept same-sex marriage’s inevitability while carving out protections for dissent. But now, apparently, the official line is that you bigots don’t get to negotiate anymore.

This is rather obviously the goal. Progressivism is a covetous faith. It does not play well with other religions. It is why their body count in so high. Catholics, over 1500 years, probably killed a million people for heresy. The radicals of the Enlightenment have murdered 100 million in a century and half. History tells us Genghis Khan was the most murderous invaded to ever enter Europe. In reality, history’s greatest monster was Jean-Jacques Rousseau.

Which has a certain bracing logic. If your only goal is ensuring that support for traditional marriage diminishes as rapidly as possible, applying constant pressure to religious individuals and institutions will probably do the job. Already, my fellow Christians are divided over these issues, and we’ll be more divided the more pressure we face. The conjugal, male-female view of marriage is too theologically rooted to disappear, but its remaining adherents can be marginalized, set against one other, and encouraged to conform.

I am being descriptive here, rather than self-pitying. Christians had plenty of opportunities — thousands of years’ worth — to treat gay people with real charity, and far too often chose intolerance. (And still do, in many instances and places.) So being marginalized, being sued, losing tax-exempt status — this will be uncomfortable, but we should keep perspective and remember our sins, and nobody should call it persecution.

Finally, we see why the American Right is entirely worthless against the Left. They have never come to terms with what we face. They keep thinking that if only they can purify their souls, the Left will forgive them. Alternatively, they think they can reason with what amounts to religious fanaticism. Neither is tethered to reality or much good when your culture is being looted by well organized fanatics. The Right is built to lose, so it must be destroyed if there is ever to be an opposition to the Left.

Not So Smart Fraction

Raw intelligence is a poor predictor of political success. The HBD people tends to link IQ with everything, even politics, despite the rather obvious fact that many of our politicians are uncommonly stupid. Joe Biden is quite dull. Years of drinking and a few strokes have shaved a dozen points off his IQ. Odds are he would score in the low 20’s on the Wonderlic Test, maybe even high teens. His rather obvious lack of intelligence has not worked against him. He’s going to president one day.

Saying that politicians are dumb is a popular past time, but not all of them are dumb and even the dumb ones can say some smart things. Simply noticing things can be the smartest thing one can do and some of our politicians can notice things. Sarah Palin was hooted down by the Left for her alleged lack of smarts. They mocked here for claiming Russian had designs on parts of the Ukraine.  This story from Breitbart goes into it in light of recent events..

During the 2008 presidential campaign, Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin warned that if Senator Barack Obama were elected president, his “indecision” and “moral equivalence” may encourage Russia’s Vladimir Putin to invade Ukraine.

Palin said then:

After the Russian Army invaded the nation of Georgia, Senator Obama’s reaction was one of indecision and moral equivalence, the kind of response that would only encourage Russia’s Putin to invade Ukraine next.

For those comments, she was mocked by the high-brow Foreign Policy magazine and its editor Blake Hounshell, who now is one of the editors of Politico magazine.

In light of recent events in Ukraine and concerns that Russia is getting its troops ready to cross the border into the neighboring nation, nobody seems to be laughing at or dismissing those comments now.

Hounshell wrote then that Palin’s comments were “strange” and “this is an extremely far-fetched scenario.”

“And given how Russia has been able to unsettle Ukraine’s pro-Western government without firing a shot, I don’t see why violence would be necessary to bring Kiev to heel,” Hounshell dismissively wrote.

Palin made her remarks on the stump after Obama’s running mate Joe Biden warned Obama supporters to “gird  your loins” if Obama is elected because international leaders may test or try to take advantage of him.

That’s not to say Palin is very smart. It is a good bet that she is not working math puzzles in her free time. She’s not dumb like Joe Biden. Palin is school teacher smart, while Biden is fork lift driver smart. On the other hand, Biden is politician smart, while Palin is not. One can be left unsupervised while the other may run with scissors if you don’t watch him. You can trust Palin with your kids, while Biden, well, you know.

That’s the thing about politics in a social democracy. it’s not about smarts. Palin could have been the sharpest person in the room, but the Left would still call her dumb, because they need to call her dumb. They would get away with it because she is not good at politics in the way a lunkhead like Joe Biden is good at politics. That’s why democracy is a terrible system. It rewards Joe Biden and punishes Sarah Palin.

Drugs & Welfare

I used to be broadly in favor of drug legalization, but I never thought about it too much, so my opinion has always been conditional. Smart people seemed to think legalizing drugs made sense so I went along with it, but smart people often have nutty ideas about the world. My view of government says we should have a very small state controlled by the nation’s wealthy, leaving most things up to citizens to work out for themselves.

At the same time, I knew that legalization was not a panacea. Life is nothing but trade-offs. Fewer drug laws may mean fewer cops chasing drug dealers, but it also means more drug addicts. That has a cost too. That’s an easy one to tease out right from the start, but there are always unexpected or hidden trade-offs. We’re just not very good at thinking through all of the possibilities. It’s why chess is not our national past time.

According to this story, one such unexpected trade-off is the use of EBT cards for buying weed.

The “Preserving Welfare for Needs Not Weed Act,” is expected to be introduced on Monday by Colorado Republican Reps. Dave Reichert, Scott Tipton and Cory Gardner, KDVR.com reported.

The bill would add pot dispensaries to the current list of locations where states must block welfare electronic benefits transfer (EBT) cards from being used for purchases or ATM withdrawals, Reichert’s office told the station.

KDVR.com reported last week that at least 19 different dispensaries allowed electronic benefits transfer withdrawals inside their pot shops in January. Public records obtained by the station showed 56 transactions, totaling nearly $4,000.

One of the only things John Edwards said worth remembering is the line about there being two Americas. There’s actually more than two. If you are black, you live in an America very different from that of white people. If you are a member of the ruling class, you live a life nothing like the rest of us. If you are in the underclass, you live a different life than most people. We spend a lot of time talking about blacks, the rich and the middle-class, but  not much about the under-class.

Anyway, this law will do nothing to curtail the use of EBT cards for buying weed. The underclass figured out long ago how to turn welfare benefits into cash. EBT cards are traded like any other commodity. Of course, the easiest trick is to use the card to buy a bunch of easily salable food, like canned goods or soda. Then you sell those to a small restaurant or market at a discount. Magically, the card was converted into cash. It is what funds the Oxycontin Express.

People in the under-class are stupid, but they are clever. They know how to work a scam if there is a quick buck in it. Not all are without morality, but one reason the poor are poor is they lack social competence. Getting over on the government is not a moral question for them. It is a matter of impulse control. They can so they do. These are not people contemplating the vagaries of the universe. They want what they want and will do what they must to get what they want. The poor have always been transactional.

Of course, the under-class is at it full-time while the agents of the state administering these programs are part-timers. Just as prisoners know a lot more about the prison than the guards, the poor know more about the ghetto than the social workers and case officers from the state. The politicians know nothing about the poor, which why we got a welfare state in the first place. That means whatever rules the state creates to control the activity within the under-class is going to fail.