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Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Extra -- The Scales of Justice (Casey Anthony and DSK)

EXTRA: THE SCALES OF JUSTICE?


A Jury of My Peers?


Casey Anthony Acquitted...

Here's What Nancy Grace Thinks

(With Video, If You So Choose):



Not Too Many Things Scare Us Anymore, But....


 We Know That The Global Game Readers Could Care Less What Nancy Grace Thinks.

Here's What TGG Readers Think:

One reader writes, "If she were Black, 
she would have been convicted."

Another writes, "If she were Black, 
we never would have heard of  her."

A third says, "It's easy to focus on Casey Anthony because it's hard to focus on the eradication of 
the American middle class." 


The Casey Anthony trial captivated one part of America.

The DSK Affair captivated another.

What to think about the latest shocking developments, which you couldn't have made up if you tried?



Why Is This Man Smiling?   No, Really.......


TGG doesn't have many rules, but this is one of them:
we never try to say in our own words what somebody else has already said perfectly well.

So here, hitting the nail on the head, is New York Times columnist Joe Nocera, in his own (complete) words:


OP-ED COLUMNIST

The D.A. Did the Right Thing

A young immigrant woman, lacking privilege and money, alleges that she was raped while on the job. She reports the incident soon after it takes place. There is semen on her clothes and bruises on her body. She tells her story with such conviction that, according to The Times, seasoned investigators cry when they hear it.
Earl Wilson/The New York Times
Joe Nocera

Related

Readers' Comments

Readers shared their thoughts on this article.
The man she says raped her — wealthy, famous and powerful — is on an airplane about to depart for his native land. This is the same countrythat, for decades, helped shield Roman Polanski from being prosecuted for statutory rape in the United States. The man in the current case appears to have left the hotel where the rape allegedly occurred in some haste. He even forgets to take one of his cellphones.
With no time to spare, detectives lure him off the plane and arrest him. When he is questioned, he refuses to talk about the incident, having already “lawyered up.” He is forced to do the “perp walk,” and spends the next five days in jail, at which point he is indicted. (Under New York law, if prosecutors don’t indict him within five days, they have to release him on his own recognizance.) Once out on bail, he is placed under house arrest, in a $200,000-a-monthTriBeCa townhouse. The New York tabloids mock him mercilessly.
Now that the man can’t flee, prosecutors turn their attention to the alleged victim. They begin investigating her background, knowing that the case hinges on her credibility. In just six weeks — an extraordinarily short time, as these things go — they put together a devastating profile of her past, filled with troubling inconsistencies, outright lies and the possibility that she hopes to profit from her alleged ordeal.
The prosecutors waste no time divulging these exculpatory facts to the man’s lawyers. Then, in open court, they tell the judge what they’ve found. He releases the man from house arrest. Though the case is not yet abandoned, it almost surely will be.
You know what I’ve just described, of course: l’affaire D.S.K. In the days since Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s stunning reversal of fortune, many Frenchmen have howled at the injustice of it all: “This vision of Dominique Strauss-Kahn humiliated in chains, dragged lower than the gutter,” as the French writer (and D.S.K. friend) Bernard-Henri Lévy put it in the Daily Beast — all because Cyrus Vance, the Manhattan district attorney, chose to believe “a hotel chambermaid” over an esteemed member of the French political establishment.
In America, meanwhile, the case’s collapse has brought sniping from former prosecutors and white-collar defense attorneys, who have criticized Vance for indicting Strauss-Kahn before he knew more about the victim’s background.
For the life of me, though, I can’t see what Vance did wrong. Quite the contrary. The woman alleged rape, for crying out loud, which was backed up by physical (and other) evidence. She had no criminal record. Her employer vouched for her. The quick decision to indict made a lot of sense, both for legal and practical reasons. Then, as the victim’s credibility crumbled, Vance didn’t try to pretend that he still had a slam dunk, something far too many prosecutors do. He acknowledged the problems.
Lévy, himself a member of the French elite, seems particularly incensed that Vance wouldn’t automatically give Strauss-Kahn a pass, given his extraordinary social status. Especially since his accuser had no status at all.
But that is exactly why Vance should be applauded: a woman with no power made a credible accusation against a man with enormous power. He acted without fear or favor. To have done otherwise would have been to violate everything we believe in this country about no one being above the law.
As for Strauss-Kahn’s humiliation, clearly something very bad happened in that hotel room. Quite possibly a crime was committed. Strauss-Kahn’s sordid sexual history makes it likely that he was the instigator. If the worst he suffers is a perp walk, a few days in Rikers Island and some nasty headlines, one’s heart ought not bleed. Ah, yes, and he had to resign as the chief of an institution where sexual harassment was allegedly rampant, thanks, in part, to a culture he helped perpetuate. Gee, isn’t that awful?
The point is this: We live in a country that professes to treat everyone equally under the law. So often we fall short. The poor may go unheard; the rich walk. Yet here is a case that actually lives up to our ideal of who we like to think we are. Even the way the case appears to be ending speaks to our more noble impulses. Vance didn’t dissemble or delay or hide the truth about the victim’s past. He did the right thing, painful though it surely must have been.
To judge by his recent writings, Bernard-Henri Lévy prefers to live in a country where the elites are rarely held to account, where crimes against women are routinely excused with a wink and a nod and where people without money or status are treated like the nonentities that the French moneyed class believe they are.
I’d rather live here.

For balance, if you want to get into the mindset of the most take-no-prisoners DSK apologist, here is the aforementioned  French intellectual Bernard-Henry Levy's diatrabe against the American justice system and the wounded "honor" of his ami DSK:



All we can say, is, this story is not over.   And we are quite sure that it has revealed as much about DSK's true character as anyone else's.  

And It May Be Just Us, But We're Guessing That
 One Way or The  Other,
There's More Nail-Biting Times To Come



STAY TUNED. 

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Volume 1, Issue 18 (Special Rainbow Over New York Edition)




IN THIS ISSUE:

-- NO NEWS IS GOOD NEWS?

-- ONE GIANT STEP FOR MANKIND

-- CATCH A TIGER BY THE TAIL

-- U.S. SOCCER --- WHO, WHAT, WHEN?



TGG was already on our summer ("we'll put out an edition if the weather's not too nice") schedule, when it looked like it was shaping up to be a very slow news period.


The Republican Party had a Presidential Debate, and nobody cared.




And Really, Why Would They?


The NBA held a draft, and nobody cared.



Quick, Name All Three



In fact, one commentator, examining the GOP field, characterized the race for the Republican nomination as a "Tallest Leprechaun Contest"

The fallout?


Leprechauns All Over The World Took Offense


But as it turns out, there would be some news by the end of the week.  And what news it was.  In a historic vote, the Republican-dominated New York State Senate joined the Assembly in legalizing gay marriage in New York.   By some estimates, that single-handedly doubled the number of gay Americans now able to legally marry.
Governor Andrew Cuomo staked his reputation and his political future on doing whatever it took to pass the measure, and took a well-timed (and well-deserved) victory lap at New York City's Gay Pride Parade on Sunday.

Smile, and The Whole World Smiles With You


The change in public opinion and shift in American attitudes that made the passage of this bill possible is nothing short of remarkable.  Cameras, of course, showed celebrations in Greenwhich Village and San Francisco, but we think all over America those who have no room for hate were celebrating.

Politically, the implications were equally as stunning.   Andrew Cuomo wants to run for President.  He has calculated that leading the fight to legalize gay marriage is not a dealbreaker for a progressive Democrat running for President.   Which inevitably led many who think about such things to contrast Cuomo's position with that of our current President, who remarkably (that is our word of the week) appeared at a gay fundraiser in Manhattan on the eve of the New York vote and could not manage to offer an endorsement of the landmark bill. 

What Would Michelle Do?

All of this caused New York Times coulumnist and Obama skeptic Maureen Dowd to rip into the President, for trying to have it both ways on issues from gay rights to Afghanistan:

"As a community organizer, Obama developed impressive empathetic gifts.  But now he is misusing them.  It's not enough to understand how everybody in the room thinks.  You have to decide which ones in the room are right, and stand with them.  A leader is not a mediator or an umpire or a convener or a facilitator."

Did someone mention Afghanistan?   


 We almost forgot --- the President announced his new Afghanistan policy this week, committing to bring back 33,000 troops in relatively short order and promising that the Afghans would be ready to protect themselves by 2014.   Neither liberals or conservatives were pleased with the decision or the number of troops staying or going.  

The cover of "The Week" seemed to get it just about right:

Birdwatcher


Now, TCG is no strategic think tank --- just a (semi) weekly tip sheet for the fleet of foot and the faint of heart.   But when we hear that after a Trillion Dollars and hardly any visible signs of progress, Afghanistan is expected to take care of itself in 2014 --- just three short years away --- the words literally fail us.  We can't explain exactly what is wrong with that analysis, but in the words of our Old School Jam of the Week, we surely do know that....










Meanwhile, with the NBA playoffs over, it was not clear that there would be any real sports until Labor Day.     Two items managed to catch our attention last week, however.   The first was the breakout performance of Rory McIlroy at the U.S. Open.    We are not going to go into great detail here, but let us just say, with someone in the mix who actually appears to enjoy himself on the course ('cos you're just playing golf, fellas!), the word here is "Tiger Is Through."


"The King Is Dead --- Long Live The King"


Careful There, Now, Chief....



Finally, U.S. soccer fans had their hopes dashed once again as the Yanquis disgraced themselves by giving up a 2-0 lead to lose 4-2 to El Tri in the Gold Cup Final.   There was only one bright light: the who-could-have-seen-it return of former phenom Freddy Adu, written off by most observers as through at the age of 22, to a key role with the U.S. national team.  There it was, for all the world to see: the creativity that Adu brings to the table that so many of the "play in junior soccer since you're 5 years old with drills from some book and by the way everybody gets a medal even if their team loses" other American-bred players never, ever seem to have in comparison to the rest of this futbol-mad world.   3 years until World Cup 2014 to shape up, Team USA!



This Time, He's Taking Names




TCG will be on hiatus next week.  Stay tuned July 4th Weekend for our special "All American Girls" edition,
and be on the lookout for periodic updates
"as events warrant"


Sunday, June 12, 2011

Vol. 1, No. 17 (Special Bron-Bron's Breakdown Edition)






IN THIS ISSUE:


-- WE JUST DON'T GET IT

-- CALLING CONGRESSMAN WEINER

-- RACE FOR THE WHITE HOUSE: 
THAT SHIP JUST SAILED

-- GAY-BASHING: WHOSE LAUGHING NOW?

-- THE ASSOCIATION: BRON-BRON'S BREAKDOWN

-- COLLEGE FOOTBALL IN COLLAPSE

-- TIGER: IN THE TANK? 


Before we get to our regular roundup, TGG is announcing a new category of current events.  We don't yet have a name for it, but Back In The Day, if we recall, Arsenio Hall used to refer to these events as "Things That Make You Go Hmmmm....."





Remember Me?


Two items were reported in the press this week that left us, well, speechless.   In an earlier day, in fact, we might have called them "Things That Make You Go Hmmmm....", but frankly, they left us much more puzzled-slash- astounded than that.

The first was a number of reports concerning Congressman Anthony Weiner, who was married to his wife, who is a top aide to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, in a ceremony officiated by former President Bill Clinton.   The stories noted that "the Clintons" were
 "very disappointed by
 Congressman Weiner's behavior."  

Huh?



"How Exactly Does That Work, Chief?"



The second was a statement issued by Ohio State Athletic Director Gene Smith, after disgraced quarterback Terrelle Pryor announced that he would not be returning for his senior year at the university.

"We understand Terrelle's decision and wish him well in this next phase of his life," Smith's statement said.   "We hope he returns one day to The Ohio State University to finish his degree."    


Right.



Because We All Know That He Was Just  A Few
Credits Short of His B.A. In Astrophysics....



Calling Congressman Weiner 

The cable-news headlines continued to belong to Anthony Weiner, whose latest ploy to hang on to office was to announce that he was seeking treatment and requesting a leave of absence from the House.   This, on Saturday, in the wake of mounting calls for him to resign, including ultimately from Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.   Clearly he needed treatment.   But the political question for the Democrats was how long they could afford to have him around as a member of the House.  Because as long as he stayed, his saga would crowd out other news from Capitol Hill.   It's always easier for voters to pay attention to sex scandals than to policy issues, and Weiner's scandal looked like it might play out for months on end --- treatment, return to Capital Hill, rehabilitation, first floor speech, first interview (MSNBC), first interview (Oprah/Barbara Walters/60 MInutes), etc. etc. etc.   

It wouldn't leave much time for the Democrats, who actually had some hope of recapturing the House in 2012, to talk about the GOP plan to End Medicare As We Know It.

If Weiner wouldn't resign, the Democrats could move to have him expelled from the House. 

But did anybody have the guts to do it?



The other shoe(s) were bound to drop, and we wanted answers: had anybody in the House Democratic Leadership listened to the TGG Old School Jam of the Week?


(..."Might Hurt You...")




Time To Make Some Hard Choices


As commentator Peggy Noonan of The Wall Street Journal said, 

"Of course he should resign --- or, better, and as a statement, the House should remove him.  I speak as conservative who wishes to conserve.  If I were speaking as a Republican I'd say, "By all means keep him, let him taint all your efforts."  But Sometimes all of Washington has to put its hand up like a traffic cop and say no.  It has to say: That doesn't go here, it's not acceptable, it's not among the normal human transgressions of back stairs, love affairs and the congressman on the take.   This is decadence.   This is pornography.   We can't let the world, and the young, know it's "politically survivable."  Because that will hurt us, not him, and define us, not him.  So: Enough." 



Race for the White House -- 
"That Ship Just Sailed"


Of course, the biggest news from the political world was the virtually unprecedented decision of all of Newt Gingrich's senior campaign staff to quit en masse.   It was felt to be a crippling blow to a campaign that had already gotten off to a disastrous start.   Various reasons were given, from the staff's disappointment that the Mr. and Mrs. Gingrich chose to take a two-week cruise to the Greek Isles at a time when they should have been trying to get traction for the campaign..... 



A Carnival Fun Ship It Was NOT.




To reports that the staff found the candidate's third wife, Callista Gingrich, extremely difficult to get along with. 



Somehow, We Don't Have Any Problem Believing That



In the wake of Gingrich's embarrassment, the press seemed to delight in portraying him as some kind of has-been rube, who knew nothing about campaigning, strategy, or the hard work of winning.   How quickly they forget --- Gingrich almost single-handedly captured the House for the GOP in 1990s, after having labored for years in obscurity when the conventional wisdom held that the Democratic majority in the house was, if not "permanent," at least the natural order of things.  Gingrich was responsible for the recruiting, the strategy, the fundraising and the message behind the Republican takeover of the House.   And now, all of a sudden, he knows nothing about politics?  There is something more to the story.  TGG just wishes we knew what it was.  






It Was A Breakthrough Tactic At The Time 



Just Remember -- This Is Not Newt's First Rodeo



 Newt's troubles were more or less a sideshow, however.   As the economic news continued to be problematic --- high unemployment, especially in battleground states like Florida and Ohio, weak expected growth, and bad news from the stock market, President Obama's approval ratings stalled and some polls actually showed GOP front runner Mitt Romney beating him in a head-to-head matchup. 



This Is No Joke




And POTUS Knows It


Analysts universally agreed that the continuing economic woes redounded to the benefit of Romney.  And they were probably right.   As always, the Journal's Noonan had a right-on-point take on Mr. Romney:


"His seamless happiness can be grating.  People like to root for the little guy, and he's never been the little guy.  His family has never in his lifetime known financial ill fortune, and his personal wealth is of the self-made kind, the most grating because it means you can't even patronize him.  He has in him that way of people who are chipper about each day in large part becuase each day has been very nice to them.  This makes some people want to 
punch him in the nose." 






We're Saving Our Questions For Later....




Gay-Bashing --- Who's Laughing Now?


30 Rock star Tracy Morgan's vile rant that he would "kill his son if he were gay" (it actually was worse than that) has gotten all of the criticism it so justly deserved, including ultimately from Chris Rock and his own
 co-stars....

When will they ever learn?  Some things are not funny.   Some lines are not to be crossed. 



TGG Is Just Asking: Was He Ever Really That Funny Anyway?


On a related note, TGG wholeheartedly supports the NBA's anti-homophobia campaign.  It's about time.   But we have to ask, might it not have been just a little bit more effective if it featured players other than Grant HIll (because after all, don't we expect this from Grant Hill?) and one of his Phoenix Sun teammates who nobody had ever heard of?   Grant was always a likely suspect to to do a public service announcement like this.   The NBA will really make strides when its pro-tolerance campaign features a player or two that makes you say, "I never expected that from him." 




But We've Got To Start Somewhere....




The Association -- Bron-Bron's Breakdown


Maybe LeBron James could make such a commercial.   But in the meantime, LeBron had troubles of his own.  The Chosen One had only 11 fourth-quarter points in 5 games, and his Heatles were facing elimination down 3-2 with 2 games left at home in Miami.   Dallas star Dirk Nowitzki had more than 50 fourth-quarter points, and appeared set to spoil the Heat's march to the first of their "not 5, not 6, not 7 titles."  The critics of LeBron were merciless, especially ESPN, which endlessly dissected his clutch time failures and even used special graphics to show the clear lanes to the basket that he failed to exploit when guarded by the much-smaller Jason Kidd.

Was all of this fair?  All TGG can say is "be careful what you wish for."   LeBron asked for the spotlight when he "took his talents to South Beach," and he asked for it even more with all the hype of the introductory press conference/pep rally, etc.   Some of the greatest in recent memory had their failures in individual series (most notably Magic Johnson), but the great ones to whom LeBron wishes to be compared all earned multiple titles as well.  LeBron is stringing together  a series of questionable moments --- not shaking hands with the Spurs after the Finals defeat, vanishing against Boston in his last playoff defeat with the Cavs, orchestrating the ridiculous "Decision" and its aftermath, and now fading in the 4th against Dallas.   It could be a long, long summer unless he and
 D. Wade can pull these next two rabbits out of the hat. 

LeBron wants to be considered among the all-time greats.  In basketball, that means two things: (1) You win titles, and (2) Year-in, Year-out, you come up big when the game is on the line.   The Chosen One now has some catching up to do. 




Except Maybe If We're Talking About The Last 12 Minutes of The Game






How Time Flies



College Football In Collapse

Lost in all of the discussion about LeBron, but critically important, was the fact that college football is virtually imploding on itself.   Last week, the BCS stripped the USC Trojans of their 2004 national title.   This came, of course, the week after the Ohio State program self-destructed with the resignation of Coach Jim Tressell and the announcement that star quarterback Terrelle Pryor would not return for his senior year.   As if that weren't enough, last years' National Champion Auburn Tigers remained under investigation for possible violations, and the NCAA called in current USC frontman Lane Kiffin to discuss possible major violations under his watch when he was the head coach at Tennessee.

Make no mistake about it --- USC and Ohio State are two of the premier programs in college football --- and two programs that were thought to be basically doing it right.   If they are cheating, who is not?   The practical effect of all of this for college football fans is that you basically have to go through the season rooting for your team or teams (and against your rivals), and then just hope against hope when the season is over that there is not another shoe which is about to drop.   The whole thing becomes more and more unseemly each year, and ultimately will reduce enthusiasm for the game.   Wake up call to the NCAA: Is anybody home?





Be Careful Where You Stick That Thing, Tommy....







But Were They All In The Past?





Where There's Smoke?





There's Something We Just Don't Like About Lane Kiffin
OK, Strike That --- There's Everything We Just Don't Like About Lane Kiffin 




The Fakest Fake Tough Guy Ever?



Tiger: In The Tank?

Finally, as Tiger Woods withdrew from the U.S. Open, the question no longer was when would he win the additional 4 majors to tie Jack Nickalaus' mark of 18, but would he do it at all?

Analysts said that at his 25% rate for winning majors (14 for 55) it would take the 35 year-old Tiger until he was 40 to tie the mark.

Our prediction: He's lost his dominance and isn't ever going to get it back.   Tiger finishes oh-so-close-yet-oh-so-far-away with 17 majors.   Remember, you read it in The Global Game first...



But The Question Is, Does He?









Stay tuned next Weekend for Volume 1, Issue 17 of TGG,
and be on the lookout for periodic updates
"as events warrant"