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Thursday, January 26, 2012

All quiet on Tim Lincecum contract front, but Giants say talks with Matt Cain have been “healthy, ongoing” | Extra Baggs




Good news for Giants fans. It seems like down the road we may have to reconcile the staff to include Lincum OR Cain rather than Lincecum AND Cain, but this may have pushed that date down the road a little bit.

Lincecum, Giants agreed to $40.5M, 2-year deal

http://www.northjersey.com/sports/012412_Lincecum_Giants_agreed_to_405M_2-year_deal.html



All quiet on Tim Lincecum contract front, but Giants say talks with Matt Cain have been “healthy, ongoing” | Extra Baggs:

"The Giants are known to prefer a four-year structure that would take Lincecum through arbitration and buy out his first two seasons of free agency. Lincecum’s camp has preferred a one- or two-year deal that would preserve his ability to hit the open market after the 2013 season, although they proposed an eight-year structure that the club had no interest in pursuing.

The Giants have been just as public in their desire to wrap up a long-term extension with Matt Cain, who is under contract for $15 million this season but will be a free agent at the end of the year. Unlike Lincecum, Cain isn’t tied to the arbitration schedule. So there was the assumption the Giants might wait until after they clear their arbitration docket (they have Angel Pagan, Melky Cabrera, Sergio Romo, NAte Schierholtz, Santiago Casilla and others to prepare for, too) before turning their attention to Cain.

But as Evans told me today, “Hey, I can multitask.”"

Report: Jets Rip 'Lazy' Sanchez


Paving the way for NY to become a "dual-Manning" town? Why not? The press will eat it up.

Report: Jets Rip 'Lazy' Sanchez:

A sampling of the criticisms:

- "He's lazy and content because he knows he's not going to be benched," said one player.

- "How can we when he's not improving at all?" another teammate said. "He thinks he is, but he's not. He has shown us what he's capable of."

- "So many games, he looked defeated before he ever took the field. He didn't have much confidence in what he was about to go do. ...He never felt comfortable with some of the things we were doing. It was too much for him," said a team source.

- "He just doesn't have the mental toughness to be great... especially in New York," added another source.

Ouch.

Hey, 99 Percenters, You Call This 'Fair'?



Too many people riding in the cart, not enough people pulling the cart. These 99% folks don't realize that they don't speak for about half of the people they think they do. Reality bites and it bites hard. Occupy a job.

Hey, 99 Percenters, You Call This 'Fair'? | Fox News:

A study by the New York City Independent Budget Office was released this week, and you didn't hear much about it in the mainstream media because it hurts their candidate's message.

"New York City has a little more than 8 million residents. Of those many millions, 1% -- ONE PERCENT -- pays 43% of the income taxes. You know how many people that works out to? About 35,000 people.

Picture in your mind's eye the City of New York, not just Manhattan, but all five boroughs. Imagine the throngs here right now enjoying the holidays. Think about the police presence, the sanitation, the schools brimming with children...East Side, West Side, The Village -- a hell of a town! 8 million people!

Now imagine Yankee Stadium, or any average Major League ballpark, and fill it except for the nosebleed seats. That tiny number pays almost HALF the operating costs for the city. How's THAT for fair?

Another kick in the head is that ten percent of New Yorkers pay 71% of the taxes. Guess how much income it takes to crack that ten percent?You don't have to be one of the millionaires or billionaires whom the Divider in Chief loves to vilify. You need not be an evil fat cat making $200,000 -- perish the thought! What's it take to crack the top ten percent in the most expensive city in America? $105,000. Yep, a buck five."


The top 1% of income earners, those who earn over about $400 thousand a year pay 40% of all the income taxes

*** FORTY PERCENT of taxes are paid by 1% of taxpayers ***

In other words, the government collects 40% of all the income taxes it gets from only 1% of the people who pay taxes.

The other 99% of taxpayers COMBINED only pay the other 60%.

And half of all adults DON'T PAY ANY INCOME TAX AT ALL.

If I have my math correct.

- The 1% pays 40% of the freight

Of the 99%

- 49.5% pay the Other 60%
- 49.5% PAY ZERO

Too many people riding in the cart, not enough people pulling the cart.

Raise taxes on the 49.5% of the free-loaders.


Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Is Eli the Greatest QB in Giants' History?


This is an interesting question. My wife asked me if Eli has made the leap over Phil Simms in my mind as the Greatest Giants QB of all time. And it was tough for me to answer.

Is Eli the Greatest QB in Giants' History?:

'via Blog this'

In the same way that the prior generations (my Dad) cling to Y.A. Tittle and Charlie Connerly as the best, for me, it comes down to the old saying "you never forget your first" and Phil Simms delivered the Giants first Super Bowl. Not only delivered it, but persevered in spite of many naysayers (the 'Simms Sucks' brigade) who continued chirping even up until the eve of of the Super Bowl. If you think that Tim Tebow has vocal (and sometimes irrational) doubters, you haven't spent enough time with full-throated Giants fans in unrequited heat.

So Simms will always be #1 in my heart, but Eli is slowly but surely building the case to be #1 if I'm leading with my head.

UPDATED: Giants reward Ryan Vogelsong with two-year contract plus option for 2014 | Extra Baggs


A long, frustrating road for Vogie, but he is being justly rewarded.

UPDATED: Giants reward Ryan Vogelsong with two-year contract plus option for 2014 | Extra Baggs:

"Vogelsong made it clear he wanted to commit to San Francisco after resurrecting his career with the same organization that drafted and developed him a decade earlier. Vogelsong arrived last spring as a minor league free agent and pitched so well in camp that he became the first line of defense when the Giants needed a starting pitcher. He came up to replace an injured Barry Zito in late April and never lost his spot in the rotation, finishing with a 13-7 record and 2.71 ERA that ranked third in the NL — better even than heralded rotation mates Tim Lincecum and Matt Cain.

Vogelsong, 33, also joined Lincecum and Brian Wilson on the NL All-Star team — a huge accomplishment for a pitcher whose career was sidelined by injuries and inconsistency. Before replacing Zito, Vogelsong hadn’t appeared in a major league game in almost five years, spending most of the interim in the Japanese leagues."

Miami Heat's LeBron James says he can relate to Denver Broncos' Tim Tebow - ESPN



From ESPN:
Miami Heat's LeBron James says he can relate to Denver Broncos' Tim Tebow - ESPN:

Strange that the two best comments about the Tebow craze have come from Ben Roethlisberger and LeBron James. Players get it. Better late than never.

""I can relate to him a lot. I see how the media plays it sometimes and how the critics go at him," James said. "To see him prove them wrong ... he continues to stay positive and move forward. You respect that."

In August, James came to Tebow's defense on Twitter during Broncos training camp. When several analysts criticized Tebow on ESPN, James wrote: "Tim Tebow will succeed in the NFL. He's a hard worker, a student of the game, a natural born leader and most of all a WINNER! It takes time and he'll be nice.""

Roethlisberger's quotes before the Pittsburgh - Denver playoff game:
"I don't think Tim's really calling ESPN and asking them to talk about him," Roethlisberger said. "I would assume his teammates understand it. It's a tough thing. It's the position we play."

Interestingly enough, LeBron took a drubbing among fans and some in the media for his stance.


From somewhere in the Twittersphere:
http://tsminteractive.com/lebron-james-tim-tebow-twitter/


Citing James’ own inability to win a championship and the way he fell apart while playing for the Miami Heat against the Dallas Mavericks in the NBA finals, Twitter’s version of the peanut gallery sprang into action.

A few examples:

ESPN’s Skip Bayless tweeted: “Can’t wait to talk about LeBron’s tweet about Tebow. If only LeBron could say that about himself …”

Chris Burke of SI.com tweeted: “Takes one to know … oh wait.”

And Fufu Pounder tweeted: “I wish I could say the same about U in 4Q.”

In a nutshell, without all the talk-show histrionics, here is the crux of the debate.

From YahooSports:
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=ms-silver_tim_tebow_broncos_steelers_suggs_elway010612


Earlier this week, Baltimore Ravens All-Pro pass rusher Terrell Suggs took some shots at Tebow on ESPN’s “First Take.” T-Sizzle expounded upon those thoughts during a phone conversation on Wednesday, saying he had nothing against the quarterback personally but felt that “he’s held to a different standard than the other 31 quarterbacks” in the NFL.

“I’m a Christian,” Suggs continued. “I have no problem with him being a Christian. But it’s like, you know, God forbid anybody say anything against Tim Tebow. Oh, we’re just giving him a hard time because he’s a Christian? No, that’s not it! We’re giving him a hard time because he went 6-and-22 for 60 yards!

“That’s terrible quarterbacking. Are you kidding me? Donovan McNabb had a game like that [early in the season] and got the hatchet. The hatchet! And we never heard from him again. And then Tim Tebow plays in a game where they need to win the AFC West, and he had a game like that, and we’re still talking about the Tim Tebow phenomenon?”

The MAJOR differences between the examples that Mr. Suggs cites are a) Tebow is WINNING despite his lousy stats and lousy mechanics, McNabb was not and b) Tebow is a YOUNG QB who is somewhat expected to have statistical ups and downs related to his youth and inexperience, McNabb was a VETERAN QB.

BIG DIFFERENCES THERE, CHIEF. But thanks for your insight.

When and if Tebow combine lousy stats with losing, Denver will pull the plug on him in a heartbeat or two. Rest assured about that my little Schadenfreuders. Until then, how about a healthy dose of STFU?

Sandoval Agrees to 3-Year Extension -- Details Here



Sandoval Agrees to 3-Year Extension -- Details Here:


The Giants and Pablo Sandoval have agreed to a three-year extension, Henry Schulman of the San Francisco Chronicle tweets. The deal is worth $17.15MM plus incentives, Andrew Baggarly of the San Jose Mercury News tweets. Morgan Advisory Group represents the 25-year-old third baseman.



Sandoval, who was arbitration eligible for the first time this offseason, had a projected $3.2MM salary for 2012 and would have been in line for raises in 2013 and 2014 via the arbitration process. The deal doesn't delay his free agency -- he's still on track to hit the open market after the 2014 season.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Casey Crosby coming to Chicago? COOL!!!


If this report pans out, perhaps.....How cool would that be? One of my favorite players to keep tabs on, although it is a growing list (thankfully). This will give me a much better reason to trek out to Wrigley Field again. Winning would help.

Report: Cubs, Tigers Working on Trade for Matt Garza | Bleacher Report:

"The Cubs could, however, realistically ask for one of Detroit's intriguing left-handed starters, as Andy Oliver, Casey Crosby and Drew Smyly all rank in the Tigers' Top 10 prospects, according to MLB.com. Oliver has seen the show, and probably wouldn't be packaged with Turner. Smyly is a softer tossing left-hander, which the Cubs already look to have two of with the recently-signed Paul Maholm, and Travis Wood, who was acquired in the trade for Sean Marshall."

This leaves Casey Crosby. Crosby, 23, has battled arm injuries in the past, missing out on the 2008 season due to to Tommy John surgery, and had all but three appearances in 2010 because of an elbow injury. However, the 2007 fifth rounder is still considered to have front-of-the-rotation stuff, simply needing the time to refine his craft. Already having lost two seasons to arm injuries, Crosby seems like the perfect candidate for a change of scenery. He was simply okay in AA Erie in 2011, going 9-7 with a 4.10 ERA over 25 starts, logging 131 2/3 innings.

Crosby is also a Chicagoland native, hailing from Elburn, IL and pitched for Kaneland High School, where he won the Illinois Gatorade Player Of The Year in 2007. While it's hard to judge whether he'd be a Cubs or White Sox fan having pitched so far from the city limits of Chicago, it's not hard to say that the potential to play as close to home as he could get would be an added motivator for the young lefty. With a mid-90's fastball, a nasty curve and a developing changeup, Crosby could find himself in the Cubs' rotation by 2014.

Even if the Tigers were to offer Turner with Crosby, it still likely wouldn't be quite enough to sway Hoyer and Epstein to move Garza. However, the Tigers could offer a couple of farther-off prospects, preferably an outfielder or two with potential not unlike Ronald Torreyes, the wild card of the Marshall trade.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Who Owns The Media? The 6 Monolithic Corporations That Control Almost Everything We Watch, Hear And Read - BlackListedNews.com




Who Owns The Media? The 6 Monolithic Corporations That Control Almost Everything We Watch, Hear And Read - BlackListedNews.com:

The Bad News:

Back in 1983, approximately 50 corporations controlled the vast majority of all news media in the United States. Today, ownership of the news media has been concentrated in the hands of just six incredibly powerful media corporations. These corporate behemoths control most of what we watch, hear and read every single day. They own television networks, cable channels, movie studios, newspapers, magazines, publishing houses, music labels and even many of our favorite websites. Sadly, most Americans don't even stop to think about who is feeding them the endless hours of news and entertainment that they constantly ingest. Most Americans don't really seem to care about who owns the media. But they should. The truth is that each of us is deeply influenced by the messages that are constantly being pounded into our heads by the mainstream media. The average American watches 153 hoursof television a month. In fact, most Americans begin to feel physically uncomfortable if they go too long without watching or listening to something. Sadly, most Americans have become absolutely addicted to news and entertainment and the ownership of all that news and entertainment that we crave is being concentrated in fewer and fewer hands each year.


"The six corporations that collectively control U.S. media today are Time Warner, Walt Disney, Viacom, Rupert Murdoch's News Corp., CBS Corporation and NBC Universal.  Together, the "big six" absolutely dominate news and entertainment in the United States.  But even those areas of the media that the "big six" do not completely control are becoming increasingly concentrated. For example, Clear Channel now owns over 1000 radio stations across the United States.  Companies like Google, Yahoo and Microsoft are increasingly dominating the Internet.

But it is the "big six" that are the biggest concerns.  When you control what Americans watch, hear and read you gain a great deal of control over what they think.  They don't call it "programming" for nothing. "




The Good News:

Fortunately, an increasing number of Americans are starting to wake up and are realizing that the mainstream media should not be trusted. According to a new poll just released by Gallup, the number of Americans that have little to no trust in the mainstream media (57%) is at an all-time high.

That is one reason why we have seen the alternative media experience such rapid growth over the past few years. The mainstream media has been losing credibility at a staggering rate, and Americans are starting to look elsewhere for the truth about what is really going on.


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As a citizen and a patriot, I demand that the liberal media end their campaign of religious bigotry. As Speaker Gingrich pointed out in the Republican debate on January 7th, it has gone too far for too long.

I pledge to expose, confront and neutralize all instances of anti-Christian bigotry in the liberal media.

Stand with the MRC against Media's anti-Christian bigotry
"Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." - John Adams

Watch Speaker Gingrich call out the liberal media for their anti-Christian bigotry and sign our petition demanding the media to end this disgusting behavior.



Former Speaker Newt Gingrich in the Republican Primary Debate on January 7, 2012.

Giants C Drew Stiner Suspended 50 Games and Pippa Passes


Not a great way for a prospect to begin his tenure with an organization. Early return on Stiner were that he was a good defensive catcher with a solid arm. I believe he was Drew Bundy's catcher in HS. He's a long way off, so time is on his side once he makes his comeback.

"Better that it's amphetamines rather than steroids", right? I guess that comment describes where we are right now with the PED issue. God's in His heaven....

Pippa Passes, Robert Browning:
The year’s at the spring,
And day’s at the morn;
Morning’s at seven;
The hill-side’s dew-pearled;
The lark’s on the wing;
The snail’s on the thorn;
God’s in His heaven—
All’s right with the world!

Farmhand Suspended 50 Games:


San Francisco Giants catcher Drew Stiner has been suspended for 50 games under baseball's minor league drug program after testing positive for a banned amphetamine.

Stiner's suspension, announced Monday, was the second of the year under the program. Washington left-hander Zechry Zinicola was suspended for 50 games last week for a second violation for a drug of abuse.

Stiner is on the roster of San Francisco's Arizona League farm team. He was a 43rd-round draft pick last year from Owasso High School in Oklahoma.

There were 71 suspensions last year under the minor league drug program and two under the big league plan. In addition, Manny Ramirez plans to serve a suspension this year for a 2011 violation.

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The Giants place CF Gary Brown at # 57. It looks like the Jesus Montera era in Yankee-land is scheduled to begin in 2012 with the announcement of Jorge Posada's retirement.

The Rays LHP Matt Moore and Nats OF Bryce Harper seem like safe early 2012 ROY calls. The Angels OF Mike Trout may have something to say as well.

Scout.com: 2012 Minor League Baseball Top Rankings

Scout.com: 2012 Minor League Baseball Top Rankings:

"Overall
Rank Rating Name Bat Thw Ht/Wt Current Team MLB Home
P 1 Matthew Moore L L 6-2/205 Durham (AAA) TAM Fort Walton Beach, FL
OF 2 Mike Trout R R 6-1/200 Arkansas (AA) LAA Millville, NJ
OF 3 Bryce Harper L R 6-3/225 Harrisburg (AA) WAS Las Vegas, NV
P 4 Julio Teheran L L 6-2/175 Gwinnett (AAA) ATL Colombia
C 5 Jesus Montero R R 6-4/230 Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (AAA) NYY Venezuela
P 6 Shelby Miller R R 6-3/207 Springfield (AA) STL Brownwood, TX
SS 7 Jurickson Profar B R 5-11/165 Hickory (A) TEX Netherlands Antilles
SS 8 Manny Machado R R 6-3/185 Frederick (A) BAL Miami, FL
P 9 Manny Banuelos L L 5-11/185 Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (AAA)"

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Scout.com: Giants Notes & Quotes: Giants Choose Fontenot:

"QUOTE TO NOTE: "You have to make do with what the blueprint presents itself to be financially. That's what we're trying to do, we're trying to be creative within that." -- GM Brian Sabean on doing business with a $130 million payroll, knowing more than $30 million of it goes to ex-Giant Aaron Rowand and subpar pitcher Barry Zito."

Fw: THE BEGINNERS MIND


Some interesting concepts for coaches, teachers or parents to understand when dealing with the developmental stages athletes and students are navigating while learning new skills.


03.15.09 Beginner's Mind

"In the beginner's mind there are many possibilities, but in the expert's there are few."  Shunryu Suzuki-Roshi
Foo
(Courtesy of Will Taylor, Chair, Department of Homeopathic Medicine, National College of Natural Medicine, Portland, Oregon, USA, March 2007.)

The Four Stages for Learning a New Skill

The Crossfit methodology continually challenges us to expand our capabilities in a variety of facets. I found this model very interesting as it can pertain to just about any skill. We often don't think about the progressions we naturally experience as we strive to suck less. Being aware of these stages helps us better accept that learning can sometimes be a slow and frequently uncomfortable process.

Stage 1 - Unconsciously unskilled or incompetent . We don't know what we don't know. We are inept and unaware of it. We don't know we suck...

Stage 2 - Consciously unskilled or incompetent.
  We start to learn at this level when sudden awareness of how poorly we do something shows us how much we need to learn. We now know what we suck at...

Stage 3 - Consciously skilled or competent.
 Trying the skill out, experimenting, practicing. We now know how to do the skill the right way, but need to think and work hard to do it.

Stage 4 - Unconsciously skilled or competent. If we continue to practice and apply the new skills, eventually we arrive at a stage where they become easier, and given time, even natural. Firebreather!




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http://www.petercoyote.com/zenmindcdx.jpg
Shunryu Suzuki (1905-1971) was a direct spiritual descendant of the great thirteenth-century Zen Master, Dogen. This inspiring work ranks with the great Zen classics, in a voice and language completely adapted to contemporary sensibilities. Suzuki's words breathe with the joy and simplicity that make a liberated life possible. As he reveals the actual practice of Zen as a discipline for daily life, one begins to understand what Zen is really about.

The practice of Zen mind is beginner's mind. The innocence of the first inquiry - what am I? - is needed throughout Zen practice. The mind of the beginner is empty, free of the habits of the expert, ready to accept, to doubt, and open to all the possibilities. It is the kind of mind that can see things as they are, which step by step and in a flash can realize the original nature of everything . This practice of Zen mind is found throughout the book. Directly or sometimes by inference, every section of the book concerns the question of how to maintain this attitude through your meditation and in your life. This is an ancient way of teaching, using the simplest language and the situations of everyday life.


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The Beginner's Mind

By Peter Kaufman

http://www.everydaysociologyblog.com/2011/10/the-beginners-mind.html

In this book, Suzuki encourages us to have the beginner’s mind. What this means is that we should never feel as if we have something all figured out. We should always be hungry for more information and view ourselves as works in progress. I think one of the most basic ways to think about the beginner’s mind is to speak of intellectual curiosity—to have this insatiable desire to gain more knowledge and wisdom because we know there is so much more to learn. As Suzuki says, “In the beginner’s mind there is no thought, ‘I have attained something.’”

When most of us first entered school we epitomized the beginner’s mind. We were so excited to learn anything and everything. We had this unlimited intellectual curiosity. We were constantly asking questions such as: Why? How? When? Where? But after years of being told what we must learn, when we must learn, and how we must learn, much of this curiosity has been extinguished. And after years of memorizing the answers that teachers poured into our heads just so that we could regurgitate these answers on quarterly exams, many of us have actually come to dislike learning.

To make matters worse, we live in a hyper-competitive and hyper-individualistic culture where we are constantly vying to out-do each other and acting as if we know it all.

This makes many of us much more used to having an expert’s mind than a beginner’s mind. We have that “been there, done that” attitude. We feel as if once we’ve learned something or experienced something there is nothing more to be gained and we can move promptly onto the next topic. Or we think that just because we know someone’s characteristics—maybe their race, their gender, their sexuality, their social class or even their hobbies—we feel confident that we know what type of person they are and whether or not they are our kind of people.

These are all examples of the expert’s mind. At the very least, the expert’s mind results in narrow-mindedness and closed-mindedness where we shut others out and strengthen arbitrary borders instead of work together to build bridges. At the very worst, the expert’s mind results in prejudice, discrimination, fanaticism, and oppression—things we see all over the world each day.

CARPE DIEM: Tax Tip for Warren Buffett, and Wouldn't His 2010 Taxable Income Be only $100k To Pay 17.4% Rate?

from Tax Policy Center Blog:
http://taxvox.taxpolicycenter.org/2011/08/23/was-buffett-right-do-workers-pay-more-tax-than-their-bosses/

Was Buffett Right? Do Workers Pay More Tax than Their Bosses?

Roberton Williams | Posted on August 23, 2011, 12:47 pm






Overall, Buffett’s story is correct, but he did get a couple of things wrong.

First, the 41 percent top tax rate he ascribed to his fellow workers appears to be a marginal rather than an average rate. That is, it’s the tax on an additional dollar of income rather than total tax measured as a percentage of total income. A single worker’s earnings must approach $500,000 before his combined income and payroll tax hits even 35 percent and the effective tax rate never tops 38 percent. For a married couple, total earnings have to near $1 million to hit those levels. Those are still very high rates, well above Buffett’s 17.4 percent, but they’re not as high as he asserted.

More importantly, because of progressive tax brackets and the many exclusions, exemptions, deductions, and tax credits, typical taxpayers actually pay effective tax rates well below the levels Buffett cites. And high-income taxpayers usually pay a higher effective rate than he does. The average household in the middle 20 percent of the income distribution (income between about $34,000 and $65,000) will pay combined income and payroll taxes equal to 12.0 percent of total income this year, compared with 19.6 percent for those in the top 20 percent (income over about $104,000) and 20.2 percent for those in the top 1 percent (income over roughly $533,000).

Warren Buffett may be right when he says that high-income taxpayers could pay more, especially given the extremely rapid rate of income growth at the top of the distribution. And he’s certainly correct when he says that the low tax rate on investment income cuts his tax bill well below that of many Americans. But he’s off base when he suggests that all high-income taxpayers pay a smaller share of their income in taxes than their middle-income coworkers.

---

from Carpe Diem blog:
CARPE DIEM: Tax Tip for Warren Buffett, and Wouldn't His 2010 Taxable Income Be only $100k To Pay 17.4% Rate?:

"Just a thought: If Warren Buffett is really serious about paying higher taxes, couldn't he simply take the standard deduction voluntarily ($11,400 for married taxpayers filing jointly in 2010) instead of itemizing his deductions?  That wouldn't require any change in tax policy, so he doesn't have to wait.  

After all, it must be all of his itemized deductions (e.g. charitable, etc.)  that reduce Buffett's income tax rate to only 17.4% on about $40 million income last year.  Except for about the first 1% of his income ($373,650) that would be taxed at lower rates, he should be paying a marginal tax rate of 35% on the other 99%.  Using the tax brackets below for 2010, how could Buffett claim that he paid an effective tax rate of only 17.4% unless his taxable income was only about $100,000?"

Married Filing Jointly 2010 Tax Brackets

Taxable Income Marginal Tax Rates
$0-$16,750..............................10%
$16,751-$68,000.........................15%
$68,001-$137,300........................25%
$137,301-$209,250.......................28%
$209,251-$373,650.......................33%
$373,651+...............................35%


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MORE ON BUFFET AND TAXES

Last year, according to his own accounting, Mr. Buffett earned a “taxable income” of almost $40 million. It goes without saying that most of us will never see that kind of money in our lifetimes. Not by a long shot. You’d think, therefore, all would be “good in the hood” for one of America’s richest men.

But Buffett has a big problem: Taxes. He is unhappy with the amount he pays. It’s not enough, he says. Nor is the amount paid by his super wealthy friends. Earlier this week, Buffett’s odd desire to keep less of what he earns led him to pen an op-ed piece in The New York Times in which he decried Washington for “coddling the super- rich.” Perhaps you saw it.

“Some of us are investment managers who earn billions from our daily labors but are allowed to classify our income as ‘carried interest,’” he confessed, “thereby getting a bargain 15 percent tax rate. Others own stock index futures for 10 minutes and have 60 percent of their gain taxed at 15 percent, as if they’d been long- term investors.”

In 2010, Buffett paid almost $7 million in taxes to the federal government, about 17.4 percent of that whopping “taxable income.” Despite his immense earnings, that percentage came in considerably less than the 20 other folks working in his office. “Their tax burdens ranged from 33 percent to 41 percent and averaged 36 percent,” he wrote.

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The diagram below shows why Buffett pays a lower "total" tax rate and why this is an apples to oranges comparison.

http://www.moneychimp.com/features/tax_calculator.htm

Tax Calculator

Obviously, this very simple calculator can only give you an unofficial estimate - please don't try to file your taxes by mailing the IRS a screen shot of this thing stapled to a check. (Although it makes you think that Congress could probably simplify the heck out of the tax code if they really felt like it. They probably just don't feel like it, is all.)

(Adjusted gross income determines whether you are eligible to contribute to a Roth IRA. And don't forget to pay Social Security.)

How to Pay Less Taxes

As complicated as the tax code is, it's built around a philosophy that actually makes sense: the government will reward intelligent behavior with a tax break. A few obvious suggestions:

(1) Don't Churn Your Portfolio
You want to pay the long term capital gains rate, and pay that as infrequently as possible. (Many index funds are low-churn and tax efficient.)

(2) Open a Retirement Account
A deductible IRA gives you a negative adjustment, lowering your taxable income. (A Roth version gives you a tax break later.)

(3) Have "Good" Debt
Credit card debt is bad debt, but a long-term mortgage is very good debt - a fixed, low interest rate, plus a tax break that shows up as an itemized deduction.

(3a) Give to Charity
Another deduction, plus you'll make people think you're nice.


Tax Diagram: Which Rates Apply, and Where?



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WARREN BUFFET RIDES TO BAC'S RESCUE: QUID PRO QUO CLARISSE?



The Silence of the Lambs (1991)

Hannibal Lecter: "Plum Island Animal Disease Research Center." Sounds charming.
Clarice Starling: That's only a part of the island. There's a very, very nice beach. Terns nest there. There's beautiful...
Hannibal Lecter: [cuts her off] Terns? Mmh. If I help you, Clarice, it will be "turns" with us too. Quid pro quo. I tell you things, you tell me things. Not about this case, though. About yourself. Quid pro quo. Yes or no?
[pause]
Hannibal Lecter: Yes or no, Clarice? Poor little Catherine is waiting.
Clarice Starling: Go, doctor.


Hannibal Lecter: First principles, Clarice. Simplicity. Read Marcus Aurelius. Of each particular thing ask: what is it in itself? What is its nature? What does he do, this man you seek?
Clarice Starling: He kills women...
Hannibal Lecter: No. That is incidental. What is the first and principal thing he does? What needs does he serve by killing?
Clarice Starling: Anger, um, social acceptance, and, huh, sexual frustrations, sir...
Hannibal Lecter: No! He covets. That is his nature. And how do we begin to covet, Clarice? Do we seek out things to covet? Make an effort to answer now.
Clarice Starling: No. We just...
Hannibal Lecter: No. We begin by coveting what we see every day. Don't you feel eyes moving over your body, Clarice? And don't your eyes seek out the things you want?




"I've taken a look at recommending a BAC short several times over the past year," says our short specialist Dan Amoss, "with the idea that ‘fraudclosuregate' might transform it into a juicy target for class action lawyer piranhas.

"But I kept coming back to the bull thesis... that with good enough lawyers, BAC can string along this legal settlement process and mortgage-related losses forever. With Tim Geithner at Treasury, BAC also essentially has a lobbyist on its behalf.

"The suspension of mark-to-market accounting, an army of lawyers and lobbyists to fight mortgage put backs, and a very friendly Treasury Department will probably keep the stock muddling along for the next few years. I wouldn't buy it or sell it short. The Fed's ‘zero rates through 2013' policy is a guaranteed carry trade gift to BAC shareholders -- or a tax, if you're a depositor -- that will be measured in the billions."

In other words, in a fair and just world, BAC would have gone down in flames long ago. But it's not a fair and just world... and you can't invest on that assumption.

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MORE ON DEBT AND DEFICITS:


Erskine Bowles on the proposed Obama Budget compromise:
"It is $4 trillion, however, over 12 years. It is heavily back-end loaded, so when you compare it to the Ryan plan and to the Commission’s plan, which also has $4 trillion in savings, it is probably more like $2.5 trillion. And in fairness, the way it is setup, according to our analysis, it really doesn’t stabilize the debt, and the debt as a percentage of GDP gets up to around 77 percent and it never gets to primary balance, which is about a deficit-to-GDP ratio of around 3 percent." -- Erskine Bowles re: Obama's $4T Budget "Savings"

On the other hand, he WAS against this type of behavior before he was FOR it. I guess this is just another example of the huge divide between candidate Obama and President Obama.



On the day before Independence Day 2008, Senator Barack Obama pronounced deficit spending "unpatriotic" at a campaign event. He would go on to rack up more debt in three years than his predecessor did in eight. Does he still think deficits are "unpatriotic," or is that the wrong word?

Sustained deficit spending is certainly irresponsible. Trillion-dollar deficits are an accepted fact of life in Washington, even after a big "deficit reduction deal." This means the government is willing to spend more money than it collects, in perpetuity.

Deficit spending is tyrannical. It's the ultimate form of taxation without representation, presenting children not yet born with bills they never had a chance to vote against. It establishes programs that become permanent financial obligations for future Congresses. It's a lie, because it offers the people subsidies and benefits, paid for with money that doesn't exist. When politicians speak of trillion-dollar "stimulus" programs, they're distorting the free market with false information, and wielding economic influence they don't really have.

Our massive national debt, built through decades of deficit spending, makes America weak. Increasing individual and corporate dependency on a rapidly growing government drains the vitality of the free market. Unfriendly creditor nations like China gain unhealthy amounts of economic leverage over us. Credit agencies like Standard & Poor's become major players in public policy debates. In the end, social chaos caused by the collapse of unsustainable entitlements will destroy civic order.

Does all of that add up to make deficit spending "unpatriotic?" Barack Obama claimed to think so, four trillion dollars ago. — John Hayward

In praise of Title IX and the positive effect of sports in women's lives


I meant to post this some time ago. One of the most remarkably successful, albeit controversial pieces of legislation in recent history. Born of the Nixon Administration, of all places. I submit to you: Title IX.-

Coaches are famous for saying "I don't want to hear about the labor pains, just show me the baby".

Now -- some firty years later -- we are able to look back on both the labor pains and the growth of the the child. Much of the change, as it was occurring, was accompanied by significant episodes of grinding and gnashing of teeth and a whole lot of sound and fury, which in the end, signified nothing.

Warts and all -- on balance and in hindsight -- I believe that Title IX has had more positive effects on society in general and on the movement to assimilate and advance women from the kitchen to the workplace specifically -- with far less of the deleterious negative social side-effects -- than the advancement of the radical feminist agenda.

There, I said it. And I'm not taking it back.

Thank you Title IX.
Thank you Sports.
Thank you former President Nixon.

I guess that whole "Sports as a metaphor for Life" mantra has some practical uses after all. ;)

Making Sports a Metaphor for Life
http://www.middlebury.edu/giving/difference/impact2/impact/Foote

Often during a team practice on Kohn Field, Missy Foote, head coach of the women's lacrosse team, will stop play for what she calls a "Green Mountain moment," a brief pause in practice to appreciate the dramatic backdrop just east of their field. Now into her 32nd year at Middlebury, Coach Foote has had numerous moments like these. She has forged lifelong bonds with many of the approximately 360 student-athletes she has mentored at the College during her tenure.

"As coaches, we try to make sports a metaphor for life," she explains. "Through athletics, we grow highly functioning, committed adults. For me, this maturation process is incredibly rewarding to see and play a part in."

Over the years, Foote has witnessed significant changes in the athletics program at Middlebury. These differences are most evident in the advancements in the athletic opportunities available to female students.

When Foote came to Middlebury, Title IX was still in its infancy. As she recalls, there was only one locker room for all women-the general public, students, and visiting teams alike. The facilities have improved and "the emphasis on athletics and the role it plays in a woman's life has changed remarkably," says Coach Foote. "Now well after Title IX, there is nothing holding back our females. They can achieve anything they want, which is a great transition to have witnessed."

Coach Foote weighs her success as a coach not in the number of titles her team achieves or her overall record, but rather in the role she plays in launching players into their lives beyond Middlebury.

The deep connections that develop on the field are the bonds that unite Middlebury athletes and keep them "invested in each other's joys and sorrows years after graduation," Foote explains. She regularly attends the weddings of her athletes and christenings of their children, and provides advice to many former students who are now coaching on their own. She also participates in marathons with her former athletes. "There's nothing like helping each other come into the finish to reaffirm the strong relationships we built at the College," Coach Foote says. "These are lifelong friendships and a support group that is ever expanding...bonds that define my coaching career at Middlebury."

That's what it's all about!!

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from Wikipedia:
Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 is a United States law, enacted on June 23, 1972.

In 2002 it was renamed the Patsy T. Mink Equal Opportunity in Education Act, in honor of its principal author Congresswoman Mink, but is most commonly known simply as Title IX.

The law states that

"No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance..."
—United States Code Section 20, [1]



Hi Charles,

We would love to share with you an article that we just posted on our own blog! "9 Title IX Facts Every Athlete Should Know" (http://www.onlinecollegecourses.com/2011/08/07/9-title-ix-facts-every-athlete-should-know/) would be an interesting story for your readers to check out and discuss on your blog.

Either way, I hope you continue putting out great content through your blog. It has been a sincere pleasure to read.


Thanks
Larry Dignan  

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Created in 1972 as a way of providing equal opportunities for education and athletics regardless of gender, Title IX has gotten a lot of attention in recent years — both positive and negative — from teachers, students, administrators and parents. While most people probably have an opinion one way or another, many may not know the facts behind the act, nor really understand how it is applied to colleges and secondary schools. Many, even the student athletes whom it directly affects, may be quite surprised to learn more than a few of the facts we've collected here. Some may have to reconsider just how they look at what it's really doing to nurture equality in the higher education system.
  1. Many schools still don't abide by the Title IX law

    While Title IX has helped women gain access to a wide range of athletic programs and scholarships, there are still many schools out there who don't abide — or try to skirt some of its policies. Perhaps more distressing is that schools violating Title IX often face little or no legal action. Investigations are often drug out over years, and rarely result in any kind of meaningful penalties. One investigation at USC has gone on for over 12 years now, with no sign of resolution in sight. Even more troubling? Investigations are often conducted by the schools themselves, giving them little to no incentive to report any problems they do find. Though to be fair, some are quite willing to fix issues if they are pointed out.
  2. No school has ever lost federal funding for violating Title IX

    Since 1972, when Title IX was enacted, not a single case of discrimination against female (or male) athletes was referred to the justice department for further investigation or repercussions. Not one. That doesn't mean that there has been no discrimination — between 2002 and 2006 alone, there were 416 complaints filed with the Office for Civil Rights — just that there are few (if any) cases where schools have been forced into compliance. This brings into question its effectiveness at providing equality.
  3. Women are not inherently less interested in playing sports than men

    Many who argue against Title IX claim that women are simply less interested in sports than their male counterparts. Since the act went into effect in 1972, female participation in college-level sports has increased 403%. Today, 43% of college athletes are women, and many more say they would participate if their schools offered programs in their sport of choice.
  4. For every new dollar going into college athletics at the Division I and II levels of college athletics, male sports receive 65 cents. Female sports receive 35 cents

    Just as women only make 77 cents for every dollar men do, their sports haven't attained equal funding, either. Women's sports programs at Division I and II schools are given almost half of what men's programs are. This means half the money for facilities, programs, recruitment and scholarships. With women making up 56% of all undergrads in college and 43% of athletes, that's a pretty startling discrepancy.
  5. Title IX hasn't radically changed how college athletic programs are managed

    While 53% of the students at Division I schools are women, female athletes in Division I receive just 32% of the funds to recruit new athletes, 37% of total athletics expenditures, 45% of total athletic scholarships and 44% of the opportunities to play intercollegiate sports. While that's far better than in 1972, it still doesn't adequately support many of the athletic programs underrepresented students are interested in. Big ticket sports like basketball and football still dominate the majority of resources in nearly every college athletics department — to the detriment of both female and male sports.
  6. Title IX doesn't only apply to athletics or females

    Title IX actually applies to all aspects of federally-funded education programs and activities for both men and women. It prohibits sexual harassment, discrimination in admissions and housing and helps ensure that people of both sexes have access to higher education, career services, safe learning environments and appropriate technology. Athletics is only one facet of the act, which is much broader in its scope than most people are aware.
  7. Title IX doesn't force schools to cut men's athletic programs

    While some schools may choose to cut men's athletic programs to comply with Title IX, the legislation does not require this kind of action. There are actually multiple ways that schools can meet its tenets, and not all require the proportionality test (matching the percentage of male and female students to the availability of athletic programs, scholarships and funding) to be strictly enforced. They can also comply through showing a history and continuing practice of expanding athletic programs in response to the interests and abilities of the underrepresented sex. Schools can also qualify if their present athletic programs are broad enough to meet the underrepresented sex's interests. Issues with Title IX are usually only investigated if there have been claims of denial of participation opportunities in athletics.
  8. There are fewer female coaches today than there were in 1972

    Title IX hasn't spurred progress in gaining equality for every facet of athletics, as some might think. In 2008, only 43% of coaches of women's teams were women. In 1972, that number was over 90%. The problem is two-fold. On one hand, there simply aren't enough women going into coaching to fill all the available positions. On the other, those that do are often bullied and discriminated against, causing them to change careers or leave college coaching altogether. The Title IX legislation that's meant to protect them? It often doesn't do much at all. Just ask the female coaches at Ball State University.
  9. The majority of Americans support Title IX

    Despite the large number of those who grumble about Title IX on the web or in the media, the majority of Americans still support this act. How many? Recent surveys put it at about 82% in favor, across all political parties, cultural and age groups. Only 14% believe that the law should be repealed. Whether or not everyone agrees that Title IX legislation is the best way to help women get into sports, it's clear that people today value female athletic participation. This makes it all the more important to help ladies get the equal opportunities they deserve to play.

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At U of I, Title IX is toothless
BY DARREN SWAN AND EVAN SWAN
DEC 11, 2007

http://news.medill.northwestern.edu/chicago/news.aspx?id=73245

Athletes feel wrath of Title IX fallout
On June 16, 2006, Fresno State University varsity wrestler Sean Carlson was living what he called the high life.

Having grown up in Fresno, he was used to the non-nirvana-like weather of central California.

Carlson was vigorously training during the unruly hot summer for his junior season on the team with a starting spot all but assured -- he had no worries.

Then, on that June day almost two years ago, just two days shy of 21st birthday, he got the call.

Carlson, who routinely puts himself through pain in a sport that requires hard work, discipline and toughness, began to cry. He was at the lowest point of his life.

His love, passion and craft were all taken away with that one phone call from a coach on the team. The Fresno State University wrestling program was cut.

“Effective immediately.”

Today, still feeling angry and depressed like many of his teammates, Carlson is able to recall exactly how he felt on that very day.

“Everyone was angry, depressed and pissed off because we didn’t get a reason of why we were cut,” said the former 125-and 133-pound wrestler. “The [athletic department] did it during the middle of summer, not considering the [incoming freshmen] or seniors who would have to go to other colleges to wrestle.”

The university promised to uphold its financial agreement with the students, with or without the program. Scholarships would be honored even if the students wrestled at a different college, Carlson said.

The Fresno State University wrestling team is just one example of the plethora of collegiate athletic programs across the country that get cut each year due to issues of compliance with Title IX, the law created to provide gender equity in education and athletics.

Nowadays the average college consists of 42 percent male and 58 percent female, the Department of Education reports.

Larry Kocher, president of the College Sports Council based in Chicago and head wrestling coach and professor at the University of Chicago, indicates much of the language in Title IX is questionable and unclear.

Title IX has three sections—known as prongs— that demonstrate how schools must comply. Universities are required to observe just one of the three prongs to be “in compliance with the law.”

Prong one mandates schools to provide athletic opportunities that are substantially proportionate to the student enrollment. Prong two orders schools to demonstrate a continual expansion of athletic opportunities for the underrepresented gender. And prong three requires a school to provide full and effective accommodation of the interest and ability of the underrepresented gender.

Kocher says because prong two and three contain ambiguous language, many schools employ prong one not for feasibility, but more out of convenience.

Prong one specifically targets proportionality. As long as the enrollment is proportional to the number of athletes participating in a given sport, the school is in compliance with the law.

However, there’s just one problem: Experts believe prong one is being used as a loop hole, instead of its original intention—to provide gender equity in college athletics by gender.

Traccee Passeggi, a public policy officer at the Women’s Sports Foundation in New York—founded by Billy Jean King—elaborates on prong one as the most relied on form of testing for Title IX compliance.

“There has been strong criticism that the proportionality test has been used to mandate quotas in intercollegiate athletics,” she said.

Passeggi said this is “in direct violation of the true intent of Title IX.”

However, according to Kocher, the three-prong test has turned into a quota law. Other critics, like Jim McCarthy, spokesman for the College Sports Council in Chicago, said the DOE needs to provide a clearer and more provable way that school’s can comply with prong three.

But a greater problem exists, McCarthy said, “There’s no way to prove [compliance with prong three.]”

Without clear language establishing what schools need to do to be compliant with Title IX, problems will continue to arise.

Title IX does not instruct schools to cancel programs, the Department of Education states on its Web site, but it perpetuates an easy escape to compliance. If a school’s numbers are off and subtracting 30 student athletes from the participation pool will make it right, Kocher acknowledges, they cut.

More than 450 wrestling programs have been hacked since the inception of Title IX in 1972, according to USA Wrestling, the nation’s amateur wrestling governing body.

Gary Abbott, director of special projects at USA Wrestling, told the New York Times in 2003 there were 363 NCAA wrestling teams with 7,914 wrestlers in 1982. In 2001, there were only 229 teams with fewer than 6,000 wrestlers. Nonetheless, during that time period, the number of NCAA universities grew from 787 to 1,049.

On average 200 wrestlers every year since 1972 lost their program, equating to thousands of student-athletes over the last 35 years losing a chance to participate in college and, in some cases, an opportunity at higher education altogether.

Carlson is only one name among the thousands of wrestlers who lost their sport—and passion—since in the inception of Title IX, 35 years ago.

Though Carlson still lives in sunny California, where he’s currently finishing his degree at Fresno State University, only one thing crosses his mind every day.

“I just want to get the hell out of here,” he said.

However, not even success guarantees safety for a program.

In 1994, UCLA chose to drop its men’s swimming program. The program had produced more than a dozen Olympians, more than any other school, and maybe even the greatest swimmer of all-time in Mark Spitz. His seven gold medals at the 1972 Olympics is still a world record.

Would the University of North Carolina ever drop its men’s basketball program, which produced possibly the greatest basketball of all-time in Michael Jordan?

Bob Groseth, Northwestern University men’s swimming coach, has seen many of his athletes crowned as NCAA champions. His program is unquestionably dominant and his student athletes have been regularly commended by the Big Ten conference for their work in the classroom.

“Swimming is vulnerable with the current interpretation of Title IX,” he said. “One, it has large numbers. Two, the facilities are expensive and if a school has to reach proportionality with Title IX – it’s easier to cut a large team like men’s swimming to do so.”

Title IX does not protect programs. It gives specific discretion to the individual schools to handle their business how they see fit. Even though the most common way for schools to reach compliance is through cutting, Jocelyn Samuels, vice president for education and employment at the National Women’s Law Center, said removing programs has never been the way of getting institutions to comply with the law.

In plain English, Samuels says cutting teams is the absolute wrong way to create equality in athletic programs. “The focus of the law is to ensure equal opportunities and by adding those opportunities.”

Easier said then done.

In its 55th and last year of existence, the Oregon wrestling program welcomed back 10 letter winners in 2007-08, seven of whom competed in the 2007 Pac-10 Championships.

Athletes, like Carlson, are experiencing program cuts from another Title IX factor: highly expensive revenue generating sports.

Debbie Yow, the University of Maryland's athletic director for the last 14 years and the Atlantic Coast Conference’s first ever female athletic director, offered a correlation between Title IX and the elimination of more than 400 men's college programs over the last 35 years.

“I think that there is a connection. Actually, this is -- the reason this is such a complex issue is because there is no simple answer,” said Yow in an interview with CNN, who was recently voted by the Chronicle of Higher Education as one of the 10 most powerful people in college sports. “Others will say to you that those teams could have been saved, if their -- the expenses for the revenue sports in college athletics, like football and men's basketball, were not so high.”

Athletes at James Madison University in Virginia and the University of Oregon are going through the same situation as Carlson and his teammates went through two years ago.

James Madison over the past year cut 10 programs (seven men’s and three women’s) and flatly blamed Title IX for doing so, according to an official university statement. All together 144 students and 11 coaches will not be participating in athletics for JMU this year.

The university stated at the time that adding programs was not the best course of action the university could take.

“Any solution that would require the addition of sports beyond the current 28 teams was deemed unacceptable.”

Oregon this past year chose to reinstate its baseball team, add a competitive cheerleading team and cast away its nationally-ranked wrestling team. University officials did not offer Title IX as the reason for the cut, but, in effect, keeping the wrestling team on board would have put the school not in compliance with the law.

The Oregon wrestlers have started a campaign to save their wrestling program. Donations are pouring in, but that may not even be enough, according to McCarthy, because regulations prohibit money being designated for specific teams, and any donations would have to be matched for a women’s team.

This makes it twice as hard to save a program during a time where student-athletes are fighting uphill without a paddle.


Myths and Facts
Because the written language, interpretation and implementation of Title IX is ambiguous, here are some common misnomers people and schools alike believe to be true but aren’t. The legislation’s goal was to provide gender equity for males and females in education and athletics. However, experts say, equity for men and women is collegiate athletics is still far from reality.

Myth: Title IX is only about athletics.

Fact: Although most people who know about Title IX think it only applies to sports, but Title IX applies to every aspect of federally funded education programs. In fact, athletics is only one of 10 major areas addressed by the law. These other areas are: access to higher education, career education, education for pregnant and parenting students, employment, learning environment, math and science, sexual harassment, standardized testing, and technology.

Myth: Title IX applies only to females.

Fact: Both male and female students are protected by Title IX.

Myth: Title IX forces schools to cut men's sports.

Fact: Title IX doesn’t require a school to cut a men's sports program. The Department of Education states clearly, “Nothing in Title IX requires the cutting or reduction of teams in order to demonstrate compliance." All federal courts that have considered the question have agreed. Some schools have decided on their own to eliminate certain men's sports, but the law is flexible. There are many other ways to comply. Some schools have cut sports, like gymnastics and wrestling, rather than attempt to control bloated football and basketball budgets, which consume a whopping 72 percent of the average Division I-A school's total men's athletic operating budget. For example, San Diego State University decided to address its $2 million budget deficit by cutting its men's volleyball team instead of looking for any of the money within its $5 million football budget.

Myth: Women just aren't interested in sports.

Fact: After Title IX’s implementation, women's participation in intercollegiate sports has skyrocketed. Before Title IX, fewer than 32,000 women participated in college sports; today that number exceeds 150,000--nearly five times the pre-Title IX rate.

Myth: Title IX requires quotas against men.

Fact:Title IX prohibits sex discrimination in federally funded education programs, which means female students must have equal opportunities to participate in educational programs, including athletics. Because Title IX allows sports teams to be segregated by gender, schools themselves decide how many participation opportunities they will give female, as compared to male, students. Title IX does not in any way require quotas; it requires that schools allocate participation opportunities for both genders in nondiscriminatory ways.

A school can meet this requirement if it can demonstrate any one of the following ways:

-The percentages of male and female athletes are substantially proportionate to the percentages of male and female students enrolled; or

-If the school has a history and continuing practice of expanding athletic opportunities for the underrepresented sex; or

-If the school’s athletics program fully and effectively accommodates the interests and abilities of the underrepresented sex.

That being said, it’s probably clearer why this is such a cloudy and misunderstood piece of legislation, providing loop holes where discrimination does occur.

*Information courtesy of Title IX.info







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FROM THE NATIONAL REVIEW:
http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/225402/olympian-political-correctness/todd-gallagher

August 22, 2008, 0:00 p.m.

Olympian Political Correctness
In all the Olympic hype, you won't hear about performance differences between Venus and Mars.

By Todd Gallagher

‘Can Jamaica’s Sprinters Fight Crime?” That’s the tongue-in-cheek headline of a recent Time magazine article celebrating the remarkable Olympics performances of track stars from that Caribbean nation. In the space of a few days, Usain Bolt smashed world records in the men’s 100 and 200 meters, while three Jamaican sprinters swept the medals in the women’s 100 meters.

Time’s question is amusing, but for me, the incredible accomplishments of the Jamaican track team call to mind another question that isn’t so funny to a lot of people — as I learned the hard way.

You see, I wrote a book in which I worked with professional athletes and Olympic medalists to settle a series of long-running sports debates. The questions I heard most often had to do with gender: How big is the gap between the top male and female athletes?

One of my initial findings was jarring: the women’s Olympic record in the 100 meters, set in 1988 by superstar Florence Griffith-Joyner, is virtually identical to the U.S. record for 14-year-old boys — also set in 1988, by the less heralded Curtis Johnson. The winning time of 2008 women’s gold medalist Shelly-Ann Fraser? Well over a tenth of a second slower than Johnson’s.

Nor is the 100 meters an aberration. In sport after sport, evidence shows that the top female professional athletes in the world are on par with the best American 14- and 15-year-old boys. Nearly every female Olympic record in speed, strength, and endurance events falls between the records set by the best American 14- and 15-year-old boys:

Speed/Endurance Record Times:
Distance Men’s Boys’ 14 Women’s Boys’ 15
100M 9.69 10.64 10.62 10.42
200M 19.30 21.49 21.34 20.97
400M 43.49 47.16 48.25 46.55
800M 1:42.58 1:55.9 1:53.43 1:51.03
1500M 3:32.07 4:04.1 3:53.96 3:51.5
5000M 13:05.59 15:46.8 14:40.79 14:32.8
10000M 27:05.10 32:48.0 30:17.49 31:43.2


Leaping Records (in meters):
Event Men’s Boys’ 14 Women’s Boys’ 15
High Jump 2.39 2.04 2.06 2.18
Long Jump 8.90 7.21 7.40 7.49
Pole Vault 5.95 4.72 4.91 5.33
Triple Jump 18.09 14.74 15.33 14.98

Direct competition between women and boys tends to confirm the gap: the women’s Olympic hockey team has lost to boys’ high school junior-varsity teams; the women’s Olympic soccer team has lost to club teams of 15-year-old boys, the Colorado Silver Bullets professional baseball team has lost to American Legion squads — the list goes on and on.

I was surprised that this information had never been disseminated widely, since the data I researched and the interviews I conducted didn’t take long to put together. Obviously, I’m not suggesting that any slob off the street could outrun Shelly-Ann Fraser; but if she can’t beat the time that a 14-year-old boy set 20 years ago, surely that fact should inform a number of gender-and-sports discussions: Has Title IX done enough to level the playing field for female athletes — or has it actually penalized male athletes? Should golfers like Michelle Wie receive sponsors’ exemptions to compete against men in PGA tournaments? Should Wimbledon award men and women tennis players the same prize money?

Experts in the field of gender differences in sports emphatically argue that men’s superior performance is due primarily to societal factors — if they’re even willing to concede men’s superior performance, that is.

For example, in October 2007, Eileen McDonagh of Northeastern University and Laura Pappano of Wellesley College published Playing with the Boys: Why Separate Is Not Equal in Sports. “The premise of this book, and our work,” McDonagh says, “is that sex segregation does not reflect sex differences between men and women, rather it constructs them.”

I laid out the results of my research for Pappano and asked why male athletes outpace female athletes starting at 14 and 15. She answered: “Women are told around that time that they are athletically inferior to men and that they should start acting like ladies. That’s why we see the boys making such stunning gains at that age and the girls begin to suffer.”

While no one can deny that societal factors play some role, the research makes it pretty clear that there was a simpler explanation for the gap: puberty. The Centers for Disease Control publishes growth charts for the U.S. population which reveal that boys hit their major growth spurt between the ages of 14 and 15 — precisely when the best boy athletes begin to outperform the top adult female athletes.

My interviews with female professionals and others in the world of women’s sports confirmed the importance of boys’ physical development at that age. Aaron Heifitz, the publicist for the U.S. national women’s soccer team, described how the women’s squad performs against the best youth club players in Southern California: “The boys’ 13s we can handle pretty consistently, but when the boys start really developing at 14, and especially 15, that’s when you start to see real separation and they pass even the best women’s players. They’re just bigger, stronger, and faster.”

Eileen McDonagh has suggested that gender differences don’t matter in skill-based games that don’t place a premium on size, strength, and speed — pointedly asking, during a speech at Wellesley, “Why on earth are pool and ping-pong sex segregated?” Here again, even a little research reveals that the best female performers can’t compete consistently with the best males. Ping-pong actually relies heavily on physical attributes, and the difference between male and female competitors is almost as severe as it is in tennis — where the 203rd-ranked male player soundly defeated both Serena and Venus Williams in separate exhibition sets (6-1 and 6-2, respectively). In pool, Jean Balukas — possibly the greatest female player of all time — finished in the middle of the pack in men’s events in the 1980s; and Jeanette “The Black Widow” Lee — formerly the world’s Number One female player — told me, “You would not believe the amount of men, in my world, who can wax me.”

Cathy Young, the author of Ceasefire: Why Women and Men Must Join Forces to Achieve True Equality, suggests that that failure to discuss research findings openly and honestly reflects a larger feminist agenda of “bio-denial” to promote the idea that there are no natural differences between the genders. “There’s a whole establishment that’s invested in perpetuating the notion that there are not inborn differences between the genders athletically, and that any differences can only be attributable to sociological circumstances and societal oppression. They have a clear agenda to empower women through a distorted notion of equality but these people are saying things that are completely out of touch with biological reality.”

Kurt Fischer, director of the Mind, Brain, and Education Program at Harvard’s Graduate School of Education, has seen this firsthand. “I’ve been at faculty meetings where the notion that there are differences in the genders is ridiculed,” Fischer says. He adds, “[T]he first woman dean at Harvard was my dean when she got here, and when I would try to bring up studies that showed inborn gender differences she wouldn’t even allow it.”

Anyone who saw what happened to Harvard president Lawrence Summers — for even suggesting that there could be inborn gender differences — might conclude that challenging the claims of the Laura Pappanos of the world is an unnecessary headache. “When you have a large group of people with a vested interest in maintaining an agenda,” Fischer observes, “they’re going to find ways to attack anyone or anything that threatens their existence.”

The media have also obscured the facts in this debate. Young suggests a reason for this: “At most newspapers, Title IX is gospel at this point. And anything that could be seen as an argument against it is going to be ignored, attacked, or ridiculed.”

Professor Fischer was not surprised when I told him of my difficulties getting traction with my own data. “I have a colleague here in town that has a biologically based view of gender differences. She’s done a whole lot of research that shows fairly large, important differences between boys and girls in their socio-relationships at an early age. And she was prevented from publishing that at several points from people who just didn’t want to hear that point of view, regardless of the evidence.”

We almost certainly won’t hear anyone discussing controversial gender issues in all the hype surrounding the closing days of these Olympic Games. But maybe if we keep laying out the data in a calm and rational manner, we can advance the discussion beyond the biased, politically correct, opinionated nonsense that passes for serious intellectual debate on this subject.

— Todd Gallagher is the author of Andy Roddick Beat Me with a Frying Pan: Taking the Field with Pro Athletes and Olympic Legends to Settle Sports Fans’ Greatest Debates.