Melania Trump issues statement in support of LeBron James after president insults him

The president took to his favorite medium and attacked James’s intelligence Friday night after CNN aired an interview in which the NBA star told anchor Don Lemon that he thought Trump was trying to divide the country by using sports as a wedge.

.. “What I’ve noticed over the past few months,” James told Lemon, “is [Trump has] kinda used sports to kinda divide us, and that’s something that I can’t relate to.”

While James has not commented on Trump’s tweet, others have responded both directly and indirectly — like the first lady.

“It looks like LeBron James is working to do good things on behalf of our next generation,” said Melania Trump’s spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham. “And just as she always has, the First Lady encourages everyone to have an open dialogue about issues facing children today.”

.. During the interview, James told Lemon his first interaction with the white community was on the basketball court, where divisions melted away. “Sports has never been something that divides people,” James said.

Can Germany Survive Its World Cup Defeat?

My neighbor Peter told me that losing to South Korea has implications for the nation’s soul.

.. Peter suggested that there were implications for the nation’s soul itself, with the team’s exit from the tournament reflecting a wider sense of unease. Chancellor Angela Merkel is right now fighting for her political survival at home, where she’s facing pressure to be tougher on immigrants and refugees, both within her own party and from the right-wing Alternative for Germany party.
..  I wrote in this newsletter about how the far right views the ethnically diverse national team.
.. She was worried that the team’s defeat would play into the far right’s self-pitying, us-versus-them worldview. “I just hope that some of those flags disappear now,” she said, “and the nationalism right along with them.”
.. four years ago, German television had broadcast a live stream of the national team’s plane on its way to the World Cup in Brazil. Everyone had been more optimistic then, in football and in life. It would have been good for Germany if the team had gone through to the next round, he said, “because the atmosphere in the country is not that nice, and sometimes sports can help.”

Mizzou Pays a Price for Appeasing the Left

Enrollment is down more than 2,000. The campus has had to take seven dormitories out of service.

Timothy Vaughn dutifully cheered the University of Missouri for a decade, sitting in the stands with his swag, two hot dogs and a Diet Coke. He estimates he attended between 60 and 85 athletic events every year—football and basketball games and even tennis matches and gymnastics meets. But after the infamous protests of fall 2015, Missouri lost this die-hard fan.

“I pledge from this day forward NOT TO contribute to the [Tiger Scholarship Fund], buy any tickets to any University of Missouri athletic event, to attend any athletic event (even if free), to give away all my MU clothes (nearly my entire wardrobe) after I have removed any logos associated with the University of Missouri, and any cards/helmets/ice buckets/flags with the University of Missouri logo on it,” Mr. Vaughn told administrators in an email four semesters ago.

He was not alone. Thousands of pages of emails I obtained through the Missouri Freedom of Information Act show that many alumni and other supporters were disgusted with administrators’ feeble response to the disruptions. Like Mr. Vaughn, many promised they’d stop attending athletic events. Others vowed they’d never send their children or grandchildren to the university. It now appears many of them have made good on those promises.

The commotion began in October 2015, when student activists claiming that “racism lives here” sent administrators a lengthy list of demands. Among them: The president of the University of Missouri system should resign after delivering a handwritten apology acknowledging his “white male privilege”; the curriculum should include “comprehensive racial awareness and inclusion” training; and 10% of the faculty and staff should be black.

.. Donors, parents, alumni, sports fans and prospective students raged against the administration’s caving in. “At breakfast this morning, my wife and I agreed that MU is NOT a school we would even consider for our three children,” wrote Victor Wirtz, a 1978 alum, adding that the university “has devolved into the Berkeley of the Midwest.”

.. As classes begin this week, freshmen enrollment is down 35% since the protests

.. Universities have consistently underestimated the power of a furious public. At the same time, they’ve overestimated the power of student activists, who have only as much influence as administrators give them. Far from avoiding controversy, administrators who respond to campus radicals with cowardice and capitulation should expect to pay a steep price for years.

 

Comments:

.. Susan Fox: I live in Missouri.  I even attended Mizzou for a summer program in high school.  I am now having my first child.

Mizzou will not receive a dime of my money. If my child wants to go to a state school, they can go to Rolla or Kirksville. If Mizzou sends my child brochures, they will be returned with a “We need some muscle over here!” comment splayed across it. This is 18 years into the future we are now talking about.

I do not think Mizzou has correctly accounted for the long-lasting effects its actions will have.

 .. Gene Strickland: Looks like the administrator as this and the other schools mentioned in this article forgot who is actually paying the bills. Wont take long for the word to get around to other universities/colleges and the next set of demand by student protesters will be met with the acknowledgement, and then dismissal that they deserve.

.. William Butos: .. What they do not understand is that the people paying the freight are beginning to see through this shell game and refusing to play along.

.. Barrett McShane: The only thing that can really change a university administration’s bent towards Lefties is for wealthy alums to stop contributing.  For some reason the allure of having a brick, plaque, quadrangle or building with one’s name on it is stronger than common sense, so unlikely things will change to any great degree.

.. Historically, the money has been donated by those that are adults and tend to think more conservative and logical. Being PC and trendy is a risk as those on the left will not part with their free money from the government.

.. Jeff Middleswart:

This is an important lesson to understand.  Actual Americans need to realize that they still hold the purse-strings here.  They also need to realize that the truly privileged in this society are leaching off the productive and getting perks that the rest of us pay for and yet do not receive ourselves.

Does the 20-year old who became a welder still get spring break and summers off?  Can the welder borrow money via a school loan to pay for his vacation to Europe?

How many of you work more than 9 hours per week for 32 weeks per year?

Do you get a free pension with mandated set returns from tax payers?

Can you bill the tax payers for grant money to produce work no one will read or use?

How many of you have life time employment with automatic raises?

If your business isn’t viable anymore – does it get subsidies forever like NPR, NEA, teaching French…?

Can you mandate that people use your product?  The school can require that an engineer take literature from a tenured prof and buy his book.

.. Nancy McCord: The universities have dug their own graves.  By not tolerating freedom of thought, they’ve created an Orwellian world.  The irony is overwhelming.  Would be hilarious if it wasn’t so scary and now spreading to corporations and other parts of our society.

.. John Watson

The very day Donald Trump announced his candidacy, my liberal niece asked me what I thought about it, like it was absurd. I told her that whatever the result, one thing was for sure. Trump was going to make us talk about “uncomfortable” things. No PC BS from him. She asked with concern why that was a good thing, and I explained that we can’t fix what we can’t talk about. She agreed with that basic premise, if nothing else I said.

The PC culture has done immense damage to our nation and our society. It has created what we know as snowflakes, college students who are shielded from the real world to the extent they will never be prepared to deal with it. Free speech has been endangered to the extent some even want to criminally prosecute those who dare disagree with their view of things, such as the Climate crowd. Corporations fear the PC police and their press to the point of acting irrationally, as seen by the recent exodus of CEO from Trump’s support.

Let’s talk and fix things.

.. Robert Brooks: As a Mizzou alum, I’m sorry to see this. However, I have also stopped making any financial contribution to the University and have not renewed my alumni association membership. Actions DO have consequences.
.. Robert Selsor: The student body is overwhelmingly moderate according to my step daughter. Most simply want to get their education and have no time for drama from either the right or the left. The small group of protesters took many liberties with their characterization of that campus. But, on the other hand the president at the time would not even meet with them to hear their grievances. The same curator told me that the president did not have the right skill set for the job.

.. Hillsdale College in Michigan is one of the few institutions remaining that does not have as their mission to indoctrinate students in Leftism.  Sad to say, but even the military schools have become cesspools of political correctness.  One can hope this movement against Leftism that has been the guiding light for over 40 years at these schools is now going to be challenged.  When you look at the cost benefit ratio of student debt versus what is taught the whole college education imperative comes into question.

Jim Harbaugh’s Advice to Football Recruits: Play Soccer

Why the counterintuitive Michigan coach wants quarterbacks who played fútbol and football

Harbaugh is the counterintuitive outlier in a sport that breeds conservative thinkers. In that way his unlikely embrace of soccer is perfectly Harbaughian. It’s something that seems preposterous until you think more about it, at which point it makes so much sense that you start to question why it took so long for others to figure out.
.. “I think every American boy should play soccer till the eighth grade,” Harbaugh said. “Then they should play football. American football.”

He explained to recruits that soccer can help them with their footwork, coordination, balance, conditioning and spatial awareness. Those traits are quite useful to a quarterback required to throw on the run while surveying the whole field as 300-pound linemen attempt to spear him.

“It’s one of the best sports that a young person can play getting ready to play football,” said UCLA offensive coordinator Jedd Fisch, who worked under Harbaugh

..  The famously intense coach said he wanted to see quarterbacks compete against each other as much as they possibly could. They could field baseballs. They could peg each other with dodgeballs. They could even play soccer. “You can’t just compete in throwing all day long every day,” Fisch said.

.. It turns out many of the NFL’s star quarterbacks are former soccer players.