NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament 2021: Round of 64 Day 2 – Afternoon

By the end of the day half the teams that started on Thursday will be headed home, half will be moving on to the next round. There were a few upsets as teams seeded higher beat the expected winner:

ek hornbeck would have been happy, #11 Syracuse literally wiped the court with #6 San Diego St. 78 – 62

#15 Oral Roberts shocked #2 Ohio St that went into overtime.

#12 Oregon St wiped the court with #5 Tennessee.

# 13 North Texas shocked #4 Perdue in overtime.

Not so surprising #9 Wisconsin walked all over #8 N. Carolina.

#10 Rutgers made my kid happy, she’s a graduate. She’s not a sports fan,at all, but used to go to the games with friends.

Here are yesterday results:

#1 Baylor 79 – #16 Hartford 55

#8 Loyola Chicago 71 – #9 Georgia Tech 60

#6 Texas Tech 65 – #11 Utah St. 53

#2 Ohio St. 72 – #15 Oral Roberts 75 OT

#1 Illinois 78 – #16 Drexel 49

#7 Florida 79 = #10 Virginia Tech 70 OT

#3 Arkansas 85 – #14 Colgate 58

#5 Tennessee 56 – #12 Oregon St. 70

#4 Oklahoma St. 69 – #15 Liberty 60

#8 N. Carolina 62 – #9 Wisconsin 85

#2 Houston 87 – #15 Cleveland St. 52

#4 Perdue 69 – #13 N. Texas 78 OT

#7 Clemson 56 – #10 Rutgers 60

#6 San Diego St. 62 – #11 Syracuse 78

#3 W, Virginia 84 – #14 Morehead St. 67

#5 Villanova 73 – #12 Winthrop 63

This afternoon’s games include another of ek hornbeck‘s favorite teams, Michigan. I’ll be rooting for Iona and of course, Michigan.

 

Time Network Seed School Record Seed School Record Region
12:15 CBS 12 Georgetown 13 – 12 5 Colorado* 22 – 8 East
12:45 TruTV 13 UNC Greensboro 21 – 8 4 Florida St.* 13 – 6 East
1:15 TBS 14 Eastern Wash. 16 – 7 3 Kansas* 20 – 8 West
1:45 TNT 9 St. Bonaventure 16 – 4 8 LSU* 18 – 9 East
3:00 CBS 16 Texas Southern 16 – 8 1 Michigan* 20 – 4 East
3:30 TruTv 12 UC Santa Barbara 22 – 4 6 Creighton* 22 – 7 West
4:00 TBS 15 Iona 12 – 5 2 Alabama* 24 – 6 East
4:30 TNT 11 Drake 25 – 4 6 USC* 22 – 7 WEST

* indicates the winner

TMC for ek hornbeck

Cartnoon

Cleopatra’s Needle (New York City)

Cleopatra’s Needle in New York City is one of three similarly named Egyptian obelisks. It was erected in Central Park, west of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in Manhattan, on January 22, 1881. It was secured in May 1877 by judge Elbert E. Farman, the United States Consul General at Cairo, as a gift from the Khedive for the United States remaining a friendly neutral as the European powers – France and Britain – maneuvered to secure political control of the Egyptian government.

Made of red granite, the obelisk stands about 21 metres (69 ft) high, weighs about 200 tons, and is inscribed with Egyptian hieroglyphs. It was originally erected in the Egyptian city of Heliopolis on the orders of Thutmose III, in 1475 BC. The granite was brought from the quarries of Aswan near the first cataract of the Nile. The inscriptions were added about 200 years later by Ramesses II to commemorate his military victories. The obelisks were moved to Alexandria and set up in the Caesareum – a temple built by Cleopatra in honor of Mark Antony or Julius Caesar – by the Romans in 12 BCE, during the reign of Augustus, but were toppled some time later. This had the fortuitous effect of burying their faces and so preserving most of the hieroglyphs from the effects of weathering.

The original idea to secure an Egyptian obelisk for New York City came from the March 1877 New York City newspaper accounts of the transporting of the London obelisk. The newspapers mistakenly attributed to a Mr. John Dixon the 1869 proposal of the Khedive of Egypt, Mehmet Ali Pasha, to give the United States the remaining Alexandria obelisk as a gift for increased trade. Mr. Dixon, the contractor who, in 1877, arranged the transport of the London obelisk, denied the newspaper accounts. However, in March 1877, Mr. Henry G. Stebbins, Commissioner of the Department of Public Parks of the City of New York, undertook to secure the funding to transport the obelisk to New York. However, when railroad magnate William H. Vanderbilt was asked to head the subscription, he offered to finance the project with a donation of more than US$100,000 (equivalent to $2,400,938 in 2019).

Stebbins then sent two acceptance letters to the Khedive through the Department of State which forwarded them to Judge Farman in Cairo. Realizing that he might be able to secure one of the two remaining upright obelisks — either the mate to the Paris obelisk in Luxor or the London mate in Alexandria — Judge Farman formally asked the Khedive in March 1877, and by May 1877 he had secured the gift in writing.

TMC for ek hornbeck

The Breakfast Club (Smell Like Dirt)

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.

This Day in History

American and British forces invade Iraq; U.S. soldiers charged in Abu Ghraib scandal; France’s Napoleon regains power; ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’; Sarin attack hits Tokyo subway; John Lennon marries Yoko Ono.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

In the spring, at the end of the day, you should smell like dirt.

Margaret Atwood

Continue reading

Late Night Today

Late Night Today is for our readers who can’t stay awake to watch the shows. Everyone deserves a good laugh.

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah has been preempted by the NCAA Men’s Tournament

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

Detective McGrowl On Why You Shouldn’t Smoke Weed

His argument has no flaws.

No. 45’s Racist Rhetoric Led Directly To Hate Crimes Against The AAPI Community

While all Americans have an obligation to protect one another and treat each other with respect, our former president bears a particular responsibility for inflaming and amplifying the hatred that is behind this spate of terrible crimes against Asian and Asian-American people in this country.

“Bad day” disrupts fruit bouquet delivery

After police relayed that the Atlanta shooter was motivated because he had a “bad day,” this delivery guy walks off the job.

Late Night with Seth Meyers

Trump Planning to Sit for 12 Book Interviews

McConnell Threatens “Scorched Earth” as GOP Attacks Voting Rights: A Closer Look

Seth takes a closer look at Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell promising a “scorched earth” Senate if Democrats change the filibuster to pass sweeping and urgently needed democracy reforms.

CORRECTIONS: Week of Monday March 15

Seth Meyers takes a moment to address some of the errors from this week of Late Night, including the usage of “crikey” in a joke about New Zealand.

Jimmy Kimmel Live

Finally a President Who Does What He Says He’ll Do

Deadly murder hornets are back, March Madness is underway, Barack Obama filled out his bracket, Gonzaga is still a fake university that doesn’t exist, President Biden’s promise of 100 million Americans being vaccinated in his first 100 days is ahead of schedule, Biden is planning to make Russia pay for their repeated election meddling, turns out Biden quotes his mother more than any President ever, a place called Louis Tussauds Waxworks had to remove its sculpture of Trump because people kept punching it in the face, the country continues to open up, help is on the way for that annoying person in your life who won’t stop talking about their Peloton, and This Week in Unnecessary Censorship.

The Late Late Show with James Corden

The Late Late Show with James Corden

James Corden kicks off the show excited to share it’s the last taping of the winter season, and he finally asks Ian Karmel why he drives a Prius with no bumper. After, he challenges the band to come up with a sting when they pivot to the headlines. Today they tackle Russian President Vladimir Putin demanding an apology from President Joe Biden for calling him a “killer.” And does Kanye West really have $6.6B dollars?

One of the Writers Has Been Living in the Rafters

When James Corden goes to interview Benedict Cumberbatch, he hears a noise from the studio rafters and learns one of the show’s writers, Louis Waymouth, has been surviving up there since a bit over a month ago where he dressed as a superhero named Banana Man. And after Louis suddenly finds himself back on the ground, he needs a key piece of information from Benedict to make things right.

NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament 2021: Round of 64 Day 1 – Evening

Tonight’s games include one of ek hornbeck‘s favorite teams, Syracuse, since he went to college there. It’s kind of one of mine, too, because I was born there. My family left when I was an infant and I’ve only been back when I drove through on my way to Canada.

 

Time Network Seed School Record Seed School Record Region
6:25 TBS 13 Liberty 23 – 5 4 Oklahoma St. * 20 – 8 Midwest
7:10 CBS 9 Wisconsin * 17 – 12 8 N. Carolina 18-1 South
7:15 TruTV 15 Cleveland St 19 – 7 2 Houston * 24 – 3 Midwest
7:25 TNT 13 N. Texas * 17 – 9 4 Perdue 18 – 9 South
9:20 TBS 10 Rutgers * 15 – 11 7 Clemson 16 – 7 Midwest
9:40 CBS 11 Syracuse * 16 – 9 6 San Diego St. 23 – 4 Midwest
9:50 TruTV 15 Morehead St. 23 – 7 3 W. Virginia * 18 – 9 Midwest
9:57 TNT 12 Winthrop 23 – 1 12 Villanova* 16 – 6 South

* indicates the winner.

TMC for ek hornbeck

Russian Oligarch Pulls Plug On Moscow Mitch

Back in 2019, then Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell blocked a bill to keep sanctions in place on Russia’s largest aluminum producer.

In January, as the Senate debated whether to permit the Trump administration to lift sanctions on Russia’s largest aluminum producer, two men with millions of dollars riding on the outcome met for dinner at a restaurant in Zurich.

On one side of the table sat the head of sales for Rusal, the Russian aluminum producer that would benefit most immediately from a favorable Senate vote. The U.S. government had imposed sanctions on Rusal as part of a campaign to punish Russia for “malign activity around the globe,” including attempts to sway the 2016 presidential election.

On the other side sat Craig Bouchard, an American entrepreneur who had gained favor with officials in Kentucky, the home state of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Bouchard was trying to build the first new aluminum-rolling mill in the United States in nearly four decades, in a corner of northeastern Kentucky ravaged by job losses and the opioid epidemic — a project that stood to benefit enormously if Rusal were able to get involved. [..]

By the next day, McConnell had successfully blocked the bill, despite the defection of 11 Republicans.

Within weeks, the U.S. government had formally lifted sanctions on Rusal, citing a deal with the company that reduced the ownership interest of its Kremlin-linked founder, Oleg Deripaska. And three months later, Rusal announced plans for an extraordinary partnership with Bouchard’s company, providing $200 million in capital to buy a 40 percent stake in the new aluminum plant in Ashland, Ky. — a project Gov. Matt Bevin (R) boasted was “as significant as any economic deal ever made in the history of Kentucky.”

That earned McConnell the nickname “Moscow Mitch,” which, to this day, he hates.

Now, with a new administration in town that is willing to hold Russia accountable for its interference in US elections and threatening sanctions, Rusal has pulled the plug on the deal:

According to a Bloomberg report, Rusal, the formerly blacklisted Russian company with a major stake in the 10-figure project, is suspending its investments while it awaits word that its U.S. partners have raised the necessary funds. So far the company has sunk at least $65 million in the proposed mill, to be built by Unity Aluminum, previously known as Braidy Industries.

The news is only the latest twist for the troubled project, which has been plagued by fundraising questions and the ouster of the CEO formerly overseeing the venture. Rusal’s involvement has been controversial from the start, after it was revealed that the company had been subject to sanctions.

Kentucky pledged $15 million in taxpayer dollars toward the project under former Gov. Matt Bevin, but current Gov. Andy Beshear has repeatedly vowed to get the money back if the mill project doesn’t materialize.

Backers have touted the plant, which was slated for completion last year, as one that could create up to 550 jobs.

I guess now that the other guy and Moscow Mitch can’t protect him, Deripaska has no reason to invest in the US.

Cartnoon

You must watch Georgia’s Democratic freshman Senator Raphael Warnack’s first Senate speech. It’s that inspiring.

?Standing OVATION! ? SENATOR Raphael Warnock’s TRIUMPHANT First Floor speech

Give a preacher a microphone, and watch them make it plain! Senator Raphael Warnock move the entire Senate chambers to a standing ovation after his first floor speech in which he made it clear that no matter what it takes, the voting rights of minorities must be protected in this country!

TMC for ek hornbeck

NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament 2019: Round of 64 Day 1 – Afternoon

Last night the Play-ins for the East and West Divisions that will start tomorrow finished with a couple of tight games and one that went to OT.

West

#16 Norfolk State (16 – 7) 54 – Appalachian State (17 – 12) 53

#11 Witchita State (16 – 5} 52 – #11 Drake ((25 – 4) 53

East

#16 Texas Southern (16 – 8) 60 – Mount St. Mary’s (12 – 10) 52

#11 UCLA (27 – 9) 86 – #11 Michigan State (15 -13) 80 OT

Needless to say, the Michigan St. loss was disappointing after leading through most of the game, fell in OT. The two West games were nail biters  with Drake a surprise win over Wichita St. that at one point in the game has a double digit lead..

Now we begin the games in earnest . There are 8 games in the afternoon and 8 in the evening , The NCAA has frozen the fields, meaning, if a team drops out for any reason, its opponent will automatically advance. The same will hold for the Women when they start on Sunday. The coronavirus will be a persistent threat to upend the two marquee events of college sports.

 

Time Network Seed School Record Seed School Record Region
12:15 CBS 10 Virginia Tech 15 – 6 7 Florida 14 – 9 South
12:45 TruTV 14 Colgate 14 – 1 3 Arkansas 22 – 6 South
1:15 TBS 16 Drexel 12 – 7 1 Illinois 23 – 6 Midwest
1:45 TNT 11 Utah St. 20 – 8 6 Texas Tech 17 – 10 South
3:00 CBS 15 Oral Roberts 16 – 10 2 Ohio St. 21 – 9 South
3:30 TruTV 16 Hartford 15 – 8 1 Baylor 22 – 2 South
4:00 TBS 9 Georgia Tech 17 – 8 8 Loyola Chicago 24 – 4 Midwest
4:30 TNT 12 Oregon St. 17 – 8 5 Tennessee 18 – 8 Midwest

TMC for ek Hornbeck

The Breakfast Club (Implementing Ideas)

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.

This Day in History

US launches 2003 attack on Baghdad; Televangelist Jim Bakker quits ministry due to scandal; Nevada legalizes casino gambling; Bob Dylan’s debut album is released

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

You don’t make progress by standing on the sidelines, whimpering and complaining. You make progress by implementing ideas.

Shirley Chisholm

Continue reading

Late Night Today

Late Night Today is for our readers who can’t stay awake to watch the shows. Everyone deserves a good laugh.

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

Please Stay Home This St. Patrick’s Day

With any luck, this is the last time we’ll have to wear green on zoom

The Answer Is Simple Yet Strangely Difficult: Don’t Hate Each Other

Amid a terrifying rise in anti-Asian violence in this country, and following the grim news that six Asian women were murdered in Atlanta last night, Stephen Colbert pleads with Americans to recognize our common humanity and remember that this nation of immigrants is meant to be a welcoming place for everyone

Wendy Williams, Don’t You Dare Apologize!

Stephen Colbert stands in solidarity with his talk show sister Wendy Williams, and shares some embarrassing never-before-seen footage of his own.

Take a Ride On The “Republican Agenda of Terror”

Introducing a brand-new terrifying rollercoaster featuring all the thrills and chills of Mitch McConnell’s policy agenda.

Late Night with Seth Meyers

Trump Urges Americans to Get Coronavirus Vaccine

Fox News Demands Biden Give Trump Credit for the COVID Vaccines: A Closer Look

Seth takes a closer look at Fox News and the GOP struggling to criticize President Biden’s coronavirus response, including his $1.9 trillion relief bill, because it’s been overwhelmingly popular with voters.

Jimmy Kimmel Live

Trump is a Hero and His Vaccine is Saving the World!

Jimmy gives a St. Patrick’s Day history lesson, continues the tradition of sharing the greatest local news story in the history of broadcast journalism, President Biden spoke to George Stephanopoulos about Vladimir Putin and interference in our elections, MyPillow Mike Lindell is on the run for fear of unnamed enemies, Donald Trump had a 21 minute long chat with Maria Bartiromo about the COVID vaccine, his imaginary wall, Meghan Markle, and we have a new edition of “This Week in COVID History.”

The Late Late Show with James Corden

Anti-Asian Hate Crimes Must Be Addressed

In the wake of a series of shootings that claimed the lives of 8 people in the Atlanta area, including 6 women of Asian descent, James Corden looks at the alarming rise in violence targeting the Asian community, and how hate speech and action are linked. And it’s well past time we all address the hate that is at the center of these crimes.

Ohhhh You Bet Putin’s Gonna Pay – You’ll See!

James Corden recaps the headlines, including President Joe Biden vowing to make Russian President Vladimir Putin pay a price for again interfering in an American election – and maybe some day we’ll see what the price is. And James wonders what life would be like with an arm made of chocolate before pitching a new chia seeds business idea and diving into some of the porn names of the Late Late Show staff.

NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament 2021: Play Ins Day 1

It’s been two years since the NCAA held its Basketball Tournament and ek hornbeck is no longer with us to work his html magic for posts to keep up with all the games, men’s and women’s. It is now left to me and I hate html, plus I still have a full time job. The Men’s and Women’s Brackets are out. The Women’s games begin Sunday.

Today are the Play Ins. It used to take two days for these games but due to the pandemic, the games have been scheduled for today. The first Round of 64 begins Friday at 12 PM ET and Saturday’s second round also starts at noon. I still haven’t figured out how to deal with al those games. ek hornbeck was a genius at this but he left me a road map. Enjoy some March Madness!

 

Time Network Seed School Record Seed School Record Region
5:40 pm truTV 16 Texas Southern 22 – 12 16 MSM 20 – 13 West
6:27 pm TBS 11 Drake 26 – 5 11 Wichita St. 23 – 9 East

Enjoy some March Madness!

Time Network Seed School Record Seed School Record Region
8:40 pm truTV 16 App St. 22 – 12 16 Norfolk St. 20 – 13 West
9:57 pm TBS 11 UCLA 26 – 5 11 Michigan St. 23 – 9 East

 

Pondering the Pundits

Pondering the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news media and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Pondering the Pundits”.

Follow us on Twitter @StarsHollowGzt

Eugene Robinson: Remember these words whenever anyone tells you policing is colorblind

Capt. Jay Baker’s thoughtless news conference undermined trust in law enforcement.

“He was pretty much fed up and kind of at the end of his rope, and yesterday was a really bad day for him, and this is what he did.” Remember those words from a Georgia police official whenever anyone tries to tell you that policing in this country is colorblind. And if you doubt that those words matter, remember who law enforcement officials are supposed to serve and protect.

The “he” in question is Robert Aaron Long, a 21-year-old White man, and authorities say that “what he did” on Tuesday was to kill eight victims — including six Asian women — in three Atlanta-area spas. The “really bad day” account of the alleged rampage was how Capt. Jay Baker, the spokesman for the Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office, summarized investigators’ description of their early interviews with Long.

Like Long, Baker is a White man. But you probably guessed that.

Journalists subsequently discovered a post on Baker’s Facebook page with photos of a T-shirt describing covid-19 as an “IMPORTED VIRUS FROM CHY-NA,” the kind of language many experts blame for a sharp increase in hate crimes against Asian Americans.

For all I know, in terms of the performance of his duties, Baker may be a decent cop. But take that post, and add it to what Baker said about Long and the way he said it, and the question is obvious: Whose side is he on? And how are the Asian and Asian American victims and families Baker is supposed to protect supposed to trust him?

Bob Bauer: How to Counter the Republican Assault on Voting Rights

Congress should consider a targeted federal law to slow the march of restrictive state laws.

Republican-dominated state legislatures around the country have responded to the cynical calls from Donald Trump for “election reform” with an array of proposals to restrict voting rights. They include limiting early-voting opportunities, constraining access to vote-by-mail and imposing more voter identification and other requirements to protect against what Mr. Trump falsely claimed to be “a level of dishonesty” that “is not to be believed.”

In Washington, congressional Democrats have rallied around H.R. 1, which has already passed in the House and would establish specific voting rules that states would be required to follow for federal elections, empowered by Congress’s clear constitutional authority to “make or alter” state regulations governing the “Times, Places and manner” of holding such elections.

But as this legislation is pending, the Republican state legislative movement to burden the exercise of voting rights proceeds apace. Iowa has already done so, Georgia is poised to act shortly, and others may follow suit.

Congress should consider a targeted federal law to counter this march of these draconian state laws. And it could be designed in such a way that some Republicans would support it — or find it uncomfortable to explain why they wouldn’t.

Gail Collins: When the Filibuster Turns Deadly

Stop talking and just pass the gun bills.

You may have heard that the House just passed a couple of very, very moderate gun safety bills. They now go to the Senate, where Republicans are hoping to let them molder forever in a closet somewhere.

But hey, maybe not. The mood in Washington is different these days. Spring is in the air! A $1.9 trillion relief program is on the books! If the Senate Democrats overcome a filibuster to tighten our gun laws — even the tiniest bit — we can tell ourselves that nothing is impossible. [..]

The measures now go to the Senate, where the Democratic majority leader, Chuck Schumer, says they will absolutely not slide off into a legislative bog, never coming to a vote, or even a debate. This would be the old theory of parliamentary progress, beloved by now-minority leader Mitch McConnell.

“Put it on the floor. We’re going to see where people stand,” said Schumer, who believes that the 50 Democrats will all support the measures. But then McConnell or one of his minions will undoubtedly start a filibuster, in which the poor bills will swing haplessly in the wind forever unless supporters can summon 60 votes.

We have two very separate questions here, people. One is, what about the gun control bills? The other is, what’s with the filibuster? Is that all the Republicans know how to do?

Amanda Marcotte: Sarah Everard and the Atlanta spa shootings show how victim blaming continues even after #MeToo

The reaction to misogynist murders in Atlanta and London shows how women are still being blamed for male violence

“Yesterday was a really bad day for him, and this is what he did.” [..]

After Baker’s “bad day” comments during Wednesday’s press conference, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms pushed back, saying, “We are not about to get into victim blaming, victim shaming, here” and noting that the spas that were targeted “are legally operating businesses that have not been on” the radar of law enforcement.

It’s a sticky problem because it shouldn’t matter if the victims of misogynist violence are sex workers or not. Even asking the question is a form of victim blaming, as it focuses attention on the victims and away from the actual cause of the violence, which is misogyny. The notion that women can even meaningfully decipher a set of rules and expectations to follow that will keep them safe is not only unfair, it’s a lie. Long appears to have lashed out at spa workers and was apparently considering moving onto workers at a porn shop, blaming them for supposedly being too available to his sexual desires. But recent “incel” murderers, such as Elliot Rodgers or Alek Minassian, blamed women for not being sexually available enough — a complaint that all too many right-wing pundits, like Ross Douthat of the New York Times or sexism guru Jordan Peterson, were happy to amplify. Women are told to stay at home to avoid violence, but, as philosopher Kate Manne reminded us in the Atlantic, the vast majority of violence women experience at male hands is from domestic partners or family members.

You can be sexually available or closed off, go out at night or stay in. It doesn’t matter. Male violence is everywhere. It is not caused by women being a “temptation.” It’s caused by men who want to dominate and control women. Unfortunately, as Baker’s ugly press conference Tuesday showed, the police all too often share a worldview with the men who are violent towards women. Baker came off as a person who saw the world from Long’s point of view, where spa workers are a “temptation” instead of women just trying to make a living, where sexual objectification of Asian women is somehow “not racist”, and where women are blamed for men developing distorted and violent sexual urges. Men still control our society and men don’t want to take responsibility for male violence. Until at least one part of that equation changes significantly, the scourge of misogynist violence is unlikely to go anywhere.

Aaron Tang: A Supreme Court case could devastate unions’ ability to organize. And that’s just the start.

Aaron Tang is a professor at the University of California, Davis School of Law. He was a law clerk to Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

On March 22, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in a seemingly minor labor-law dispute with potentially sweeping ramifications. Although the case itself concerns a mundane California agricultural regulation, a decision could threaten fundamental laws governing organized labor, child safety, nursing-home inspections — and even laws forbidding stores and restaurants from discriminating.

The case, Cedar Point Nursery v. Hassid, involves a decades-old California regulation that grants union organizers temporary access to an agricultural employer’s property — during non-working hours — to communicate with workers about their right to organize.

A pair of California fruit producers are challenging this access in the Supreme Court, contending that it amounts to an uncompensated “taking” of their property, forbidden under the Fifth Amendment. But California is not taking their property at all. Unlike the paradigmatic situation where government appropriates private property for its own use, California’s regulation merely grants union organizers a narrow license to meet with workers — without interrupting the employer’s operations.

The fruit producers are thus left to make a different — and far more sweeping — argument. They assert that the access regulation is a taking because it prevents them from excluding people that they just don’t like. And this “right to exclude unwanted persons,” they contend, is “so universally held to be a fundamental element of the property right that it cannot be infringed without compensation.” If the Supreme Court agrees, the upshot would be staggering.

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