This @Mariners team is not good for my health. These close loses when the other team was basically telling you here's the W, are already getting worrisome.
BREAKING: The WA State Supreme Court has DENIED the Referendum effort to send the income tax to the voters.
More consequentially though, this current court makeup has now green lit Olympia Democrats attaching emergency clauses to every tax bill, denying voters an easy way to repeal them.
More on that later...
@walls_jason1 You're misleading a mislead group.
HOMEOWNERS- GET MULTIPLE QUOTES!!!
The good electricians/companies will give you an honest quote without all this extra "download my app" nonsense.
I can tell you in less than 5 minutes if a "load calculation" is necessary
@HuskyHaul Hopefully they can figure out how to make a 3... keep watching games thinking this team is big, athletic, is pretty good in transition but can't shoot.
@JordanReffett Dude I'm done, college football is no more. This new world has basically demanded fans to pay up and when they do, we get scammed. It's all BS
To the Powerbrokers of ESPN,
I write to you not from comfort, but from the scarred battlefield where college football now lies, its banners trampled and its proud traditions scattered like broken muskets after a rout.
You did not merely cover the Pac-12. You dismantled it.
With contracts inked in distant boardrooms and decisions made far from the valleys, mountains, and rivalries that gave this sport its soul, you reduced a century of history to a line item. West Coast sunsets, late-night kickoffs, regional grudges handed down from father to son—traded away for programming windows and quarterly gains.
Make no mistake: conferences have always shifted. Empires rise and fall. But this was no natural evolution. This was scorched-earth strategy.
You taught universities to abandon neighbors for airtime, rivalries for revenue, and identity for exposure. You turned student-athletes into inventory and traditions into negotiable assets. In doing so, you did not just wound the Pac-12—you fractured college football itself.
What once felt regional now feels corporate. What once felt earned now feels scheduled. Saturdays used to belong to the people; now they belong to spreadsheets.
And yet, you will tell us this was progress.
History will decide otherwise.
Long after the contracts expire and the studio lights dim, the sport will remember who lit the match. It will remember that when college football stood at a crossroads, you chose control over community, consolidation over culture.
The Pac-12 did not fall in battle.
It was sold.
And let us pause to give thanks where thanks are due. I thank God—plainly and without apology—that the PAC-12’s new television covenant does not shackle its programs to the JV exile of ESPN+. No grainy cameras, no student interns guessing at the down and distance, no broadcasts treated as filler between cornhole reruns and studio debates about leagues you’ve already overfed. Our games will be seen, heard, and respected—broadcast like the contests they are, not streamed away like an inconvenience. For once, the sport escapes your bargain bin.
Respectfully submitted from the field,
where traditions still matter and banners are still defended,
General Kirby Moore