@nyknicks Thank you for making my son’s day! He wrote to the organization a couple of weeks ago and received this very kind note and a box with Knicks merchandise! He’s a fan for life now!
I don’t blame anyone in the Lane Kiffin-Ole Miss mess. Everyone in college football operates in naked self interest — conferences, schools, coaches & players. Fans are the only ones left who are actually loyal to a school. And, of course, it’s the fans who make everyone rich.
@British_Airways we flew BA to the UK and @AmericanAir back to the US. Our experience on BA was fantastic from start to finish. The flight attendants were so nice. I can’t say the same for AA. The difference in service was dramatic. Only BA to and from the UK from now on!
@AmericanAir just flew home from Edinburgh on flight #0279 with my wife and two children. The flight attendants were aggressively rude. I have never experienced anything like it before. If this is the culture at @AmericanAir I hope I never have to fly with it again.
Never forget John McEnroe won four U.S. Opens and three Wimbledons by heroically overcoming the incompetence of everyone around him. An inspiration.
👉 https://t.co/bumguoqUii
I was picked to be on a jury once. It was one my life’s most important experiences and responsibilities.
There is enormous pressure on holdout jurors to capitulate to the majority. People are away from home and work, and responsibilities start to pile up. Juries and courts use that pressure in an attempt to get to an unanimous verdict.
My only advice to jurors is to stick to your personal assessment of the accused’s guilt or innocence after considering all of the facts and the input of others on the jury, but don’t capitulate and approve a verdict that you disagree with. Someday, it could be you, your father, mother, son or daughter on trial, and it may be that lone juror that is the difference between your/their independence and 25 years in jail or worse.
If you are a juror on the Daniel Penny case, stay strong with your convictions and never capitulate to a verdict you don’t believe in. It is matter of life and death.