@JonahDispatch@stanveuger I'm not much into combat sports, but many people seem not to realize that UFC is pretty mainstream, at least as much as boxing.
@dgoold Allow me to yell at clouds for a second and point out that DH is not a position. It's a lack of a position. I was told that after a while I would like the DH game more. It has not happened.
@jpodhoretz I live near St. Louis, a city with a violent reputation. We have celebrated three major champions in recent years and nothing was destroyed. Hardly anyone was even arrested for disorder.
@nytimes@TheAthletic The only thing you need to know about the U.S. is that people are doing everything possible to get in, but the line to leave is wide open.
@10zJohnson Giving what up? The skyline? The great thing about going to a sporting event is that you close out the rest of the world. If I want to see the city center, I'll visit downtown. If I go to a game, I only care about the game. The stadium could be in a corn field.
@PeterHamby Let's stipulate that no fraud took place. Is there a reason why the count should take this long? Could they not allay some of these concerns by releasing the totals sooner?
@JonahDispatch Obama attended 15 pro sports events while in office. W attended about 20. Most were in bigger venues that had to screen far more people. Those cities figured it out somehow.
@JonahDispatch I don't like Trump at all, but Presidents do these kinds of things. The real culprit is MSG and New York more broadly for not having a better plan in place.
@MarcoFoster_ Reporting from a combat zone with your name on a byline, face on TV, and option of leaving when it gets too harry is certainly noble in some sense, but it is not "for the country" in the true sense of that phrase.
@Polymarket Do New Yorkers think everyone is dying to claim that title? I'm sure they are proud of New York. It's an amazing place. So are many other places.