@PhilWMagness This is the same paper that printed the 1619 project and forever hamstrung history education in the western world.
Pseudo academic ‘rigor’ justification for planting and foisting really divisive opinions on our fractured society.
Stoke the left. All it is
It seems the fascist principal ruined the day. The school board should step in and open it to everyone.
Or all the parents should protest. Verbally Attack the security preventing them from entering the graduation site. Spit and curse at them. Tell them they are Nazis for breaking up their families on such a great day. Get the names of the security staff and dox them!
Stand outside the homes of the guards and principal. Honk horns. Scream obscenities all night. Block the streets so the guards can’t get past. Intervene physically the guards when they try to remove a parent attempting to attend.
You know: maybe antifa will show up and help stop (or is it stomp) this fascist principal and her storm troopers.
@doc_blume Makes one wonder how the USGA will approach Shinnecock for the open.
In 1995 (Pavin wins). But the greens were almost burned out and players could not hold a number of them prompting lots of anger.
In 2018 Phil swatted a still moving missed putt! Again green speeds were wild.
Thank you for a reasonable response, sometimes rare when we have dialogues on X. I don’t necessarily disagree with you, but the people who were put out of work as far as my understanding goes (and it’s a long time since I was in college -I’m way too old to have a perfect recall) was that it was the skilled classes of artisans-such as Weaver’s, woodworkers, individuals who ran manually operated looms, who were adversely affected. I thought, especially in the Midlands and northern parts of England, the use of the steam engine created thousands of jobs for otherwise poor working class people, including children (unfortunately).
So I think there was possibly a net increase in the labor force.
The other downside: how much did the change to the steam driven economy ultimately led to the philosophy of Marx! Or the increased need for coal?
Anyway. Thx for the back and forth.
Perhaps more a ‘ritual’ type thing. Many athletes’s have quirky behaviors aka process that might help maintain concentration. Or maybe it is protection of his grooves. No one complains about drivers, other metal fairway woods or hybrids much less putters having covers.
As for using two gloves; just having googled this for full disclosure, a glove adds anywhere from one to two tape wraps to the grip size. Maybe he’s using these instead of wrapping his grips more. One could conceive this gives him a more consistent grip size, and having his grips having to be wrapped throughout the whole irons, woods and wedges. I don’t know just speculating.
Or maybe this is just like the way he wants to play. If I were him, I wouldn’t change a thing going forward.
@psybabble_999@yunta_tsai Please review the history of the Luddites. The IT and steam engine displaced the artisan class but created multiple scale increase in labor related jobs and significantly reduced costs of multiple goods for local and export consumption.
That is a valid point but only to a degree.
according to Becker’s hospital review over 80 percent of physicians are now employed by profit/not for profit hospitals, private multi specialty practices with private equity ownership or community health centers. (5/26).
The severe leveraging up to maximize revenue is done on a scale any smaller private practice i don’t think would have the risk tolerance to try.
Bill what type of Democrat? An anti meritocracy, pro equity of outcome, defund the police, ‘Billonaires should not exist, climate change
Is the greatest threat to the human race so all must adhere to 0 carbon, gender is part of the patriarchy, men can have babies, Israel should no longer exist, the 1619 project is our true history…or some other kind?