Iranian threats continue
***Update:*** This story came out yesterday but Blogger/Google decided they wanted to have some tech problems right as I tried to post. So it's old news but still worth checking out.
If there is anyone out there who is still not convinced Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is a nut case? Earlier today,
Ahmadinejad continued his aggressive hate speech toward Israel at a conference questioning the Holocaust.
TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Tuesday told delegates at an international conference questioning the Holocaust that Israel's days were numbered.
Ahmadinejad, who has sparked international outcry by referring to the killing of six million Jews in World War Two as a "myth" and calling for Israel to be "wiped off the map," launched another verbal attack on the Jewish state.
"Thanks to people's wishes and God's will the trend for the existence of the Zionist regime is downwards and this is what God has promised and what all nations want," he said.
"Just as the Soviet Union was wiped out and today does not exist, so will the Zionist regime soon be wiped out," he added. |
My question is, how long will it be before
retiring UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan blames this one on America as well? And when will someone in the international community finally realize the threat this guy poses?
And Democratic leaders want us to "reach out" to Iran?
Guess their all hoping if they play nice, Mr. Ahmadinejad will spare them his Islamic-Jihad wrath.
Labels: Iran, Israel, War on Terror
College football gets political

If you're a regular reader, you know this little blog is all about politics. So it only comes natural for me to rant about the political fallout of the current college football controversy.
Not sure what I'm talking about? Just turn on ESPN or any other sports talk show and listen to all the high and mighty "experts" talk about the BCS (Bowl Championship Series) national championship game. Here's the skinny...Ohio State will play Florida for the division 1 national title on January 8th in Glendale, Arizona. But how we got to those two teams is the source of controversy. Then again, what about the BCS isn't controversial.
The BCS is the antiquated formula the NCAA uses to decide who is No. 1 and No. 2 at the end of the college football season. This formula uses computers and voters to try and figure this mess out. It seems having a playoff like every single other college sport is just too complicated for the NCAA. So they rely on the calculations of plastic box, coaches who are too busy to watch any game but their own and writers who only cover their local teams and have never played a snap in their sports crazed lives.
And with such a convoluted system comes the margin for error…which seems to be more about keeping the error small than simply getting things right.
So we have two football teams that will battle in the desert for a championship. And if you ask me, I hate to say it, but I think the BCS got it right. But there is more to this story. Today the headlines are all reading the same about how Michigan got screwed.
ESPN.com columnist
Gene Wojciechowski says... "If you're Michigan coach Lloyd Carr, how do you explain to your players that they won't be in the BCS Championship Game?"
ESPN.com columnist
Pat Forde says... "If we've learned one lesson from recent BCS history, it's this: Whiners win. And that will only breed more whining in the future."
Tribune columnist
Dave Del Grande says... "The BCS made its biggest possible mistake this season: It might have invited the third-best team to the grand finale rather than No.2."
You see, Michigan was ranked No. 2 when they played Ohio State in their regular season finale. The Wolverines lost to OSU by 3 points, but didn't drop in the polls. So their season ended at 11-1 while holding their No. 2 spot. But other teams continued to play. UCS beat Cal and Notre Dame, which vaulted them into the No. 2 spot a week later. USC was poised to play for the title until they lost to UCLA last weekend. Michigan would be back at No. 2 right? Well, the Florida Gators were sitting there at No. 4 and proceeded to beat FSU and Arkansas in the SEC title game. So in the final week of voting, Florida jumps past Michigan to No. 2 with an SEC title and a 12-1 season.
But you'd think the Duke Blue Devils had just gotten the invite to play for the title by all the carping by sports writers.
Forgive me for asking...but didn't Michigan already lose to Ohio State? What about that result says they deserve a chance to play Ohio State for the national title? And what about that result does it tell Ohio State? You beat the No. 2 team in your conference in the season finale, but we think you have to do it again to win the title.
And so the politicking is running amuck in the world of NCAA football as Michigan supporters cry foul and Florida fans feel justified. And rightfully so!
Like I said, you have two teams with one loss asking for a chance to play for a title. One can't win their conference. The other does and they win it with the tougher schedule. You tell me who is more deserving.
(For the record, I
picked Ohio State to play for the title at the begining of the season.)