The Ukrainian Men’s National Soccer Team defeated Scotland 3-1 and advances to play Wales with the winner going to the 2022 World Cup.
In love Scotland, but this is another powerful moment for a country that needs all the support it can get.
Craig Cheslog’s thoughts about politics, sports, and other stuff.
The Ukrainian Men’s National Soccer Team defeated Scotland 3-1 and advances to play Wales with the winner going to the 2022 World Cup.
In love Scotland, but this is another powerful moment for a country that needs all the support it can get.
David Pell makes a vital point in his NextDraft newsletter today when discussing the Uvalde, Texas, elementary school massacre:
The delayed reaction by the police is part of the exact same problem that led to the shooting in the first place: The fact that anyone can walk into a gun store and acquire a ridiculous amount of firepower. If a gun is powerful enough paralyze armored cops with fear, it’s too powerful to be sold.
Don Moynihan examines how a fake news story became a viral conservative hit in his latest Can We Still Govern? substack.
A network of partisan conservative websites pushed a story that falsely claimed that a school district was going to require teachers to adjust their grading scales to account for the ethnicity of their students.
Moynihan examines how the story spread, the organizations behind that, and some of the famous people who spread the lie without checking its veracity. As Moynihan writes:
“When you give the benefit of the doubt to partisan fake news rather than professional educators, it is hard to take the whole “I’m here to defend education” bit too seriously.”
Grant Wahl interviews the Guardian’s Nick Ames to discuss the Ukrainian Men’s National Soccer Team’s preparations for Wednesday’s World Cup playoff against Scotland.
As you can imagine, preparations have been difficult since Russia’s invasion in February. Ames has been following the Ukrainian team as they have prepared in Slovenia the past few weeks. Is soccer meaningful when one’s country is facing extermination? As Ames tells Wahl:
So it is important. And I think also it’s important to remember that what Russia is trying to do in Ukraine is erase Ukrainian culture, no more, no less, really. I think I said it in my piece from Slovenia. And I think as you and I both know, Grant, from our travel: What is an international football team, if not an expression, a representation of a culture, of a country’s hope, of a country’s ambition, of how a country expresses itself and everything around it? So I think that is all tied into what the feeling was in the camp.
If Ukraine can beat Scotland and then Wales, they will face the United States in the first game of the World Cup’s group stage in November.
I’m glad they will be able to try.
The Uvalde Elementary School Massacre is the latest example of the police lying to the public about their activities.
Aaron Rupar examines how the story the police told changed dramatically as their lies were exposed as the facts came to light. As Rupar writes:
The lesson here, as my friend Alexandria Neason wrote better than I can, is that police departments lie, primarily to make themselves look like necessary servants of an endangered public. Allowing them to self-justify off the record is, at this point, inexcusable.
Rupar explores how what the police said about the imaginary school resource officer, the mythical Border Patrol agent, the nonexistent body armor, and the children who weren’t dead yet were lies designed to make law enforcement appear to be the heroes.
After all of these incidents, law enforcement has lost the benefit of the doubt.