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Monday, July 16, 2018
[Donald Trump Is Always Donald Trump](
The first president without the ability to code-switch.
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[McCain: âNo Prior President Has Ever Abased Himself More Abjectly Before a Tyrantâ](
The Arizona senator leads a chorus of GOP condemnations of the presidentâs press conference with Vladimir Putin.
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[The Substandard on Blessed Prime Day 2018](
In this latest micro episode, JVL, Sonny, and Vic share their wishes and wishlist on Prime Day 2018. But is it a Merry Prime Day or Happy Prime Day?
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[An Embarrassing Spectacle in Helsinki](
The Donald Trump presidency somehow reaches a new low.
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[Climate Signals](
Do liberals care about climate change, or do they just care about caring about climate change?
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Afternoon Links
Thoughts from lunch with Commissioner Manfred. This being All-Star week and all, earlier today I took advantage of my National Press Club membership (a steal!) and attended a lunch with MLB commissioner Rob Manfred. Joe Torre was there, as was Mark Lerner of the Washington Nationals.
But you donât have to be an NPC member to watch[his Q&A session](. My question was about the no-pitch automatic walk and how that impacts pace of play, and the young experiential-focused fans. Why piss off the loyal fans to appease young fans who care more about the availability of a burger from a place (like Shake Shack) they can already get elsewhere than watching baseball? Not changing the rules to make things faster benefits baseball franchises, doesnât alienate diehard fans, and keeps Instagram influencers at the bars and burger joints. The question I asked was split into two questions that are part of a theme, and Manfredâs series of answers comes at about the 44:00 minute mark.
Some other interesting takeaways from Manfred: He talks like heâs a CEO of a technology business. Lots of talk about product, platforms, and #content. Itâs clear he knows he answers to the owners, but at about 19 minutes in, he talks about the evolution of the game (Manfred is obsessed with, and hates, the âshiftâ) and says something to the effect of that the game belongs to the owners. From where he sits, sure. But in reality, it also belongs to the ballplayers, the managers, and the fans.
My main worry about the pace of play rules is that the MLB will go down the same road as the NFL, NHL, and others in changing the rules of the game in such a way that make it far less enjoyable. Theyâre not there yet, but theyâre going down that road. I got the sense that Manfred cares a lot about[the data]( and hopefully if something isnât working or isnât popular, maybe heâll have the sense to abandon any changes to the game. At least we can hope.
Youâre either with us, or youâre with the terrorists. Al Shabbab is[banning plastic bags](. Pick a side.
These, Tom, are your causeheads. Think your workplaceâs expense process is brutal? Imagine not being able to expense any meals where a client orders meat. And that your workplace bans tasty sources of protein.[Thatâs happening at office-sharing giant WeWork](
âWeWorkâs 6,000 employees around the globe have now been told that they will no longer be able to expense meals including meat, in a move that will certainly reduce T&E expenses for the fast-growing company but that will also cause a ridiculous amount of agita for its frontline staffers and, especially, the benighted HR folks tasked with enforcing the policy. The company isnât simply turning itself into a group of restaurant cops, either: Itâs also banning meat (but not fish) from all corporate events on the grounds, handed down by co-founder Miguel McKelvey, that âavoiding meat is one of the biggest things an individual can do to reduce their personal environmental impact.ââ
(Side note: McKelvey is building himself a house on a mountaintop in Utah.) Once again, PCU[predicts the future](.
Elon Musk steps in it. After claims that the use of his submarine in the rescue of the soccer team in Thailand were⦠overstated, Elon Musk exploded on Twitter. Will his sycophants care that[he suggested]( with no evidence, that a critic of his was a âpedoâ? Doubtful. This is why billionaires shouldnât use Twitter.
âJim Swift, deputy online editor.
Please feel free to send us comments, thoughts and links to dailystandard@weeklystandard.com.
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