Wednesday, December 21, 2022

End of the Year Onion

“Choose your leaders with wisdom and forethought. To be led by a coward is to be controlled by all that the coward fears.” Octavia Butler


I haven’t written that frequently here as I have in years past. I think I’m tired of talking to myself, tired of my own preoccupations and fears, and if I’m tired, why would any person stumbling upon Shouts from the Balcony on the Internet want to read what I’ve written, about any subject under the sun? 


Who am I? Not a simple question because most of us are like onions, which is why the onion is a useful metaphor for pondering the complexity of most people. Ironically, in my current occupation as a part-time member of the Housekeeping team at Whole Foods Market, onions, and more precisely, onion skins, are a nuisance, which can be found all over the store. Not the messiest vegetable, but certainly the best traveled. 


There’s a difference between having something to say, something beyond the ordinary, and just being a wanker with some technical skill, shouting into the void, hardly different from a street corner preacher haranguing a congregation of broken bottles, orange rinds, cigarette butts and birdshit stains. 


That’s why I gave myself a limit of 1,000 posts or 20 years, whichever comes first, and then I must stop this nonsense. This blog is like a diary. I suppose you can say it’s one of my onion skins, but there is more to me than what I’ve represented in these postings. I tend to ruminate about things that are more remote from my day to day experience, rather than describe what I had for breakfast, how I take my coffee, or what my wife and I argue about. I wander, mostly in the political and historical realm, with some sports mixed in from time to time. I used to write some about baseball, the New York Yankees, who I followed closely for almost a decade, but I completely lost interest in baseball as the Yanks phenomenal core players (Derek Jeter, Jorge Posada, Mariano Rivera, etc) aged out of the game, and then I got hooked on football, or soccer as some call it. What captivated me was the World Cup of 2010, played in South Africa. Something between the game and my brain clicked, and I was hooked and remain so. I’m by no means a historical or statistical encyclopedia, but I find the information I need, and I watch matches every week, Chelsea Football Club of England’s Premier League. I also watch Serie A, the Italian top flight, and loosely follow a number of clubs -- Juventas, Napoli, Roma, and lately, Lazio, AC and Inter Milan. I follow the Champions League. I spend a lot of time now on football because it fascinates me. That you can gather these athletes from all over the world, and see what they collectively bring to this very difficult, technical, and physically demanding game is to me supreme in the world of sports. I don’t watch anything else. American football and basketball don’t interest me, though when I was between the ages of eight and fourteen, I liked basketball, followed the Lakers and Celtics in the Bill Russell-Jerry West era, and was a decent ball handler and passer, but I was always too small. In the modern game, the players seem too large and the court too small, and there are simply too many stops and starts, time-outs, commercials for beer and cars and travel and phone service. 


I read a lot and write reviews for the California Review of Books for which I am paid nothing. I like history, philosophy, politics, novels, and memoirs of literary figures. I read periodicals, The Nation, Mother Jones, and the New York Review of Books; the podcast I listen to most regularly is Background Briefing. 


As I said, this is boring shit. There’s no sex, mayhem, murder, or tragedy, very little humor, more than enough snark, some good use of quotations from people I admire. I was very active in a labor union when I worked in public service for the school district. When I joined the management ranks I became a cog in a bureaucracy; though I was often bored and restless and felt the work I did was meaningless, I like the idea of public service and believe in a large public sector. The maintenance and care of public or common goods is tricky and difficult, but worthwhile, I believe. I like public libraries and parks, museums, schools, hospitals, smooth roads and clean water, and baseline services for the needy. 


In 1977 I enlisted in the Air Force and spent five years in Japan. Seems like it all happened to someone else. What strikes me all these years later was how ignorant I was of American history. I read a lot, but I was pretty dumb and swallowed most American mythology, which is why I voted for Ronald Reagan in 1980. I was only four when JFK was assassinated, but remember looking at black and white photographs from that day, and watching the Watts Riots on television, understanding none of the context, being too young, but I realize I got the standard indoctrination about Black people; meaning, primarily, that they are different and scary, prone to violence and criminality. It wasn’t always overt in the household or neighborhood I grew up in, but casual racial bigotry was always present. We learn a lot through absorption, proximity, and then we have to unlearn through direct experience or by travel, reading and study. 


I have come to the conclusion that, by and large, white Americans love Black culture but hate Black people. 


I got married for the second time in 1992 (still married!) and earned my BA in 1995. It took seven years, but I wanted to be the first person in my working-class family to graduate college. I consider myself a fairly typical liberal arts major. 


I like different kinds of music, but again, I’m not the type who can name members of a band or knows the lyrics to every song. Lately I’ve been listening to Curtis Mayfield, John Coltrane and Ludovico Einaudi. 


I lean heavily toward atheism, drink wine, beer, whisky, gin (not at the same time) and smoke pot from time to time, but never on the days I work. I worry about climate change and this country’s never-ending nightmare of gun violence. I’m demonstrative with my children and laugh a lot with my wife. My physical health is very good for a man of 63, but I now understand how performing a routine repetitive job, over the course of many years, can be disabling. 


I like to think that over the course of my life I’ve done more good deeds than bad ones. 


Monday, December 19, 2022

Argentina Wins the World Cup

 “This World Cup arrived courtesy of Western commercial capital and FIFA. The blood stains their hands as well.” Jules Boykoff and Dave Zirin, The Nation 


Super Bowl games and heavyweight title fights don’t always live up to their hype. Not so the 2022 World Cup Final between Argentina and France. The last match of a tournament that saw upsets in the group stages, late goals, penalty shootouts, Croatia knocking Brazil out, and Morocco making an improbable run to the Semi Finals, delivered, and then some. 


It was the best this beautiful, worldwide sport has to offer. The devotion and passion of fans along with the grit and skill of the players. The drama. The twists and turns and heart-stopping suspense, wild swings of emotion, from joy to despair in a matter of seconds. No other sport comes close. It’s what sets football apart.


For 75 minutes, Argentina completely outplayed France, dominating  the midfield, winning almost every duel, pouncing on every loose ball, and defending with an intensity that left France struggling to cope. It was a clinic of tactics and execution. A penalty from Lionel Messi and a stunning team goal on a counter-attack saw Argentina with what looked like a comfortable two goal advantage with fifteen minutes to play.


What happened thereafter will go down in World Cup history. After Kylian Mbappe converted a penalty everything changed for France. The players’ body language was revived as if all of them had received an injection of adrenalin. Within 90 seconds, Mbappe struck again with a bit of incredible individual skill and the match was suddenly tied at two goals apiece. Now it was Argentina’s turn to look dazed. This was a scenario they had seen in the Quarterfinals against the Netherlands, when a comfortable two goal lead vanished in ten minutes; that time Argentina escaped, winning a penalty shootout, but this was the Final against the defending champions. 


Near the end of the first period of extra time, Lionel Messi scored, and it looked like it might be enough to pull Argentina over the line for the first time since 1986. But in the second period Mbappe converted another penalty, giving him a hat trick and pulling France level. 3-3. 


Penalty shootouts are nerve wracking, gut wrenching affairs, full of psychology and mind games, and sometimes even the best penalty takers falter. Look what happened to Harry Kane when England and France tangled in the Quarterfinals. I thought Argentina would have an advantage because France’s goalkeeper, Hugo Lloris, isn’t known as a great penalty stopper, unlike Argentina’s keeper, Emiliano Martinez. Sure enough, France came out on the losing end, 4-2.


France gave everything. Making it to the final of the World Cup two tournaments in a row is a feat of which the French can, and should, be proud. 


But it’s impossible not to feel happy for Argentina and Lionel Messi. The country has faced tough economic times the past several years. For Messi, bringing the World Cup trophy home completes his set of football achievements. The diminutive magician has won everything, individually, and for club and country. As far as I’m concerned, Messi is the greatest player of the modern era. 


This World Cup was phenomenal, but while I loved the matches I can’t forget the enormous human cost; thousands of workers died building the facilities and infrastructure. According to Jules Boykoff and Dave Zirin, the financial cost landed in the neighborhood of $220 billion. Writing in the Nation Boykoff and Zirin observe:


“So why did Qatar do it? This World Cup shows that authoritarian, unchecked power can launder surplus capital—the mega-event reportedly cost some $220 billion—into reputational capital. “


One of the commercials on the Fox network boasted about Qatar’s progress and modernization, and its integration with Western institutions, including the US military. That seems a dubious endorsement. Suffice to say that a tremendous amount of money was spent, made, and splashed around. Now that Qatar has all these beautiful facilities, what will it do with them? 



Friday, December 16, 2022

Heavyweights

It comes down to two of world football’s heavyweights, France and Argentina. When the World Cup tournament started I had three teams, basically my sentimental favorites. France, because my favorite player is N’golo Kante; Croatia, because I love watching Luka Modric command the midfield; and Belgium, because of Eden Hazard and Kevin DeBruyne, both of whom played for Chelsea at one time. Belgium looked old and tired and didn’t make it out of the group stage; Croatia were defeated by Lionel Messi and Argentina, though I think Croatia deserves lots of credit and praise for making it to the Final in 2018 and the Semi-Final in 2022. How does tiny Croatia consistently produce so many footballers of the highest quality, who play in all of Europe’s top divisions? The country is a football factory. 


France is missing three key players, Karim Benzema, N’golo Kante, and Paul Pogba. Benzema is a big absence because he’s a big game player and always a scoring threat, Kante a midfield giant when healthy and in form, and Pogba is an athletic midfielder who can join in the attack and provides good passing range. Despite missing these players, the French have reached the Final for the second World Cup in a row. It’s still a very good team, an experienced team. If Adrien Rabiot is fit I will feel good about France’s chance to repeat. 


Argentina has Messi. What more needs to be said? Messi is the ultimate X-factor and this tournament has an air of destiny about it. I can’t explain it other than to say it’s like Lionel Messi is going to get his ultimate prize, no matter what France does. Messi is likely to produce a moment of sheer genius. He’s hard to contain for 90 minutes, and he only needs one opportunity to beat you. 


Messi also has quality players around him, and Argentia are a cohesive unit. They have displayed more solidity than flair, overall, which is how World Cups are won. It’s hard to bet against Argentina. In football, time is an implacable enemy, and this Final is surely Messi’s last chance to add a World Cup to his legendary list of accomplishments. In these circumstances, I give the little magician the edge against a French defense that has seemed vulnerable at times. 


No disrespect to Kylian Mbappe. Like Messi he could easily come up with one moment of magic.


Which side will control the midfield? Which side will take its chances? The French have been very clinical in front of goal. Can they do so again? 


I can’t wait until Sunday. It’s going to be a joy. 


Friday, December 09, 2022

Wandering Mind

I have a couple of days off from the Market and my body needs it. As the calendar year comes to an end I find myself bothered by nagging injuries; torn rotator cuff muscle in my left shoulder; pain in my right thumb; minor nerve damage in the balls of both feet; and there’s something creaky about my neck, a stabbing pain if I turn my head at a certain angle. This neck pain really bothers me when I ride my bike. I walked 27 miles over my last two shifts at the Market. This afternoon I had a training session in my home gym, and then took a fast walk up the hill to Franceschi Park. The recent rainfall was a boon, and the ground beneath the trees is still damp. The view was magnificent, visibility to the Channel Islands, clear blue sky, and a slight breeze moving through the Eucalyptus trees. 

As I walk my mind skips from topic to topic: rising rents and the continuing gentrification of State Street in Santa Barbara; how many more years I might be able to work at the tempo I work at now; where my wife and I will ultimately live, it can’t be our hometown. We’re on the road to being priced out as so many have been in the real estate madness and cruelty that prevails, not just in SB, but all over the country; my son and daughter will both be home for Christmas, and I’m looking forward to seeing them; my grown children are hilarious individually and brutally so together; the way MBS of Saudi Arabia toys with the Biden Administration is a clear sign of waning US influence. The US is no longer able to call all the shots. Why is the US in this unbreakable marriage with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia? Oil is part of it. American military installations and arms sales are the other. It’s an unholy alliance that has gone on for far too long. Never let anyone tell you that the military industry doesn’t get what it wants, it always does. There’s no empire without it. Maybe in their lifetimes my kids will witness the dismantling of the American empire, the rolling up and shutting down of the massive worldwide network of bases and outposts and installations, which even a fraction of the annual cost could fund health care for all, housing and food security, clean water, education and climate mitigation.

And I think about the World Cup Quarter Finals. 

Eight teams left. Croatia, Brazil, Netherlands, Argentina, Morocco, Portugal, England and France.

Brazil is a ridiculously talented and deep squad, their football is creative, expressive, and athletic. Many Brazilians play in the Premier League and in Europe’s Top Five leagues. Loads of swagger, too. Croatia is scrappy, as we saw in 2018, led by 37-year-old maestro Luka Modric (I love watching Modric control the tempo and pass the ball, he’s brilliant), but they have talented players in nearly every position. Maybe a little weak up front, but sturdy in defense and their midfield is solid with Kovacic and Brozovic. Croatia will need a massive team performance to have any chance. However, I expect Brazil to prevail by a 2-nil margin. I’m sure the Netherlands will have a tactical plan for Argentina, and I expect this one to be tight. Low score, a 1-nil to Argentina in extra time? 

Every World Cup there’s a sleeper team that surprises everyone. In 2022 that team is Morocco, the only African team to earn a berth in the quarterfinals. I like Morocco very much and admire their unity and spirit; I won’t count them out. Portugal is a team with a chance to win it all, sneaking through the backdoor like they did in the Euros in 2016. A talented team, pretty stingy, and full of creative attacking talent, Bruno Fernandes, Bernardo Silva, Joao Felix and the youngster who scored a hattrick and tallied an assist in the blowout of Switzerland. In my opinion, Portugal is a better team without Ronaldo in the starting eleven. It would be incredible if Morocco finds a way through, but I expect Portugal’s experience will make the difference. The match I am most looking forward to is England-France. In Kylian Mbappe France has the ultimate impact player, but England is solid, with attacking options of their own. For England to win, Kyle Walker must have an impactful game. This one is hard to call. I think goals will be scored, and the final score might be 3-2, either way. Curious to see how England approach the match tactically. 

Our luck is holding, everyone is healthy, we have a nice roof overhead, walls around us, a lovely bed to sleep in, running water and heat, food and drink, books on shelves. Nothing is ordinary, almost everything sacred when you get down to it. My wife is still in the process of grieving her sister who died almost a month ago. Today I spoke to my 88-year-old mother, who told me about how much fruit she eats every day, and the cherries she bought at Whole Foods. The women on my mother’s side of the family live long lives, deep into their 90’s, with all their faculties intact. Stubborn French-Canadian stock, immigrants, mill workers. My maternal grandfather never drove a car. 

Thursday, December 01, 2022

A Funny Old Game

 



“The net was the bridal veil of an irresistible girl. In front of the open goal he licked his chops. And in one fell swoop he stood naked, then bit.” Eduardo Galeano, Soccer in Sun and Shadow


I’m not writing much these days because of the World Cup. For more than a decade I’ve supported Chelsea in the Premier League, rarely missing a match, while also watching as many Italian Serie A matches as I can. Like many football fans, I found FIFA’s award of the tournament to Qatar bizarre and upsetting. First and foremost because of Qatar’s dismal human rights record, and second because of the human cost of building the infrastructure the tournament requires. One report I read claimed that nearly 6,500 workers died in the decade-long effort, most of them poor laborers from India and Nepal. Stadiums, training facilities, hotels, media centers, roads, all financed by some of the richest people in the world, but constructed by some of the poorest and most disposable. 


Holding the World Cup in November and December fouled up the schedules of all the major European soccer leagues, forcing compression of domestic and Champions League fixtures which undoubtedly led to injuries for players lacing up their boots every three days. Chelsea, for example, has been riddled with injuries and is so far having a forgettable campaign. 


Living in the US forces me to watch the tournament on FOX Sports, which means an unrelenting diet of adverts, news, fluff and jingoistic commentary about the US team, which prior to this tournament was ranked 16th in the world by FIFA. Call me jaded, but I simply don’t give a rat’s ass about the US team. Other than Christian Pulisic who for now plays his club football for Chelsea, and Weston McKennie of Juventas, I’m not that familiar with US players. But when it comes to US men’s soccer, and FOX Sports, Christian Pulisic is nearly a god, Captain America with superpowers in his boots and brain. This reputation is laughable for any Chelsea supporter who has watched Pulisic for the past four seasons. Yes, the young American has had moments -- against Liverpool and Manchester City in the Premier League -- but his highlight reel is brief. The physically slight Pulisic has often been injured, and unlike with the American national team, isn’t an automatic first name on the Chelsea team sheet. I’ve watched him get bundled off the ball by Premier League defenders, fail to convert clear chances in front of goal, and make the wrong decision in the final third more times than I care to remember. So, I’m not a big Pulisic fan; yes, he’s talented and still young, but in my estimation will never be a consistent top player in the physically demanding and very fast Premier League. I think Weston McKennie is a better overall talent, but McKennie doesn’t get the media hype. 


Making it out of the group stage isn’t a sure thing -- just ask Germany or Belgium or Mexico -- so I give the US credit for advancing to the knockout stage, although they got a gift from England in their head-to-head match when the Three Lions played flat, boring, and slow football. With all the attacking talent on its roster, the likes of Harry Kane, Marcus Rashford, Phil Foden, Raheem Sterling, and Jack Grealish, England managed only one or two shots on target. It was dismal, like watching Chelsea flail about. England, ranked number 5 by FIFA, didn’t appear to be playing to win. The usefulness of the FIFA rankings is suspect anyway because when the tournament began Belgium was ranked 2nd, behind Brazil, which is hysterical. Belgium were soundly beaten by an inspired Moroccan team, and their core players -- the so-called Golden Generation -- looked old and slow. Eden Hazard is a shadow of his former self after two injury-plagued seasons at Real Madrid. Belgium are due for a rebuilding period. 


The World Cup usually provides a twist or two, like Saudi Arabia beating Argentina and Japan topping Germany and Tunisia defeating France. Upsets are what make the tournament interesting and dramatic. Who would have picked Australia to advance to the last 16? 


I'm neutral in this World Cup, interested in watching competitive matches, but I do have a soft spot for France, Croatia, and Portugal. By the depth of its roster, and sheer talent, I think Brazil is the odds on favorite, even without Neymar, but as the saying goes, football is a funny old game. Anything can happen.