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Have you priced any of that stuff? I figure supply and demand should increase the price. Probably a lot as time goes on.I have a faded old wahoo hat I wear almost every day. It was my father's. I still call them the Indians. I am part native American. I see no problem with such names.
I will never sell my father's hat. So no I have not priced it. But ya as time goes there will be less and less of them. Value has to go up.Have you priced any of that stuff? I figure supply and demand should increase the price. Probably a lot as time goes on.
We are boycotting the WOKE Cleveland Indians. I mean Guardians. We won't watch them or even read news about them until they do what Trump asked and change the name back.
Back before Quincy Wheeler gave me my big break writing for Covering the Corner, I was an unpublished journalist on Medium, uncovering corruption. Iâve exposed a corrupt shaman in the Amazon, possible antitrust violations at Medium itself, and the abuse of Latino workers at Selina Hostel. Now that the regular season has concluded, Iâm setting my sights on another corrupt establishment: the national baseball media. Make no mistake â the national media doesnât cover baseball; it markets it. They churn out clickbait, superficial articles that pander to big-market money while willfully ignoring the real stories taking place. This season has been no different, because today, the Cleveland Guardians led by should-be MVP candidate Jose Ramirez completed the unthinkable â clawing back from a 15.5-game deficit to capture the Central Division title â all while the national media looked the other way.
The corrupt media bought long ago by colluding elites, wrote them off from the very start of the season. ESPN ranked them as the 24th most watchable team. Pundits said they would be lucky to finish a .500 team. Toward the middle of the season, people were already calling for Stephen Vogt to be fired. And just a few weeks ago, the odds were stacked against them to even make the post season. Less than 1% chance of making the playoffs, according to every so-called expert and âanalyticalâ model. And yet, here they are after doing something historic: Division Champions.
This isnât a story of luck or easy wins. Every game was a battle, every comeback a declaration, and the entire run was pure cinema. Down by double digits, they clawed, scraped, and outworked every opponent. The Guardians didnât just defy the odds â they rewrote them. And yet, as this historic surge unfolded, the national media yawned. The drama, the stakes, the heroics â invisible to the people who claim to cover baseball for a living.
Instead, they focused on the MVP race between Cal Raleigh and Aaron Judge while completely ignoring the man leading the charge for the Guardians â Jose Ramirez. RamĂrez could have cashed in with any of the big market teams â a New York, Los Angeles, or Chicago team would have crowned him as their face of the franchise, and the headlines would have been splashed across ESPN. That would have placed Ramirezâs constant heroics in âTop Playsâ every week and would have given him the national attention that he truly deserves. Instead, he took a hometown discount to stay in Cleveland, to fight for this team, to fight for this city â spurning the national media and big-market money that demands compliance to its fiscally-focused narrative that panders to to market size over merit.
What the Guardians have accomplished this season is historic â no team in MLB history has ever climbed back from a 15.5-game deficit to win their division. How could the media let the story of the season go unnoticed. While the national media drooled over home runs hit by Cal Raleigh and Aaron Judge, Jose RamĂrez quietly led a team to do something no other team has done. How can he not be in the MVP conversation alongside those superstars â especially considering he doesnât have the powerhouse roster that Raleigh and Judge enjoy?
From the very first day of the season, the Guardians were written off by the media. And yet this team, led by RamĂrez, channeled the spirit of the Little Engine That Could, whispering âI think I canâ with every game, every pitch, every swingâŚuntil the did.
Now they head into the postseason, set to host the Tigers. And while the corrupt media will likely continue to ignore them, focusing instead on the Yankees and Dodgers, the Guardians wonât stop at merely winning the division. Theyâve silenced doubters, rewritten narratives, and shown the world that no deficit is too large, no odds too long. This team isnât just playoff-bound â theyâre division championships, and theyâre just getting started. If anyone can do the unthinkable, itâs themâand this time, the media wonât be able to ignore them.
We are boycotting the WOKE Cleveland Indians. I mean Guardians. We won't watch them or even read news about them until they do what Trump asked and change the name back.