Thursday, May 23, 2024

In a shock to no one

The four members of the Raleigh City Council who voted for the ceasefire resolution were the four I endorsed while the other four voted to kill it. Of course, the latter four were the same ones endorsing Ukrainian Nazis and lighting up Downtown Raleigh yellow and light blue just a couple of years ago as part of the previous City Council. 

Raleigh--just like Greensboro--endorses genocide.

Downtown Greensboro news

Triad City Beat | EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK: The Assembly, and collaboration (triad-city-beat.com)

Let's hope that this new collaborative effort isn't going to suck up to the political clans that run the city and have gentrified downtown. Hope to REAL journalism since the daily is a zombie publication and the others have pretty much given up any type of investigative work.

Triad City Beat | Greensboro’s Mayor Nancy Vaughan will not seek re-election in 2025 (triad-city-beat.com)

First up, good riddance. Second, now is the time the groups that I previously mentioned to put up or shut up. Either they come together to start fielding a real antiestablishment slate, or they'll forever give up that shot as the city is forever stuck in a loop between establishment hacks and right wing nutjobs because 2029 will be too late.

Wednesday, May 22, 2024

NC Rants

  • Greensboro's lack of a food hall is a new low for an area already known for being a national laggard and the fact that ROAR was converted to an event space four months ago shows that the Triad is moving in the opposite direction as the number of food halls is once again reduced to one
  • What's happening to Triad Stage speaks for itself--namely, that Greensboro is taking yet another step to conceding the arts to Winston-Salem
  • Meanwhile, a couple of hours to the east, the Raleigh City Council is making even more bonehead decisions as it decided table a proposal to add three seats while also introducing staggered four-year terms in 2026 without even putting it on the ballot like Greensboro did in 2015
  • Speaking of Raleigh, the previous City Council reduced the hours of hot dog carts from 3 am to 1:15 am while doing nothing to curtail gentrification. In the two decades since I left the city, Downtown Raleigh has gone from a ghost town when I graduated to a place that has become unaffordable
  • The election to replace Mary-Ann Baldwin is not looking too promising

Trouble in the Ballpark District

At the beginning of the year, the City of High Point decided to split ways with Elliott Sidewalk Communities. Out of the four parcels, only Parcel C was developed (into the food hall). Parcel A is still a parking lot while the other two never got developed.

I will not blame this on the city as yet another example of it being resistant to change. This is all on Elliott Sidewalk. They had six years and only developed 25 percent of the land given to them so if the Ballpark District ends up undercooked, it's all ESC's fault.



Source 1

Source 2


Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Cardiac Pack 2.0

I'm forever grateful that the Wolfpack men's basketball team turned it around when it was almost a certainty that a coaching change was inevitable prior to the start of the ACC Tournament in D.C. While I treated the Final Four run as an extremely pleasant surprise, I'm hoping that this is the beginning of a new era of success.

A pattern of the team's three ACC Championships in the multi-bid era (from 1975 on):

Every postseason game that the Original Cardiac Pack played in except the Sweet 16 against 10-seed Utah was a nail-biter.

The previous team to win an ACC title won every game in that tournament by single digits.

Most of this year's ACCT games as well as a couple of NCAAT games were close too.



Meanwhile, notice a glaring difference between the '24 team against the other two championship teams:


Can anyone say unprecedented?

No one gave this year's team much love whereas the '83 team was hampered by Dereck Whittenburg's injury before Cardiac Pack 1.0 went on that Cinderella run once he returned from his injury. The '87 team started the season as an NCAA Tournament caliber team before it fell off in the middle of the season and had to rally in Metro D.C. just to get into the Big Dance.

Raleigh elections recap

Raleigh voters are completely fine with gentrification continuing. The swing was the establishment picking up District A while Janet Cowell ...