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How much do you follow recruiting?

I have never understood why this site and 247 are based around recruiting. Sure, it can be a major part of the site, but why is so much of peoples time and thoughts centered around recruiting?

Personally, I hardly ever follow recruiting. Until they commit, I really dont care. All these recent names we have missed, yep never watched a single shot or dribble in any video.

I am much more interested about our current team, what is going on now, and what we will be this year. I would rather way more content/threads/about the current IU team. Obviously it is summer, and not much else to talk about, but recruiting is huge to a large percentage of fans, and I just don't get it.

That's all I got for a Tuesday, now off to drive around the lovely hoosier state!

Indystar article in paper about Cam Jones and other vets calling for a meeting after puke loss

said that they were upset because some players gave up, and it seemed like that was OK. We should have beaten Cincy. Had 3 HUGE penalties. 2 resulted in TD's after we had stopped them and 1 let them take 3 off the board after a field goal and score a TD, plus a fumble on their 2 yard line. I thought it obvious we were as good or a better team but just blew it. We had debilitating injuries as the season rolled on, but If we played to most of the the potential shown that day, IU should have at least 2 or 3 more games. I was at the Rutgers game where a less-than-mediocre team beat the snot out of IU. And it was obvious that they were just playing harder that the IU players. So I agree with Jones and the other pissed vets. What I don't get is that if this was so obvious to the other players and people like me sitting in the stands, Why didn't CTA and the other coaches see this. From the article, it seemed like he was surprised as he asked for specific examples of players loafing. From the previous season, it seemed like the big deal was that his players played hard for him.

Secret Weapon ((spoiler alert, the secret is already out))



Possible Impact Player// Swiss Army Knife type guy?????

I like the concept that we could actually have another slot receiver hidden in the backfield when we might choose to utilize him as such...

Dexter Williams

Walt Bell spoke glowingly about him yesterday. Maybe he should be in the QB rotation. Tuttle's a nice guy, but other than that Wisconsin game in 2020, he has struggled. Bazelak can shoot the 3-pointer, it seems. I guess what I'm saying is if Williams can make the offense more dynamic, he should get a chance.
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All rise for the Senator from Kentucky!

Senator McConnell "The country deserves a thorough and immediate explanation of the events Monday". He continued," Attorney General Garland and the Department of Justice should already have provided answers to the American people and must do it immediately".

I agree that we need to know. I also like how McConnell chooses his words. I don't agree with all his procedural moves but dirty politics or not it is the way of the senate.
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Did the Kansas amendment mean anything for future elections?

Surprised I didn’t see anything on the overwhelming majority of voters in Kansas voting to keep abortion legal. In a very red state, where Donald Trump won by 15 points. In Kansas, you must declare R or D to vote. Over 100,000 independents voted just to vote on the abortion issue. Even though it’s allegedly left up to the states now, I’m anxious to see how many states will actually bring it to a vote after the Kansas results. Seemed to be a pretty significant victory for women’s rights to choose advocates.
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Why don't we want and why can't we have nice things?

As I've mentioned here and here, there ought to be some pretty easy fundamental and shared bonds that drive governance in the USA. And all of it should derive from the common will of the electorate - an electorate that wants nice things that are attainable and will act in the voting both to hold leaders accountable for failure to engage in simple problem-solving (even if there will always be conflict and disagreement on tons of issues).

Health care in the US is barely functional. Patients aren't the clients of doctors or hospitals; payors are. It's all a complicated and effective billing industry, but there is no centralized care or treatment. If you break your arm, sure, you'll get the basic appropriate treatment. If you have cancer that has been diagnosed, I'm sure you'll get the appropriate treatment. We have some amazing drugs and treatments that we didn't have years ago. But it's still fundamentally broken. Getting care, especially when things aren't straightforward, is incredibly difficult, defeating, unhelpful, and mostly just non-existent. Nobody really talks about those things and there's no reason we shouldn't expect better. There is no accountability, no clarity, no plan; care points are parceled off to discrete billers that do different things with zero "health care" accountability. People will do stuff, but that's not at all the same as providing care. It used to be better in a former simpler world, but it could achieve the same today if the patients demanded it. The hospitals and insurers sure won't; it's not in any way in their best interest to change anything. Why isn't there more outcry? Instead, all we get is talking heads spouting off the latest partisan inanity on the topic du jour in a galactic struggle for party control that has little bearing on the daily lives of all of us (though, of course, there is that little thing we're experiencing now of seeing our democratic republic on the verge of totally losing its validity).

Public schools. They're basically under assault and caught up in a partisan battle that isn't going to lead anywhere good. Public schools have historically and traditionally held a critical part of our national system. Now they are seemingly the enemy despite the profound and real reasons we recognized the critical role to begin with.

There's a long list, but central to the decline is a lack of caring about those nice things. I wish I understood it.

Motown legend dies. RIP Lamont Dozier

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