Friday, June 30, 2006

Close the Door on Your Way In...

That seems to be the feeling of some sons and daughters of immigrants in the United States. "Let me in, but close the door when I get through." Cute. So you and/or your parents are better than the rest of 'em because you got here first or had the good fortune to be born here. This post was inspired by this article via Remolacha.net.

I find it very sad (and kinda ironic) that one man can tell another man that looks just like him that he's not welcome here. And then people wonder why we instill pride in our heritage on our kids. So we don't sell each other out, among other reasons.

Details inside...

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

In the Best Interests of Baseball?

With the advent of free agency in the mid 1970's, the owners of Major League Baseball teams found themselves having to share a bigger piece of their wealth with the players that put on the show. After the 1979 season, starting pitcher Nolan Ryan became the first player to earn a million dollars per year. Just six years earlier, Hank Aaron was baseball's top earner at $200,000. Minimum salary as of the last collective bargain agreement is $325,000 per year.


Since then, the average major leaguer makes about $2.3 million. Player salaries rose exponentially throughout the 1980's and 90's, reaching their peak when the Texas Rangers signed shortstop Alex Rodriguez to a 10-year, $252 million contract before the 2001 season. That same year, owners claimed their teams were operating on a deficit due to the lucrative contracts that they themselves handed out. Essentially, they said they needed to be saved from themselves.

In 2002, team owners and the players' union agreed to a new collective bargaining agreement that implemented a luxury tax on teams whose player payrolls exceed a certain threshold. It also expanded a revenue sharing program that was put in place in 1997. These are supposed to restore competitive balance in baseball (read: "We want the Yankees to lose and stop taking our players"). In other words, the purpose is to curb free-spending and give small market teams a boost by giving them more spending money.

The CBA failed on all fronts. Big market teams are still posting record-breaking payrolls, and the same teams that showed no promise five years ago are still dead-last with no forseeable end. This is due of course to the flawed system. The best example of this is with the Florida Marlins. In 2005, the Marlins received $31 million in revenue sharing while posting a player payroll of $56.3 million. This year they are expected to receive even more in revenue sharing, but their payrolls stands at $15.9 million. In other words, the 14 teams that put money into the revenue sharing fund are paying the Marlins' salary in full, with plenty more to spare.

However, the Marlins aren't the prime example of revenue sharing being abused; they're expected to be competitive down the road, and entering today are in a virtual tie for second place (albeit with a losing record) in the NL East. The biggest offenders are the Pirates and Brewers, two teams who haven't had a winning season in ages.

The problem with revenue sharing as it stands is that it's flawed on many fronts, including the very definition of big market and small market. If the Yankees suddenly decide that they want to rebuild and trade away their big contracts as the Marlins did last season, they could be considered a small market team (well, not really; they rake in $50 million in TV revenues from the YES Network alone). Even without the use of payroll as a definition for market size, the system is off-balance. The Boston Red Sox are considered a big market team, nothing wrong with that. The Greater Boston metro area has a population of roughly 5.8 million. The Florida Marlins are considered a small market team despite being located in the South Florida metro area, population: about 5.4 million.

Here is a great article written in 2002 by Keith Woolner that points out the many inherent flaws of the CBA and proposes remedies. The chances of this program being approved by either side of the bargaining table are pretty remote, but it's like the New York lottery: "Hey, you never know."

Details inside...

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

The Philosophy of Poverty by Immortal Technique

Most of my Latino and black people who are struggling to get food,
clothes and shelter in the hood are so concerned with that,
that philosophising about freedom and socialist democracy is
usually unfortunately beyond their rationale.
They don't realize that America can't exist without separating them
from their identity, because if we had some sense of who we really are,
there's no way in hell we'd allow this country to push it's genocidal
consensus on our homelands.
This ignorance exists, but it can be destroyed.


Niggas talk about change and working within the system to achieve that.
The problem with always being a conformist is that when you try to change
the system from within, it's not you who changes the system;
it's the system that will eventually change you.
There is usually nothing wrong with compromise in a situation,
but compromising yourself in a situation is another story completely,
and I have seen this happen long enough in the few years that
I've been alive to know that it's a serious problem.
Latino America is a huge colony of countries whose presidents are
cowards in the face of economic imperialism.
You see, third world countries are rich places,
abundant in resources, and many of these countries have
the capacity to feed their starving people and the children
we always see digging for food in trash on commercials.
But putocracies, in other words a government run by the rich such
as this one and traditionally oppressive European states,
force the third world into buying overpriced, unnecessary goods
while exporting huge portions of their natural resources.

I'm quite sure that people will look upon my attitude and sentiments
and look for hypocrisy and hatred in my words.
My revolution is born out of love for my people,
not hatred for others.

You see, most of Latinos are here because of the great inflation
that was caused by American companies in Latin America.
Aside from that, many are seeking a life away from the puppet
democracies that were funded by the United States;
places like El Salvador, Guatemala, Peru, Colombia, Nicaragua,
Ecuador and Republica Dominicana, and not just Spanish-speaking
countries either, but Haiti and Jamaica as well.

As different as we have been taught to look at each other by colonial
society, we are in the same struggle and until we realize that,
we'll be fighting for scraps from the table of a system that has
kept us subservient instead of being self-determined.
And that's why we have no control over when the embargo
will stop in Cuba, or when the bombs will stop dropping in Vieques.

But you see, here in America the attitude that is fed to us is that
outside of America there live lesser people.
"Fuck them, let them fend for themselves."
No, Fuck you, they are you.
No matter how much you want to dye your hair blonde
and put fake eyes in, or follow an anorexic standard of beauty,
or no matter how many diamonds you buy from people who
exploit your own brutally to get them, no matter what kind
of car you drive or what kind of fancy clothes you put on,
you will never be them. They're always gonna look at you as
nothing but a little monkey. I'd rather be proud of what I am,
rather than desperately trying to be something I'm really not,
just to fit in. And whether we want to accept it or not,
that's what this culture or lack of culture is feeding us.

I want a better life for my family and for my children,
but it doesn't have to be at the expense of millions of lives in my
homeland. We're given the idea that if we didn't have these people
to exploit then America wouldn't be rich enough to let us have these
little petty material things in our lives and basic standards of living.
No, that's wrong. It's the business giants and the government officials
who make all the real money. We have whatever they kick down to us.
My enemy is not the average white man,
it's not the kid down the block or the kids I see on the street;
my enemy is the white man I don't see:
the people in the white house, the corporate monopoly owners,
fake liberal politicians those are my enemies.
The generals of the armies that are mostly conservatives those
are the real motherfuckers that I need to bring it to,
not the poor, broke country-ass soldier that's too stupid to
know shit about the way things are set up.

In fact, I have more in common with most working and middle-class
white people than I do with most rich black and Latino people.
As much as racism bleeds America, we need to understand that
classism is the real issue. Many of us are in the same boat and it's
sinking, while these bougie motherfuckers ride on a luxury liner,
and as long as we keep fighting over kicking people out of the
little boat we're all in, we're gonna miss an opportunity to gain a
better standard of living as a whole.

In other words, I don't want to escape the plantation
I want to come back, free all my people, hang the motherfuckers
that kept me there and burn the house to the goddamn ground.
I want to take over the encomienda and give it back to the people
who work the land.

You cannot change the past but you can make the future,
and anyone who tells you different is a fucking lethargic devil.
I don't look at a few token Latinos and black people in the public
eye as some type of achievement for my people as a whole.
Most of those successful individuals are sell-outs and house Negros.

But, I don't consider brothers a sell-out if they move out of the ghetto.
Poverty has nothing to do with our people.
It's not in our culture to be poor.
That's only been the last 500 years of our history;
look at the last 2000 years of our existence and what we brought
to the world in terms of science, mathematics,
agriculture and forms of government.
You know the idea of a confederation of provinces where
one federal government controls the states?
The Europeans who came to this country stole that idea from the
Iroquois lead. The idea of impeaching a ruler comes from an
Aztec tradition. That's why Montezuma was stoned to
death by his own people 'cause he represented the agenda of
white Spaniards once he was captured, not the
Aztec people who would become Mexicans.

So in conclusion, I'm not gonna vote for anybody just 'cause they
black or Latino they have to truly represent the community and
represent what's good for all of us proletariat.

Porque si no entonces te mando pal' carajo cabron,
gusano hijo de puta, seremos libre pronto.

Viva la revolucion!

Details inside...

Monday, June 26, 2006

Bienvenidos

Welcome to the dark, scary, perverted place that is the Mind of BruGz®.

First things first, the name of the blog. Obviously the "Mind of" part I bit from Carlos Mencia. BruGz is a name I kinda gave myself. Started out as "brugal con pepsi." For those of you who don't know, Brugal is a brand of Dominican rum. Pepsi over Coke cuz Coke is too sweet for me to mix with alcohol. From "brugal con pepsi" (originally just an AOL screenname) came many nicknames: brugal, pepsi, brugz, brugalerz, brugalz, pepz, brugi, among others. BruGz kinda stuck on me (pronounced BROOGZ), and I use it anywhere it's appropriate.

Thas it for now; see ya next time my mind wanderz.

BruGz..

iz..

out..

1...

Details inside...