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Sard

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  1. Like
    Sard reacted to Wanna-B-Fanboy in Random News Items   
    Kind of big news...
     
     
  2. Agree
    Sard reacted to JCon in Covid-19   
    Musk is losing lots of money right now. He's going to back out of the deal to buy Twitter. 
  3. Agree
    Sard reacted to Wideleft in Canadian Politics   
    Source unknown:
     
    I was thinking of the "free exchange of ideas" last night. You know, it's not like a market, it's like a potluck. Everyone brings their own ideas and you sample others and some are familiar with a twist, some are interesting but not to your taste, some are bad, some are lifechanging. You can get into a discussion about recipes or technique, or what have you as people talk about the food. If someone brings mashed potatoes, you can debate the appropriateness for a potluck: is it too bland? Will it get cold on the table? Do potatoes make up too much of our diet? But if someone puts a steaming platter of dog **** on the table, we're not going to debate it. And when we tell them to take it off the table, it's not because we are afraid of eating their dog **** or we think that it's going to revolutionize lunch and we don't want that to happen. We tell them to get it off the table because there is no debate to be had. It's dog ****. It's not an open question, it's not a matter of palettes or picky eaters. That's why we don't engage with neo-nazis and white supremacists, and it's why we don't (or shouldn't) let them come to the potluck
  4. Like
    Sard reacted to bigg jay in Covid-19   
    I switched to Zevia last year.  A number of their flavours are great... Their root beer can easily pass for A&W's.
    Double post.
  5. Agree
    Sard reacted to JCon in Canadian Politics   
    I mean the idea that they will privatize healthcare. They can't do that over one term. They slowly defund it and push it beyond repair so that the only way to "save" it is privatization.
    It's all about the slow play. Undermine the system, cut funding, and bleed it to death. 
  6. Like
    Sard reacted to Noeller in Canadian Politics   
    let me tell you about life in Alberta with private home and auto insurance, where the government removed the cap on how much they're allowed to charge..... it's gone through the roof the last two or three years. Privatization is not the "competition will lower prices" thing that people expect it to be.
  7. Like
    Sard reacted to JCon in Canadian Politics   
    Oh, god no. NO, no, no. 
    I had to live with it in Ontario and it's godawful. 
  8. Agree
    Sard reacted to 17to85 in Canadian Politics   
    Privatization of crown corps is something that conservatives have done in the past and always a possibility.  It is well worth continuing to ask about that.
  9. Agree
    Sard reacted to JCon in Canadian Politics   
    They started by neutering the Hydro board. Then they dismantled PUB and their powers. 
    It's a step by step plan to reduce ties to gov't and remove it entirely from the GRE. Next step will be to say that the debt is insurmountable and the only way to save "tax payers" is to sell it off. 
    Rinse, repeat. Just like MTS. 
  10. Agree
    Sard reacted to JCon in Canadian Politics   
    That would be good. 
     
    A lot of Cons got rich. They're looking to get some more money in their pockets with Hydro too. 
  11. Agree
    Sard reacted to blue_gold_84 in Canadian Politics   
    The NDP has made mention of the privatization of Manitoba Hydro because the Filmon PCs did so with MTS in 1996 after being adamant they wouldn't privatize it. Manitobans ahve been paying for that mistake ever since.
    It's not a conspiracy theory for an opposition to express concerns regarding the privatization of a crown corporation based on actual history.
  12. Agree
    Sard reacted to blue_gold_84 in Space is the Place   
    https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/james-webb-telescope-images-1.6447622

    Amazing. Simply amazing.
  13. Like
    Sard reacted to Noeller in 2022 CFL Draft (CIS/NCAA and International)   
    fun read: 
     
    https://www.cfl.ca/2022/05/06/last-man-up-burtenshaw-thrilled-as-final-draft-pick/
     
    The last man selected in the 2022 CFL draft didn’t see his name, at first, when it popped up on the draft tracker Tuesday night. He was too busy plotting his next move.
    The selection process had been methodically unfolding for hours and as things were winding down during the eighth and final round, Konner Burtenshaw was no longer hitting ‘refresh’ on his computer. He was, instead, pacing the room and wondering what he’d have to do next in order to keep his dream of playing pro football alive.
    “I felt my mind starting to race a little bit,” the 26-year-old fullback says, admitting that his hopes of being selected had been pretty well extinguished at that point. What was he thinking about?
    “What the next steps would be if I didn’t get drafted.”
    But just when it seemed like it was all over, Burtenshaw’s girlfriend, Abby, screamed and called him over to the computer. With the 74th and final pick of the draft, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers had chosen the
    Queen’s Gaels grad.
    “It was really nice seeing my name up there,” Burtenshaw says, proudly.
    Over the last few weeks and months, we’ve gotten to see a lot of information about so many of the top prospects in this year’s CFL draft and good on them, because they’ve earned that.
    But all those stories have been told. This one, a story for the less-heralded, has not been told so much. They also deserve some attention. Konner Burtenshaw, a work boots and lunch bucket football player who’s been grinding it out on his university team’s kick cover squads for four seasons, the final pick in Tuesday night’s draft, is a poster boy for those who’ve been flying under the radar but hoping that someone, somewhere in the CFL, will take notice.
    Things are moving at kind of a frenetic pace when Burtenshaw pauses to talk a little about what’s coming. “I’ve gotta be in Winnipeg in five days,” he says, energetically, the glow of the previous night’s
    excitement still brightly lighting his demeanor. Some of that excitement included a call from Winnipeg Head Coach, Mike O’Shea, who welcomed the last player selected to the Bombers’ organization, offering up some words of praise and encouragement. That’s something that has Burtenshaw even more fired up as his first pro camp gets closer.
    Just before we have our conversation, I clicked ‘play’ on Burtenshaw’s YouTube highlight video to acquaint myself with him a little bit. I was only about 20 or 30 seconds into it before I thought “Oh, I know why Mike O’Shea likes this guy.”
    That’s because Burtenshaw’s enthusiasm for special teams missions was clearly on display.
    Then, about 2:10 into the reel, I see Burtenshaw hustling downfield on kick coverage against the University of Toronto.
    He takes on one blocker, then quickly another. Each of those blockers appears quite unhappy about the zest with which Burtenshaw has undertaken his role. As the play ends, they come at him. He shoves them both away with a little more of that zest, one right after the other.
    “Oh, now I REALLY know why Mike O’Shea likes this guy,” I muttered to myself.
    I point out to Burtenshaw that his highlight tape has me thinking that he is O’Shea’s kind of guy. He laughs. “I’ve heard that a couple times now,” he says.
    O’Shea is famous in football for so many things, of course, but one of them is definitely his great love of special teams and the physical maelstrom through which players need to navigate — or force their way
    through — on every kick. O’Shea had 169 career special teams tackles, himself, and he can get positively gleeful when talking about the controlled mayhem of football’s down and dirtiest discipline. When I mention that to Burtenshaw, his reply has me believing that his new head coach will love him even more when he gets to know him.
    “It’s almost medieval,” says Burtenshaw (who ought to know since he majored in history at Queen’s). “When you’re running down the field at kickoff, you kind of think of it like you’re charging a battle line.
    It’s crazy. When you step onto that field, it’s all business and you can go out there and you can smack some bodies around. It’s part of the game and it’s awesome.”
    Going to high school in Odessa Township, just west of Kingston, ON, Burtenshaw didn’t perform on special teams, really, at all. But he did just about everything else for the Ernestown Eagles. He played
    quarterback, running back and linebacker on a team that he says had just “20 or 21” players on its roster.
    At Queen’s, the special teams play came and Burtenshaw took to it. For four seasons he worked on that particular craft, with offensive touches being generally scarce. Over his final two seasons with the Gaels, the five-foot-10, 220 pounder did see a little more action as a backfield battering ram, particularly in goal line situations. “I got myself a few touchdowns,” he says.
    Burtenshaw’s work ethic and dedication are well-known throughout the Queen’s football community. Three times he was named the Gaels’ special teams player of the year, and he was made a captain in a vote by his teammates.
    “He’s very respected by his team,” says Gaels Head Coach Steve Snyder.
    “He’s not a very outgoing ‘rah-rah-rah’ guy at all. He’s respected because of his physical presence, his toughness, and because of his work ethic and his commitment to our standard.”
    “He’s had an instrumental role as, essentially, our most reliable special teams player, and a guy that’s played all over the field on specials making an impact for a number of years,” adds Snyder. “And he’s
    become one of the most dominant special teams players in the league.”
    Even if someone like Burtenshaw is a well-known and valued commodity at his school, it’s tough for players without a gaudy stats pack to grab an outsider’s attention as the combine season plays out. Some won’t get the chance, never seeing an invitation to even a regional combine. Burtenshaw considers himself fortunate that he got a shot at the East Regional in Baie-D’Urfe, QC, in March.
    “When I got my name pulled for that combine I kind of realized it was my opportunity to get some eyes on,” he says. “It was hard for me being only a special teams guy because I’m not getting 30, 40 snaps at
    running back or fullback. I’m only getting a few snaps here and there on punt and kick-off (cover), punt return, kickoff return.”
    Although Burtenshaw did not then receive an invitation to the national combine, his regional appearance likely helped to get him drafted. “I’m just happy that someone spotted me, you know?”
    Now, he’s a Winnipeg Blue Bomber and is about to get some lessons in special teams play from not only O’Shea, but from the CFL’s all-time leader in special teams tackles (210), Mike Miller, who is entering his 11th season in the pros. Miller, I should remind you, wasn’t drafted at all at the beginning of his CFL career, making the grade at Edmonton’s training camp as a free agent in 2011.
    “I’m excited to learn from a couple of the best,” says Burtenshaw of the opportunity ahead of him. He knows of Miller’s long-standing importance and production and is aspirational when he talks about what the veteran stalwart has been providing for so long. “That’s a role that I want to play,” he says.
    “I think Winnipeg is gonna be a perfect fit,” says the native of Amherstview, ON, optimistically.
    “He (O’Shea) respects and understands a Canadian player’s role in the game and especially my role in the game as mainly a special teams guy. I think it’s gonna be a great atmosphere, a great team to be a part of.”
    If the Bombers feel like giving him a look in the backfield while camp is on, Burtenshaw is up to it. “I think my biggest impact will be on special teams,” he says, “cover teams specifically. But I would never
    say no to the opportunity at fullback or running back. And I would do my best to get there as well.”
    As he has been doing through the entire process, it seems, just like so many unsung prospects have done time and time again over the years.
    Burtenshaw was a whisker away from not seeing his name on that draft board at all on Tuesday night and he knows there are others who did not escape that disappointment. He has a message for them.
    “The thoughts that were running through my head as the draft was dwindling down was just ‘What are my next steps from here? How does free agency work? How do I figure that out?’ I hope those guys are thinking the same way. And I hope they’re still getting after it and they’re not discouraged.”
    “It doesn’t matter if you’re drafted first overall or last,” says the final man taken in the 2022 CFL draft.
    “All it is is an opportunity to prove yourself as a football player and that’s all we need.”
  14. Agree
    Sard got a reaction from blue_gold_84 in Restaurant/food thread   
    Rae's Bistro is up in North Kildonan and the food is fantastic.
  15. Like
    Sard reacted to Goalie in 2022 Off Season - Back 2 Back Champs Edition   
    We are Marshall was a hell of a movie. What a tragic event that was. 
  16. Agree
    Sard reacted to 17to85 in 2021/22 - CFL Offseason - Non-Back-to-Back Grey Cup Champion Thread   
    It's the same thing. You don't explore something you aren't interested in.
  17. Like
    Sard reacted to Tracker in Canadian Politics   
    If it walks like a duck....
  18. Agree
    Sard reacted to blue_gold_84 in Canadian Politics   
    "Justinflation"
    That is the definition of a dog whistle meant to do nothing more than rile up his misinformed and scared supporters, and is just as bad as damaging as Trudeau a communist. He proudly supported the Covidiot Clown Convoy, he's made ignorant remarks regarding the public health restrictions and mandates, and he consistently makes nonsensical statements about the liberals trying to destroy the Canada. Hyperbole, dog whistles, and falsehoods are all part of the alt-right playbook. Poilievre engages in those tactics daily - and he seems to enjoy doing so (probably because it feeds his narcissism).
    So, no. It is not a gross exaggeration to suggest he's alt-right.
    Imagine defending a Canadian politician who supports another country's political party by buying crappy merch. That's what's comical.
  19. Agree
    Sard reacted to Noeller in Canadian Politics   
    In this situation? Everyone. 
  20. Like
    Sard got a reaction from JCon in 2021/22 - CFL Offseason - Non-Back-to-Back Grey Cup Champion Thread   
    Not to mention how unpredictably a football can bounce.
  21. Like
    Sard reacted to Wanna-B-Fanboy in Space is the Place   
    Soon my pretties... soon...
     
  22. Like
    Sard reacted to Zach Schnitzer in Ep 26: John Hodge!   
    3Down Nation's and Pegger John Hodge talks all things: 
    -CFL Draft
    -Rule Changes
    -What's up with Arash Madani? 
    -How he moved from Fan, to Podcaster (Blue Bomber Talk pod), to Journalist
    -How he won the Jon Gott lookalike contest
    -Season Predictions & MORE
    https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/lets-go-bombers-podcast/id1585525041
    https://zachschnitzer.podbean.com/e/episode-26-john-hodge/
    https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkLnBvZGJlYW4uY29tL3phY2hzY2huaXR6ZXIvZmVlZC54bWw%3D
  23. Agree
    Sard reacted to Jesse in 2021/22 - CFL Offseason - Non-Back-to-Back Grey Cup Champion Thread   
    Teams will be very motivated to give that halo to returners.
    Also, tackling a guy who has his head down, picking up a ball is absolutely the equivalent to roughing the passer. 
  24. Like
    Sard reacted to Tracker in The Environment Thread   
  25. Like
    Sard reacted to Mike in 2022 Off Season - Back 2 Back Champs Edition   
    I’m hoping it’s the Khari/Milt era lightning bolt W jersey in royal blue
     
     
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