Jump to content
Grand Central Mets
  • Create Account

Mets get Shawn Green


Centerfield

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 174
  • Created
  • Last Reply
Posted


Willets Point wrote:
Find your hero.


]OUT OF THE RUINS
OUT FROM THE WRECKAGE
CAN`T MAKE THE SAME MISTAKE THIS TIME
WE ARE THE CHILDREN
THE LAST GENERATION
WE ARE THE ONES THEY LEFT BEHIND
AND I WONDER WHEN WE ARE EVER GONNA CHANGE
LIVING UNDER THE FEAR, TILL NOTHING ELSE REMAINS

WE DON`T NEED ANOTHER HERO
WE DON`T NEED TO KNOW THE WAY HOME
ALL WE WANT IS LIFE BEYOND
THUNDERDOME

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING
WE CAN RELY ON
THERE`S GOTTA BE SOMETHING BETTER OUT THERE
LOVE AND COMPASSION
THEIR DAY IS COMING
ALL ELSE ARE CASTLES BUILT IN THE AIR
AND I WONDER WHEN WE ARE EVER GONNA CHANGE
LIVING UNDER THE FEAR TILL NOTHING ELSE REMAINS

ALL THE CHILDREN SAY
WE DON`T NEED ANOTHER HERO
WE DON`T NEED TO KNOW THE WAY HOME
ALL WE WANT IS LIFE BEYOND
THUNDERDOME

SO WHAT DO WE DO WITH OUR LIFES
WE LEAVE ONLY A MARK
WILL OUR STORY SHINE LIKE A LIGHT
OR END IN THE DARK
GIVE IT ALL OR NOTHING

WE DON`T NEED ANOTHER HERO
WE DON`T NEED TO KNOW THE WAY HOME
ALL WE WANT IS LIFE BEYOND
THUNDERDOME


Later


Posted


Green on coming to NY.

]

“It’s something that’s always intrigued me,” Green said. “New York is head and shoulders the largest Jewish population in the country, if not the world, and it will be an interesting and fun experience for me. I’m looking forward to being part of the Jewish community there.”



Guest KC
Guests
Posted


There are more Dominicans in New York than The Dominican Republic. When
high profile Dominicans were brought in, it was mocked.


Guest ScarletKnight41
Guests
Posted


The question at the time was whether Omar was obtaining Dominican players because of their nationality.

I don't think that anyone believes that Omar went out to get Green because he's Jewish.


Guest KC
Guests
Posted


SK: >>>I don't think that anyone believes that Omar went out to get Green because he's Jewish.<<<

No, but I bet there are those who believe some wanted him here just because
he was Jewish and his practicing holidays was a family raising convenient point
to add to your side of the debate.

I admit at this point I'm being argumentative and I can't relate to you on this.
Maybe I'll go surf around and see if there are and German/Irish/Lithuanian/
English assclowns in MLB and find me a role model.


Guest ScarletKnight41
Guests
Posted


]No, but I bet there are those who believe some wanted him here just because
he was Jewish and his practicing holidays was a family raising convenient point
to add to your side of the debate.


Who cares if some people believe that? Like WFAN callers, they're irrelevant.


Guest KC
Guests
Posted


I'm one of the some, therefore I'm irrelevant.


Guest cooby
Guests
Posted


ScarletKnight41 wrote:
="Iubitul"]

However saying something like this:
]Commonality gives us something additional to pull for. Not all Mets are created equal

Sounds a lot like Green is more equal than other Mets due to his religion, and if that is the case, is just wrong.


First of all, it's not merely his religion, but it's the fact that he's made an effort to be a role model to kids that is noteworthy.

.


Listen, I'm not Jewish, but I do have kids, and I think this is an excellent point. There just are not enough high profile people out there of any denomination willing to show their faith.


Posted


cooby wrote:
="ScarletKnight41"]First of all, it's not merely his religion, but it's the fact that he's made an effort to be a role model to kids that is noteworthy.


Listen, I'm not Jewish, but I do have kids, and I think this is an excellent point. There just are not enough high profile people out there of any denomination willing to show their faith.


What does his religion have to do with being a role model to kids (??)


Guest ScarletKnight41
Guests
Posted


Not playing baseball on Yom Kippor makes him a role model for Jewish kids.

It's the holilest day on the Jewish calendar. It's nice to see a high-profile athelete treat that as a priority.


Guest ScarletKnight41
Guests
Posted


Did the Mets sign Shawn Green or Eric Bana?



Posted


]Last night D-Dad even mentioned how two Jewish players (Marquis and Green) were squaring off against each other


I wonder when was the last time that happened.


Guest martin
Guests
Posted


Yancy Street Gang wrote:
I think there are too many, but I admit I have a minority perspective here.


i agree. the whole idea of people having faith and other people respecting it seems very primitive. and so does being proud of faith, or race. and i think few things are more important than people realizing this.

but it is a baseball board, and shawn green seems like a nice fellow. the perfect replacement for nady. the final piece in the puzzle of a juggernaut offense.


Posted


]

I wonder when was the last time that happened.


Well that's a dumb question from me,I'm sure Green and Marquis have faced each other recently.


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


martin wrote:
="Yancy Street Gang"]I think there are too many, but I admit I have a minority perspective here.


i agree. the whole idea of people having faith and other people respecting it seems very primitive. and so does being proud of faith, or race. and i think few things are more important than people realizing this.

but it is a baseball board, and shawn green seems like a nice fellow. the perfect replacement for nady. the final piece in the puzzle of a juggernaut offense.


Should they be disrespected for it?

How is what we do here every day any less primitive?


Guest Hillbilly
Guests
Posted


Primitive means ancestral. So Martin use of term is right on the money.


Guest martin
Guests
Posted


i think we should respect faith in the same way we respect anything asserted without, or in spite of, evidence. for instance if a guy claims 2 plus 2 equals 6, we just laugh that off, and accept that what he is saying is silly and pointless. not so with religions. the christian or jew will assert things just as ridiculous, and we act like that is somehow respectable.

i'm not saying we should go around being jackasses to people with faith. but i think the mainstream mentality that we should somehow we should have some sort of reverence for people's faith, the time for that has come and gone. i think this unfounded reverence opens the door to infect future generations with faith.

what we do here is clearly pointless and primitive, but since we all know that, its cool, yo. we arent positive the mets are the best team in the universe because by random chance we were born into that unshakeable belief.

and i apologize for all this in the baseball forum.


Guest martin
Guests
Posted


oops, double post. i am incompetent and cant delete posts.


Guest Hillbilly
Guests
Posted


To follow up, if one celebrates individuals of their own group, it suggests that they favor one group, their own, over others. People of other ancestral lines almost naturally response with ‘what about my people” (check out this thread). It’s a slippery slope that is the root of tribalism, nationalism, and other forces that too often lead to no good. Of course, everybody should be proud of who they are, but that’s the point everyone should be. Ultimately all our ancestors left Africa a mere 50,000 years ago, so in truth we all share the same history, if we follow our ancestry back far enough. So we should all admire Green for being a good guy and a marvelous athlete and our brother.


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


I think things asserted lacking practical concrete evidence are very very very different from those asserted despite practical concrete evidence to the contrary.

This argument has been had a billion times in better venues than this, but I do not gather weekly to assert that 2+2=6 or anything like it.


Guest martin
Guests
Posted


Edgy DC wrote:
I think things asserted lacking practical concrete evidence are very very very different from those asserted despite practical concrete evidence to the contrary.


and when pushed, religious people who also have a hard time completely being wackos will admit that major tenets of their faiths are silly. and often over time they will backpedal until they are only asserting something so vague as to be not close to refutable. but that (not being explicitly proven as crazy) is a low standard for a belief worth respecting, a belief worth dividing over or becoming a victim or aggressor over.

]This argument has been had a billion times in better venues than this


that is true and again, i apologize for bringing it up here. i like to talk about it, but this isnt the place.


Guest Hillbilly
Guests
Posted


Galileo Galilei had concrete proof of a phenomena that went against the teaching of dominate religious bodies of his time, but rather than accept his insights, faith interfered with logic at it was argued that ‘2+2=6’ so to speak. The evidence and logical deductions of evolution are enormous in scope and scale, yet many people of faith insist on arguing that ‘2+2=6’. So although the existence of God has no conclusive evidence to the contrary, there have been examples of important religious tenets being ‘proven’ wrong and were people of faith choose to continue in their ignorance.


Posted


committed Atheist, I'd heartily recommend to all that we DON'T GET INTO THIS HERE.

Seriously folks. we'll have a row.


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


martin wrote:
and when pushed, religious people who also have a hard time completely being wackos will admit that major tenets of their faiths are silly. and often over time they will backpedal until they are only asserting something so vague as to be not close to refutable. but that (not being explicitly proven as crazy) is a low standard for a belief worth respecting, a belief worth dividing over or becoming a victim or aggressor over.


Broad characterization. Really broad.

And I know about Galileo. A lot.

Disrespecting peoople is disrespecting people.


Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
The Grand Central Mets Caretaker Fund
The Grand Central Mets Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Mets community on the internet.

×
×
  • Create New...