Saturday, March 6, 2021

Spring Football 2021 -- Best Laid Plans

Sometimes you get something right as rain, and you still don't make any money.

I spent considerable time prepping for the 1-AA spring football season and watching as many games as possible. I had a plan and thought it was a good one.

North Dakota State, riding a 38-game winning streak heading into the 2021 spring season, had won three consecutive FCS national championships. They had, in fact, won eight of the last nine. Much more dominant than Alabama over the same stretch of time, North Dakota State figured to be somewhere between 6-5 and 8-5 to win the 2021 spring title. 

I, however, didn't think North Dakota State was going to be nearly as dominant this spring as they had been since 2011. But I couldn't find any FCS title odds offshore before the spring season kicked off, so I was going to have to wait until the truncated season finished to bet some long shots. With the playoff field reduced to 16 teams from the usual 24, I would have to be patient and judicious in choosing which teams matched up well with North Dakota State. 

And then the roof caved in. For my plan to work, I needed the Bison to go undefeated or lose one close game during the regular season. North Dakota State opened by beating a Youngstown State team with just two returning offensive starters. The Bison went up 25-0, won 25-7, and I wasn't sure if ND State had just laid on them (like a wrestler or Alabama in an early non-conference game) or if ND State had real offensive issues themselves. The second Bison game was at Southern Illinois, which had been drilled opening week by North Dakota 44-21. Southern Illinois was therefore a 16-point home underdog to the Bison.

Unfortunately, the Salukis kicked the hell out of ND State 38-14. Yowza. And it had not an iota of fluke to it.

So my best laid plans of plugging in some live title contenders at 15-1 or better bit the dust hard. All the value of going against North Dakota State drained like hot chili out of Tub Girl (if you don't get the reference, do yourself a favor and DO NOT look it up). All of my prep, pretty much wasted. I had been right, but unfortunately I had been too right.

Nothing ventured and nothing gained, as it turns out. And on we go.



Bob Dietz

March 7, 2021


Tuesday, March 2, 2021

Trans Wars: Newman vs. Greene

When I first started writing this blog, I promised to offend as many people as possible in the time I have left. This entry should go quite a ways towards doing just that.

On February 24, Illinois Rep. Marie Newman hung a pink and blue transgender pride flag outside of her office. Newman's daughter, Evie, is transgender. That same evening, in response, Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene hung a sign outside her office door, which is directly across the hallway from Newman. The sign said, "There are Two genders: MALE & FEMALE. 'Trust the Science!'" Greene had earlier tried to block the Equality Act, which bans LGBTQ discrimination. 

I have neither the inclination, nor the time, nor the omniscience to say who is more correct or incorrect regarding transgender rights. But I am fascinated by the language used and the presentation of this material by (and I despise this phrase) "mainstream media."

As I said, I despise the phrase "mainstream media," so I'll address specifics. People.com displayed the headline "Lawmaker with Transgender Daughter Responds to Colleague's Transphobic Sign Outside Her Office." If Greene's sign had said, "There are Two sexes," then I would have found People's use of the word "Transphobic" problematic. Had Greene said, "There are Two sexes," she would have been technically wrong (chromosomally, there are at least half a dozen), but the phrase on the sign would not have been transphobic per se. Greene, however, with her usual judgement, chose to go full friction by saying "Two genders," which is indeed a clear cut diss of transgender people. Thus, upon review, use of the word "Transphobic" in the People headline is appropriate.

In People's opening paragraph, we then find "by mocking Newman's transgender daughter with a transphobic sign outside her office." The word "mocking" has recently become a default red flag go-to verb to boost readers' blood pressures. And sure enough, another default verb, "slammed," appears later in the piece. Writers can't ruffle readers' feathers without at least one "mocked" and a "slammed" per page these days.

In any event, Greene chose to say "Two genders" on her sign, which was both inflammatory and wrong, Even I know that gender is societally or individually defined, meaning there could technically be an unlimited array of genders.

As usual, what does NOT get said in an article tells you as much as what does. The People piece skipped what seemed to be the most logical of Greene's transgender concerns. A CNN piece covering this skirmish quotes Greene, "Biological women cannot compete against biological men. Biological little girls cannot compete against biological little boys and they shouldn't have to." Greene was referring to physical competition, specifically sports.

I have no idea how the transgender lobby, if there is such a thing, can respond to this. As a male who has been on the track and on the basketball court against females, I see any biologically born male competing in women's sports as completely inappropriate from a competitive standpoint. 


Conclusion

Marjorie Taylor Greene is an out and out nutcase with zero respect for the scientific method. Having said that, the tone of both the People and CNN pieces seemed very Hulk-ish: "Trans good; anti-trans bad." I don't understand why ostensibly neutral news organizations should craft news pieces with such explicit tone. It echoes Fox News.

It's not as if we know that today's moral absolutism will stand the test of history regarding usefulness or humanistic consequences. On topics like transgenderism, both left and right are trying to make arguments by flexing purely authoritarian muscles. 

Newman's daughter is a 19-year-old college freshman. She transitioned five years ago. How many 14-year-olds have the wisdom to choose their life arc or should be entrusted to do so? I have neither the inclination, nor the time, nor the omniscience to know. But, if pressed, I can hazard a guess.



Bob Dietz

February 3, 2021

Articles of Note and Recognizing Statistical Context

Various incarnations of Dr. Michele Gelfand's work examining cultural styles and pandemic consequences have appeared for the last month in assorted venues. I'm recommending a read of her paper in The Lancet (Planetary Health) titled "The relationship between cultural tightness-looseness and Covid-19 cases and deaths: a global analysis." The paper was published January 29. I'm also recommending an opinion piece by Gelfand published in The Guardian on February 1. This brief but informative latter piece fleshes out the implications of Gelfand's work for a general audience and is titled, "Why countries with 'loose,' rule-breaking cultures have been hit harder by Covid."

Gelfand's work provides a broad, expert perspective on the effects cultural personas have had on real world virus consequences. The articles listed above broach the issue of how cultures that have not experienced recent threats fail to react to new threats in a timely, prudent manner.

These pieces by Gelfand make their own arguments clearly, and I'm not going to obfuscate their clarity with my personal prattling.


Simplistic Superficial Stats

I wanted to tackle talking points that have popped up here in the states regarding relationships between Covid-19 stats and shut-downs. The talking points are usually in defense of red-tinged locales' decision-making or lack thereof. These talking points argue against many of Gelfand's conclusions, so I'll address them.

People who are severely critical of shut downs (I'll call them "shut-down deniers") argue that U.S. stats don't currently demonstrate that states' looseness or tightness regarding shut downs and mask-wearing affected infection rates or deaths. The shut-down deniers are saying, in essence, that California and New York had the most onerous restrictions so they should have had lower infection and death rates. I realize that this seems a very naive position, but I have actually encountered professional gamblers (quite fluent in practical statistics) who make these arguments until they are blue in the face. Their political worldviews color their ability to ask the most basic statistical questions.

This is one of those situations where the fact that no correlation exists between more stringent rules and better virus results actually makes the point that the more stringent rules worked. Some of the reasons are obvious.

First, the more stringent rules and longer shutdown areas contain large urban centers. Because urban centers have higher population densities, the transmission opportunities and larger daily virus load exposures should lead to higher transmission and death rates. Shutdowns and tighter regulations have the net effect of creating an environment that mimics lower population density. If locales containing urban centers don't have massively higher transmission and death rates, this demonstrates that the regulations were indeed effective. 

Second, because urban areas are landing points for international visitors carrying the virus initially and now carrying variants, the expectation should again be that locales with urban centers should yield much higher transmission and death rates.

Third, regulations in all of the United States, both red and blue, were quite relaxed compared to almost all other countries, and especially compared to countries rated "tight" by Gelfand. The perception of U.S. rule variation is exaggerated by the very parochial American perspective. Most everything in the U.S. has, compared to other countries, been undisciplined and loose. 

Fourth, the variants are likely embedded deeply in major urban areas and have not yet penetrated much into places like Montana or the Dakotas. 

Fifth and most important, the shutdown deniers here in the U.S. have to forcibly ignore all of the evidence from everywhere else in the world. That's a tough hurdle, but self-absorbed Americans seem to have a knack for it.

All of these points are, again, quite obvious, and actually make a strong case that more stringent rules have been useful.


Conclusion

The lack of overall context inherent in the deniers' position reminds me of a parallel argument in sport science. About 15 years ago, researchers argued against the existence of a real world "hot hand" in basketball and claimed it was all an illusion. The very basic NBA stats used in the analyses were presented without context. A lack of correlation was taken as evidence to prove the position. When context was painted in, however, the lack of simplistic correlation turned out to be evidence for a real world "hot hand," although not for a simple statistical "hot hand."

Sometime in the next month, since it's March Madness, I'll return to the hoops studies and explain their debunking. It's one of my favorite statistical rants.

For now, however, I'll wrap things up by saying that a lack of simple, clear-cut correlations between U.S. city or state regulations and transmission/death rates does not mean that those regulations had no consequences. The lack of simple correlations is actually evidence that the more stringent rules and shutdowns worked. Political prisms are generating arguments without statistical context, and the arguments are largely wrong. 


Bob Dietz

March 2, 2021