2013年1月22日 星期二

慈濟內湖開發案

 

【歷史】慈濟在內湖擁有一塊保護區。本來是一塊有儲水能力的塘埤,後來有人非法填土變成平地,而後1997年才被慈濟購入。慈濟一直想利用這塊土地蓋醫院或是興建慈濟志工大樓,但16年來居民持續反對,甚至也公投反對成功過。
但是慈濟仍然要在保護區上蓋建築物,因此向台北市政府申請將「保護區」改成「社會福利區」,如此就能名正言順的使用土地了。

【問題】由於這塊土地被非法填土,嚴重失去吸收水量的功能,會將洪水排擠到他地,使得大湖國小附近每逢颱風災情連連,甚至造成居民傷亡,也發生過一家三口淹死的悲劇。慈濟應該讓保護區立即恢復納水功能,而把「保護區」變更成「社會福利區」根本不能解決問題。

另外,慈濟要在保護區蓋上自己的建築,但是這一區是順向坡、斷層且地質脆弱,而且慈濟設計的滯洪區小到無法發揮暫時集水作用,保護區實際上是承受不了慈濟的建設。一旦市府讓慈濟申請變更土地成功,可能會造成低窪地區(住家)淹水更嚴重、大湖公園捷運線下方無預警坍方、後山農民作物收成更困難等等憂慮。

【新聞】《慈濟施壓撤廣告? 何日生:看報才知道》
http://newtalk.tw/news/2013/01/17/32946.html

 

我只想說一件事:慈濟本身是怎樣的團體,跟慈濟做一件事情的對錯沒有任何關係。不管是怎樣的人,他每做一個決定跟每做一件事情,都是一個獨立事件,就跟我們小學學的丟骰子一樣。


慈濟以前做了多少好事,跟現在它們做的任何一件事都沒有關係,不要拿甚麼慈濟以前做了多少善舉、在國際受過多少讚譽來合理化它所做的行為,這個一點相關性都沒有。更何況現在的慈濟早就不是以前的慈濟了。

我敬佩慈濟那些在底下默默行善的人,那些身體力行、默默將自己的辛苦所得捐給慈濟,相信慈濟可以將它們辛苦的所得拿去給需要的人。但是慈濟上層的師兄師姐是甚麼嘴臉你們知道嗎?我不否認那些師兄師姐還是有一些好的人,但現在大多數慈濟的高層在做些甚麼呢?也就是一些有名有勢的人,藉著參加慈濟這個表面上高尚的慈善團體,進行彼此的人脈交換及互相聯繫,說的好聽是彼此互相交流,講得難聽一點其實根本就是個老鼠會。覺得參加了這個團體讓自己的形象高尚起來,真的要做善事根本就不需要通過慈濟這個團體,台灣、大陸甚至非洲,你都可以透過直接的物資給予,通過慈濟只是想以此求名,甚至透過這樣的舉動去認識這個社會金字塔尖端的人。

何日生說看報才知道,你是看報才知道廣告「已經」被撤下來這件事吧?你對於慈濟內部會對於廣告商施加壓力這件事情毫不知情?我真的建議你自己摸著你的良心,對天發誓你對於慈濟內部會透過各種管道干涉這件事情真的毫不知情,我很想問你敢不敢。你公開承認慈濟對於這樣的言語有所不滿,有對公車業者表達希望撤下廣告的立場,我還會佩服你們敢做敢當。一個慈濟的發言人都可以大言不慚這樣公然宣示這種聽起來一點邏輯都沒有的事,在裡面那些看起來道貌岸然,口口聲聲感恩慈悲的人是個甚麼樣的嘴臉,我想大家應該心裡有數。

我不管慈濟你之前做過多少好事,要在內湖這塊地蓋大樓,你就拿出環評報告出來,不要一聽到環評就在那邊找理由五四三拼命閃。拿著慈善的大旗在那裏為所欲為,既要做XX又要立牌坊,你們對得起被你們高舉在上,對於你們所作所為不甚清楚的證嚴上人之名嗎?要不然你們請出證嚴上人啊,讓證嚴上人跟居民面對面談話,在你們口中證嚴上人是菩薩、是偉大的宗教領袖,你們對於她遭到大家誤會表現得痛心疾首,既然如此,在你們心中聞聲救苦的菩薩跟一般民眾見上幾面有這麼難嗎?還是現在慈濟大了,上人地位高了,就對跟一般民眾見面這種事情嗤之以鼻,只對見災民或者國外窮苦民眾這種有鎂光燈聚焦的事情才有興趣呢?

2013年1月15日 星期二

DEEP LEAGUES 2013 TOP 100 PROSPECTS

 

http://www.deepleagues.com/2013/01/09/2013-top-100-prospect-list/

不廢話,直接貼水手新秀,六位入圍。


9. Mike Zunino (C, SEA) – Personally, I think he’s the best catching
prospect in the minor leagues. He dominates in college. And then goes and has
a 1.137 OPS in 44 minor league games (Low-A for 29, AA for 15) with 13 home
runs. He’s got no defensive sticking questions, so he’s my top catcher and
could be a top 3 fantasy catcher for years.


10. Taijuan Walker (SP, SEA) – Walker was one of the youngest pitchers in AA
this year. His scouting reports were clean and good from the scouts, but the
numbers said differently. He’s still regarded as a potential TOR arm, and I
don’t think many if any have soured on him. He could be a fantasy ace in the
future, albeit with some risk attached.

 

30. Danny Hultzen (SP, SEA) – I don’t think I’m that low, and most have
questioned his 4.29 FIP in AAA and his control problems. He’s not a
fireballer, so control issues make him look like a good #3 starter to me. He’
s always been a high floor guy, and his stuff will play up in Petco,
depending on the fences. He’ll be a reliable starter in the majors for
years, but don’t expect fantasy dominance.


55. Nick Franklin (SS, SEA) – Franklin is a guy I keep my eye on. I own him
in a league and I think he can be a successful MLB 2B. If he moves to 2B, his
bat will be average to slightly above average. If he’s able to stick at SS,
he can likely be a good bat and fantasy relevant every year. He’s a switch
hitter and he’s still developing and very young, so I actually wouldn’t
mind seeing a full year of AAA for Nick before I hand him over to the
Mariners.

 

56. James Paxton (SP, SEA) – Paxton had a great year in 2012. He more than
held his own in AA and looks like a good future #2 starter, maybe a #3. I
think he ends up a #3 starter with the occasional great year that reminds you
of all his talent. His stuff will play up in Safeco, and boy does he have
stuff. A hard fastball from the left side and a great breaking ball cap off a
strong arsenal. I’d buy if you can, because of the combination that he could
be in the majors soon (Seattle has little pitching depth) as well as his home
park (ask Tommy Milone how much home parks are factors). He’s a buy now guy,
and I could see him higher on my list if he starts hot.


100. Brad Miller (SS, SEA) – A popular “sleeper” labeled by most, Miller
did hit well. Many are continually comparing Miller to Nick Franklin, the
other Mariners SS. Miller has questions if he will stick at SS or have to
move off (likely to 2B), but for now he’s a SS. The reason he’s nearly 50
spots lower than Franklin is partly age (he’s a year and a half older) and
level (he’s a level lower). I think he could still jump up more on the
prospect list, but I don’t see him in Franklin territory…yet.

2013年1月6日 星期日

Mariners Top 20 Prospects for 2013—By John Sickels

 

http://t.co/PDI3Enk3

1) Mike Zunino, C, Grade A-: Complete catcher, either the best catching
prospect in baseball or second-best behind Travis D'Arnaud. Power, patience,
defense, great makeup. Does everything.

2) Taijuan Walker, RHP, Grade A-: Some slippage in his numbers, but that's
forgivable for the youngest pitcher in the Double-A Southern League. Still
has premium combination of fastball, breaking stuff, developing changeup,
high upside.

3) Danny Hultzen, LHP, Grade B+: I will be honest, I am not comfortable with
Hultzen's grade or his placement here and may revise it significantly before
the book goes to press. I think it is a mistake to dismiss his Triple-A
struggles too cavalierly. His command was just too poor at that level for us
to ignore, especially given his past reputation and track record. I'm nosing
around about this one and gathering more info and opinion, so stand by.

4) James Paxton, LHP, Grade B+: He still has occasional command troubles but
the stuff is first class, love the 92-95 fastball and big-breaking curve.
Number two starter upside. Very good season in Double-A (3.05 ERA, 110/54
K/BB in 106 innings).

5) Nick Franklin SS, Grade B+: I trust my eyes on this one, good tools across
the board and the skills are in there. Is he a second baseman or a shortstop?
I'd give him a chance at short. Needs another half-season in Triple-A
following .243/.310/.416 line at Tacoma.

6) Brad Miller, SS, Grade B+: I am actually more confident in his bat than I
am in Franklin's, but he's a year and a half older and that matters. Still,
if anything Miller is underrated nationally. He can really hit
(.320/.406/.476 in Double-A) and he has the range/arm for shortstop if he can
cut down on routine errors.

7) Brandon Maurer, RHP, Grade B: Finally healthy and showed what he could do
with four-pitch arsenal and mid-90s fastball, 3.20 ERA with 117/48 K/BB in
138 innings. Next stop, Triple-A. If he stays healthy, he's a number three
starter.

8) Victor Sanchez, RHP, Grade B: Youngest pitcher in Northwest League held
his own against older hitters at age 17 (3.18 ERA, 69/27 K/BB in 85 innings).
Lacks physical projection at 6-0, 255, but already throws hard. Will truly
dominate when breaking stuff improves.

9) Stefen Romero, 2B, Grade B: Not a tools guy, but just hits and hits and
hits including .347/.392/.620 in Double-A. He's not bad at second base, but
with other middle infield options around in this organization he may shift to
a corner.

10) Carter Capps, RHP, Grade B-: Always tough to know how to grade relievers.
Former catcher hits 99 MPH and reached the majors within a year of being
drafted. Needs command refinements, but definite closer upside.

11) Stephen Pryor, RHP, Grade C+: Borderline B-. Like Capps, tough to grade.
Stuff is almost as good as Capps, and he's another guy with closer potential
if the command sharpens up a bit more.

12) Luis Gohara, LHP, Grade C+: At this point the C+ guys are interchangeable
depending on what you want to emphasize, so please no whining about "you
should have ranked #12 at #16 and #20 at #13." Gohara is a 16-year-old
Venezuelan lefty signed for $800,000 this past summer. He's enormously
projectable and generated loud buzz in instructional league. He could turn
into anything from a number one starter to an injured A-ball washout, but
keep his name in mind. You might hear a lot about it next summer.

13) Gabriel Guerrero, OF, Grade C+: Vlad Guerrero's nephew tore up the
Dominican Summer League, looked good in three weeks of rookie ball, and
offers a similar package of tools to his uncle. That doesn't mean he will
become his uncle, of course; bloodlines only take you so far (ask Preston
Mattingly), but his upside clearly bears watching.

14) Patrick Kivlehan, 3B, Grade C+: Played four years of football at Rutgers,
but despite years of rust he thrived when he went back to the diamond last
spring, then hit .301/.373/.511 in the Northwest League. He strikes out a lot
and is understandably raw for a college guy.

15) Leon Landry, OF, Grade C+: Toolsy LSU product acquired from Dodgers in
Brandon League trade, runs well, gap power, good glove, hit well in
California League. Profiles as fourth outfielder or platoon partner.

16) Julio Morban, OF, Grade C+: Cal League "breakouts" can't be fully
trusted, especially at High Desert, but Morban looks like the best of the
batch of power-hitting Latin American outfielders with bad plate discipline
that the Mariners spent a lot of money on over the last few years.

17) Tyler Pike, LHP, Grade C+: Very projectable lefty was bought away from
Florida State scholarship, showed three-pitch mix in rookie ball. Another
mid-rotation upside arm.

18) Carson Smith, RHP, Grade C+: Dominated Arizona Fall League (2.40 ERA,
18/4 K/BB in 15 innings). Great slider, could follow Pryor and Capps into
Mariners bullpen soon. Posted 2.90 ERA with 77/28 K/BB in 62 innings at High
Desert, 54 hits, 2.34 GO/AO. Do you know how hard that is?

19) Anthony Fernandez, LHP, Grade C+: Four-pitch lefty posted 3.68 ERA with
79/14 K/BB in 88 innings at High Desert. Do you know how hard that is? He
looked good in Double-A too (3.32 ERA with 55/24 K/BB in 76 innings). Not
overpowering but knows how to pitch.

20) John Hicks, C, Grade C+: Very athletic catcher hit .312/.351/.472. It was
at High Desert though, so don't assume that will hold. Stole 22 bases, threw
out 54% of runners. Has strike zone issues and needs to improve blocking, but
an intriguing player.

OTHER GRADE C+: Logan Bawcom, RHP; Vince Catricala, 3B; Timothy Lopes, 2B;
Jack Marder, C-2B

OTHERS: Taylor Ard, 1B; Jabari Blash, OF; Matt Brazis, RHP; Jin-Man Choi, 1B;
Edwin Diaz, RHP; Josephy DeCarlo, 3B; Roenis Elias, LHP; Jabari Henry, OF;
James Jones, OF; Bobby LaFramboise, LHP; Marcus Littlewood, C; Tyler
Marlette, C; Jamodrick McGruder, 2B; Yoervis Medina, RHP, Guillermo Pimentel,
OF; Steve Proscia, INF; Jordan Shipers, LHP; Chris Taylor, SS; Carlos
Triunfel, INF.


The major league team isn't winning, but the minor league system is filled
with talent of all varieties and help will be arriving soon.

On the pitching side, you have Walker, Paxton, and the enigmatic Hultzen
leading the pack, with Maurer not far behind. You also have fireballing
relievers Capps and Pryor who are ready now, plus more bullpen arms on the
way backing up the starters. Although I wouldn't count on any of the starters
being fully ready until 2014, few systems have this many potential starting
pitchers this close to being ready for the majors. Victor Sanchez and Luis
Gohara provide additional long-term upside arms as the Mariners maintain
their emphasis on Latin American talent

That focus has worked well for them on the pitching side, but hitting has
been weaker as many of their Latin American imports (Carlos Peguero, Carlos
Triunfel, Guillermo Pimentel, Phillips Castillo, plus Francisco Martinez and
Johermyn Chavez acquired in trades) have failed to thrive. This seems like a
systemic problem. Fortunately, they have drafted well and bats like Mike
Zunino, Stefen Romero, Nick Franklin and Brad Miller will be ready within the
next year. And there is plenty of material at the middle and lower levels of
the system, both in terms of future role players and potential regulars.

Everyone always mentions the problems caused by the extreme hitting
environment in High Desert, but that isn't just a matter of statistical
distortions. Some hitters have developed bad habits with their swings that
don't work well at higher levels, and it certainly doesn't do a lot for the
confidence of pitchers. That said, any pitcher who survives in that
environment, let alone thrives, is someone to watch carefully even if they
don't have great scouting reports.

Overall, despite player development issues that need to be looked at, this is clearly one of the deepest, richest farm organizations in baseball.

2個A,8個B。應該有全聯盟農場排名前五的實力。