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The Heat Is On
Townhall.com ^ | June 8, 2013 | Bill O'Reilly

Posted on 06/08/2013 4:39:52 AM PDT by Kaslin

So, last Saturday I'm back on the ball field coaching my 9-year-old boy's little league team along with three other fathers. We lose big. Why? Because it was hot. Yes, I know what you're thinking: Wasn't it hot for the other team? Stop with the logic, OK?

My team wilted in the fourth inning. In fact, three of the players cried. One missed his mother. I told him the game would be over shortly and she was looking forward to seeing him. He accepted it, but struck out anyway.

The right fielder cried when the ball hit his thumb after he booted it. The catcher shed tears when he was called out at first base. Where was Tom Hanks when I needed him?

But above all, the heat dominated the game. It was about 90 degrees, and the field was dusty. The kids were appalled. They are used to climate-control. When it's hot, they stay inside and enjoy the air conditioning. When it's cold, the house is cozily warm. So when they are forced to play six innings outside on a scorching day, there is much angst.

When I was 9 years old, I was hot all the time in the summer. My tiny Levittown house had no air conditioning, and I slept upstairs directly underneath the tar-infested roof. So one August day, I had the following dialogue with my father:

"Dad, could we get air conditioning?"

"Why? You have a fan in your room."

"But the fan just blows the hot air around."

"So don't turn it on."

End of conversation. Later, at the dinner table, my father told my sister and me about how hot it was in Brooklyn where he grew up. At least on Long Island, there's a "sea breeze."

My sister and I looked confused. The ocean was 15 miles away.

Our dog, a German shepherd named Barney, was so hot he didn't move for hours, lying supine on the linoleum kitchen floor.

"I think Barney may be dead," I told my parents.

"Don't be a wise guy," my father retorted.

We never did get air conditioning until I moved out in 1971. Then two units arrived. I still hold a grudge.

But back to the ball field.

We lost the game 12 to 4, but the team really didn't care. They quickly left the diamond for more comfortable precincts. Most of them are really good kids, far smarter than I was at their age -- but far softer, as well.

America is a place where you can succeed no matter who you are. I am proof of that. But you must work very hard and be willing to endure pain. You must set a goal and win in the marketplace, no matter the air temperature. You must pay the price for success.

These kids don't know that. But they do know two things. First, they don't want to be hot. And second, they don't have to be.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: baseball; educationandschools; fouryorkshiremen; kids; montypython; sports
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1 posted on 06/08/2013 4:39:52 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Heaven help us.

IMHO


2 posted on 06/08/2013 4:53:22 AM PDT by ripley
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To: Kaslin

Billy O. How old are you dude? And you have a 9er? Well, at least at your age you can afford him with the bucks you got stacked up. Glad you’re bein’ a good dad in any case. But, I sure don’t agree with you on a lot of other stuff. LOL!


3 posted on 06/08/2013 4:54:08 AM PDT by rktman (BACKGROUND CHECKS? YOU FIRST mr. president(not that we'd get the truth!))
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To: Kaslin

Bill OReilly is a blow hard with a supersized ego, but he is a tremendously gifted writer.


4 posted on 06/08/2013 4:59:28 AM PDT by caltaxed
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To: Kaslin

Back then my parents had an AC unit for their bedroom. The kids had nothing and never ever did we ask for AC for our bedrooms. No space in our house had AC except for that one bedroom.

Also back then before AC was pervasive..... Movie theaters would advertise their air conditioning. To come in out of the heat and see a movie


5 posted on 06/08/2013 5:09:53 AM PDT by dennisw (too much of a good thing is a bad thing - Joe Pine)
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To: Kaslin
Bill, you had heat when you were growing up. We prayed for heat, especially in July when we had to walk to school through snow that was chest deep. And let me tell you it was 7 miles up hill BOTH ways. don't even let me get started on the sabretooth tigers.....
6 posted on 06/08/2013 5:15:28 AM PDT by verga (A nation divided by Zero!)
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To: Kaslin

“Don’t be a wise guy,” my father retorted.”

Geeez, my son is only just 3 and that’s ALL I ever seem to say to him.


7 posted on 06/08/2013 5:25:00 AM PDT by TalBlack (Evil doesn't have a day job.)
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To: Kaslin
Ninety degrees? They think that's hot? Poor little petunias.
8 posted on 06/08/2013 5:31:01 AM PDT by mrsmel (One Who Can See)
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To: verga

You had a school?

Where I grew up we just went straight to juvie.

And it was so cold and icy and we were so poor we had to wrap barb wire around our bare feet so we wouldn’t fall.


9 posted on 06/08/2013 5:32:26 AM PDT by Cuttnhorse
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To: dennisw

Grew up in the sweltering Mississippi heat and humidity with no A/C-we 10 kids all made palletts on the living room floor, collected all the fans in there, and opened the front and back doors (we lived in the country). Sometimes we just camped outaide, but the mosquitos might torment you all night then.


10 posted on 06/08/2013 5:33:00 AM PDT by mrsmel (One Who Can See)
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To: Cuttnhorse
You had a school?

Where I grew up we just went straight to juvie.

Well they called it "school" but it was actually a rock quarry......

11 posted on 06/08/2013 5:40:59 AM PDT by verga (A nation divided by Zero!)
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To: Kaslin
I slept upstairs directly underneath the tar-infested roof.
BOR is an @ss. Never occurred to him to sleep out on his grass-infested lawn?
12 posted on 06/08/2013 5:48:20 AM PDT by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: dennisw

What part of the country? Outside of Boston we had some hot nights and used fans. A/C really wasn’t necessary.


13 posted on 06/08/2013 5:54:49 AM PDT by palmer (Obama = Carter + affirmative action)
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To: Cuttnhorse

You were lucky! We used to dream of having barbed wire....


14 posted on 06/08/2013 5:56:21 AM PDT by HartleyMBaldwin
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To: HartleyMBaldwin

We finally convinced my elderly parents to let us air condition their house in the 1980’s. We even told them we’d pay for any increase in their electrical bill. When we next visited (in the heat of midwest summer), it was hot and humid...inside their house was hotter and more humid. We asked why they didn’t turn on the AC. Their response “It makes cold drafts...” Go figure.


15 posted on 06/08/2013 7:10:29 AM PDT by hal ogen (First Amendment or Reeducation Camp?)
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To: Kaslin

Baseball builds character, and has both team and individual components which sometimes cause players to actually think.

It’s only a matter of time before the left demands that the game be banned.


16 posted on 06/08/2013 7:14:45 AM PDT by onedoug
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To: mrsmel

With the eighty five percent humidity, it is.


17 posted on 06/08/2013 7:16:44 AM PDT by GeorgeTex (Obama-Four M President (Mendacious Manchurian Muslim Marxist))
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To: HartleyMBaldwin

LOL


18 posted on 06/08/2013 7:17:59 AM PDT by Cuttnhorse
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To: Kaslin

I remember back in the late 50s our gym teacher was a guy who had been in the Korean war and continually told us how “soft” we were compared to the kids in Korea.


19 posted on 06/08/2013 7:19:14 AM PDT by nascarnation (Baraq's economic policy: trickle up poverty)
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To: dennisw
No space in our house had AC except for that one bedroom.

When I was a child in the late 60's and '70's, my parents installed an AC unit in our living room window. If a night was too hot, we slept in sleeping bags on the floor of the living room.

Even in the '90's, when I was pregnant with my first child, we lived in a sweltering attic apartment and had only a window AC unit in one room.

IMHO, air conditioning is overused today. And, anyway, the sound of fans can be very relaxing.

20 posted on 06/08/2013 7:31:50 AM PDT by Tired of Taxes
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