Kristy Parker (@kpnatsfan) 's Twitter Profile
Kristy Parker

@kpnatsfan

Counsel, Protect Democracy. Fmr fed civil rts prosecutor @TheJusticeDept, historian, KState/Oxford/Harvard Law alum, believer in the baseball gods. Views mine.

ID: 787064950317539328

calendar_today14-10-2016 22:58:01

17,17K Tweet

2,2K Followers

799 Following

Kristy Parker (@kpnatsfan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

My thoughts are that the competition Tiger faced was worlds better and that there’s no actual comparison between the two.

Kristy Parker (@kpnatsfan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Lerners and Davey should all go. Davey was hired because the Lerners wanted a yes man. The fact that he’s always been a bad manager was masked by the World Series win — which came after a losing season, a 19-31 start, and was driven by senior players taking over the team.

Charlotte Clymer 🇺🇦 (@cmclymer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

If I were an all-time beneficiary of nepotism, I would just quietly enjoy my unearned professional success and decline to comment on the careers of other people.

Price Carter (@priceacarter) 's Twitter Profile Photo

People often forget that Patrick Mahomes has never missed the conference championship in his seven years as a starting NFL QB lol.

Jacob Shamsian ⚖️ (@jayshams) 's Twitter Profile Photo

As a person who covered Ghislaine Maxwell's criminal trial, and who has read through pretty much every single Jeffrey Epstein lawsuit, I find the current discourse to be in bizarro land.

George Conway 👊🇺🇸🔥 (@gtconway3d) 's Twitter Profile Photo

No. Giving Trump a “win” here would indelibly stain Harvard University, and damage it deeply in the eyes of its myriad constituencies (particularly its alumni, myself included, who would revolt), not to mention the nation and the world. But more important than Harvard’s loss would be the

No.  Giving Trump a “win” here would indelibly stain <a href="/Harvard/">Harvard University</a>, and damage it deeply in the eyes of its myriad constituencies (particularly its alumni, myself included, who would revolt), not to mention the nation and the world. But more important than Harvard’s loss would be the