Oklahoma
Newspaper Deletes Column Comparing the Oklahoma City Thunder to Israel
Screenshot via The Oklahoman on X.
It would be reasonable to expect The Oklahoman, a daily newspaper headquartered in Oklahoma City, to cover the Oklahoma City Thunder’s quest for a repeat NBA championship. A now-deleted op-ed comparing the basketball team to Israel was a bit more surprising.
The Thunder won their first NBA title in 2025 since the team was sold, relocated from Seattle, and renamed, and are currently battling the San Antonio Spurs for the Western Conference title. (The Thunder lost Game 1 shortly before publication.)
On Monday, the Thunder’s hometown paper published a “curious comparison” between the team and the state of Israel in an op-ed written by guest columnist Eitan Reshef, reported Sean Keeley at Awful Announcing.
“Always find the local angle, we suppose,” wrote Keeley.
According to Keeley’s report and screenshots he shared, the op-ed was headlined, “Like Thunder, Israel is an underdog that has become hated” and shared with an image of a basketball bearing the design of the Israeli flag, white with blue stripes and a Star of David.
Screenshot via X.
“The op-ed went viral on social media and not, perhaps, in the way the author intended (or maybe exactly how the author intended, who knows),” Keeley added. “It was pulled down from The Oklahoman’s website shortly thereafter.”
The link to the op-ed on The Oklahoman’s website now has a 404 “page not found” error, and the Internet Archive did not manage to capture it before it was deleted, but several websites that syndicate the newspaper’s content still have it live, including MSN.
The Oklahoman did not comment on Reshef’s column or why it was deleted.
According to the op-ed as it was syndicated at MSN.com, Reshef, the author, is “a native Oklahoman and “a Chicago-based entrepreneur, investor and former advertising agency CEO.”
“As both a fiercely proud Oklahoman and a Jew,” wrote Reshef, “the parallels between the Thunder and the nation of Israel are difficult to ignore. Neither was supposed to become what it is.”
Reshef goes on to argue he has found “something strangely familiar abrew between the online keyboard warriors and the voices of punditry as they respond to the continued dominance of the Oklahoma City Thunder,” noting the team’s newbie status in the NBA and the resentment that the young team’s sudden success had invoked.
“The greater the Thunder’s success becomes, the more critics seem determined to diminish it or even root for its demise,” Reshef wrote, pointing out that Oklahoma City was “one of the NBA’s smallest markets,” but “built something remarkable anyway…by relying on the resources and skills we had with discipline and our own brand of resilience.”
“Israel’s story shares many of those attributes — a young, microscopic nation limited in natural resources, surrounded by hostility, perpetually under scrutiny, and constantly forced to justify its actions and existence,” he continued. “Israel nonetheless transformed itself into a global powerhouse of innovation, technology, defense, medicine and agriculture.”
Israel, the Thunder, “and even Oklahoma City” have “risen out of the ashes of a traumatic past despite all odds,” Reshef wrote, an apparent reference to the Oklahoma City bombing, and concluded by comparing the team and the country’s critics:
When dynasties emerge in sports, fanbases often cry ‘foul’ questioning the legitimacy of success. The more competent and victorious the organization becomes, the more emotionally invested outsiders hope for its failure. We are witnessing that now with the Thunder. They are young, composed, and incredibly well-managed. Instead of praising the blueprint, many fans react with disdain, espousing conspiracy theories amplified by social media.
Israel experiences a similar phenomenon on a far more consequential stage. Of course, criticism of governments and their policies is fair game. But the hyper-fixation on Israel often transcends normal criticism into deeper and darker discomfort with Jewish strength, sovereignty, and achievements. When Israel thrives across a spectrum of global stages, many observers convert healthy criticism into rabid animosity.
That reaction says less about Israel or the Thunder than it does about our human nature.
We are comfortable with underdogs. What unsettles us is when underdogs stop behaving like victims and consistently triumph. The world loves stories of perseverance until it produces an uncompromising might. Then admiration mutates into skepticism and distrust.
The Thunder are not hated because they somehow gamed the system. They are hated because they mastered it. Israel is not obsessively scrutinized because it failed, but due to its success despite deeply-rooted envy and darker historical motives.
–
New: The Mediaite One-Sheet “Newsletter of Newsletters”
Your daily summary and analysis of what the many, many media newsletters are saying and reporting. Subscribe now!
Oklahoma
Scotfest Oklahoma returns in 2026, will be final event for historic festival
BROKEN ARROW, Okla. — Scotfest Oklahoma will return to Broken Arrow for one last hurrah.
Organizers were forced to cancel the event last year after thieves stole a trailer carrying $70,000 worth of items for the festival. The trailer was also valued at $15,000.
The final festival will bring games, food, and of course, bagpipes, to Broken Arrow.
“We may have heavy hearts, but we plan to send Scotfest off with full glasses, loud pipes and one unforgettable final weekend,” said Kris Morrison, executive director of Scotfest. “For 46 years, this festival has brought people together to celebrate Scottish and Celtic culture, and while saying goodbye is not easy, we are committed to making this final year a celebration worthy of the community that built it.”
Scotfest, which was founded in 1980, was designed to bring Scottish culture, competition, music, and food to Green Country.
The final Scotfest will take place at the Broken Arrow Events Park on September 18, 19, and 20. More information is available at Scotfest’s website.
Thousands of dollars worth of gear stolen from Scotfest
Stay in touch with us anytime, anywhere —
Oklahoma
Oily Sludge Is Flooding Their Dream Home. Oklahoma Regulators Say They Can’t Help.
It was their dream home, a newly built, 2,500-square-foot modern farmhouse with a playroom that Mitch and Kara Meredith had saved for 12 years to buy for their growing family. During construction, family members had written their favorite Bible verses on studs throughout the house. For four idyllic years on Darlene Lane, the couple hosted birthday parties for their two young daughters, who became fast friends with the other children in the recently built subdivision in Fort Gibson.
Then one evening last summer, five weeks after the couple’s third child was born, their bathroom flooded.
When their 7-year-old ran into the garage to report that water was all over the floor, Mitch assumed a pipe had burst, or perhaps the toilet was backed up.
Then he entered the bathroom. A thick, black fluid with an oily sheen covered the floor. Kara yelled from their bedroom for him to come quickly; the same substance was flowing out of the floor next to their bed.
Mitch, along with several family members, fought the flood all night, vacuuming up the sludge and emptying buckets out the window. Black goo covered their arms. Shiny rainbow patterns covered their shoes. After pulling the bathtub away from the wall, Mitch saw that the substance was gushing through the house’s foundation. It was clear this wasn’t a plumbing problem.
Around 5 a.m., Mitch’s uncle turned to him. “I think this is oil,” he said. The family called the fire department, and Kara rushed their three children, including their infant, to her grandmother’s house.
“And that’s the last time we got to be in our home,” Mitch said.
The Frontier and ProPublica’s reporting on oil and gas pollution in Oklahoma over the last year has shown how old oil wells abandoned by the industry pose severe public and environmental health risks. Officially, the state lists 19,000 orphan wells that state regulators are responsible for cleaning up, but the true figure is likely over 300,000, according to federal researchers.
State records suggest that the Merediths’ house may have been built on top of an improperly plugged oil well drilled in the 1940s. And on that fateful Saturday last August, something woke it up.
Mitch drilled a hole into his home’s concrete foundation in hopes of diverting the sludge out of the house and into the yard. It worked: The foul-smelling water began to pour out of the cavity, filling a deep trench they had dug.
Many of their possessions were ruined. A strong smell of gas hung throughout the house, permeating clothes, sheets and mattresses.
After leaving Darlene Lane, the family moved four times in four months — at times paying their mortgage and rent simultaneously.
At the outset of the crisis, the family had pinned most of their hopes on the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, the regulatory agency responsible for overseeing oil and gas — including pollution from the industry and plugging old wells. They wanted the agency to figure out what happened — and help them clean it up.
It did not take long for their hopes to transform into anger.
State regulators, according to the family, have done little to help them.
“They wanted to act like it would go away,” Mitch said.
In October, more than a month after the flooding began, Jeremy Hodges, the director of the commission’s oil and gas division, met with Mitch and Kara at the house.
He told them that when his team stuck a gas reader into the hole in their bathroom floor, where the oily water continued to flow, it showed gas concentrations at explosive levels, according to a recording that the Merediths provided to The Frontier and ProPublica.
The local public works authority had also brought out a gas reader. It found gas levels that constituted a “serious and immediate hazard,” according to a report.
Old, unplugged wells — like the one that state records indicate is near or possibly under the Merediths’ house — are known to leak gas and toxic fluids.
Hodges also told the couple that the agency would likely have to tear down the house to look for the well and plug it. Subsequent sampling conducted by the commission showed salt readings that suggested the presence of wastewater resulting from the production of oil and gas. Other testing by the state’s environmental quality department found elevated levels of heavy metals commonly found in oil field wastewater including barium and bromide. Mitch took his own samples and paid an environmental lab to test them. The results also pointed to oil and gas pollution.
But as the months wore on, the agency never stated explicitly that the mysterious substance contaminating the Merediths’ home was the byproduct of oil and gas production. It simply referred to the pollution as “water” in public statements.
In a packed town hall in March convened after the family began criticizing the agency on social media, community members grilled Hodges and several other high-ranking agency representatives about the Merediths’ situation for two hours, pressing them about the environmental risks and demanding action. About half of Oklahomans live within 1 mile of oil and gas wells.
“Would you live there?” a woman in the audience asked Hodges.
“I’m not going to answer that,” he responded, prompting jeers from the crowd.
“So you’re saying that you don’t want to answer the question of whether you would actually live in that house?” asked Mitch’s brother, Matt Meredith.
“That’s a hypothetical,” Hodges said. “I’m not going to answer that.”
Homeowners facing such an event should file damages with their insurance companies, Jim Marshall, an administrator with the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, said from the front of the community center conference room. But the family’s insurance company had denied their claim last fall — citing exclusions for pollution and water damage — without ever inspecting the damage, according to the Merediths’ attorney. The Merediths have sued American Mercury, their insurance company, which did not answer questions about the case because of pending litigation, as well as their developers, who did not respond to requests for comment.
At the public meeting, Marshall suggested underground water sources could be pushing fluid into the home, noting that the Merediths’ neighborhood once contained several ponds. If the culprit is not oil and gas, that would shift the responsibility for cleanup to other state agencies. Marshall, Hodges and an agency attorney repeatedly told the crowd that with the house likely blocking access to the well, the agency had reached the end of its legal ability to help the Merediths.
Jack Damrill, a spokesperson for the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, did not answer questions about what the agency thinks is causing the pollution but said it “recognizes the seriousness of the concerns raised regarding the Meredith family matter, as well as the broader public interest.” The agency, he said in a statement, has “devoted significant investigative time, technical expertise, and regulatory resources to reviewing the situation and will continue to evaluate any new, relevant information as it becomes available.”
Last week, Oklahoma lawmakers passed a bill introduced by the Merediths’ state senator, Avery Frix, that would create a fund to compensate homeowners whose houses have been damaged by oil and gas pollution. While hopeful that the legislation will help them, Mitch noted that it requires the commission to confirm the presence of an old well, something the agency has yet to do at the Merediths’ home.
On Darlene Lane, the flow of contamination increased in late April and continues to seep into their neighbor’s yard.
“What I’ve begged for from the beginning is for them to help me contain it,” Mitch said. “They have refused to do anything.”
Nine months after they were forced to flee their dream home, the family of five is crammed into a 900-square-foot, two-bedroom bungalow on Mitch’s parents’ farm where the couple had lived as newlyweds. The girls share a bunk bed. The baby sleeps in Mitch and Kara’s room.
The girls often ask to play with the neighbors they had to leave behind, along with many of their possessions. Their toys still line the shelves of their bedrooms in the house on Darlene Lane, awaiting their return. Wet clothes sat in the washer for months. Half-packed boxes are scattered around the floor, evidence of the family’s panicked retreat last August.
The house is stuck in time, like a museum of the Merediths’ old life.
Toxic wastewater from oil fields keeps pouring out of the ground in Oklahoma. For years, residents have filed complaints and struggled to find solutions. We need your help to understand the full scale of the problem.
Oklahoma
Michigan softball ousted by No. 3 Oklahoma in NCAA Tournament
The Michigan softball team, which won two elimination games completed late on Saturday, could not muster much offense and used three pitchers as the Wolverines saw their season end against mighty Oklahoma.
Oklahoma, ranked No. 3, was dominant in an 8-1 win over Michigan (36-22) on Sunday. The Sooners (51-8), who have won eight national titles, including a four-peat from 2021-2024, hosted the regional at Love’s Field and advance to the Super Regional for a 16th straight season and will host.
The Wolverines have made the NCAA Tournament the last three seasons under head coach Bonnie Tholl but have not reached a Super Regional since 2016.
Michigan, after a first-game 1-0 loss to Kansas on Friday, won two elimination games on Saturday to advance for a shot at Oklahoma. The Wolverines beat Binghamton 6-0 in the first game and then earned a comeback 12-10 victory over Kansas
But after generating 14 hits in the win over Kansas and scoring a combined 18 runs on Saturday, Michigan could not generate much offense against balanced Oklahoma. The Wolverines had three hits and left two on base.
Michigan’s only run came in the bottom of the second inning when Erin Hoehn, who replaced starter Gabby Ellis in the circle during the second inning, hit a home run to center field to make it 4-1. It was Hoehn’s second home run of the regional.
The Sooners took a 3-0 lead in the first inning and never looked back. They capped their scoring with a solo home run in the top of the seventh. Michigan tried to find a way to slow the Oklahoma offense. Ellis was replaced in the second inning by Hoehn, and then Haley Ferguson took over in the fifth.
achengelis@detroitnews.com
@chengelis
-
Massachusetts3 minutes agoMonson’s Church Manufacturing Dam removed, Chicopee Brook restored
-
Minnesota9 minutes agoMinnesota’s housing growth slowed down in 2025
-
Mississippi15 minutes agoU.S. Supreme Court Reverses Mississippi Redistricting Order That Ended GOP Supermajority
-
Missouri21 minutes agoDemolition timeline detailed for Providence Road bridge over I-70
-
Montana27 minutes agoCiting Wyoming corner-crossing case, hunters sue Montana for public land access – WyoFile
-
Nebraska33 minutes agoNebraska ranchers struggle to recover from historic wildfires as drought worsens crisis
-
Nevada39 minutes agoNevada workers fear homelessness as housing, jobs vanish before July deadline | Fox News Video
-
New Hampshire45 minutes agoOpinion: The nostalgia of a small town – Concord Monitor








