Good morning,
Quote
of the day:
“Don’t
confuse fame with success. Madonna is one; Helen Keller is the
other.”
Erma Bombeck
A
while back out in California and middle aged woman was out jogging
and was attacked by four pit bulls The lady was killed and partially
devoured. Before all of this several people in the neighborhood had
complained about these four dogs attacking. This time, the dogs
meant business. The cops had warned the dog owner to keep the dogs
in check but evidently he didn't. He was arrested and charged with
the murder of the jogger. The dog owner is/was a pot grower, among
other things.
There
was another case of a child being killed by dogs but this is a little
different. It seems that a family that had four dogs in a fenced in
yard lived next to a motel. There was a family that had checked into
the motel. One of the members of the family was a three year old boy
that was autistic. This kid somehow wandered away from the parents,
opened the gate of the neighbors fence and entered. Ten minutes
later he was found dead without a bite mark in him....but he had a
lot of scratches. It appears that the dogs wanted to play and as
dogs will do, they paw at whoever the playmate is. One of the
scratches open a jugular and the kid bled out. I don't know who's
fault this is...except the parents.
A
couple of days ago the Greenville County deputies were called to a
filling station on the south side of town. The operator of the
station said that there was a car in the lot with two people aboard
that had been sitting in the same spot for over two hours without
moving. A deputy arrived and saw a man asleep behind the wheel with
a firearm on his lap. The cop retreated and called for back-up which
soon arrived. The cops surrounded the car and did the obligatory by
screaming for them to “show me your hands” and “get out of the
car”. The cops had their weapons at the ready. The driver got out
of the car and immediately surrendered and was handcuffed. From here
on the description of what happened is the report of one of the cops.
The passenger did not get out of the car immediately and more
screaming ensued. Eventually the passenger exited the car but did
not obey commands to put his hands on top of his head, etc., etc.
The passenger started reaching into his waistband and one of the cops
shot him. He went down and continued to reach into his waistband so
another shot was fired and the passenger died. I know of no law that
was broken by the driver because of the confusing South Carolina
laws about guns in private automobiles. The passenger's crime was
not obeying police commands in a timely manner...he paid for that
with his life. There was no weapon in the waistband...he was 22
years old. An eye-witness reported the events a lot different that
what is above. He said the passenger got out of the car and was shot
twice in rapid succession. I do not now what will come of this but
what ever happened to Tasers, pepper spray and Mace? What if the
passenger was very hard of hearing if not deaf?
I
hope most of y’all remember Natalee Holloway from the
Birmingham,Alabama area that disappeared while on vacation to Aruba.
The alleged killer of Natalee was the son of a prominent Dutch
family. It reported that this man eventually confessed to the after
the statute limitations had expired. Aruba is a Dutch possession and
their laws prevail. In the United States there is no time limit in
the pursuit of a murderer but evidently there is by Dutch law. He
was caught in Peru after murdering a Peruvian girl and is in the
joint for an extended period.
1919
After many years of bitching, marching and semi-rioting by the
girls, on this date the United States Congress ratified the 19th
Amendment that allowed women to vote. The amendment then went out to
each state for individual ratification. This crusade began in 1848
in Seneca Falls, N.Y. headed up by Elizabeth Stanton and Lucretia
Mott. Their crusade was halted for several years due to the American
Civil War from 1861-1865. The disenfranchisement of women voters was
supported by most of the population at the time. It took the
dedication and zeal of the leaders of the women voting rights
campaign to get this black mark on America erased. We still have not
erased that black mark left by the rape and near genocide of the
American Indian.
1944
The loading of the combat troops and the tools of war on ships in
anticipation of the landing on Normandy is nearing completion. The
combat troops are sitting on pins and needles. They had been trained
to a razors edge for this operation and that includes the British and
American airborne troops that were going in ahead of everybody to
help clear the way. Everybody was ready in fevered anticipation.
1863
CSA General Robert E. Lee had persuaded CSA President Jefferson
Davis that if he was able to capture a Union state Capitol the
general public in the north would realize that the war could be
fought on their soil and would force Lincoln to the negotiations
table. Lee had chosen Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. In order to get
this operation underway, on this date he sent General Richard Ewell
and the 2nd
Corp from Fredericksburg, Virginia into the Shenandoah Valley then he
would swing north into Pennsylvania and encircle Harrisburg. Lee and
the rest of the army would be close behind and reinforce Ewell and
then demand that Lincoln meet them for negotiations or Harrisburg
would be leveled. The Union military found that Lee was on the move
and headed north so they hastily began a chase hoping to cut Lee off.
Ewell was within 30 miles of Harrisburg when the Union army was
discovered close aboard to Lee’s army. Lee knew he could not fight
a battle as strung out as his troops were so he called Ewell and the
others in to meet and deploy near a small Pennsylvania town named
Gettysburg and await the damned Yankees.
1989
For three weeks an estimated 300,000 young Chinese had been
gathering tin Tiananmen Square in Beijing protesting the repressive
Chinese Communist Government and were demanding a democratic form of
government be established. On this date the Chinese Government got
fed up and sent in Chinese troops to take care of business. The
troops went in with AK-47’s ablaze and began killing
indiscriminately and arresting as many as they could. News media
from all over the world was there and could not believe what they
were seeing. There were at least 1,000 killed and over 10,000
arrested. President Bush (George H) ordered financial sanctions
imposed in protest of this clear abridgment of human rights. Then we
turn around and send our athletes over there for the Olympics. What
are we thinking?
1986
US Naval intelligence specialist Jonathon Pollard is arrested for
selling US military intelligence information to Israel. Pollard had
given Israel enough information to fill a small room. In return he
was given $50,000 and was supposed to have $300,000 put in a secret
Swiss bank account. Pollard was tried for espionage and convicted
and given a life sentence. Israel stood by Pollard declaring that
since the US and Israel are allies, they should have been given the
information anyway. Needless to say, relations with Israel and the
US chilled a great deal. Later the US and Israel met and tried to
hammer out their differences. Pollard’s release was part of
Israel’s stipulations. The US said “Not no, but hell no.”
1940
On this date the book The Heart is a
Lonely Hunter authored by Carson
McCullers is published and is an immediate success. She was born in
1917 in Columbus, Georgia and named Lula Carson Smith. Her mother
believed she was an artistic genius and gave her much encouragement.
Lula decided she wanted to be a concert pianist and was indeed
talented enough to be accepted at the famous Julliard School in New
York. On the way riding the subway to her first class, the money her
parents had given her to survive on was stolen. She worked and
supported herself in school for about a year but decided that she
would try writing and moved back to Georgia. She married a soldier
named Reeves McCuller who had no ambition and their marriage suffered
because of it. Not only that they both were sexually ambidextrous.
The both frequently fell madly in love with members of either sex.
They split up and now Carson McCullers moved into a Victorian house
in Brooklyn, N.Y. and began writing in earnest. There were other
artists in that house including Alan Copland and Salvador Dali.
Reeves re-joined the army and became a decorated soldier in WWII.
However, after the war he got heavy into the sauce and ended up
killing himself in a Paris hotel room. Carson gave us several more
great prices of literature such as The
Ballad of the Sad Café which was made
into a movie by screenwriter Edward Albee. Carson died at the age of
50 from breast cancer and a series of strokes. What a damned shame.
1942
On this date Japanese Admiral Naguma commanding the bulk of entire
Japanese navy ordered a preplanned attack on the central Pacific US
military installation on the island of Midway. The Japanese felt
that Midway and Aleutian Islands in Alaska were imperative to control
if they were going to expand their empire. They also had hoped that
the remainder of the US Navy that was not destroyed at Pearl Harbor
five months before would come out and fight so the Japanese could
finish them off. The first air attack on Midway did significant
damage and the US Navy responded with an attack of their own from the
aircraft carriers they had left. US Navy intelligence had determined
that the Japanese were going to attack Midway and the US Naval forces
were there waiting when the attack came. The first attacks by the US
Navy resulted in the destruction of 68 US planes and crews but
Admiral Nagumo now knew that there were at least two US carriers
within striking distance. Nagumo also had conflicting information
from his staff as to what to arm his planes with, either bombs or
torpedoes to either make a follow-up strike on Midway or sent torpedo
planes after the US carriers. It was too late. A swarm of US dive
bombers arrived on the scene when the deck of the Japanese carriers
were in the middle of re-arming and three of the four Japanese
carriers were sunk going to the bottom in flames. Nagumo had lost
3,500 men, 368 aircraft and three carriers. He had to withdraw. He
had not counted on the tenacity of US Admirals Jack Fletcher, Ray
Spruance, overall commander Chester Nimitz and thousands of
courageous sailors and airmen.
Born today:
470BC
Greek philosopher Socrates. He said “By all means get married.
If you have a good wife you will be happy. If you have a bad one you
will become a philosopher.” Think on that, all of you philosophers
out there.
1908
US actress Rosalind Russell. She was talking to another actress
who said “I dread the thought of forty-five.” Rosalind responded
with “Why, what happened to you then, dear?” Women can be very
catty at times.
1936
US actor Bruce Dern. He said “Because I am the only man to have
killed John Wayne in a movie so the producers consider me a villain.”
If I ain’t mistaken it was Bruce that starred in “Middle-Aged
Crazies” and also that movie “Coming Home” with Jane Fonda and
John Voight about a soldier returning from Nam with no legs (Voight).
The movie ends with Bruce wading out into the ocean committing
suicide.
Thanks for listening I can hardly wait
until tomorrow
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