Good
morning,
Quote
of the day:
“My
ancestors did not come over on the Mayflower but they were there to
meet the boat.”
US
Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell, Cheyenne
A
while back up in Charlotte two gunmen burst into a Subway sandwich
shop on Sugar Creek Road and attempted to rob the joint. The clerk
behind the counter produced a weapon of his own and capped one of the
thieves instantly and shot the other one who fled. The cops came and
could tell from the blood trail that the one that fled was seriously
injured. So they just went to the Carolina Medical Center and
waited. Sure enough, a man showed up with a gunshot wound. The
other dead bastard was carted off in a meat wagon. I have no
sympathy. Nor do I have any sympathy for that piece of trash that
was executed in Oklahoma last week even though he mumbled something
just before he died. Read about the crimes he committed and then try
to feel sympathy...for his victims. Everyone has to be held
responsible for their actions or we will sink into anarchy.
This
Date in History January 19
1809
One of the greatest poet/writers this country has ever produced is
born in Boston. Edgar Allen Poe was born on this day, but he had
lost both of his parents by the time he was twelve he went to live
with his Godfather John Allen, a wealthy tobacco dealer. Poe’s
Godfather sent him to school in England for a while and then he came
back and entered the prestigious University of Virginia. The trouble
was that Poe was a player and made some major gambling debts and
argued with his Godfather to bail him out. It did not happen and Poe
was kicked out of UVA in 1826 after only eight months. Not only
that, Poe was heavy into the sauce and would toke on opium from time
to time. He joined the US Army serving two years and was offered an
appointment to West Point. While in the army he was sent to Fort
Moultrie on Sullivan’s Island near Charleston, SC. While there he
is to have supposedly written his first mystery novel The
Gold Bug. There is a small tavern on
Sullivan’s Island called Poe’s
Tavern that is supposed to be the
place that The Gold Bug was
written, but that is just a legend. In any event, Poe’s
Tavern is one of my most favorite
watering holes on the planet. Poe did indeed attend West Point but
had yet another falling out with his Godfather about money and at the
same time he broke enough rules at West Point to get himself kicked
out. During
all of this time Poe had written a few credible poems which did not
receive much attention. In 1836 while working as an editor for a
newspaper in Richmond, Virginia this boy married his 13 year old
cousin. Poe wrote his first full length work which was published in
1838. He lost his job in Richmond be cause he got heavy into the
sauce again and he and his wife moved to Philadelphia and he went to
work for two magazines as a literary critic. His critiques were
admired for being correct and concise. It was during this time that
he gave us The Fall of the House of
Usher and The
Tell-Tale
Heart, both of which are milestones of
mystery novels to this day. Right after this he delivered The
Murder at Rue Morgue
and The Purloined Letter
which remains to this day the first detective novels. He then moved
to New York and stunned the world with his poem the immortal The
Raven which brought him eternal fame.
Soon after this his wife fell ill from tuberculosis and died in 1847.
This put Poe deeper into the sauce and opium but in 1849 he moved to
Richmond and hooked up with an old flame and they decided to marry.
He went to Baltimore to have a bachelor party with some of his trashy
friends. After a while at the party Poe showed up missing but he was
eventually found wallowing around in a gutter incoherent. His
friends took him to a hospital, but he died on October 7, 1849 at the
age of 40. What a waste of God given talent.
1983
On this day former Nazi Chief of Lyon, France, Klaus Barbie is
arrested in Bolivia for crimes against humanity 40 years earlier.
While Barbie was the Nazi chief in Lyon, he sent thousands of French
Jews and resistance worker to the deaths in interment camps in
addition to personally torturing hundreds to get information. After
World War II Barbie fled to Germany and joined an underground group
to fight the Communists. The American Counter-Intelligence-Corps
(CIC) broke up the group but hired Barbie to help gather information
on the Communists by what ever means available. In 1949 the CIC felt
that Barbie would serve the US well in Bolivia as a monitor of
Communist activity in Central America and smuggled him into country.
While there he also hired himself out to various military regimes
especially the one headed by Hugo Banzer who came to power in 1971.
Banzer was especially repressive and cruel and used Barbie to good
advantage. About this time Nazi hunters Serge Klarsfield and Beatte
Kunsel found out where Barbie was and came looking for him. As you
might expect Banzer refused to extradite Barbie but four years later
a more liberal regime came to power and agreed to extradite Barbie to
France if the French government would aid the impoverished Bolivia.
France agreed and “The Butcher of Lyon” was flown to France. In
July of 1987 Barbie was convicted of 187 crimes against humanity and
sentenced to life imprisonment, which is the highest penalty imposed
in France. Barbie died of cancer in prison in 1991 at the age of 77.
I wonder where he is today.
1822
The 23 year old Virginian Charles Bent decided to seek his fortune
and headed to the Wild West. He joined in with the Missouri Fur
Company. This company went down the toilet because of cutthroat
competition of John Jacob Astor’s American Fur Company. Bent
decided to go into the mercantile business and opens a trading post
in the Mexican owned city of Santa Fe in what is now New Mexico. He
opened a second one on the Arkansas River in what is now Colorado and
called it Bent’s Fort of which a replica is still with us. When
the Mexican War began, Bent showed his true colors when he welcomed
US General Stephan Kearny into Santa Fe with open arms much to the
chagrin of the Mexicans. Kearny awarded Bent with the governorship
of the new US territory of New Mexico and then Kearny and his troops
left Bent on his own and headed for California. Kearny did leave a
small contingent of troops for the protection of Bent. These troops
openly showed their contempt for the Mexicans and the Indians in and
around Taos which resulted a heated uprising. On this day in 1847 a
mob of Mexicans and Indians went to a house that Bent was visiting in
Taos, killed his bodyguards and killed and scalped Charles Bent. The
mob wasn’t done yet. They dragged Bent’s body through the
streets and killed and scalped an additional 15 honkies. Within two
weeks US Colonel Sterling Price arrived in Taos and executed all of
the ringleaders. In 1848 the Mexican War was over and Taos and Santa
Fe came under American control even more. By the way, Colonel
Sterling Price became a General for the Confederacy in 1861.
1806
On this date in Westmoreland County, Virginia a son is born to
Revolutionary War hero Henry “Light Horse Harry” Lee. Harry
decided to name him Robert Edward Lee, or as he became known as
Robert E. Lee. Robert was well educated in his teens and was given
an appointment to West Point. He graduated not first in his class
but went through the entire four years without a single demerit.
Before the Civil War he returned to the Academy as Superintendent.
After the Civil War he became the president of Washington College in
Lexington, Virginia. This college eventually was titled Washington
and Lee University in honor of Robert E. Lee. There is no use for me
to expound on the leadership capabilities of this man for they are
well known. Winston Churchill said of Lee “Never in the field of
human conflict has one man been loved by so many.”
Born today:
1782
US politico Daniel Webster. He said “Every man’s life liberty
and property are in danger when the legislature is in session.”
Especially if it is under the control of the Democrats.
1876
Cousin and wife of Albert Einstein, Elsa Einstein. She said “I
do not understand my husband’s theory of relativity, but I do know
he can be trusted.” That goes a long way toward a happy marriage.
1913
US entertainer Danny Kaye. He said “Life is just a big canvas,
throw all the paint on it that you can.” I feel the same way
except I say, “Life is a smorgasbord, taste as many pieces of it
that you can.”
Died today:
1936
English author Rudyard Kipling. He said “Borrow trouble for
yourself is that is your nature. But don’t borrow some for your
neighbors.”
2007
US Journalist Art Buchwald. He said “People are broad-minded.
They will accept someone that is a drug addict, wife beater,
alcoholic or even a newspaper man, but if they cannot drive a car
they think there is something wrong with them.” That reminds me of
the days when I was a “shagger” or a dancer of a style peculiar
to the Carolinas. When we would go to the Myrtle Beach area twice a
year for “SOS” which was a big, days long dance party, we would
go to “home base” which was either “The Pad”, “Fat
Harold’s”, “Ducks” or “The Spanish Galleon” (bars with
big dance floors) and the people would gather in different bunches
dependent upon the skill level of the dancers and they did not talk
to people not in their particular bunch. They were sickeningly the
epitome of elitists. I believe that if Ted Bundy or Jeffrey Dahmer
walked in and danced well enough, he would be accepted into the
elitists bunch. They were/are pretty shallow, y’all.
Thanks for listening I can hardly wait
until tomorrow
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