Good
morning,
Quote
of the day:
“We
keep saying that we are through with the past. The problem is that
the past is not through with us.”
Educator Bergen Evans
Consider
this:
It
has been confirmed that the Earth is about 4.3 billion years old.
The oldest fossil of an animal or plant ever found was about 165
million years old. My rudimentary math tells me that leaves about
4.14 billion years unaccounted for. Many scientists and most Central
American Indian tribes say that life on this planet as we know it has
been annihilated at least four times. Who/what was here before the
dinosaurs...if anything? Did intelligent life exist before then? If
so, how far back in the dim corridors of the past were they? If you
reduce the life on this planet from 4.3 billion years to one year,
present mankind has been walking upright for about four
seconds...what else has happened?
I
guess many of you read about a riot that broke out after church
services in rural South Carolina. There were about 75 parishioners
involved and it took several car loads of sheriff’s deputies to
break it up. What the problem was is a certain group of the flock
wanted a vote to get rid of the present pastor and there was another
group that wanted to keep the present pastor and they would not allow
a vote. Both sides decided to end this impasse the honorable way,
they chose to fight about it. Make no mistake, the Old Testament
allows and even encourages wholesale murder. In the book of Exodus
Moses was told by God to instruct Joshua and his army to totally
annihilate several tribes on their way to Canaan. The reason being
was when they encountered the armies of Canaan they would not have to
worry about an attack from the rear by any surviving hostiles. It
worked. This was a matter of survival for the Children of Israel but
fighting to see who was going to be the pastor is at least juvenile.
All I have to say is “Thou shalt not kill” except under certain
conditions and as directed.
This
Date in History February 4
1861
Earlier in November of 1860, the Republican nominee Abraham
Lincoln was elected president. The Republican Party was formed in
1850 for the sole purpose of eliminating slavery in America. As
early as 1858 the slave-holding states had threatened secession if a
Republican was elected President. The Democratic Party was divided
and in disarray and there was very little chance that their
presidential nominee would win. Almost immediately after the Lincoln
election, the State of South Carolina began assembling the paperwork
necessary to secede from the Union. On December 20, 1860 the South
Carolina legislature issued the “Ordinance of Secession”
declaring them as no longer being a member of the United States of
America. Soon after various regiments of the South Carolina militia
began capturing Union forts and armaments because they knew a war was
on the near horizon. On this date, representatives of South
Carolina, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia and Louisiana
gathered in Montgomery, Alabama to hammer out a Constitution and
establish the Confederate States of
America and elected Jefferson Davis of
Mississippi as President. By the time Lincoln was inaugurated in
March of 1861, Texas had joined the Confederacy. Very soon after
this meeting all of the Union forts and outposts on Confederate soil
had been capture by the Confederacy except Fort Sumter in Charleston,
SC harbor (been there) and Fort Pickens on the end of the Santa Rosa
Island peninsula near Pensacola, Florida (been there, too). The
Civil War began in earnest of April 12, 1861 when CSA General P.T G.
Beauregard ordered an artillery bombardment of Fort Sumter after the
commander of the Fort refused to surrender to the Confederates.
Eventually the commander of the fort did indeed surrender because the
Confederate artillery forbade any supplies reaching the fort. Fort
Sumter is on an island in the middle of the Charleston, SC harbor and
supplies can only get there by boat, parachute or helicopter.
1789
On this date 69 members of Congress cast their ballots for our
first President of the United States. In those days the members of
Congress cast a ballot with two names on it, the person who had the
most votes at the top of the ballot was President and the other was
Vice-President. In this case the President was George Washington and
the Vice President was John Adams. The same thing happened four
years later.
Born today:
1876
US writer Sarah Cleghorn. She said “The children working in the
factories are close enough that they can look out the window and
watch the adults playing golf.” Using child labor in America is
not that far in our past, y'all.
1895
English actor Nigel Bruce. When told the price of tickets to the
ballet he said “That is a hell of lot of money to watch people
jump.” I concur.
1906
German theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Bonhoeffer was a vehement
anti-Nazi and had no problem saying so. When asked why he did not
join the Nazi party he said “When you board a train going the wrong
direction, there is no use in running down the aisle headed the
opposite direction.” He was hanged by the Nazis just before the
surrender.
Died
today:
1982
English musician Alex Harvey. He said “Do you think Paul
McCartney makes records just to aggravate me personally, or does he
want to get up every freaking body’s nose with his freaking
antics?” Alex and Paul evidently did not get along.
2006
US feminist Betty Freidan. She said “The feminine mystique has
buried millions of American women alive.” What the hell is the
“feminine mystique” Betty?
Thanks for listening I can hardly wait until
tomorrow.
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