Al's
Most Recent
Quote
of the day:
“The
price of Prozac went up 50% last year. When Prozac users were asked
about it, they said, “Whatever…’”
Jay Leno
I
wish all of y’all a Happy New Year!
I am
still reading “Comanche Empire”.
As I understand it this is used
as a textbook at Southern Methodist University. There was one
passage that stood out. The Osage tribe originally lived within the
boundaries of the Comancheria (lands claimed by the Comanche) but
constant clashes with the well mounted and well experienced Comanche
cavalry forced them to move to a small strip of land on the present
day Oklahoma/Kansas border. In 1823 under the auspices of the US
Government a treaty between the Osage and Comanche was achieved and a
system of trade was established. In one trade session the Osage
bought 20 white children from the Comanche for firearms, gunpowder
and ammo that they had taken in raids on white settlers. The Osage
took the kids to a US Cavalry fort where an American Indian Agency
existed and offered them for horses and metal utensils like knives,
axes and pots and pans (believe it or not) in return. The Osage
decided that ransoming white children was a great way to make a
living. Two years later the Osage and the Comanche met for another
event and a trade valued at an estimated $60,000 changed hands. That
was a hell of a lot of money in those days. By the way, right after
the turn of the century the mighty Comanche had virtually disappeared
and so had the bison. The Osage discovered that the cattle ranchers
would pay rent to the Osage to allow grazing on the miles and miles
of grass on Osage land. They also discovered that their lands were
virtually afloat on a sea of oil. To this day, the Osage is the
richest aboriginal tribe in existence. God works in mysterious ways.
Over
in Fayetteville, NC an elderly cattleman had raised a black Angus
bull from a calf to a 2,000 pound behemoth. The bull never relented
from his hostile behavior. The cattleman wanted to keep the bull at
stud to replenish his herd but he had very little control of his
behavior. One day the bull got out of his personal pasture and went
a couple of pastures over chasing the cows around. The cattleman
attempted to coax the bull back into his personal field but tripped
and fell. The bull immediately charged and pinned the old gentleman
to the ground by pressing his forehead into the man’s chest killing
him. A few days before the cattleman had sold the bull to a
slaughterhouse because of its behavior. The bull will soon be
distributed around the southeast in smaller pieces.
I
just read where the amount of money we contribute to Social Security
in our lifetime in no way covers our medical expenses after the age
of 65. I vehemently disagree. What about the hundreds of thousands
of tax payers that die a couple of years before or after the age of
65? What happens to that money they contributed virtually all their
lives? Is there a refund to their heirs? Of course there isn’t.
That money is spent anyway the House and Senate see fit.
Here
is a few comments about the book Guns,
Germs and Steel. The
author is investigating the mystery of why some segments of society
progress to become conquerors and adventurers and others do not. In
one chapter he touches on the aborigine peoples of Australia. It is
well known the they had been there alone for at least 40,000 years
and DNA has proven that their ancestors came from the Indonesian
archipelago. It seems that during a distant ice age the sea levels
fell hundreds of feet making it possible to walk from Indonesia to
Australia...except for one stretch where there was a channel about 50
miles wide that would require a substantial boat. The Aborigine
never did have boats larger than a hollowed out log and essentially
did not know what a ship was until they saw the English arrive in
them.
Not
only that, the Aborigine never progressed past the stone age before
the arrival of the Europeans. They did not need to...they could kill
or capture game with sharpened stone tipped weapons. What the
mystery is, what happened to make the aborigine have no ambition to
improve their lives? They did not seek ways to improve their
health...no medicine...no sanitation, no discovery of the causes of
diseases, etc. In one instance an explorer went with a group of them
on a food scavenging trip. They walked for a considerable distance,
stopped and dug up a plant that was of the sweet potato family,
removed the tuber and planted it back in the same hole. The explorer
asked them why didn't they take it back to their camp and plant it
and they said that they never thought of it. There are tribes in
central Africa and in the Amazon rain forest that to this day are
still in the stone age. How is this possible with me sitting here
looking at an devise that is about 1 1/2” X 3”X 1/2” and I can
pick it up and talk to someone in Russia?
This
Date in History December 31
1600
On this date Queen Elizabeth I signed a charter authorizing a group
of London merchants to form an organization known as the East India
Company to act at the behest of the crown to capture the spice trade
in the East Indies from the hands of the Dutch. This endeavor was
unsuccessful but the market they found in India and China more than
made up for their failure against the Dutch. Soon the flow of spices
from India and the tea from China was almost unending on their way to
England. This almost untapped gold mine of consumables did not go
unnoticed by the French and Dutch and they attempted to move in and
get part of this cornucopia. This prompted the East India Company to
form their own army and navy to protect their investment. Eventually
England felt it was necessary to declare India as a British
possession and sent in a governor and staff to rule this most recent
colony to protect the trade from interlopers by use of the mighty
British army and navy. After this decision the East India Company
became nothing but an administrative arm of the British Governor. In
1857 the Indian soldiers in the British army revolted against the
British control of their country. This “Indian Revolt” was
crushed the next year and Great Britain tightened its grip on India
even more by dissolving the East India Company. They even had the
gall to pass a law stating that the Indians could not go to the
seaside and dig out settling ponds to allow the water to evaporate
leaving the salt. Salt was imperative to the Indians not only for
seasoning but for food preservation and imperative for personal
consumption considering the heat. This meant that they could only
get their salt from the British. It was a monopoly of a necessary
item. In the early 1930’s an Indian holy man named Mahatma Gandhi
began a peaceful revolt that eventually caused the demise of English
rule and the beginning of an Independent India. By the way, the
beginning of the end of British rule began when Gandhi left home
headed for the coast to obtain some salt stating that salt was a gift
from God and should not be controlled by man. Along the way he had
gathered more and more followers and he arrived at the coast with
over 60,000 people. The British army did not know what to do with
that many people and they let them alone.
The
English tried the same monopoly on tea and cod fish here in the land
of the free and the home of the brave. How did they stop the
colonists from getting cod? They forbade any American vessel to fish
in the known haunts of the cod in the north Atlantic and patrolled it
with warships. How about the tea? They forbade the colonists from
purchasing tea from any source except a British owned company. This
is what imperialism is all about, y'all. I causes wars, however. It
was this imperialism that caused Great Britain to need the mightiest
army and navy on the planet and it took our ancestors a little over 8
years to overcome them.
Thanks
for listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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