Musing
and History
Quote
of the day:
“Never
let your sense of morals get in the way of doing what is right.”
Mark
Twain
I
don't understand what all the hullabaloo with Prince is about. What
did he do that was so spectacular? How many hit songs has Willie
Nelson authored? Mozart wrote and entire opera at the age of 8.
What about Richard Rogers, Oscar Hammerstein, Moss Hart, Jerome Kern,
Cole Porter, Hoagie Carmichael, the Gershwin brothers among many,
many other songsmiths? These people wrote hundreds of songs, operas,
operettas and Broadway shows, etc. with songs that we all know to
this day. I do not know a word of “When Doves Cry” but I do know
“I've Got You Under My Skin”, “On the Road Again”, “Your
Cheatin' Heart”, “Ohhhhklahoma”and so do you.
This
Date in History June 7
1776
On this date Richard Henry “Light Horse Harry” Lee submitted
and encouraged the adoption of what was later known as the “Lee’s
resolutions”. I cannot tell you how important these resolutions
were to us. “Light Horse Harry” was the father of CSA General
Robert E. Lee and his proposed resolutions were looked at with an
interested eye by the other members Continental Congress. In fact,
after the builders of this great country saw what Lee had rendered,
they realized how close he had come to defining the soul of the
United States. The first few line of our Declaration of Independence
is almost word for word from Lee’s resolutions. A little more than
a month later, after the Congress had named a panel to enhance the
document into an acceptable level led by Thomas Jefferson (the most
polished writer in America at the time) and others they delivered our
most treasured and valued document of all time, our Declaration of
Independence. It was a miracle, y'all, a miracle.
1942
Four days before the United States had deciphered the Japanese
secret code and determined that in spite of the military
demonstrations toward the Aleutian Islands of Alaska, the real target
was the island of Midway. Midway is in the Pacific between Hawaii
and the Solomon Islands. Because of the location of Midway, it was
deemed very important to the security of the west coast of America.
In my humble opinion, the ability of US Navy intelligence to break
the Japanese code and the US Naval leadership on hand at the time was
no accident. I believe they had divine guidance. The only aircraft
carriers the United States Navy left over after the attack on Pearl
Harbor were the Enterprise, Hornet and the Yorktown. They were sent
north of Midway to await the arrival of the Japanese fleet. The
Japanese arrived as advertised in two columns, one from the southwest
and the other from the west but the Americans were waiting. The
columns were discovered and an 18 plane torpedo bomber attack was
launched. Each and every one of the 18 American aircraft and crewman
was shot down and killed. Over the next three days the United States
Navy launched more attacks by swarms of dive bomber and even more
torpedo bombers. The end result was the Japanese lost four aircraft
carriers, over 250 aircraft and 2,500 sailors and aircrew men. The
United States lost one carrier and 360 sailors and crewmen. It was
one of the most important victories in United States history. It
sent the Japanese Navy scurrying back toward home to lick their
wounds which gave the greatest manufacturing facilities on the planet
time to crank out the tools of war.
1692
On this date a rare earthquake shakes the pirate haven of Port
Royal, Jamaica. When I say shake, I ain’t kidding. The ground
shook so hard and for so long that the sandy soil around the
waterfront liquefied and the entire area slid into the Caribbean Sea.
Then came the tsunamis that mopped up the entire town killing
thousands. The misery was not over yet. The tsunamis brought 40
feet of water into the town which floated bodies out of graveyards
which mixed with the freshly killed, not to mention wholesale looting
island wide. What did you expect, Port Royal was the headquarters of
every pirate in the western hemisphere. The British ship HMS Swan was
washed inland and deposited on the top of a 40 foot tall building and
became a relief headquarters for the survivors. Then soon
thereafter, the exposed corpses began to disintegrate and epidemics
of cholera broke out not to mention millions and millions of flies.
The people of Jamaica learned their lesson and built another capitol
off the beach and named it Kingston. If any of you have been to
Kingston you will understand what I am about to say. Kingston is the
most rotten and unpleasant gathering of the dregs of humanity I have
ever seen. It is such a shame because just a few miles away are some
of the finest five star resorts in the world. But if you take a cab
from the resorts to downtown Kingston the cabdriver will insist that
you not leave the cab, in fact they don’t even want you to unlock
the door. If you see something you want, the cabbie will go get it
for you. Even then little kids and even older people walk up to the
window holding out their hands for coins. Paradise Lost, indeed.
1866
On this date chief Seattle (Seathl) died in his small village near
the town named for him. His mother was of one tribe and his father
was the chief of another tribe making Seattle well suited to be the
Chief of both tribes. He was born in about 1790 in a village on
Puget Sound and welcomed what few Anglos settled in the area. Most
of the Anglo settlements were temporary ones dependent upon the game
they were hunting. But eventually a permanent settlement was
established after the timber industry burgeoned. The settlers
decided to name the town after the Native American that had treated
them with kindness and understanding and the mighty city of Seattle
was born. By the way, if I am not mistaken the term “skid row”
began in Seattle. It seems that the loggers would construct a wooden
trough or “skid” to sent their logs down the mountainside into
the city to be then loaded on ships. Later all the people that had
no money would gather near the terminus of the “skid” to try to
get a little money helping move the logs. While there they would
build shacks to get out of the weather thus “skid row”.
Born today:
1848
French artist Paul Gaugin. He said “Life being what it is, one
dreams of revenge.” Paul was Vincent Van Gogh’s roommate at one
time or another, I don’t know if it was before, during or after the
time Vincent cut off his own right ear. But soon thereafter Gaugin
moved to Tahiti.
1952
Irish actor Liam Neesom. He said “Here in Los Angeles you see
people that jog for two hours and then think they are morally
superior. That is when you want to choke people, you know.” I
think Liam has been to Daniel Island, South Carolina too.
1958
US songwriter/singer Prince. He said “They named Michael
Jackson’s album “Bad” only because there wasn’t enough room
on the album cover to put “Pathetic”.
Thanks
for listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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