Musings
and History
Quote
of the day:
“Last
month I went to get a test for AIDS. The problem is that you don’t
get the result for five days. I spend those five days in deep
reflection. What the hell was I doing fooling around with all that
skanky-ass I met in Miami, Cleveland, Milwaukee and many other
places? What the hell was I thinking?”
Chris
Rock
Trivia
question of the day:
Alexander
Hamilton was killed in a duel...who was his opponent?
Answer
at the end of the blog.
A
while back a teenager near Charlotte, NC heard a knock at his front
door but he did not answer. He looked out a window and saw a young
man standing on his porch. The person on the porch waved at two
other people in the yard waving them to go around to the back door.
The young man was not happy with this and ran upstairs and retrieved
a Samurai sword. When he got back downstairs the two at the back
door almost had the door knocked open. The teenager charged them
with his sword over his head. The two in the back ran into the
street retrieving the third guy on the front porch and they
hightailed down the street with the sword bearer in close pursuit.
All three potential burglars were arrested. The young man said that
he was fearful at the start but when they started running with him
nipping at their heels he felt great exhilaration. I would have too.
Down
at Eglin Air Force Base near Fort Walton Beach, Florida two
undocumented aliens were arrested. These arrests mean that a grand
total of 40 undocumented aliens that have been arrested while working
on an addition to the 7th
Special Forces building. This outfit specializes in “Black Ops”
y’all. It is these soldiers along with the Delta
division
based in nearby Hurlburt Air Force Base that do most of United States
covert assignments worldwide. It is disconcerting to know that they
cannot keep undocumented aliens away from one of the most secretive
military units on the planet.
This
Date in History December 21
1761
Revolutionary War hero and hard-core Patriot Robert Barnwell was
born in Beaufort, South Carolina. This boy joined his local militia
at the age of 16 and was promptly engaged in the Battle of Mathew’s
Farm on John’s Island near Charleston. During this battle young
Robert received 17 separate wounds. He had his equipment taken from
him and was left for dead. He was taken from the field by a slave to
the plantation home of his aunt which was nearby. He spent several
months in recovery and eventually rejoined his militia and was given
the rank of lieutenant. Unfortunately, soon thereafter Charleston,
South Carolina was captured by the British including Lieutenant
Barnwell. Barnwell was put aboard the British prison ship Pack
Horse
anchored in Charleston Harbor where he spent 13 months before being
exchanged. During the Revolutionary War, Barnwell rose to the rank
of Lieutenant Colonel. After the War Barnwell was elected a member
of the South Carolina legislature and was sent to Washington as a
member of the South Carolina delegation to ratify the US Constitution
He spent two years in Washington as a member of the US House of
Representative and then returned to his beloved South Carolina and
rejoined the South Carolina legislature. He stayed in the
legislature along with serving on the board of directors of Beaufort
College until his death on October 24, 1814. Strangely enough his
son Robert Woodward Barnwell was a passionate advocate of South
Carolina secession from the Union. His son was trying to tear apart
what his father had spent most of his life putting together.
1861
Earlier in November of this year a United States warship had
stopped and boarded the British mail ship Trent
in the Bahamas and captured two Confederate representatives on their
way to England and took them prisoner. On this date British
Secretary Lord Lyon met with United States Secretary of war William
Seward about this event, Lord Lyon assured Secretary Seward that the
British crown thought of this act as one of piracy and was worthy of
a declaration of war if the Confederate representatives, James Mason
and John Slidell, were not released immediately. Seward took Lyon’s
words to Lincoln. Lincoln stalled for a few days until he found out
that there were 11,000 British troops on the way to Canada. Soon
thereafter, Mason and Slidell were released and the US promised to
observe the sovereignty of British ships in the future. Lincoln
could not risk having to fight a war on two fronts.
1975
On this date in Vienna, Austria, a terrorist named llich Ramirez
Sanchez led a group of fellow terrorists into a meeting of OPEC and
kill three guards and capture 16 OPEC members. This was not the
first, nor the last, act of terrorism committed by a man that had
been labeled Carlos
the Jackal.
He made a demand for a bus and an airplane which the Viennese
government provided. Carlos directed the plane to Algeria where all
aboard were released, Carlos was born into a wealthy Marxist family
in Caracas, Venezuela, He was educated at Patrice Lumumba University
in Moscow. He chose a life of terrorism at an early age. No one
really knows why he chose a life on the run but he was an
accomplished terrorist. He had practiced his craft for over 25 years
without capture, However in 1994, French undercover agents tracked
him down to the Sudan and kidnapped the son-of-a-bitch back to
France. The French government chose to not announce his capture for
three years when finally he was put on trial for killing two French
counter-intelligence agents in 1975. He got life without parole.
Not enough, as far as I am concerned.
1866
In 1861 the United States signed the Treaty
of Laramie
with the Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indians ceding the Indians the lands
that contained the Bozeman
Trail,
but soon after this treaty was signed, gold was discovered on the
Indian lands and gold seekers resume using the Bozeman Trail once
again much to the displeasure of the Indians in general and the
Cheyenne chief Red
Cloud
in particular. The US Government not only allowed the breaking of
the treaty, they built army forts along the Bozeman Train to protect
the travelers. The most obnoxious one to the Indians was the fort on
the Little Piney named Fort Phil Kearney. This fort saw very few
days without some kind of attack by Red Clouds warriors. During all
of this, the fort had to have timber for heat and sent out wood
cutting groups on a regular basis. On this date, Red Cloud was
waiting and killed all but one of the wood cutting crew. Red Cloud
sent seven or eight warriors in view of the fort and when the fort
fired a round of artillery the Indians ran away in fear….or so they
thought. A Lieutenant Fetterman requested permission from the camp
commander to chase down the Indians that had ran away in fear and the
permission was granted. Fetterman took 45 cavalryman and 45 infantry
and left the fort. Fetterman had instructions to not go out of sight
of the fort but soon after leaving the fort Fetterman spotted 7 or 8
Indians running over the snowy hillside and chased after them. As
soon as all the troopers were over the hill, Red Cloud and 2,000 of
his warriors fell upon the hapless troopers and annihilated them to a
man. Not only that, not one of the troopers was found in one piece.
They had all been mutilated. Soon after this the United States
decided to abandon Fort Phil Kearney. After the troopers left the
fort, it was set afire by Red Cloud before the troopers were out of
sight. This is one of the very few victories the Native-Americans
enjoyed.
Answer to the trivia
question:
Alexander Hamilton was
killed in a duel by Aaron Burr.
Thanks
for listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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