Musings
and History
Quote of the day:
Jay Leno told this
tale:
Rodney Dangerfield was
in near coma and Jay went for a visit. He put one of his fingers in
Rodney's hand and told him if he knew who he was to squeeze his
finger. Rodney did indeed squeeze. Then Jay said “Rodney, that
wasn't my finger.” Jay said there was a very faint smile but a
smile none the less.
Trivia question of the
day:
What country music
star signed a baseball contract with the San Diego Padres but later
chose music? Answer at the end of the blog (thanks Tina).
A while back I saw a
program on youtube where there was going to be a demonstration
against Trump signs and banners included. There was a CNN camera
crew out there telling them how to arrange themselves and their
signage where it would be the most effective photographically. That
is why I do not watch with any expectation of accuracy any and all
American news agencies. They all have an agenda including the
Washington Post that has morphed into the voice of the Democratic
Party. Back in the day of news reporters Woodward and Bernstein and
the discovery of the Watergate scandal the editor of the Washington
Post was Ben Bradlee. This man allowed his reporters to proceed on
thin ice as long as each and every allegation was backed up with rock
solid verification before it was printed. Those days and men with
character of Ben Bradlee are sadly gone and all were left with is
every news agency selling out for ratings.
This
Date in History June 12
1862
Earlier General George McClellan had persuaded his military
superiors to allow him to bring the Army of the Potomac, 100,000
strong, to the James River peninsula by ship and attack Richmond from
the southeast rather than from the obvious direction from the north.
The plan had merit but how do you unload 100,000 troops and their
associated accouterments without being noticed. They were indeed
noticed and the Army of Northern Virginia 60,000 strong, CSA General
Robert E. Lee commanding, headed down the peninsula to see what
McClellan had in mind. What resulted was later known as the Battle
of the Seven Days in which these gigantic armies slugged it out for
seven days with McClellan admitting defeat and he took his ass and
his army back to the end of the peninsula and headed back north. But
before the battles began in earnest, on this date General Lee tasked
his cavalry commander, CSA General J.E.B. Stuart and 1,200 troopers,
to reconnoiter McClellan’s left flank for weaknesses. Stuart
started out and took a look at the Yankee left but decides to keep
going eventually rides completely around the Army of the Potomac
arriving back to Lee with a wealth of information but not before
raising hell with McClellan’s supply wagons. The ironic thing
about this whole trip was that Stuart was chased by several Yankee
cavalry units, one of which was lead by US General Phillip St. George
Cooke. General Cooke was Stuart’s father-in-law. After the
battles began observers said that they could see McClellan begin to
sag when he saw how the battle chopped and mutilated his men. It is
believed that the horror of this vision took most of the fight out of
him and later he was relieved because the lack of energy and
aggressiveness. In truth, I think it might have the same effect on
most of us.
1994
On this date the ex-wife of NFL star O.J. Simpson, Nichole Brown
Simpson and a man passing by named Ron Goldman were found stabbed to
death just outside Nichole’s home. Brown had been to lunch at an
upscale restaurant on Los Angeles and had left her sunglasses and
Goldman, a waiter at the restaurant, was bringing her the sunglasses
on his way home. The immediate suspect was O.J. Simpson because the
police had been called to Brown’s house of several occasions
because Simpson had been in a rage and trying to break in to her
house and had indeed beaten the crap out of her more than once.
After a bizarre ride through Hollywood in a White Bronco driven by
O.J.’s friend Al Cowling, the truck arrives at O.J. s house where
he is arrested. There is no use in me describing the overwhelming
evidence the prosecution had against O.J. that should have been more
than enough to put a needle in that murderers arm, but he had
something the prosecution did not. He had Johnny Cochran, F. Lee
Bailey and assorted other superior legal minds in the country. He
also had a jury that was 75% black. I am not saying that the jury
was prejudicial, but when they came out of deliberations, one of the
black jurors raised a clenched fist with a big smile. There is
little question that O.J. Simpson got away with murder. But one of
these days he will go on to his reward and he will be alone.
1876
Earlier New York Herald journalist Marcus Kellogg was on a train
headed to Bismarck, North Dakota and met with a United States cavalry
officer and his wife. It was Colonel George Armstrong Custer and his
wife Elizabeth. The train ran into an unexpected snow storm and the
train was stuck in a snow bank. Somehow Kellogg was able to get to
the telegraph lines along side the railroad and was able to get a
message to Custer’s brother Tom and he came and rescued them in a
sleigh. Custer was on his way to take command of the 7th
Cavalry and begin an expedition against hostile Indians who refuse to
go to a reservation. Custer asked Kellogg if he would like to go
with the 7th
on this trip and write a few dispatches to be sent back to New York
during his trip. Kellogg immediately agreed. On this date, Kellogg
wrote his last dispatch saying that the 7th
was leaving the Rosebud River area and were headed to the Little Big
Horn River and should encounter the “red devils” soon. Four days
later they did indeed encounter the “red devils” and were
annihilated including Kellogg. Had Kellogg survived and had been
able to write a white man’s account of the battle he would have
been a celebrity. As it turned out, he filled a grave near Colonel
Custer cut to pieces like the rest.
1940
The failure of the invasion of Dunkirk left thousands of British and
other Allied troops still in France in spite of the attempt to rescue
them back across the English Channel to England. On this date 54,000
British and other allied troops surrender to German Field Marshall
Erwin Rommel near the French border town of St Valery-en-Caux. This
surrender virtually assured the capture of Paris, France. This was
amplified when French General Maxime Weygand notified the French
military governor in Paris to declare Paris an “open city”
meaning that the French military planned no resistance to German
occupation, capitulation in other words. All of this happened in
spite of Winston Churchill going to France himself and tried to
encourage the French leadership to resist but It was for naught. It
is disgusting, isn’t it?
Born today:
1802
English journalist Harriet Martineau. She said “Men who pass the
most comfortably through this world is the ones with good digestions
and hard hearts.” My digestion is suspect but the other is not.
Died
today:
1936
Austrian writer Karl Krauss. He said “Education is a crutch with
which the foolish use on the wise to prove they are not idiots.”
Where did you go to school, Karl?
Answer
to the trivia question:
The country music star
that signed with the San Diego Padres was Garth Brooks.
Thanks for
listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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