Musing
and History
Quote
of the day:
“The
easiest job in the world has to be a coroner. Doing surgery on dead
people. What is the worst that could happen?”
Dennis
Miller
Trivia
question of the day:
There
was a British ship named the “Bounty” commanded by a William
Bligh and the first officer was Fletcher Christian that lead a
mutiny. The Bounty was sent to the South Pacific and Tahiti in
particular on a specific mission...what was the mission? Answer at
the end of the blog.
I
have a friend whose house was destroyed in the flooding in Baton
Rouge, La. He is rebuilding for the second time in 10 years. His
house was nearly destroyed courtesy of Hurricane Gustav in 2008. The
homeowners were given rules to go by when cleaning out their
destroyed household goods. They want the debris is six different
piles primarily to protect the environment and for safety. They want
those flammable products like paint, paint thinner, turpentine, etc.
in a separate pile, electronics in a separate pile...I suspect
because the the lead bearing solder and the gold, silver and platinum
in the circuit boards. They want appliances in a separate pile I
suspect because many of them have mercury switches. Mercury is
deadly if ingested, then it is regular household goods.
My
friend sent me a photo of one of his neighbors that had a sign on his
debris piles saying “No looting or I start shooting.” I would
hope that they were not talking about their trash being protected by
firearms, that stuff is going to end up in a landfill somewhere
anyway. My friend assured me that the sign was indeed about
protecting their trash piles even from those people that have nothing
and come looking for anything to help. How can anyone be that
shallow, protecting their garbage so no one else can have it and
willing to kill for it? They are out there, folks. As I have said
before “Crises brings out the best...and the worst in human
nature.”
Here
are words of a Patriot:
“In the first place, we should insist that if the immigrant who comes here in good faith becomes an American and assimilates himself to us, he shall be treated on an exact equality with everyone else, for it is an outrage to discriminate against any such man because of creed, or birthplace, or origin. But this is predicated upon the person's becoming in every facet an American, and nothing but an American...There can be no divided allegiance here. Any man who says he is an American, but something else also, isn't an American at all. We have room for but one flag, the American flag... We have room for but one language here, and that is the English language. And we have room for but one sole loyalty and that is a loyalty to the American people.”
Teddy
Roosevelt...1907
This
Date in History September 6
1916
The first successful tracked military vehicle rolled out of an
assembly plant in Great Britain. Because this vehicle was made in
secret in a plant that made water tanks, the vehicle was called a
“tank”. The British chose this plant site so they could bring in
a lot of metal plates and not arouse suspicion. Most of the
countries involved in WW1 were desperately trying to find a way to
overcome trench warfare and a tracked vehicle that could cross over
the trenches was the answer. England started making tanks at a
furious pace and soon trench warfare was a thing of the past.
1948
Germany finally got back on it feet when the allies release all of
the former Nazi regime’s assets. This was prompted by the recovery
and successful operation of the VW plant in Wolfsburg. The VW beetle
was the largest selling automobile in Europe.
1863
Confederate soldiers abandoned Fort Wagner located on the southern
rim of Charleston harbor. In January the US navy had been given the
task of capturing Charleston, S.C. US Admiral Samuel I. DuPont tried
to enter the harbor with 8 warships and had his ass handed to him by
the batteries on Fort Wagner. DuPont ordered his ships to turn
around and go back to sea out of range of Fort Wagner’s guns. The
US military knew that Fort Wagner had to be neutralized before the
capture of Charleston was possible. The famous 54th
Mass. Regiment tried a land assault and was repulsed with many, many
casualties. The 54th,
by the way, was the first all black unit in the US army. Later on
CSA Gen. Beauregard saw that the continued defense of Fort Wagner was
not possible and ordered it abandoned. The capture of Charleston
came much later.
1847
Transcendentalist Henry David Thoreau moved out of his shack on
Walden Pond and moved in with the Ralph Waldo Emerson family.
Emerson had been a close friend of Thoreau’s for several years he
being a transcendentalist also. Thoreau was a Harvard graduate and
he and his brother opened a school. Henry, while on a canoe trip,
decides that teaching ain’t his bag and chooses to write essays and
poetry like Emerson. Wonder what happened on that canoe trip that
made him change his mind? He is successful with his books On Walden
Pond and Civil Disobedience among others. It is interesting to note
that Mohandas Ghandi, the architect of India’s separation and
independence from Great Britain admittedly used Thoreau’s Civil
Disobedience almost as a guide book in his search for independence.
Thoreau was also an avid abolitionist also and was active in the
“underground railroad”. He died in 1882.
1901
President William McKinley is shot by an anarchist assassin named
Czolgosz, the pronunciation of this name is discretionary. McKinley
was the first president to have body guards around him but these guys
did not stop the assassin when he walked up to the President with his
right hand out and a handkerchief covering his left hand and the gun.
They did, however, beat the shit out of the assassin after he had
put 2 rounds into the McKinley. It was McKinley that stopped the
body guards from killing him. McKinley died of gangrene a week
later.
1844
Explorer/cartographer John C. Fremont saw the Great Salt Lake and
mapped it. Fremont was not the first honky to see this sight.
Mountain men had been coming back east and talking about the lake
since the 1820’s. Fremont’s maps of the western lands were
critical to those pioneers and settlers that followed. Had it not
been for these maps the settling of the west would have come much
later and a much higher price. Fremont was not a person that knew
how to live off the land, he hired mountain men and people like Kit
Carson to guide and advise him. Fremont was also made a US General
during the War Between the States. It was soon apparent that being a
field commander in combat was not his calling and he resigned and
went back to exploring. He died in 1890.
Born
today:
1757
French adventurer Marquis de Lafayette. He said “If the
liberties of America are ever lost, it will be at the hands of the
clergy.” I hope those are not the words of the future but the
actions of the evangelicals are worrisome.
1964
US actress Rosie Perez. She said “Yes, they are real and they
are mine.” It doesn’t matter to me Rosie; I am an ass and leg
man.
Answer
to the trivia question:
The
mission of the Bounty was this:
There
was a botanist aboard with several hundred breadfruit seedlings. The
botanist was going to see if breadfruit could be raised in that area
of the world and used to feed the slaves that were to brought by the
British to run and maintain coconut and copra plantations that was to
be established by the British East India Company.
Thanks for
listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
No comments:
Post a Comment