Musings
and History
Quote
of the day:
“The
ability to witness two men stand toe to toe in the spirit of
sportsmanship and pummel each other into insensibility is what
separates us from the animals.”
“Reverend
Jim” Ignatowski (Christopher Lloyd), Taxi
Trivia
question of the day:
In
India workers in the forests will wear a facial image mask on the
back of their heads...why?
This
Date in History January 29
1936 On this date
the first baseball players were selected for the newly opened
Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. They were Ty Cobb,
Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner, Christy Mathewson and Walter Johnson. Ty
Cobb, to this day, is the most productive hitter to ever play the
game. Babe Ruth was both an ace pitcher and a devastating home run
hitter, Honus Wagner was a versatile infielder and a dependable
clutch hitter, Christy Mathewson had the most wins in National League
history up until that time and Walter “Big Train” Johnson is
considered to be one of the most powerful pitchers in history. The
Hall of Fame was supposed to have opened in 1935 but money was at a
premium because of the Depression so the opening was delayed. The
rumor was spread that Civil War General Abner Doubleday was the
inventor of baseball in Cooperstown but that was bullshit. The local
businesses fostered that idea to pump up business and they made
contributions toward the building of the Hall. The Hall of Fame has
about 350,000 visitors a year.
1820
After 10 years of a debilitating disease that lead to total
insanity, King George III of England died. King George was the chief
antagonist of the American colonists that resulted in the American
Revolutionary War. King George knew that he was not well and was
desperately seeking someone that he could trust to take care of
business in his behalf. He found one in Lord North and King George
was very relieved. The problem was that England lost its most
profitable colony in America and the English people were furious. In
1784 William Pitt the elder gained enough power in Parliament to take
control. After this the King retired from active participation in
government except for an occasional interference with major issues
such as “Catholic Emancipation” which was defeated in 1801. I
have not researched this issue but I will soon. King George had a
long history of illness beginning in 1765 when he had a nervous
breakdown and in the winter of 1788-89 he had a severe bout with
mental illness. By 1810 he was permanently insane but he was cared
for tenderly by his wife Charlotte Sophia. His son, the Prince of
Wales, was named regent and assumed throne as King George IV when his
father died in 1820.
1861 On this date
Kansas was admitted to the Union as a “free state”. This act was
one of the prime causes of the American Civil War. Kansas was
bordered on the east by Missouri and on the south by Texas; both were
slave-holding states. There were many bloody skirmishes on the
Kansas-Missouri border in the struggle for and against slavery. The
United States Congress brought Kansas in as a “free state” in
order to show support of the anti-slavery factions in the state and
it blew up in their faces when the war broke out a few months later.
I am not suggesting that slavery is acceptable but just that is what
happened. After the Civil War got cranked up the attacks on Kansas
and Missouri reached a crescendo with many atrocities committed by
both pro and anti slavery factions. An example of each was when the
fervent anti-slavery leader John Brown went to a small community in
Missouri and slaughtered five people with a broad sword because “he
thought” they were pro slavery. Then a pro slavery Confederate
guerilla leader named William Quantrill leads his troops into
Lawrence, Kansas and that group killed over 150 men and burned the
town to the ground. Prejudice has no limits.
Born today:
1737 Super American
Patriot Thomas Paine. He said “When we are planning for posterity,
we must remember that virtue is not hereditary.” Paine was one of
the greatest wordsmiths this country ever produced.
1862 English
composer Fredrick Delius. He said “Music is an outburst of the
soul”. Indeed Fred, indeed.
1874 US
industrialist John D. Rockefeller, Jr. He said “A friendship based
on business is better that a business based on friendship.” The
Rockefeller dynasty began with the establishment of Standard Oil
which eventually became Exxon.
1880 US comedian
W.C. Fields. He said “My illness is due to my doctor insisting
that I drink milk. It is a whitish fluid that they force down
helpless babies.” Fields was a famous imbiber.
1923 US writer
Paddy Chayefsky. He said “"Now
listen to me, goddamnit! The Arabs are simplying buying us! A handful
of gas, shahs, and emirs who despise this country and everything it
stands for—democracy, freedom, the right for me to get up on
television and tell you about it—a couple of dozen medieval
fanatics are going to own where you work, where you live, what you
read, what you see, your cars, your bowling alleys, your mortgages,
your schools, your churches, your libraries, your kids, your whole
life...!" Pay attention to Paddy, y'all, It could happen.
1939
Australian feminist Germaine Greer. She said “Freud is the
father of psychoanalysis, it has no mother.” I agree, Germaine.
Answer
to the trivia question:
Most
of the time a tiger will not attack a human from the front...the mask
is supposed to fool tigers into thinking their back is also the
front.
Thanks
for listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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