Wednesday, April 22, 2009

This Day in History, April 22

1836 - Texas Revolution - A day after the Battle of San Jacinto, forces under Texas General Sam Houston capture Mexican General Lopez de Santa Anna

1864 - U.S. Congress pass the Coinage Act, which mandates that the inscription "IN GOD WE TRUST" be placed all coins minted as U.S. Currency.

1899 - At high noon, thousands rush to claim land in the Land Run of 1899. Within hours, cities of Oklahoma City and Guthrie are formed with populations of at least 10,000 each.
That makes a lot of sense of how those cities would be formed. I've spent time in both cities.

1954 - Red Scare: Army-McCarthy hearings begin.

1970 - First Earth Day is celebrated.

1993 - The Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC is dedicated.

1998 - Disney's Animal Kingdom opens at Walt Disney World in Orlando.

2000 -In a pre-dawn raid, jack-booted federal agents seize 6 year-old Elian Gonzalez from his relatives' home in Miami.

2008 - United States Air Force retires remaining F-117 Nighthawk aircraft in service.

Birthdays:

Aaron Spelling - 1923

Mrs. Garrett from Facts of Life - 1926

Jack Nicholson - 1937

USAF pilot Captain Steven L. Bennett - Congressional Medal of Honor winner for "his unparalleled concern for his companion, extraordinary heroism and intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty, at the cost of his life, were in keeping with the highest traditions of military service and reflect great credit upon himself and the United States Air Force."
(quotes from postumous award presented by President Gerald Ford)

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

The Burger King Man creeps me out...

I was watching TV and a Burger King commercial came on and it reminded me of the Burger King man. I find him creepy. Am I the only one who thinks he's weird. I mean, he shows up in people's beds while they sleep, and they aren't even surprised that he's there. I mean, what did they do the night before that he's not surprised a plastic faced Burger King man is in his bed. Then, BK man tries to offer the guy a breakfast sandwich from his coat. I mean, the sandwich can't be fresh.

Another commercial has the BK man trying to push a black man working on a scaffold high in the air off the scaffold. So, the BK man is racist also.

He's fathering children out of wedlock, sleeping with men, trying to kill black men and trying to give people cold sandwiches from his coat...at least I think its from his coat. Where is he keeping those sandwiches.

Let me know your thoughts about the Burger King man.

Today in Sports

Manny Ramirez signs a 2-year, $45 million deal with the Dodgers today.

Ray Lewis and Kurt Warner stay with their respective teams, both signing deals.

The Crapskins (Redskins) signed Albert Haynesworth to a 7 year, $100 million dollar deal last week. They also signed DeAngelo Hall to a $54 million deal. Looks like Snyder has done it again. No real help for the team, but he does get Haynesworth.

The Cowboys made some "fantastic" moves last week: Getting Keith Brooking and signing the immortal John Kitna. This makes me real excited.

A-Roid has a cyst in his hip. I wonder where he got that.

Shaq has been kickin A-- recently.

This Day in History, March 5

1770 - Boston Massacre - 5 Americans, including a black man named Crispus Attucks, and a boy are killed by British troops in an event that would contribute to outbreak of American Revolutionary War 5 years later.

1836 - Samuel Colt makes his first production-model receiver, the .34-caliber.

1933 - Great Depression: President Roosevelt declares a "bank holiday": closing all the U.S. banks and freezing all financial transactions.

1946 - Winston Churchill uses phrase "Iron Curtain" in his speech at Westminster College, MO.

1966 - BOAC flight 911 crashes on Mount Fuji, Japan, killing 124.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Common Sense by Oliver North

LtCol Oliver North's weekly column can be read every sunday in The Washington Times
Stealth Surge

Washington, DC – The economy is stuck on “meltdown.” The cabinet still has vacancies. The ruling political party on Capitol Hill is obsessed with “pork,” and the mainstream media is fixated on Ottawa’s Obama-mania. When nothing else seems to work – dial 911 at the Pentagon and call for those who get things done: soldiers, sailors, airmen, Guardsmen, and Marines. And just to be different – send them on a stealth surge.

That’s what happened this Tuesday when Mr. Obama decided that “urgent security needs” – his phrase – required the deployment of a Marine Expeditionary Brigade and an Army Stryker Brigade to Afghanistan. Rather than making the announcement in a televised address to the nation, as his predecessor had done with the surge in Iraq, this commander in chief has his press secretary hand out a piece of paper. No Oval Office. No questions from the press. Just a sheet of paper.

This deployment – about 8,000 additional Marines, 4,000 soldiers – and 5,000 “support personnel” does not come as a surprise. During the presidential campaign, Mr. Obama made it clear that he saw Afghanistan as the “Central Front” of what he calls “the war on terror.” He also has said repeatedly that he wants increased U.S. combat power to take on the Taliban and al Qaeda. The surprise is in the timing – and the way he has decided to do it.

Last week the administration announced a full-blown, 60-day, interagency, multi-national, quadraphonic, star-studded, strategic review of “every aspect of our Afghanistan policy.” Our European allies were informed that Afghanistan is at the “top of the Agenda” for the NATO summit in March. On Sunday, President Hamid Karzai announced that he too would be “participating” in the strategic review. And then, on Tuesday, February 17, at 5:30 PM, too late for much beside a headline on the evening news – the one-page deployment order that has troops from Camp Lejeune, North Carolina to Fort Lewis, Washington – and countless points in between – packing their kit for the Hindu Kush. So much for having a strategy before committing what’s needed to implement it.

The deployment announcement apparently didn’t impress our “allies’ in Pakistan. White House “Special Envoy” Richard Holbrooke has been in Islamabad and Kabul – ostensibly on a “fact-finding mission.” His plane was barely off the ground before the government in Islamabad announced that offensive military operations against the Taliban would cease in the Malakand region of northwest Pakistan and that henceforth the area would be governed in accord with Islamic sharia law. So much for convincing Pakistan – through which we send more than 80 percent of our supplies – to crack down on radical Islamic terror.

Mr. Holbrooke didn’t fare much better in Kabul where he acceded to Afghan demands for “coordinating all military operations with Afghan forces.” On Sunday, he and Afghan President Hamid Karzai held a testy joint press conference. Afterwards, Mr. Holbrooke apparently convinced someone at the White House that the two presidents needed to have a little chat – something that, strangely enough, there just hasn’t been time for since the inaugural.

If the various spokesmen are telling the truth, the Obama-Karzai conversation finally came Tuesday, February 17, after Mr. Obama issued his one-page deployment order. The next day, Mr. Karzai, who is running for reelection in August, said that, “If foreign troops do not listen to us, we will call a loya jirga (grand council) and we will also include the Taliban to decide whether foreign troops should stay in Afghanistan.”

While none of this sounds particularly encouraging, it must be noted that Mr. Karzai also said, “The tension the Afghan government had with the U.S. government is now over.” That should make everyone feel better.

Unfortunately, timing and diplomacy aren’t the only problems with this deployment announcement. There is also the matter of what’s in it – and what’s not. Last year, General David McKiernan asked for 30,000 additional combat troops to reinforce the 49,000 from NATO and the 32,000 U.S. personnel he already has on the ground. But that’s not what he’s getting.

Tuesday’s presidential order authorized sending 17,000 troops. Yet, the Pentagon only identified II Marine Expeditionary Brigade “with approximately 8,000 Marines” to deploy in “late Spring 2009,” and 5th Stryker Brigade with “approximately 4,000 soldiers” to deploy in “mid-summer 2009.” It then adds, “Approximately 5,000 additional troops to support these combat forces will receive deployment orders at a later date.” In short, General McKiernan is getting less than half of what he asked for.

Finally, there is the issue of presidential style. In the final paragraph of his one-page order, Mr. Obama notes that, “This increase is necessary to stabilize a deteriorating situation in Afghanistan.” All true. But then, he goes on to whine, “which has not received the strategic attention, direction and resources it urgently requires.” That is a gratuitous and unseemly swipe at his predecessor. Perhaps that is why Mr. Obama decided this had to be a stealth surge.

This Day in History, Feb. 22

1856 - The Republican Party opens its first national meeting in Pittsburgh, PA.

1862 - Jefferson Davis is officially inaugurated for a six-year term as President of the Confederate States of America in Richmond, VA.

1879 - In Utica, NY, Frank Woolworth opens the first of many $.5 and $.10 Woolworth stores

1959 - Lee Petty wins the first Daytona 500

1974 - Samuel Byck tries and fails to assassinate President Nixon

1980 - Miracle on Ice: In Lake Placid, NY, the U.S. Hockey Team defeats Soviet Union hockey team 4-3 in what is considered to be one of the greatest upsets in sports history.

1994 - Aldrich Ames and his wife are charged by U.S. Department of Justice with spying for the Soviet Union.

This Day in History, February 21

1842 - John Greenough is granted the first U.S. Patent for the sewing machine.

1878 - The first telephone book is issued in New Haven, CT.

1885 - The newly completed Washington Monument is dedicated.

1948 - NASCAR is incorporated

1965 - Malcolm X is assassinated at the Audubon Ballroom in NYC by members of the Nation of Islam.

1970 - A mid-air explosion and subsequent crash kills 38 passengers and nine crew members near Zurich, Switzerland.

1975 - Watergate Scandal - Former U.S. Attorney General John Mitchell and former White House aides H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman are sentenced to prison.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Random Thoughts of the Day

Whatever happened to the Noid?


The Noid was the villanous red-suited character in rabbit ears that tried to ruin Dominos Pizza's in the 80's.
Was he finally captured by the cops? Did he switch to Papa John's?
The last time I heard about the Noid, Mayor West of Quohog killed him once and for all.
I had forgotten that there was video game made about the Noid. It was only on Activision?
Where did the Noid go?

This Day in History, February 18

1735 - Charleston, SC, hosts the first performance of a ballad opera, "Flora: Or Hob in the Well" by Colley Cibber, in the United States, at New World Theater.

1841 - The first ongoing filibuster in the U.S. Senate begins and lasts until March 11. (Democrat minority tried to block a bank bill favored by the Whig Majority. Senator Henry Clay, promoter of the bill, threatened to change Senate rules to allow majority to close debate. Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Barton rebuked Clay for trying to stifle Senate's right to unlimited debate and Clay unsuccessful in eliminating filibuster by a Senate majority vote.)

1861 - In Montgomery, Alabama - Jefferson Davis is inaugurated as Provisional President of Confederate States of America.

1885 - Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is published for the first time.

1929 - The first Academy Awards are announced.

1979 - Snow fell in the Sahara Desert in Southern Algeria for only recorded time in history.

2001- FBI Agent Robert Hanssen is arrested for spying for Soviet Union. He is ultimately convicted and sentenced to life in prison.

Monday, February 16, 2009

February 14, This Day in History

1849 - In NYC, James K. Polk becomes 1st serving U.S. President to have his photograph taken.

1859 - Oregon admitted as 33rd State.

1876 - Alexander Graham Bell applies for patent for the telephone.

1899 - Voting machines approved by U.S. Congress for use in federal elections.

1903 - U.S. Dept. of Commerce and Labor established (later split into Dept. of Commerce and Dept. of Labor)

1912 - Arizona admitted as 48th State

1990 - 92 people killed aboard India Airlines flight 605 at Bangalore, India

1998 - U.S. authorities announce Eric Rudolph is a suspect in an Alabama abortion clinic bombing. Rudolph is later named as the 1996 Olympic Park Bomber (although there is no evidence of that. ) How can you believe this when they ruined Richard Jewell's life with the false accusations of him being the bomber. Eric Rudolph would soon be the scapegoat for all the bad things happening. I'm surprised they didn't try to blame 9/11 or the Anthrax scare on him. Rudolph was finally apprehended outside a Piggly Wiggly digging in the dumpster by some Barney Fife cop outside Asheville, NC, where he has been hiding in the mountains for years.



Wednesday, February 11, 2009

This Day in History, February 11

1531 - Henry VIII of England is recognized as Supreme Head of Church of England

1794 - First Session of United States Senate opens to the public

1941 - First Gold Record is presented to Glen Miller for "Chattanooga Choo Choo"

1943 - WWII - General Eisenhower is selected to command the allied armies in Europe.

1964 - The Beatles hold their first public concert in the United States at Washington Coliseum in Washington D.C.

2006 - Vice President Dick Cheney shoots his friend, Harry Whittington, in the face, neck and upper torso while hunting quail.

Birthdays:

1926
- Leslie Nielsen (no Naked Guns without him)
1936 - The Bandit (Burt Reynolds)...Did you know that Alfred Hitchcock's favorite movie is Smokey and the Bandit?
1953 - Jeb Bush
1964 - Sarah Palin (we all know who she is)

Monday, February 09, 2009

News of the Day

- Turncoat Republican Senators Arlen "magic bullet" Specter, Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins decided to abandon the Republican Party by voting with the Democrats today to pass the $838 million dollar stimulus package out of the Senate. All 36 No votes came from Republicans.

Now the bill faces hurdles in conference committee as House and Senate negotiators will try to hammer out some sort of compromise agreement. Let's see if they can pass that.

- The Daytona 500 on Sunday kicks off the Nascar season. We will see if Jimmie Johnson can win his 4th straight title.

- Bret Michael's Rock of Love Bus is getting crazy. Last night he brought in 3 new girls to shake up the mix, because he hasn't really been feeling the connections with the other girls. I just have no idea who he will pick and I believe neither does Bret.

- White House is demanding oversight of the 2010 Census. This move has far-reaching political implications for voting, redistricting and representation in future elections. This move looks like the White House wants to take Census-taking power away from the Commerce Department, which has oversight of the Census Bureau, so they can manipulate the redistricting of congressional seats. I hope this is not so. It would be not only unethical, but illegal. Bruce Chapman, of the U.S. Census Bureau, wrote in his Discovery blog that "the only reason the White House would want to be involved is in figuring out how to add more voting power to certain states and certain groups within states."

- Stimulus plan could supply illegal aliens with 300,000 jobs. The Senate version of the bill, which just passed today, does not prohibit illegals from those jobs. The House version prohibits contractors from hiring employees without first checking the E-Verify system, which allows employers to verify whether a person is authorized to work in the U.S.

- The RealID Act of 2005 has been temporarily killed in the Virginia House and Senate committees. If this ever passes, it is an egregious violation of the 1st, 4th, and 10th Amendments.

This Day in History, February 9

1825 - After no Presidential candidate received a majority of electoral votes, the U.S. House elects John Quincy Adams President of the United States.

1861 - War of Northern Aggression - Jefferson Davis is elected Provisional President of the Confederate States of America by the Confederate convention in Montgomery, Alabama.

1889 - U.S.D.A established as a Cabinet-level agency

1900 - Davis Cup competition is established

1964 - Beatles make their first appearance on Ed Sullivan show, performing before a record-setting crowd of 75 million viewers.

1971 - Satchel Paige becomes the first Negro league player to be voted to Baseball Hall of Fame.

Births:

1914 - Ernest Tubb
1943 - Joe Pesci
1945 - Mia Farrow
1947 - Crazy U.S. Senator Jim Webb
1963 - American Icon Travis Tritt