Monthly Archives: February 2012

Quote of the Day

“I don’t believe in an America where the separation of church and state are absolute.  The idea that the church can have no influence or no involvement in the operation of the state is absolutely antithetical to the objectives and vision of our country.  To say that people of faith have no role in the public square?  You bet that makes me want to throw up.”

– Rick Santorum, speaking on ABC’s This Week.

 

Here’s a refresher for Santorum and other like-minded religious zealots.

Bill of Rights – Amendment I:

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.”

 

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How a Bearded Virginia Woolf and a Band of ‘jolly savages’ Fooled the British Navy

Virginia Woolf, left, and the Bloomsbury group hoaxers. Photograph: Antonio Zazueta Olmos for the Observer

This is a great story about one of the greatest practical jokes played by one of the 20th century’s greatest writers on one of the world’s greatest military powers.

A previously unknown letter has surfaced, detailing the “shriekingly funny” Dreadnought hoax, when members of the Bloomsbury group donned beards and costumes to disguise themselves as Abyssinian princes and gained access to the pride of the British naval fleet.  The Bloomsbury group was a collection of writers, artists and economists who had assembled loosely at the University of Cambridge in the early 1900’s.  Among them were author Virginia Woolf and economist John Maynard Keynes.

The letter was written by Horace de Vere Cole, who described how he and five friends, including the novelist Virginia Woolf and painter Duncan Grant, deceived an admiral and the crew of the battleship HMS Dreadnought, flagship of the home fleet, on February 7, 1910.  Four of them pretended to be Abyssinians and two claimed to be their Foreign Office guides.  Even Woolf’s cousin, one of the naval officers on board the ship, failed to recognize the author in her fake beard.

Cole wrote the letter to a friend a day after the hoax.  Explaining that, “the idea was mine, but the carrying out was the work of six,” Cole wrote: “The interpreter, the four princes and an officer went over the ship talking gibberish fluently … We departed to the band strains and the company of marines drawn up and the staff at the salute once more.

“It was glorious! Shriekingly funny – I nearly howled when introducing the four princes to the admiral and then to the captain, for I made their names up in the train, but I forgot which was which, and introduced them under various names, but it did not matter!

“They were tremendously polite and nice – couldn’t have been nicer: one almost regretted the outrage on their hospitality.”

The hospitality even extended to a carriage for the group’s journey to London from Weymouth.

Added Cole: “I was so amused at being just myself in a tall hat – I had no disguise whatever and talked in an ordinary friendly way to everyone – the others talked nonsense.  We had all learned some Swahili: I said they were ‘jolly savages’ but that I didn’t understand much of what they said … It began to rain slightly on the ship and we only just got the princes under cover in time, another moment and their complexions would have been running – Are you amused? I am … Yesterday was a day worth the living.”

A descendant of the letter’s original recipient brought the correspondence to light recently.  It’s now being offered for sale by Rick Gekoski, a London dealer in rare books and manuscripts, who said, “Just imagine trying to do such a thing now.  This is elegant and audacious, very Edwardian.”

The letter is accompanied by an original photograph of the friends in “Abyssinian” costume, annotated by Cole with their fake names.

Martyn Downer, the author of Cole’s biography, The Sultan of Zanzibar, described the letter as particularly interesting as most of Cole’s papers were destroyed or lost.  “Although he was born to a great fortune, he lost it all and ended his life in great penury,” he said.

As you might expect, the British Navy did take revenge on one of the hoaxers, albeit not in an official manner.  Three sailors abducted Grant and took him to Hampstead Heath, where they were reported to have caned him.

 

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February 26, 2012 – 298 days Until Baktun 12

Survivalist Tip:  Iodine is an essential element for basic human glandular functioning, so obviously the well-prepared survivalist should have iodine supplements on hand when the apocalypse hits.  You don’t know how long the chaos will reign, so the odds of your local health food store re-opening soon may be slim.  Iodine is required by higher animals like chimpanzees and dogs for proper regulation of thyroid hormones, which in turn, aid the metabolism.  Lower animals like cephalopods and humans need it, too, but mainly to keep from getting headaches, which slows them down in the hunt for food.  Iodine is found naturally in water, especially in very salty water.  But, don’t even think about moving near the Dead Sea just for the briny water!  For one thing the Mayan gods will destroy the Middle East region first, since that’s where all this Judeo-Christian-Islamic crap that always gets the world in trouble started 2,000 years ago.  Besides, they don’t have any chocolate out there, and you don’t want to live in a society like that.  Iodine is found plentifully in such places as Chile, Japan and the Mississippi River Valley.  These areas are the birth places of some of the world’s greatest civilizations, so we’re already in luck.  More importantly, iodine will be critical as you struggle to survive in the aftermath of the upheaval.  And, you thought it was just for cuts and scrapes!

 

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Today’s Birthdays

Singer – songwriter Fats Domino (Ain’t That a Shame, Blueberry Hill) is 84.

 

 

Singer Mitch Ryder (Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels) is 67.

Singer Sandie Shaw (There’s Always Something There to Remind Me) is 65.

 

Keyboardist Jonathan Cain (Journey) is 62.

 

Singer Michael Bolton (How Am I Supposed to Live Without You) is 59.

 

Actress Jennifer Grant (Beverly Hills, 90210) is 46.

 

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On February 26…

1802 – French author Victor Hugo (Les Miserables) was born.

 

1829 – Levi Strauss, creator of blue jeans, was born Loeb Strauss in Buttenheim, Germany. 

1907 – Members of the U.S. Congress raised their own annual pay to $7,500 each.  Both House and Senate members got the same salary, while Cabinet members and the Vice President would earn $12,000.

 

1916 – Mutual signed Charlie Chaplin to a film contract.  Three years later, the ‘old’ Charlie Chaplin films were released and became very successful at the box office.

 

1919 – Congress established the Grand Canyon as a National Park.  The gigantic gorge that cuts through the high plateaus of the northwest corner of Arizona is split by the Colorado River; covers 1,218,375 acres; measures 18 miles across and over two hundred miles long; and is a mile from its rim to the Colorado.

 

1929 – Congress established the Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming, covering approximately 310,000 acres, or 485 square miles.

 

1939 – First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt resigned from the Daughters of the American Revolution after the group refused to allow African American opera singer Marian Anderson to perform at Washington, D.C.’s Constitution Hall.

             

 

1942 – The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences held its 14th annual Academy Awards at Hollywood’s Biltmore Hotel where, via radio, President Franklin D. Roosevelt thanked the film industry for its WWII defense preparedness work.  For the first time the Oscars were presented in sealed envelopes.

1951 – Minnesota became the 36th state to ratify the 22nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which limited a U.S. president to two terms in office.

1972 – A damn in Logan County, WV collapsed, killing 118 and leaving another 4,000 homeless.

1993 – In a precursor to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, a van packed with a 1,210-pound bomb exploded in the parking garage underneath the World Trade Center’s North Tower.  The explosion killed 6 people and injured more than 1,000.

 

 

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Cartoon of the Day

And America still hasn’t collapsed!  Progressives must be doing something right!

 

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Picture of the Day

USMC Brandon Morgan, right, greeting his lover upon return to his base in Hawaii. 

I’m sure religious and social conservatives will get pissed off at the mere sight of this, but who cares?!  At least Morgan has served his country in the military – unlike the war-mongering draft dodgers who left office 3 years ago.  God bless America and pray for the troops!

 

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2nd Quote of the Day

“He’s both as popular and as unpopular as he’s ever been.”

– Jim Henson, co-director of a University of Texas/Texas Tribune poll, about a question with 51% of respondents saying they would not vote for Perry again

 

39% should be a familiar number for him

Courtesy Charles Kuffner, Houston Chronicle

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1st Quote of the Day

“I would think so, if I had to make the decision today.” 

– Gov. Rick Perry on running for president in 2016

 

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February 25, 2012 – 299 days Until Baktun 12

Survivalist Tip:  Your home may have a basement.  In upper class neighborhoods, they’re called wine cellars; in middle class, they’re basements; and in lower class, they’re called tubs.  Regardless, a basement is a great place to flee in the event of a natural calamity such as a tornado or IRS audit.  But, after the Mayan apocalypse, a basement won’t necessarily protect from all the miscreants roaming the barren terrain searching for food, medicine and a working telephone.  For that reason, you’ll need to construct a bunker in your back yard.  Don’t worry about code violations or neighbors’ complaints.  They won’t matter when the Mayan gods return to Earth to slay the remnants of a world gone awry.  A bunker should be completely encased in steel and / or concrete and have enough room for you, your family, your pets, clothing, food rations, water and several vials of Xanax.  (You may be enclosed for a while, so someone in your party is bound to panic, and killing them is not an option is such a confined environment.)  A well-fortified bunker will guard against such catastrophes as a nuclear attack and, of course, the Mayan siege.  You can build it yourself, or you can contract a reputable right-wing firm to build it for you.  Either way, just build one!

 

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