08/28 - Emmet Till's Murder
At the time it was written, The Declaration of Independence, with its nice rhetoric about Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness, did not apply to various classes of people, Indians, certain People of Color, witches and heretics, and others, and it was not intended that if ever would apply to them.
It could easily be argued that it didn't even fully apply to propertyless free white women, but that is yet another kettle of fish. The typical types intended to be covered by the Declaration and the US Constitution are shown in Barry Faulkner's mural The Declaration of Independence, reproduced below
On this day in 1955, Emmet Till, a 14 year old black boy was abducted, tortured and brutally murdered in Mississippi. The perpetrators were found not guilty by an all white Mississippi jury. The Declaration's "Right to Life" language, the Constitution, The Bill of Rights and the Civil War Amendments provided him no protection or security. It is said that his death gave impetetus to the Civil Rights struggle. Perhaps it did, but lynchings still happen today, 68 years later. They are more circumspect, the perpetrators no longer take and widely publish photos, etc., but they still happen. They were never confined solely to the south, and still aren't. They were never confined solely to persons of color and still aren't. They are fueled by hatred, self-righteous arrogance, and belief systems, often based on fear, that disparage and denigrate the "other". Prevention must, among other things, target those mental aberrations.
I will note in passing that it is Red Wine Day
On this day in history:
1565 -- Pedro Menendez de Aviles spotted land near St. Augustine, Florida and established the city of St. Augustine
1609 -- Henry Hudson "discovered" Delaware Bay.
1789 -- William Herschel found a new Saturnian moon, Enceladus.
1830 -- The B & O Railroad's Tom Thumb locomotive raced a horse-drawn car
1833 -- The Slavery Abolition Act 1833 abolished slavery in most of the British Empire
1845 -- The first issue of Scientific American magazine was published
1850 – Wagner’s Lohengrin premiered
1859 -- The strongest geomagnetic storm on record hit earth
1964 – The Philadelphia race riot began.
1867 – The United States seized Midway Atoll.
1913 -- Queen Wilhelmina opened the Peace Palace in The Hague.
1955 -- Emmett Till was murdered in Mississippi by racist thugs.
1957 -- Strom Thurmond filibustered the Civil Rights Act of 1957 for over 24 hours
1963 -- Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his I Have a Dream speech at The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom
1968 -- Demonstrations at the Democratic National Convention in Chitown triggered a police riot
1993 – NASA's Galileo probe performed a flyby of the asteroid 243 Ida.
1996 – The Federal Protective Service arrested 11 for protesting in a demonstration during that year's Democratic National Convention
Some people who were born on this day:
People with advantages are loath to believe that they just happen to be people with advantages.
~~ C. Wright Mills
1481 – Francisco de Sá de Miranda, poet
1749 -- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, novelist, poet, playwright
1801 – Antoine Augustin Cournot, mathematician and philosopher
1853 – Vladimir Shukhov, architect and engineer
1903 – Bruno Bettelheim, shrink and author
1906 – John Betjeman, poet and academic
1908 -- Roger Tory Peterson, ornithologist and author
1916 -- C. Wright Mills, sociologist and author
1916 -- Jack Vance, author
1917 -- Jack Kirby, comic book author and illustrator
1925 -- Billy Grammer, singer, songwriter and guitarist
1928 -- Vilayat Khan, sitar player and composer
1941 – John Stanley Marshall, drummer
1948 -- Danny Seraphine, drummer
Some people who died on this day:
I saw in the whole Christian world a license of fighting at which even barbarous nations might blush. Wars were begun on trifling pretexts or none at all, and carried on without any reference of law, Divine or human.
~~ Hugo Grotius
0632 -- Fatimah, daughter of Muhammad
1645 -- Hugo Grotius, philosopher, jurist, and playwright
1665 – Elisabetta Sirani, painter
1784 -- Junipero Serra, slave driving, land thieving, oppressive, murdering, imperialist, genocidal inquisitor
(oops, that's SAINT slave driving, land thieving, oppressive, murdering, imperialist, genocidal inquisitor)
1818 – Jean Baptiste Point du Sable, fur trader, founded Chicago
1903 -- Frederick Law Olmsted, architect
1955 -- Emmett Till, victim of racist murderers in Mississippi
1988 -- Max Shulman, author and screenwriter
2014 – Glenn Cornick, bass guitarist
Some Holidays, Holy Days, Festivals, Feast Days, Days of Recognition, and such:
The feast of Augustine ofThe Hippos Hippo
Red Wine Day
Today's Tunes
Pedro Menendez de Aviles
Emmet Till
1968 Democratic Convention
Roger Tory Peterson
Billy Grammer
Vilayat Khan
John Stanley Marshall
Danny Seraphine (CTA)
Glenn Cornick
Saint Junipero Serra the Clerical Conquistador
Red Wine Day
Bonus:
Ok, it's an open thread, so it's up to you folks now. So what's on your mind?
Cross posted from http://caucus99percent.com
Comments
Good morning
The MTS Birdland is a great way to start the day. And Bouree to boot!
Thanks enhydra - gets me going .. upbeat and fun!
question everything
Good morning QMS. MTS, and in particular
Birdland, is always refreshing, though not something I reach for that often. Bouree was just one of those things, not many videos that somewhat feature Glenn Cornick.
glad it helped to get you going.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Unintended consequences?
Well, that Trump GA arrest and mugshot certainly has rocked legacy, indie and social media - but not, I'm guessing, all in quite the way the would-be takers-down of Trump and his allies envisioned.
The Trump indictment has blown up in a big way in black social media - problem for the Trump haters is that much of it is favorable/ sympathetic *to* Trump...
Oh.
More on Zerohedge:
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/more-you-indict-more-we-unite-black-...
PS - Thanks for the Jethro Tull
Practically the entire American experiment is buried
in multiple failures of 'unintended consequence'. Foreign policy, finances, immigration,
infrastructure, law enforcement, incarceration, health care, housing, food insecurities,
response toclimate devastation, justice, congress, media propaganda, censorship.
The list goes on.
Watching this country fail on so many levels simultaneously is disheartening.
Our priorities are all mixed-up. Start with leveling the squillionaires with the poverty
class. Stop the pentagon poison milking machine and value people over profits then
we may be able to turn this sinking ship around.
question everything
From your lips
to Gawd's ear, mon.
The story of the US is that of the unholy marriage of unintended consequences and the profit motive. When it really all went wrong was the start of the Cold War, when the unintended consequences became entirely *intended*, and profit because the sole concern...
Twice bitten, permanently shy.
Assorted "great men" from our history separately
and publicly decried as to be feared and possibly destructive of the country specific things; political parties, corporations, a central bank, foreign entanglements, and a standing army. No one listened then and nobody listens now.
Two more pernicious things were largely left uncriticized, pure capitalism, and a religious doctrine holding that the earth, in its entirety, and everything on and in it, were put here to be used and exploited by us for our benefit.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
I gotta
disagree
on that oneevery one of those effects Were
intended to happen
conceived
planned and
implemented to the detriment
of All of us
For those that
haven’t yet
a visit to tae this morn
longform comments from
the usual suspects are
Rockin’!
damn near sprayed
coffee on
‘does he own a mercedes?’
worth the time
Thanks for the ot
you Really like that junipero guy, huh?
Ya got to be a Spirit, cain't be no Ghost. . .
Explain Bldg #7. . . still waiting. . .
If you’ve ever wondered whether you would have complied in 1930’s Germany,
Now you know. . .
sign at protest march
Good morning TBU. Serra, by normal human standards,
was an amoral, sociopathic, criminal. But he was an envoy of the church, which means that different standards apply, different enough that the no good sob was made a saint somewhat recently in the face of a ton of criticism, complaints and protest.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
In California..
I'm pretty sure Helen Hunt Jackson's novel 'Ramona' used to be required reading in HS. Set in the period after US had acquired California it deals with the deteriorating situation of the mission Indians.
Jackson made extensive studies of and was a prominent early critic of US Indian policy.
Despite the California missions' colonial-era origins (and their being arguable culturally imperialistic), the system did work to protect the Indians from encroachment on their lands and to some extent from exploitation. Legal protections afforded to them deteriorated after 1833 due to secularization policies of the Mexican government and were also disregarded by the American administration - the previously stable population fell by over two-thirds with a couple decades.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Hunt_Jackson
Good morning BR, thanks for the clip.
The Jethro Tull was, as I noted above to QMS, all about that Bass.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
Dont Cry for Me Argentina
At the start of each day I follow much the same pattern. I do a quick perusal of various sites, ignoring the BS snooze sites because they spend so much effort blowing smoke up my behind. Believe me, after the last week or so and even to this day I am totally disgusted with the smoke situation. I haven't seen the night sky in a couple of months.
On Friday last we got the extreme hazardous air quality warning (https://www.airnow.gov/). Meh, breathing is overrated. In any case, we closed up the apt and did a lockdown for the next 4 days, minimizing the influx of outside air(?). The smoke from the out of control Canada fires was flowing south to us and it was joined by the fires in the Cascades and the Spokane fires. Oh what fun we had. At one point the visibility was down to under a half mile.
But I digress...
Following on the heels of the BRICs conference where Argentina is most definitely in play as a vital battleground against the hegemony, Global South has an essay about the current situation there and the dollarization issue. It appears our neolibcons are going all out (can anyone take away those shithead's open ended credit card?) to make sure Argentina remains under the colonialist's thumb.
A while back there was another essay that provided background for the current events. I won't bother with a link because it is easily located on the site.
And now the point of my musing: I have always been moved by "Don't Cry For Me Argentina", especially the Sinead version, and that led off the essay above. In it there was a reference to Eva Peron's My Message (Mi Mensaje) book. She completed the book just before the end of her young life. Someone who accomplished so much in such a short lifespan. After some effort I managed to find a transcript and translation of it. I found this ending statement in the book even more moving than the song.
It ties in well with the "Rich Men North of Richmond" kerfluffle.
On edit: fixed freudian slip.
Later today I will do a side load of the book to my Kindle and add it to the queue. BTW, the last one was "Winters Tale" by Mark Helprin. Excellent if you get the chance. A different treatment of the evil in the world and how pervasive it is. Pay no attention to the attempted coopting by the holy crowd in the reviews.
Be well, please. Send air if you have any to spare.
Good morning exindy. Great excerpt, thanks.
I especially liked this ending:
Sadly, I don't foresee much chance of bringing the oligarchs into the folds of those who actually work, or of much unanimity of purpose among those who do. Nonetheless, one must have goals, so why not that one.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Forgot to include this in my other reply
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Macron is delusional. When in trouble one can always pull
ISIS out of the magic hat.
https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/french-ambassador-stays-n...
Imperialist and colonizing countries seem unable to shake
off the mindset and the need to project power and control abroad. It seems that they need to be hit with a Dien Bien Phu type of event and even then, that only applies to the country performing it.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Getting ready for the
Getting ready for the Hurricane. Even though it's not projected to hit anywhere near here, will still get the heavy rains. As much as I hate the thought of anyone getting hit, it is already cooler outside than it has been. Oh, and people are going nuts. The local Walmart is reporting that they are already out of bottled water.
Same here
語必忠信 行必正直
Good morning Soryang. Glad you got some bottles
and good luck with any weather events.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Water is quickly becoming a problem here in dystopia
For our needs we use filling stations that are available in quite a few places. On a supply run this AM I stopped outside the Safeway and filled up 3 gallons of filtered, treated water. Half a buck each. The station will do 5 gallons also. We always make sure that we have at least 2 gallons on hand in the fridge to fill a pitcher.
Another boomer with his bottles was waiting for me to finish so he could get his 4 5-gallon bottles.
Be safe, please.
Here's hoping you don't suffer any damage or bad
flooding. This is when it helps to have a lot of empty, clean, 1/2 and 1 gallon containers around to fill from the tap. We have at least 10 gallons worth from our camping days.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
The Emmet Till case
Reminded me of a homicide near Brunswick GA about two and a half years ago. I don't think I've posted this anecdote here before.
My ex and my son once lived in the same area where the shooting death of Armaud Arbery took place. Because my son grew up near there, and although they had moved from the neighborhood long before Arbery was murdered there in broad daylight, they still lived in the same part of Georgia, where I have spent a fair of amount of time. Although I've lived in the South for decades and traveled widely in the Southern US, I know parts of Florida and southeast Georgia best. I had earlier learned of one other homicide and a disappearance in this area as well. There are plenty of guns, gators and swamplands.
Southeast GA is like something out of Coolhand Luke imo. Prisoners in the labor crews on the side of the highway wear those striped prison outfits one sees in black and white movies, and the guards ride shotgun on horses. It's not that its just racist, it isn't safe for whites either. Drugs are a terrible problem there.
The video below is an analysis of the Arbery case in terms of self defense laws, the host is apparently some sort of self defense teacher, not that laws or principles would have helped Arbery. This video was just a convenient analysis of the situation on the ground at the scene of the crime. The guy does a little Bible thumping near the end, which seems apropos somehow. This may be true anywhere in the US, but any encounter with the police in this part of GA could be fatal. I suspect Montgomery and Little Rock aren't much different. I had this told to me about Florida too, by one of the state's top criminal trial lawyers at a seminar once. It may not matter where you are. It's something I've always kept in mind. fwiw
(edit spelling)
語必忠信 行必正直
Thanks, Soryang. I'll have to watch it in a bit, have to
go get my walking in
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
I should make clear
Waiting for the 5 pm update.
語必忠信 行必正直
Take cary, soryang
I have always had more damage and more problems in the aftermath than the high winds.
It is scary, no doubt, and dangerous.
I remember seeing the video of the father-son combo killing Embery.
I can't remember if they drew first degree murder charges or not.
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981
I'm not exactly sure
語必忠信 行必正直
Typically, 1st deg. felonies have a range of punishment up to
I never had a reason to study for Ga.'s bar exam.
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981
Monday Monday
yeah, well, you know how it goes...
Hi all, Hey EL! Hope it's all good out there!
Big day today, eh? Midway? We seized the biggest nesting colonies in the world of Laysan and Black-footed Albatross on this day in history. Must have been some battle. I hear the birds have suffered tremendous losses.
I'll lift a glass for Roger Tory Petersen. At the Am. Birding Assoc. meeting in Kenmare N.D., maybe 1972, he told a story of (his address was reprinted) when he noticed his eyes starting to go. He lived in Old Lyme CT, went to the optom. Who did not know who he was. Suggested to Roger he might consider trying birdwatching as good exercise for the eyes. ROFL. The father of modern field ID. When he first called female Cape May Warblers, and fall Blackpoll vs. Bay-breasted in fall in the Bronx, the Linnaeus Soc. guys shot em to prove him wrong. You can't ID that by sight from 150' up in a tree. They were wrong. That was in the 30's I think... I saw him at a Ross' Gull at Oyster River CT, April 1984.
Being rasied in Org. Co. socal schools we were essentially taught Junipero Serra was a deity. Certainly he was already sanctified to hear how it was taught. Tamed the uncivilized natives and all. Standard bus load field trip in elementary school to see a mission. Every school did it, about 3 buses at once, fourth grade, so 10 or so. We went to San Luis Rey. Great for a youth to see, the tallow room was the most awesome thing, 8' candles and such hanging from big wood beams, no doubt of the live-oaks that used to be there. Somehow we were not taught the whole truth about what happened. No one gave the natives more... diseases and enslavement than the conquerors... To later find out what happened, it seemed more than odd that we were taught to worship the great enslaver of native peoples, with hardly an afterthought to the fact that THEY built these places. Gee, that sounds familiar, too familiar.
I determined over a half-century ago I would not hear Volunteers by the Airplane enough times in my life.
Big Tull fan. As I recall, they are not in the Rock Hall of Fame. But Donna Summer is. Jan must have hated Tull. They were awesome. That early stuff, the first 5 albums through Thick as a Brick especially, and Stand up and Benefit in particular. Glenn Cornick and Clive Bunker. WOW. I saw them a few times; 72, 74 and 75 or so. They were amazing live, complete with minstrel show and theater act. There was nothing like it.
Thanks for the tunes, thread, and thoughts!
have good ones all!
We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.
Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.
both - Albert Einstein
Hola Dysto, wondered when you'd show up and what
#7
you'd have to contribute about RTP.
Midway is finally a wildlife refuge, way, way late in the day. Ah well.
be well and have a good one
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --