Monday, December 08, 2014
In other words, he was a comforter
George Bush was interviewed by Candy Crowley on CNN about his book on his father. Hey, did you know his father was ALSO president? What’re the odds?
IN OTHER WORDS: “Well, I think I’m introducing him to our country in a way no one’s ever known him. In other words, he’s an extraordinary person, not only because of his accomplishments but because of his character.”
PLEASE, YOU DON’T EVEN KNOW HOW A PRETZEL WORKS: “And secondly I understand how history works; it takes a long time for people to get to know him, get to know somebody and then analyze their decisions. But I wanted to be one of the first people out in the evaluation of George H.W. Bush.” Most of the rest of us actually evaluated him when he was president, but George was pretty drunk those entire four years.
MEANS NEVER HAVING TO SAY YOU’RE SORRY. “And it’s a love story. I mean, there’s - I love him.”
IN OTHER WORDS: He denies having daddy issues: “Yeah, stiff competition is overstated. In other words if you love somebody as much as I love my dad, and my brothers loved my dad, my sister, there’s no need to compete.”
He says he didn’t discuss presidential stuff with his father: “And I think part of it has to do with how he raised us, and that is I love you no matter what you do.” Or he just gave up on you ever getting anything right a long time ago.
IN OTHER WORDS: “But I hope when people read this, and I hope they do, is that they understand that when he reached across and grabbed my arm after the speech on September the 14 in the National Cathedral, I mean, incredibly emotional moment for me, it was in many ways symbolic of what he’d meant for me as president. In other words, he was a comforter. A lot.” No, he just seemed like a comforter because he was feather-brained.
DOESN’T KNOW A LOT OF ADJECTIVES, DOES HE? “and so he was confident I had a good team and that I would make decisions based upon good judgments of a lot of good advisers.”
IN OTHER WORDS: Still won’t admit being wrong about Putin’s soul. “Well, I think he’s become more zero-sum type thinker. In other words... it’s almost as if he says that if the - if the West wins, I lose. And if I win, the West loses. As opposed to what can we do together to enhance our respective positions?”
He explains how to defeat ISIS: “Well, first thing is there has to be a goal, and the president has laid out what I think is a good goal, and that is to degrade and defeat ISIS.” Why, that’s so crazy it might just work!
IN OTHER WORDS: On Jeb: “So when you’re weighing the presidency, you think, ‘Do I fear success?’ In other words, can I handle it if I win?” But he has “no clue where his head is now” and hasn’t talked with Jeb about 2016. Jeb hasn’t called to ask for advice, George hasn’t called to ask if he’s running. Tell us again all about how close your family is, George.
He also has “no clue” about whether Hillary will run for president in the conservatory with a candle stick.
Similarly, “The [Eric Garner grand jury] verdict was hard to understand”. Also, door knobs.
“But it’s sad that race continues to play such a, you know, kind of emotional, divisive part of life. I remember back in when I was a kid, in the ‘70s...” George was born in 1946. “...and there was race riots with cities being burned. And I just think we’ve improved. I had dinner with Condi the other night and we talked about this subject, and, yes, she just said you got understand that there are a lot of, you know, black folks around that are just incredibly more and more distrusting of law enforcement.” And then I forgot she wasn’t the maid and told her to clear the plates.
The Eric Garner video is “very disturbing to me. And, yes. I mean it just - it calls into question what needs to be done to heal...” Er, nothing, he’s dead. The cop choked him to death.
“...to get the country united again.” And there you go: the poster boy for unearned white privilege thinks there was a golden age of race relations, if we could only figure out how to return to it.
Today -100: December 8, 1914: Of iron crosses, neutrality, and truces
Now that the unwritten ban on Jews in the German military has been lifted, several have been promoted to be officers and 710 have received the Iron Cross, to which some have responded, “Dude, we’re Jews and you’re giving us a cross?” (I believe the German for “dude” is “mein duden”).
The US Supreme Court denies Leo Frank’s writ of error.
Charles M. Schwab of Bethlehem Steel and Shipbuilding has given in to Pres. Wilson’s request that he not make submarines for Britain, which Wilson seems to think would violate his neutrality policy. Evidently the government had no legal way to stop Schwab had he ignored it.
Germany claims to have captured Lodz.
The pope wants a truce in the Great War over Christmas.
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100 years ago today
Sunday, December 07, 2014
Today -100: December 7, 1914: Of horses, mules, olympics, and Jewish bravery
One of Mexico’s competing presidents, Eulalio Gutiérrez, moves into the presidential palace in Mexico City. He doesn’t make a speech, but does send someone out to say that his soldiers have not come to steal horses and automobiles, but to work for the welfare of the nation. It’s probably not a great sign if you have to say that, but he is backed by bandits Villa and Zapata, so the horse-thief/president line might be a little bit blurrier than elsewhere.
Britain is buying pretty much all of Georgia’s mules.
The European war may put a crimp in the 1916 Olympics. The 1916 Berlin Olympics.
Bankers and stock brokers in Chicago want to change their time zone from Central to Eastern, because it would be convenient for them to sync up with the NY Stock Exchange, but the railroads disagree. There will be discussions.
The German governor of occupied Antwerp bans the distribution of any pictures of Belgian ruins.
Headline of the Day -100: “The Jew’s Bravery Established in War.”
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100 years ago today
Saturday, December 06, 2014
Today -100: December 6, 1914: It still has that new revolution smell
Headline of, Oh, Pretty Much Once a Week -100: “New Revolution Begins in Mexico.” Led by a couple of Huerta’s generals, Emilio Campo and José Inés Salazar. Salazar escaped a couple of weeks ago from jail in Albuquerque, where he was held on a perjury charge, which I think must relate to his acquittal by a federal jury in May on a charge of smuggling 100,000 rounds of ammunition into Mexico. After this current revolutionary movement fails, Salazar will once again flee into the US, and a year from now will be acquitted again. Somehow he’ll wind up joining Pancho Villa’s forces, even though he had been in charge of fighting Villa under Huerta. He’ll be killed in battle in 1917.
The departure of the Lusitania from New York harbor is delayed while the new “war tax” on tickets is collected from passengers. This amounts to $3 for steerage passengers on their $37.50 ticket.
According to official reports, “Nothing of importance happened in the Carpathians yesterday.”
Vice President Marshall says no one cares that he’s taking paid lecturing gigs.
Belgium is reported, falsely I assume, to have hidden some of its art treasures, including a Rubens, from the Germans at the bottom of the River Scheldt.
Theodore Roosevelt has an op-ed in the NYT entitled “Our Responsibility in Mexico” (this link is more readable than the NYT’s; it’s his 1916 book Fear God and Take Your Own Part [!]; today’s article starts on p.230 at the words “THE SOUND OF LAUGHTER AND OF PLAYING CHILDREN HAS BEEN STILLED IN MEXICO.”) TR accuses Wilson of doing both too much in Mexico (refusing to recognize Huerta’s coup regime in the first place, then landing troops at Vera Cruz) and too little (not... actually I’m not sure what he thinks Wilson should have done, but he accuses him of having “hit soft” and withdrawn before accomplishing anything). I believe this type of criticism is called the Full John McCain. He says that Wilson’s putting the American finger on the scale in favor of Carranza/Villa has “produce[d] much evil and no good and [made] us responsible for the actions of a peculiarly lawless, ignorant and blood-thirsty faction” and cites the many acts of violence and the harassment of the Catholic Church.
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The departure of the Lusitania from New York harbor is delayed while the new “war tax” on tickets is collected from passengers. This amounts to $3 for steerage passengers on their $37.50 ticket.
According to official reports, “Nothing of importance happened in the Carpathians yesterday.”
Vice President Marshall says no one cares that he’s taking paid lecturing gigs.
Belgium is reported, falsely I assume, to have hidden some of its art treasures, including a Rubens, from the Germans at the bottom of the River Scheldt.
Theodore Roosevelt has an op-ed in the NYT entitled “Our Responsibility in Mexico” (this link is more readable than the NYT’s; it’s his 1916 book Fear God and Take Your Own Part [!]; today’s article starts on p.230 at the words “THE SOUND OF LAUGHTER AND OF PLAYING CHILDREN HAS BEEN STILLED IN MEXICO.”) TR accuses Wilson of doing both too much in Mexico (refusing to recognize Huerta’s coup regime in the first place, then landing troops at Vera Cruz) and too little (not... actually I’m not sure what he thinks Wilson should have done, but he accuses him of having “hit soft” and withdrawn before accomplishing anything). I believe this type of criticism is called the Full John McCain. He says that Wilson’s putting the American finger on the scale in favor of Carranza/Villa has “produce[d] much evil and no good and [made] us responsible for the actions of a peculiarly lawless, ignorant and blood-thirsty faction” and cites the many acts of violence and the harassment of the Catholic Church.
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100 years ago today
Friday, December 05, 2014
Today -100: December 5, 1914: Of censorship, and crimes negroes are prone to commit
The British authorities finally allow the press to report the sinking of the Audacious, although not the name of the ship or the location.
The German authorities suppress an issue of the Vossische Zeitung for reporting on a super-secret meeting of a committee of the Reichstag at which, they say, Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg said the war would go longer than expected and the German people had better tighten their belts. The government denies he said anything of the sort.
And the Budapest authorities are trying to suppress newspapers that reported that Hungarian Prime Minister Count Tisza got a poor reception in Berlin when he tried to get troops sent to protect Hungary’s border. Kaiser Wilhelm is reported to have been particularly upset about the “egotism of some people” whose desire not to be invaded by Russia would upset Germany’s meticulous war plans. The Hungarian secret police are literally ripping newspapers out of the hands of people in cafés. Everyone in Austria-Hungary is coming to realize that all decisions are now being made in Berlin. Hungary especially was never thrilled with this war. It disliked Archduke Franz Ferdinand and doesn’t share the Austrian interest in territorial expansion, which would just bring in more troublesome Slavs.
Fog of War (Rumors, Propaganda and Just Plain Bullshit) of the Day -100: Germany claims to have discovered in a town in Belgium super-secret pre-war papers from the British army detailing Belgian military information, showing that Belgium was never neutral, so it was totally okay for Germany to violate its neutrality.
Fog? The London Morning Post says that two of Kaiser Wilhelm’s sons had to flee the Russian army in Poland by airplane.
France, which doesn’t seem to be pressing its advantage while Germany is distracted by losses on its eastern front in Poland, is also fighting a colonial war in Morocco, where a lot of officers have been beheaded by Arab insurgents.
Massachusetts Gov. David Walsh wants to suspend labor laws, including those regulating child labor, overtime, and the 54-hour week, so that the state can take advantage of all the extra orders coming in due to the European war. It’s called opportunity, people!
The journal American Medicine, which is published in New York, has an article by a psychologist trying – and failing – to figure out why Atlanta is so eager to execute Leo Frank for a crime Jim Conley, who testified against him, obviously did, despite the fact that “The crime [presumably rape rather than murder] is one which negroes are prone to commit, and if a white man is guilty he generally, if not always, shows signs of mental disturbance.” It’s just science.
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100 years ago today
Thursday, December 04, 2014
Today -100: December 4, 1914: Of the just aspirations of Italy, naval mishaps, moral surveillance, shell shock, and hangings
Italian Prime Minister Antonio Salandra tells Parliament that just because Italy is neutral in the war doesn’t mean it won’t try to scavenge the bones of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and annex Trento and Trieste (“the just aspirations of Italy,” he calls this goal).
British newspapers are again complaining about censorship, specifically the continued refusal to let the public be informed of “a certain naval mishap” (i.e., the sinking of the Audacious on October 27) of which the German public is fully informed.
After a campaign by suffrage and other feminist groups in Britain against a government circular to local police forces asking them to enquire into the moral worthiness of soldiers’ wives, the government backs down only slightly, and police will continue to consider it their business whether those wives are drinking or screwing around.
Headline of the Day -100: “Shell Fire Wrecks Reason.” They don’t have the phrase “shell shock” yet, but will soon.
Pennsylvania holds its last hanging (they’re switching to electrocution).
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100 years ago today
Wednesday, December 03, 2014
Core principle
Another week, another Obama statement about a dead black man killed by a cop who gets away with it.
He has a strong finisher – “When anybody in this country is not being treated equally under the law, that’s a problem. And it’s my job as President to help solve it.” – but most of what leads up to it strains so strenuously to avoid speaking hard truths about how this country is policed that it seems to suggest, in as many words, that the only problem is a perception problem on the part of overly sensitive minorities:
...the concern on the part of too many minority communities that law enforcement is not working with them and dealing with them in a fair way.
communities of color and minority communities that feel that bias is taking place
they’re [cops] only going to be able to do their job effectively if everybody has confidence in the system.
And right now, unfortunately, we are seeing too many instances where people just do not have confidence that folks are being treated fairly.
And I am absolutely committed as President of the United States to making sure that we have a country in which everybody believes in the core principle that we are equal under the law.And unicorns.
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Today -100: December 3, 1914: Of war credits, presidents, and legitimacy suits
The Reichstag votes $1.25 billion in war credits and adjourns for three months. The only no vote was socialist Karl Liebknecht’s and the rest of the SPD should be ashamed of itself.
South Africa captures rebel leader Gen. Christiaan De Wet. It seems that automobiles are better than horses in a chase.
Zapata and Pancho Villa confer, and guess what, they both support different people to be president.
Austrian troops finally occupy Belgrade, which will make a nice present for Emperor Franz Josef for his 66th anniversary as emperor.
The Slingsby legitimacy suit opens in London. I’ll admit I just clicked on this story because of the glorious phrase “Slingsby legitimacy suit,” but it turns out to be darned interesting. Charles Slingsby, a former lieutenant of the British navy married to an American and living in San Francisco, inherited money and lands in Yorkshire from his father, as did his heir – £100,000 – except his heir died at or soon after birth and so he adopted a child and passed it off as his natural son, or at least that’s the accusation being made by his brothers. Follow-up: In February 1915, Judge Bargrave Deane, possessor of the most magistratey name in all England, ruled that the baby-substitution story was a fabrication. He thinks the child (Teddy) looks like his parents, complete with his father’s “peculiarly shaped jaw.” The judge called in his friend, the sculptor Sir George Frampton, who noticed Teddy’s odd-shaped left ear, which looks like his mother’s. He’s a funny-looking kid, is what the court is ruling here. Further follow-up: in 1916 the Court of Appeals overturned Bargrave Deane’s ruling, coming to the conclusion that the evidence that Mrs Slingsby had advertised to adopt a baby while supposedly pregnant (the theory now seems to be that there was never a legitimate baby, and to be fair, there does seem to be a lot of evidence for it, although the other Slingsby brothers were spreading around an awful lot of money in the New World bribing witnesses, so I’m not really sure). In December 1916 the House of Lords refused to hear the appeal, noting that it was sorry to fuck over Slingsby (now serving again in the military) and his funny-looking bastard child.
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100 years ago today
Tuesday, December 02, 2014
Today -100: December 2, 1914: Of wood, mahans, wardens, and tramps
Headline of the Day -100: “Germany Won’t Pass Wood.” No, don’t click: whatever you’re thinking (and you should probably be ashamed of whatever you’re thinking) is much more interesting than the real story.
Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan, the famous naval strategist, dies. Though important in the US, he was really influential in Germany, whose military leaders (and the kaiser) read his books and decided they needed a big navy to compete with Britain. Well, it seemed like a good idea at the time.
Pancho Villa arrives in Mexico City. He says he’s only there to preserve order, and absolutely not to take personal revenge on his enemies. So... that’s reassuring, I guess.
Thomas Mott Osborne, the new reforming warden of Sing Sing, arrives. You can tell the prisoners love him, because there were no fires, strikes or riots, which is the traditional greeting for a new warden.
There’s a bidding war for Charlie Chaplin, who is leaving Keystone. Two companies have offered him more than $1,000 a week.
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100 years ago today
Monday, December 01, 2014
Today -100: December 1, 1914: Of Gurkhas, war taxes, yellow books, and football
The Norddeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung claims that Britain’s Sikh and Gurkha troops sneak into German trenches at night to slit soldiers’ throats and drink their blood. As you do.
Germany announces more extortion from Belgium, a $7 million per month war tax, which will go to the expenses of occupation. This is supposedly being imposed as punishment for the shooting of German soldiers by Belgian civilians. The fines imposed up until now on Belgian cities, it is explained, were just for the widows and children of fallen German soldiers.
Luxembourg, which unlike Belgium rolled over for Germany, has been given $318,000 by German in compensation for damage to fields, roads, etc by the passage of German troops.
France publishes its Yellow Book on the causes of the war. Evidently it was Germany’s fault.
The owners of British football clubs are not best pleased with the press campaign against them, and say they will stop playing, as is being demanded, when all the theaters, cinemas, golf courses and race tracks also close.
A majority of the US Supreme Court says that the Oklahoma Supreme Court was wrong to uphold a Jim Crow law allowing railroads to provide luxury accommodations – sleeping cars, dining cars, etc – only to whites. However, they still throw the case out since the petitioners had not been refused such services and lack standing.
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100 years ago today
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Today -100: November 30, 1914: Love, not dreadnoughts and siege guns, will bring peace to warring Europe
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle says that Sir Roger Casement must have gone literally insane, probably from all that time in the tropics, to have gone to Berlin to negotiate. The Irish nationalists repudiate Casement.
Woodrow Wilson is going ahead with his plan to settle the Colorado coal strike, even though the mineowners rejected it. He appoints a commission to settle future differences (or, as the bitterly anti-union LA Times puts it, “President Vents Spite”). Not that he can force anyone to listen to the commission, so I’m not sure what he thinks he’s accomplishing.
Gen. Pablo Gonzales is reported to have declared himself provisional president of Mexico, because Mexico definitely needed a third one of those. Can’t have enough provisional presidents, I always say.
The commander of the United States Naval Training Station in Rhode Island bans the song “Tipperary” because it violates Woodrow Wilson’s neutrality order.
Speaking of violating neutrality, Today -100’s Headline of the Day: “Mr. Bryan Evades Embrace. He Had Just Predicted Love Would Bring Peace to Europe.” A young woman who claimed to be his cousin, but wasn’t, tries to hug him. There’s never a cameraphone around in 1914 when you need it.
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100 years ago today
Saturday, November 29, 2014
Today -100: November 29, 1914: Beware the French Dragons!
France and Germany and Austria will exchange civilian prisoners aged 45-60 who are medically unfit for military service.
NYT Index Typo of the Day -100: “DRAGONS WRECKED GERMAN AIR FLEET; French War Office Describes Night Attack of Cavalry on an Aeroplane Camp.” What are French dragons like? I picture him wearing a beret, with a Galois hanging from the corner of his mouth.
German newspapers are trying to reassure the public that the Russian winter isn’t really so bad for German soldiers. In fact, according to the professors being trotted out, severe cold kills germs and is therefore healthy (cholera has already broken out among some soldiers).
Norway’s women’s suffrage society (est. 1885) dissolves, because they won. In Norway suffrage was granted in installments (local elections to women paying a certain amount of tax in 1896, in state elections in 1907, county elections in 1910 for women over 25, and equal votes in 1913.
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100 years ago today
Friday, November 28, 2014
Today -100: November 28, 1914: Of football, fighting clergy, disguised steamers, impudent good will, and muffs
London newspaper owners jointly decide to stop reporting on football beyond the scores. If that doesn’t make everyone join the army, I don’t know what will.
Headline of the Day -100: “German Clergymen Want To Fight.” Some clergymen in Berlin protest being exempted (I guess actually barred) from the military. It’s an insult, they say.
Churches are not exempt from military service, however. At least according to the London Morning Post, which claims that the German army has put machine guns and anti-aircraft guns in the towers of Cracow Catholic churches to lure Russia into bombing them, thereby alienating the Poles.
German schoolboys have been “volunteering” for military training at their schools. They will go to the front in the spring as young as 16.
Headline of the Day -100: “Lusitania Drops Disguise.” Arrives in New York painted in its Cunard Line colors again, after having been cunningly disguised for two months by being painted black.
British newspapers are castigating former diplomat Sir Roger Casement for going to Berlin and getting a statement from the kaiser that Germany would never invade Ireland (which the Daily News calls “an impudent message of good will”). Casement is also negotiating for more concrete aid for Irish rebels.
Turkey has decided not to default on its pre-war bonds. But it will pay the interest only in person at the Ministry of Finance in Constantinople. Just make your way through the front lines, foreigners who hold most of the bonds.
Headline of the Day -100: “WANT MUFFS FOR SOLDIERS.; German Officer Appeals to Women to Send Their Furs.” Say, what sort of war is this, anyway?
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100 years ago today
Thursday, November 27, 2014
Today -100: November 27, 1914: We will again save the republic
Carranza arrives at Vera Cruz, declares it the new capital, or temporary capital, or something. “We will again save the republic,” Carranza says.
Prime Minister Asquith says he won’t bring in legislation to ban football. Or to seize all football grounds for military purposes. Yet.
Fog of War (Rumors, Propaganda and Just Plain Bullshit) of the Day -100: Germany accuses Britain of a war crime: a British airplane was forced down behind German lines, and beside the pilot was a German prisoner, very cold and very naked, who’d been taken up in an attempt to scare him into revealing military secrets. The pilot was then shot.
Headline of the Day -100 (LA Times): “Russian Girl is Crucified.” Another Fog of War story, one hopes.
A British battleship, the Bulwark, blows up in Sheerness Harbour, killing 738 of the crew. Not enemy action. Maybe it’s not a good idea to store shells next to the boiler room bulkhead after all.
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes denies Leo Frank a writ of error on technical grounds, but expresses doubt that he received a fair trial, given the presence of a threatening mob.
Retired Tammany Boss Richard Croker’s marriage comes off. Since he was marrying an Indian, there was a crowd in front of the church of “ragamuffins in black face and motley attire, masquerading in honor of Thanksgiving Day”. Elsewhere in the paper, the NYT complains that “Army of Beggars Mar Thanksgiving.”
This blog wishes you and your army of beggars a happy Thanksgiving.
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100 years ago today
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Today -100: November 26, 1914: Of pardons, Bavarians, football, Christmas ships, internment camps, and Indian maids
Outgoing South Carolina Gov. Coleman Blease will pardon or commute the sentences of 75 prisoners for Thanksgiving. I’m still not sure what’s up with his campaign to use his pardon power to empty the jails.
Fog of War (Rumors, Propaganda and Just Plain Bullshit) of the Day -100: More stories about how disaffected the Bavarian troops supposedly are, fraternizing with French soldiers and not shooting at them but into the air. I’m not sure whether this propaganda campaign (at least, I’m pretty sure it’s not true) is aimed at reassuring the French or dividing the Germans.
After the weekend, the British newspapers conducted a tut-tut campaign about how many healthy young male spectators there were at football matches and how few of them responded to army recruiters. So the next step is a campaign to ban football, because of course it is. A question will be asked in Parliament tomorrow.
One of the ways in which the US is helping out with the war is the “Christmas ship,” a philanthropic scheme to send presents to European children (and sell copies of the newspapers sponsoring the scheme, of course). It was the least we could do.
The Duchess of Marlborough (née Consuelo Vanderbilt) has zeppelin-proofed her London home, Sunderland House.
Germany orders a census of all the animals in Germany, for rationing purposes. Also, to save flour, Berlin bakers are banned from baking bread more than twice a day, which they do because everyone prefers fresh bread. Berliners will eat stale bread and by god they’ll like it, officials declare.
British guards shot several rioting interned Germans at the detention camp on the Isle of Man. News of this has reached Germany and there are now fears of reprisals against British prisoners.
Zapata’s forces move into Mexico City as Gen. Blanco’s forces hastily depart, leaving barely any time for mobs to form and start looting. This is why you need to be prepared and draw up a shopping list. Pancho Villa plans to enter the capital tomorrow.
Headline of the Day -100: “Croker Is To Wed Indian Maid Today.” Richard Croker, the former Boss of Tammany Hall, will marry Beulah Edmonson, a Cherokee woman “who last year rode a pony and sang Indian songs in the Hippodrome,” and rode a horse at the head of a suffrage parade in D.C.. The NYT says she’s 50 years younger than him, but it’s really 40, 41 years, tops.
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100 years ago today
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
Today -100: November 25, 1914: Of invasions, missionaries & dwarfs, salaams, and Florida property
H.G. Wells suggested that if Germany invaded Britain, civilians should defend the country with carving knives or any other weapons they could find. The government is trying to shut down this sort of talk (which would violate the rules of war and make the entire population of Britain legitimate military targets), but won’t say what it’s plans in case of invasion actually are.
Headline of the Day -100: “German Missionary Tries to Blow Up Ship.” In West Africa somewhere, a British gunboat called the Dwarf. He says he’s a soldier first and a missionary afterward.
Fog of War (Rumors, Propaganda and Just Plain Bullshit) of the Day -100 / Headline of the Day -100: “Salaams of Indian Stay German Fire.” One of Britain’s Indian troops was scouting at night when a German spotlight fell on him. He started salaaming (bowing) his way to the Germans, where he pretended to be a disaffected colonial who just wanted to fight the British. The next day he said he could come back with more like-minded Indians, so they let him go, like the lunk-headed Germans they are, not realizing that every single subject of the Raj is completely loyal to the king.
That article says that the Indians in Europe have been engaged in trenching and counter-trenching. I have no idea what that means and no, Google, I did NOT mean “define contour-trenching.”
More Fog? Germany is said to be dismantling locomotives for their copper and brass, to make more bullets.
Zapata’s forces are entering Mexico City, which Carranza’s troops have all left.
E.C. Chambers, on trial for using the mails to defraud by the sale of Florida (swamp)land, claims that William Jennings Bryan himself inspected the land back in ought-ten and declared it perfectly good land (though under two feet of water) and later bought some.
I don’t normally do birth anniversaries here, but what the hell: Joe DiMaggio, whose autograph my father failed to get twice, once in the 1940s and once in the 1970s.
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100 years ago today
Monday, November 24, 2014
There’s never an excuse for violence
I’m reading Obama’s comments on the Ferguson grand jury rather than watching them on tv because I can’t stand to hear his voice any more. To be fair, there hasn’t been a president in my lifetime whose voice I could stand to hear this far into their presidency.
“our police officers put their lives on the line for us every single day.” They sure put SOMEONE’s lives on the line every single day.
“As they do their jobs in the coming days, they need to work with the community, not against the community, to distinguish the handful of people who may use the grand jury’s decision as an excuse for violence...” Okay, this is my first Fuck You, Obama Moment™ in this address. You can argue that violence, setting a police car on fire, for example, is not the appropriate response, but the word “excuse” suggests that Some People just love them some violence and have no other motivation beyond their love of violence, and don’t really care about Michael Brown at all.
“...distinguish them from the vast majority who just want their voices heard around legitimate issues in terms of how communities and law enforcement interact.” The police don’t get to decide what “legitimate issues” are. Also, Obama, since you inserted that word “legitimate” in there, maybe you can tell us which issues related to cops shooting unarmed black kids are illegitimate? Because we’d really like to know.
“The fact is, in too many parts of this country, a deep distrust exists between law enforcement and communities of color.” How many parts is the right number?
“And there are good people on all sides of this debate”. There are also a lot of assholes. But I’ll bet you won’t talk about them.
“We have made enormous progress in race relations over the course of the past several decades. I’ve witnessed that in my own life. And to deny that progress I think is to deny America’s capacity for change.” This just occurred to me, and I haven’t read his memoirs, but has Obama ever talked about any discrimination he has personally felt in his life?
“there are issues in which the law too often feels as if it is being applied in discriminatory fashion.” How often is the right amount?
“That [progress] won’t be done by throwing bottles. That won’t be done by smashing car windows. That won’t be done by using this as an excuse to vandalize property.” There’s that word again.
“Those of you who are watching tonight understand that there’s never an excuse for violence”. Tell that to the fucking grand jury.
Or the Iraqis, Afghans, etc, yeah yeah, but I think we all know “there’s never an excuse for violence” was never intended to apply to Johnny Foreigner.
“But I think that we have to make sure that we focus at least as much attention on all those positive activities that are taking place as we do on a handful of folks who end up using this as an excuse...” You’re really beginning to piss me off, dude. “...to misbehave...” Oo, I love it when he talks to us like we’re naughty children. “...or to break the law...” Yeah, I don’t think anyone’s too impressed with “the law” this evening. “...or to engage in violence.” “There is inevitably going to be some negative reaction, and it will make for good TV.” I mean, not “Breaking Bad” good, but still pretty good.
Oh, and I hear Officer Wilson is engaged, and not to a big hairy cellmate named Bubba. Congratulations, Officer Wilson!
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Today -100: November 24, 1914: That’s a lot of bullets
After seven months, the American occupation of Vera Cruz ends, “with little show of enthusiasm on the part of the Mexicans.” In the end, they just left, without deciding to which of the competing Mexican regimes to hand over the port, the customs house, and seven months of customs duties. Carranza’s soldiers take over the town, following two blocks behind the withdrawing Americans, and issue orders that everyone has to turn in their weapons or face execution, anyone who commits crimes will face execution, and all the saloons are closed until further notice. Which probably explains the lack of enthusiasm.
Headline of the Day -100: “Wilson To Receive Women.” For Christmas? Actually, he will receive and, I’m gonna predict, condescend to, a women’s suffrage deputation.
The Belgian authorities in Antwerp are refusing to pay the fine demanded by Germany until they stop requisitioning anything they want from the city.
Germany complains to the US and other neutral nations that Britain is violating the laws of the sea in seizing what it declares to be contraband.
Someone or other has calculated that it takes 168 pounds of bullets, which is 5,860 bullets, to kill a man on the Belgian front.
Headline of the Day -100: “Football, Not War, Attracts English.” English newspapers are working themselves into a froth, as is the custom, over this. Recruiters at Saturday’s games succeeded in getting only one man to take the king’s shilling. Now that the first giddy rush to arms is over, recruitment is way down. They’ve raised the pay, already the highest in Europe (they’re the only warring country without conscription) and reduced the minimum height to 5’3”.
A British patrol trawler, the Dorothy Gray, rams a German U-boat, the U-18, off Scotland’s coast, causing it to founder and surrender. 26 crew are taken prisoner, only one died.
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100 years ago today
Sunday, November 23, 2014
Today -100: November 23, 1914: Of spies, plots, and again being a state
Fog of War (Rumors, Propaganda and Just Plain Bullshit) of the Day -100: the Allies have reportedly shot René Colaert, the mayor of Ypres (which is currently being destroyed by the battle of the same name; the town hall was blown up yesterday), as a spy for Germany. None of which is true.
Russia arrests several Social Democratic members of the Duma for a supposed revolutionary plot to overthrow the state.
More Fog, from the Morning Post (UK): Kaiser Wilhelm is said to have demanded that Austria transfer all its troops to the defense of East Prussia because he thinks Austria itself is a lost cause. The Austrians would prefer that German troops help them defend Cracow. There’s also a story that retreating German and Austrian troops quarreled and shot at each other.
Still more Fog? Honestly, I don’t believe anything I’m reading today. The military governor of the Austrian fortress of Cracow says civilians aren’t obeying his order to leave the city fast enough, so he’ll have any that don’t do so shot.
A committee of the Colorado Legislature demands that outgoing Governor Ammons “prepare to accept for the people of this State the responsibility of again being a State” and send the national guard back into the strike regions so that federal troops can leave. They want him to issue a proclamation that everyone should obey the law and refrain from “incendiary utterances” and tweets, and make clear that every able-bodied man from 18 to 45 is a member of the state militia whether they like it or not. The governor-elect talks of deporting from the state any strikers who break the law. Neither governor suggests that the mining companies accept Wilson’s proposed truce, much less negotiate in good faith with the miners.
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100 years ago today
Saturday, November 22, 2014
Today -100: November 22, 1914: Of unfriendly unhostile acts, free countries, swapped giants, and little lord fauntleroys
Turkey explains why it fired on a US launch in Smyrna. See, they were just friendly warning shots, warning the launch that the harbor was mined and they shouldn’t enter it. The Wilson administration is pretending to believe this, although we’re not quite sure what the captain of the Tennessee believes, since he reported the shots as “unfriendly” but also as “not intended as a hostile act,” whatever all that means. It also seems that US embassy was informed that the port of Smyrna had been closed but didn’t have the means of communicating that information to US Navy ships.
The NYT Magazine asks “Did You Ever Hear of a Free Country Called Moresnet?” Moresnet was a tiny sort-of-nation between Belgium and Germany, sort of jointly but very loosely administered by both, without a real government or courts. And (Spoiler Alert) it won’t last long.
Evidently not just Carranza fled Mexico City, but also the entire police force.
Headline of the Day -100: “Swap Giant for Dwarfs.” William Hempstead, an eight-foot-tall Englishman stuck in Germany at the start of the war, is exchanged for two Germans who are under two feet tall, and are you fucking kidding me?
Headline of the Day -100: “LORD FAUNTLEROY,' ORIGINAL, MARRIES.” That’s Vivian Burnett, the son of novelist Frances Hodgson Burnett, is forever stuck with being called Little Lord Fauntleroy, the effeminate character his mother modeled on him. Indeed, in 1937 the NYT reported his death at 61 under the headline “Original Fauntleroy Dies in Boat After Helping Rescue 4 in Sound.”
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100 years ago today
Friday, November 21, 2014
Today -100: November 21, 1914: Of uniforms, knives, vicious lobsters, and illicit newspapers
Headline of the Day -100: “Leaves Battle Front to Visit His Tailor; Marquis of Anglesey, His Coat Shot Away, in London for New Uniforms.” The article notes that his uniform may have been more than usually fragile because it was made by a fashionable tailor, and that the previous Maquis of Anglesey, “Toppy” Paget, was renowned for his wardrobe of more than 300 coats (and for cross-dressing, but the NYT doesn’t mention that part).
Mexican Rumor of the Day -100: Gen. Lucio Blanco is now in charge, having imprisoned Gen. Obregón.
The US has decided to keep the customs duties it collected while occupying Vera Cruz until there’s a stable government in Mexico. Could be a while.
Headline of the Day -100: “Slew 1,200 With Knives.” Moroccan troops. Either the French didn’t trust with guns or they simply didn’t need them. They attack Germans who were desecrating a graveyard at Tracy-le-Val by digging trenches in it. I’m guessing there’s some slight exaggeration in this story from Le Temps.
Headline of the Day -100: “Bitten By Vicious Lobster.” A helper in the kitchens of the Hotel Klein in New Brunswick, NJ, is bitten on the finger by a lobster he was trying to grill. He had to go to the hospital for more than a month and has now won $210 + medical expenses in court. Don’t know what happened to the vicious lobster, who I have decided was named Harold, but I fear the worst.
Canada bans four German newspapers. It is now illegal to sell or even possess one.
The British Parliament votes to raise another 1 million soldiers, in addition to the existing 1.1 million. They are assured that will be quite enough to ensure victory.
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100 years ago today
Thursday, November 20, 2014
We’ll miss her when she’s gone. She is going, right? Please tell me she’s going.
Michele Bachmann complains about Obama’s immigration policy: “millions of unskilled, illiterate, foreign nationals coming into the United States who can’t speak the English language.” And they’ll take away jobs producing hilariously oblivious straight lines from hard-working American idiots.
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Michele Bachmann
Today -100: November 20, 1914: Of bigger armies, volunteer prisoners, and squandered shells
Headline of the Day -100: “Taft for a Bigger Army.” Also, bigger pants, bathtubs, pies. However, he supports Wilson’s policy of staying out of the European war.
After multiple scandals at Sing Sing, the new warden will be Thomas Mott Osborne, a prison reformer who spent a week as a volunteer prisoner in Auburn Prison last year, just like Robert Redford in that movie, and wrote a book about it. He is opposed to capital punishment and won’t attend executions, but says if there are to be executions, they should be public.
Headline of the Day -100: “Squandered Shells to Please the Kaiser.” While he was touring the front.
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100 years ago today
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Today -100: November 19, 1914: Three hundred miles of cannon spoke
A committee of the American Federation of Labor (AFL) submits a report in favor of the restrictive immigration bill (including literacy tests) pending before Congress. It says that the European war will be followed by mass migration from the affected countries, but those governments will offer inducements to the fit to stay and aid in restoration while encouraging those crippled by the war – “these bits of wreckage” – to emigrate to America.
Carranza moves his capital from Mexico City to Orizaba. The other president of Mexico, Eulalio Gutiérrez, is rumored to have been put in jail by Pancho Villa for approving the idea of Villa and Carranza going into exile.
Turkish forces in Smyrna shoot at a US Navy launch (which was flying the US flag) from the cruiser Tennessee.
German troops have reportedly captured the governor of Warsaw (Russian Poland). He is being confined in the “best hotel” in Gnesen.
Germany is trying to forcibly recruit Belgian Civil Guards into its war with Russia. They are resisting, hiding, and attempting to escape into Holland.
Fog of War (Rumors, Propaganda and Just Plain Bullshit) of the Day -100: Even the overly credulous NYT doesn’t really believe this one: A Cossack general named Arintinoff captured Czernowitz, in Austrian Poland, and told the town rulers that, following the Austrian example in Kaminez Podolski, he wanted 600,000 rubles in gold and silver (reduced, after much begging, to 300,000) by the next day or he will blast the city. So they milked every last peasant (the rich people having already fled town), collecting trinkets, jewelry, menorahs, church ornaments etc, and just managed to raise it by the deadline, whereupon the general told them to take it back, he just wanted to show them what it’s like.
A little light googling doesn’t show up a Gen. Arintinoff or Arintinov or Rintintinoff, except for this tale.
Rudyard Kipling shits out a poem in praise of the late Lord Roberts:
He passed in the very battle-smoke
Of the war he had descried.
Three hundred miles of cannon spoke
When the Master Gunner died. Etc.
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100 years ago today
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Today -100: November 18, 1914: Of mediation, good times in Warsaw, elusive teetotalers, wet military zones, and humane projectiles
Headline of the Day -100: “President to Await Mediation Request.” And await... and await...
Command of Mexico City is seized by Gen. Álvaro Obregón. On behalf of Carranza, but that part is not clear to a confused NYT yet. The move was intended to forestall Villa, who is sending troops towards the capital.
Headline of the Day -100: “Germans Expected Good Time in Warsaw.” This is why you should never trust graffiti in bathroom stalls. The Germans had been planning to hold a ball in Warsaw after they captured it – they printed invitations and everything. The army is now retreating, leaving behind horses and artillery, although it claims this is merely a strategic maneuver.
To pay for the war, British Chancellor of the Exchequer David Lloyd George proposes doubling the income tax and increasing the tax on beer and, so that the “elusive teetotalers” don’t escape having to pay, on tea as well (at this point Liberal MP and temperance advocate Leif Jones stalked out of the House of Commons chamber in protest).
Britain declares the whole North Sea a military zone, supposedly in response to Germany using civilian shipping vessels to lay mines. So really, this military zone thing is a benevolent act to protect neutral ships from German perfidy and not at all a naval blockade intended to starve Germany.
Britain denies German charges that it uses dum-dum bullets, and says Germany does. On the standard British army bullet, “In the opinion of Sir Victor Horsley, a well-known surgeon [and well-known vivisector of dogs], this bullet is ‘probably the most humane projectile yet devised’”.
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100 years ago today
Monday, November 17, 2014
Today -100: November 17, 1914: The Germans all boast of their culture
Russian troops may have set Cracow on fire.
Fog of War (Rumors, Propaganda and Just Plain Bullshit) of the Day -100: More Russian rumors about Austria: Austria is planning to seek a separate peace, independently of Germany; Germany demanded that Austria fire 11 generals and the heir-apparent, Archduke Karl Franz Josef (as a field marshal; he can continue being heir-apparent); and have taken command of Cracow’s defenses away from the Austrians.
The war is costing Britain £1 million a day.
Germany is re-naming French cities it claims to have annexed: Calais will be Kales, Dunkirk Dünkirchen, Lille Ryssel, Boulogne Boonen, Nancy Nanzig, etc.
Pope Benedict urges peace. He blames the war on materialism and lack of brotherly love. “The spirit of Christ does not reign today,” he says.
Pancho Villa accepts Carranza’s offer that they both quit their positions and leave the country. So we’re all agreed, and this will definitely happen, right? Eulalio Gutiérrez certainly thinks it has, and has written to Woodrow Wilson, “president” to president, that “the time of dictatorships born of violence and personal ambitions has passed forever” in Mexico. So that’s all good.
Name of the Day -100: Americans with German names are being warned by the State Department against traveling to countries at war with Germany after complaints from a George Rottweiler of Chicago about ill-treatment in France and Britain.
In the NYT letters pages appears what you didn’t even realize the war needed: a limerick.
The Germans all boast of their culture
In a way that would almost insult you;
But the wreckage at Rheims,
And the loot of Louvain
Show their “culture” develops a vulture!
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100 years ago today
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Today -100: November 16, 1914: Of foxes, censorship, flügels, uriahs, fortresses, and Masonic conspiracies
First World War Problems: the war is seriously interfering with fox hunting in England.
All train passengers heading from London to the Continent will be searched for spy stuff.
The Daily Chronicle (UK) complains again about military censorship. Germany has accredited war correspondents and “If Germans die in the performance of a heroic exploit, they do not die unheard of, unhonored, and unsung, as with rare exceptions their British and French opponents do. In this way the martial enthusiasm of the nation is kept at the highest pitch.” But the French War Office’s “policy it has been to hound down British correspondents in France like vermin and treat them as if they were worse than spies.” And the British government has taken to seizing reporters’ passports. The Chronicle claims Germany treats reporters from neutral countries very hospitably, but NYT correspondents report frequently being arrested as suspected spies.
Headline of the Day -100: “Worry Over War Kills Dr. Fluegel.” Worst Dr. Seuss book ever. Ewald Flügel was chair of the Stanford English Philology Dept, working on a massive project to create a concordance to Chaucer’s work. And he was worried about the war.
Also dead: Uriah Hill, a retired stove manufacturer. Nothing noteworthy, but you just don’t see many Uriahs anymore.
Russia is imposing financial penalties on East Prussian towns, just like Germany does in Belgium. The German military authorities have ordered East Prussians to flee and leave nothing behind that the Russian troops can use, bringing their flocks with them and burning their homes.
Exotic-As-Hell Headline of the Day -100: “Indians Take Turkish Fortress in Arabia.”
Cardinal O’Connell of Boston blames the disorder in Mexico on a “Masonic conspiracy.”
Masonic conspirator Carranza offers to turn control of the military over to Masonic conspirator Gutierrez and go into exile in Cuba – provided that Masonic conspirator Villa does the same, on the same date.
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100 years ago today
Saturday, November 15, 2014
Today -100: November 15, 1914: Of little Bobs, touchy czarinas, Belgian caps, audaciouses, illustrations independent of accordance with fact, and ice
Field Marshal Frederick “Little Bobs” Roberts, the 1st Earl Roberts of Kabul and Kandahar, the retired former Commander-in-Chief of the Forces, dies of pneumonia at age 82 in France, where he had gone to visit Indian troops. He bounced around the colonies most of his military career, which spanned the Indian Mutiny to the Boer War. He spent the last years before the war agitating for compulsory military service and for the army to rebel and refuse to enforce Irish Home Rule. At five foot two, he was too short to be an enlisted man, even with the newly reduced minimum height.
Headline of the Day -100: “Touch of Czarina Like Miracle Cure.” A barracks near the Winter Palace has been converted into a military hospital, and Mrs Tsar and a couple of the czarettes play at nurses.
Fashion Headline of the Day -100: “BELGIUM MAY BE INSPIRATION FOR WINTER'S NEW FASHIONS; Details of Costumes Worn by Inhabitants of Little Nation Which Has Stirred the Imagination of the World May Be Reproduced in Other Lands. Already Belgian Cap Is the Smart Thing in Millinery.” I’m assuming a Belgian cap is some sort of contraceptive device.
The super-dreadnought HMS Audacious, the 3rd largest ship in the British Navy, was sunk by a mine last month in the North Sea. Most of the crew was rescued by the Olympic. The news was kept secret for more than two weeks, despite being known by the crews and civilian passengers of multiple ships.
If a dreadnought fears nothing, what is a super-dreadnought?
The federal commissioner of Indian Affairs, Cato Sells, admits that Kate Barnard’s accusations about Indians being robbed of millions are true, but says he inherited the situation from previous regimes and he’s now sending probate lawyers to try to straighten it out. He doesn’t seem to be as willing as Barnard to accuse the newish state of Oklahoma of being a giant criminal conspiracy to defraud Indians of their lands, which is what it was.
The Rev. Hugh MacCauley of the Second Presbyterian Church in Paterson, NJ, says that his mention in a recent sermon of a New Jersey woman who adopted two Belgian boys, only to find when they arrived that their hands had been cut off by German soldiers, was just a rumor which he used as an “illustration” and “its value as an illustration was quite independent of its accordance with fact.”
The city of Bakersfield’s new charter, which has to be ratified by the California Legislature, declares ice a public utility and authorizes the city to manufacture and sell it.
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100 years ago today
Friday, November 14, 2014
Quote of the Day
Asked in Burma about press freedom, Obama says he has raised the issue with both the Chinese and Burmese governments: “I’m pretty blunt and pretty frank about the fact that societies that repress journalists ultimately oppress people as well”. First they came for the journalists, but they weren’t people, so I said nothing....
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The return of In Other Words
George Bush is interviewed by NPR, because of course he is. He mostly talked in other words about the book he totally wrote all by himself about his father.
IN OTHER WORDS: “He had a strategy to deal with Saddam Hussein. And then when he said, this will not stand, he meant it. In other words, he understood that when a president speaks, he’s got to mean what he says.”
IN OTHER WORDS: “We both went to the United Nations to get a resolution. In other words, this wasn’t a unilateral American action.”
IN OTHER WORDS: “It was more complex because this decision was made in a post-9/11 world. In other words, the removal of Saddam from Kuwait was definitely in our national interest. But it didn’t necessarily mean that the United States’s homeland would be threatened or not threatened depending upon his actions.” No, it didn’t necessarily mean that. I think. Wait, what did you say?
WHAT GEORGE CAN UNDERSTAND (NOT GRAMMAR. NEVER GRAMMAR): “I can understand the comparisons between he and me.”
WHAT GEORGE COULD ENVISION: it was totally necessary to invade Iraq because “one could envision a nuclear arms race between Iran and Iraq.”
A BETTER SHOT: “And I would argue that the people of Iraq have a better shot at living in a peaceful state.” They certainly have enough ammunition.
THE CONDITION ELSEWHERE MATTERS:
GREENE: I guess I just wonder broadly what you tell Americans who look at the chaos today and link it back to your decision to invade in 2003. And...
BUSH: I just say the condition elsewhere matters to the security of the United States, and we cannot become isolationists.
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Today -100: November 14, 1914: Of insane dukes, passports, villas, and punctured romances
Headline of the Day -100: “Duke of Cumberland Made Insane By War.” Found wandering around in a demented state because his son, the Duke of Brunswick, has been declared missing in battle. I don’t know if either element of this story – the insanity or the MIA thing – have any truth to them. This could be British disinformation aimed at two guys on the German side (the elder Duke used to be the king of Hanover, when there was still a kingdom of Hanover, and the younger is married to Kaiser Wilhelm’s daughter) who happen to possess English titles (which they will be deprived of in 1919). The inter-marrying of royalty creates these problems. The dukes are direct descendants of George III, who was king of both Britain and Hanover, as were all British monarchs from George I until Victoria – Hanover’s rules of succession did not allow for female monarchs. (Update: Germany denies, a few days later, that Brunswick is wounded or missing or a prisoner.)
The US says it will end its occupation of Vera Cruz in 10 days. Evidently trying to get out before the newest civil war heats up. Now they just have to decide which government to give the customs duties they’ve been collecting.
Kate Barnard, the state commissioner of charities in Oklahoma, says there is a conspiracy in the state legislature and congressional delegation to rob Cherokees, Seminoles and Chickasaws, especially orphans, of tribal funds. This theft was facilitated by the 1908 decision to turn the cases over from federal courts to Oklahoma courts. Once she started advocating for Indian wards, the Legislature de-funded her Department of Charities and Correction, which now runs on, well, charity. Incidentally, state commissioner of charities is the only office a woman was allowed to hold under the OK constitution.
Britain will now require Americans boarding steamships for America to show passports, but...
The State Department admits that foreign spies have gotten American passports (such as Carl Lody, who was just executed in Britain) pretty easily. Under new rules, people will have to do more than pretend they’ve lost their passport and swear that they’re American, like Lody did.
Kaiser Wilhelm, afraid that Greece might soon join the Allies, is trying to sell his villa, Achilleion, on Corfu before it gets confiscated. Which is in fact what happened. It became a wartime hospital, an orphanage, a Nazi headquarters, and a museum/casino (in which the casino scene in the James Bond film For Your Eyes Only was filmed).
Speaking of film history, “Tillie’s Punctured Romance,” the first full-length comedy motion picture, starring Marie Dressler, Charlie Chaplin and Mabel Normand, directed by Mack Sennett, is released. This is a pretty good print, but turn off the obnoxious sound.
The New Statesman publishes George Bernard Shaw’s article “Common Sense About the War,” which will also begin running in the NYT tomorrow and lead to much vituperative debate in Britain, questions in Parliament about why it wasn’t censored, etc (some of the debate is reproduced in the book version at the link). Read it and decide for yourself (in other words, I completely forgot I intended to read it by today).
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100 years ago today
Thursday, November 13, 2014
Today -100: November 13, 1914: Before the leaves have fallen from the trees
Berlin: Censorship to repress any news of the Russian invasion of East Prussia doesn’t really work if your city is filling up with refugees.
A guy told a guy who told a NYT correspondent that Kaiser Wilhelm, visiting a field hospital, told soldiers, “Mark my word, there will be peace before the leaves have fallen from the trees.”
Russia claims that Armenians are gleefully welcoming Russian troops and even joining them. Which a few certainly are doing, but this Russian propaganda plays into the pre-genocidal all-Armenians-are-traitors propaganda that the Turkish government is already beginning to ramp up. Also, it will soon be clear that the move into Armenia was more of a feint by a single army corps than a real invasion, so any Armenians who did gleefully welcome Russian troops would be kind of screwed.
Japan is upset at California’s re-election of Gov. Hiram Johnson and the election of still more racist legislators. They fear new legislation will prevent Japanese not just owning land in California as at present, but leasing it.
Headline of the Day -100: “President Resents Negro’s Criticism” (Alternate headline, in the LA Times: “Wilson and a Negro Clash in White House”). The critical negro is William Monroe Trotter of the small National Equal Rights League and the criticism is over Wilson’s segregation of federal offices. Wilson repeatedly insists that segregation, which was of course implemented for the comfort and in the best interests of negroes, is not a political issue. Trotter promises united negro opposition to the Democrats in 1916 and expresses disappointment in Wilson, who says he’s never been so insulted in his life, and that mentioning votes is a form of blackmail, finally ordering Trotter out, saying that if the NERL ever came to the White House again, it had better be without Trotter. The next day, various negroes sent telegrams to the White House disavowing Trotter, and the White House trumpeted its great support of black federal employees: why, two negro messengers have been advanced to clerkships! Two of them! One of whom had only been waiting for a promotion for 45 years.
Headline of the Day -100: “Disobeyed His Orders, Killed 600 Germans.” A French gunner, so it’s okay.
Headline of the Day -100 (Chicago Tribune): “Sneeze Powder Kills Man.” In a New York streetcar. James C. Allan, 78, one-time Greenback-Labor Party candidate for lieutenant-governor.
Headline of the Day -100: “Kaiser Clips Ends off His Mustache.” The London Standard claims this has brought home to Germans that they are losing the war.
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100 years ago today
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Today -100: November 12, 1914: The Battle of Cocos. No, really, that’s what it’s called.
The German cruiser Emden, which has been very successful against Allied ships – mostly British – for two months (2 warships, 16 steamers and a merchant ship captured or sunk) is attacked and destroyed by the Australian cruiser Sydney off the Cocos Islands in the Indian Ocean, with 1/3 of its crew killed. The Emden’s captain and officers will be allowed to keep their swords. They won’t be returned to Germany until 1920. A landing party on Direction Island when the battle occurred escaped capture, stole a ship and got back to the German fleet safely. One of the Emden’s guns may now be viewed in Hyde Park, Sydney:
German newspapers are neglecting to mention that Russian troops have crossed into German territory.
The NYT’s military expert says “The close fighting of the last nine weeks in France has been very trying to the morale of the troops.”
Luxemburg’s Parliament opens, not that it matters, given the German occupation. Grand Duchess Marie says the Germans are promising an indemnity, presumably because they didn’t resist like Belgium did. “Our rights, though violated, remain. ... I thank the people for their correct attitude, whereby disagreeable events have been prevented.”
Carranza declares war on Villa.
The NYT praises Southern women suffragists for opposing the federal route to women’s suffrage: “If they cram the vote down the throats of a large part of the United States which does not want it and is even hostile to it,” the Times says, the “indifference and lack of intelligence” which the new voters will display “will be a body blow to the influence and standing of women in politics.” The lesson from negro voters is that “the real friends of the negroes” wanted to start with just a few negroes voting and gradually expand it and had this been done, the Times says, some negroes might still have the vote, because evidently the reason they were deprived of the vote was that they weren’t very good at it, and for no other reason.
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100 years ago today
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Today -100: November 11, 1914: They will do what is just
Formal declaration of war by Britain, France, Russia, Belgium and Serbia on Turkey.
At the Southern States Suffrage Conference in Chattanooga, Alva Belmont says that with the European armies “shelling cities and destroying everything before them, leaving women and children without a place to lay their heads, it is somewhat illogical to talk of woman’s sphere as the home.” Asked whether negro women in the South should be allowed to vote, Belmont would not venture an opinion, saying it should be “left entirely to the men of the South to decide. They will do what is just.” There’s a first time for everything, I suppose. “We seek for women political rights equal to those of men. Negro women could share the rights of negro men. If they are disfranchised let the women share the same treatment.” Since she, unlike most Southern suffragists, supports a national constitutional suffrage amendment, I wonder how she thinks it should be phrased to allow for racial discrimination.
The German government is complaining about vulgar cartoons of the heads of enemy states. “Germany does not require such poisonous medicine and should leave such things to the English mob, the Paris apaches, and Russian moujiks.”
14 states are under quarantine for foot-and-mouth disease.
Psychic Headline of the Day -100: “Psychic War News.” The Occult Messenger (UK) reports, via psychic sources, that the Allies will do very well in November and that “The United States, the most unlikely people of all, will put a finger in the Turkish pie.” Very unlikely: when the US finally did join the war with the Central Powers, it did not declare war on Turkey.
Carl Lody, the German spy, is executed at the Tower of London, the first execution there since the 11th Lord Lovat, a Jacobite, in 1747.
Germany is threatening to ban the importation of food into Belgium (whose population is being partly fed by American charity) unless Belgians return to work. What work? the Belgians wonder, since the Belgian economy has been wrecked, bombed, thoroughly looted, and is in no shape to provide jobs. Every means of transportation has been commandeered.
Mexico orders a secret German wireless station in Ensenada closed.
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100 years ago today
Monday, November 10, 2014
Today -100: November 10, 1914: More men and still more
Carranza declares himself chief head of Mexico, ordering generals to ignore the convention and subordinate officers to ignore their generals if they follow the convention. Gutierrez also declares himself president.
Lord Kitchener, the British secretary of war, wants “more men and still more, until the enemy is crushed.” He admits casualties have been “severe,” but says those casualties “will act as an incentive to British manhood to prepare themselves to take the places of those who have fallen.” Come on, British manhood, those mass graves won’t just fill themselves.
Headline of the Day -100: “RAIN OF GERMAN SHELLS MAKES YPRES A RUIN; Fine Old Buildings Destroyed ;- Lone Woman Fights Flames With Buckets of Water.”
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100 years ago today
Sunday, November 09, 2014
Today -100: November 9, 1914: Of absinthe & glass eyes
The US will intern the German cruiser Geier at Honolulu after it missed a deadline to leave port because it was trying to out-wait a larger Japanese ship waiting to sink it.
France bans absinthe.
First World War Problems: all of Germany’s glass-eye factories have shut down, and the US is running out of them. The US manufactures some of its own, but the material came from Germany.
Britain denies German claims that German ships bombarded Yarmouth.
Germany imposes yet another $1.25 million fine on Brussels, for the crime of Brussel’s police having helped newspaper vendors resist arrest by German secret police for selling contraband Dutch newspapers.
The Mexican convention gives Carranza until Tuesday to relinquish the presidency, or force will be used.
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100 years ago today
Saturday, November 08, 2014
Today -100: November 8, 1914: Of beer, internment, wireless, and cow pictures
Japan previously said it would only keep Kiautschou temporarily but, now that it’s been captured from Germany, says it will administer it until the end of the war and then “open negotiations with China.” Germany hasn’t left much of it intact.
Headline of the Day -100: “A.F.L. Declares for Beer.” Says prohibition is contrary to freedom and would throw (unionized) brewery employees out of work.
As threatened, Germany has ordered all male English nationals aged 17 to 56 to report for internment.
The exposition for New York’s tercentenary opens. It is opened by an Indian named... White Man Runs Him.
Cuba says it has put down an army mutiny.
The US military is searching for secret wireless stations that certain unnamed European countries (Germany) are using to transmit military information – the positions of sinkable ships, that sort of thing.
Headline of the Day -100: “War Facts in Cow Pictures.” Supposedly, the German army is using cow-themed graffiti to leave messages directing troops – the cow’s head pointing in the direction of French troops, the size of the cow indicating the size of enemy forces, that sort of thing.
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100 years ago today
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