Saturday, July 28, 2012
Today -100: July 28, 1912: Of the foulest of liars
Another lively, um, primary debate, in South Carolina. Gov. Coleman Blease accuses Southern Railroad of having employed the son of Ira Jones to influence his father when he was chief justice of the SC Supreme Court. Ira Jones calls Blease the “foulest of liars” and rushes him. Partisans of both sides whip out their guns. The police chief pulls his revolver and jumps between Jones and Blease, threatening to shoot the first one who made a hostile move.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Friday, July 27, 2012
It would be great if we could just leave it at that
Seeing certain elements of the internet delighting in The Sun’s dubbing Romney “Mitt the Twit,” I had to look up when I first started calling him Twitt Romney. August 14, 2007, it was. In that post, I reported a line snapped by Romney at reporters: “I’m pro-life; it would be great if we could just leave it at that.” I responded: “Really, would everybody just stop asking Romney any questions about his positions on issues, he doesn’t like it.” And nothing in his campaigning style has changed since then.

I’ve been looking for another old post, without success. I could swear that sometime in 2000, I drew up a list of unanswered questions about George Bush – where was he when he was supposed to be in Alabama in the Air National Guard, did he take cocaine, how many times was he stopped for DUIs, etc etc – and that months later, right before the election, I re-ran the post (except I can’t find that one either), noting that none of the questions had been answered and, indeed, almost none had ever been put directly to Bush himself. So no, it’s not inevitable that Mittens will be forced to release his tax returns.
Topics:
Mitt Romney
Today -100: July 27, 1912: Of correctives and antidotes, and stews
Theodore Roosevelt says his address to the National Progressive Party convention next month will be “a corrective of socialism and an antidote to anarchy.”
Headline of the Day -100 (LA Times): “Roosevelt in a Stew on the Negro Question.” That is, he thinks he can win in a few Southern states, but not if he treats negroes like human beings (Southern racists still haven’t forgiven him for inviting Booker T. Washington to dine with him at the White House that one time).
Topics:
100 years ago today
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Today -100: July 26, 1912: Of battleships, visible governors, and the electric chair
During parliamentary discussions over the proposed increase in naval spending, Prime Minister Asquith says Britain has no quarrel with Germany, it just doesn’t want anyone messing with its shit, which is half the world. Foreign Minister Sir Edward Grey says that the arms race will increase the prospect of peace, because it will make everyone realize just how jolly expensive a war would be. So that’s all right then.
Headline of the Day -100: “Wilson To Be Visible For Just Two Hours.”
Georgia’s Bull Moose party holds a convention to nominate delegates to the national convention, but splits into two competing conventions over the “negro question.”
The electoral laws in many states did not really anticipate a situation where a third party springs up overnight out of an existing party after the primary but before the general election. This means that fights over ballot access and control over electors are developing in state after state. Roosevelt started out wanting to build his third party as a new independent party rather than a Republican splinter party, so that he could appeal to progressives of both the Democratic and Republican variety. In practice, though, in states where his followers control the Republican party machine, he is now willing to compromise and support Republican candidates (such as in Minnesota), if they support his presidential electors. In the Minnesota deal, the existing Republican electors would all resign and become Progressive electors by petition, and the Tafties would have to find new electors.
For 22 years, NY state has been executing people, 155 of them, in the electric chair, at a cost of $65,000+. An electrician charges $250 per execution (his assistant gets $50), plus travel and lodging.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Today -100: July 25, 1912: Of serpents and battleships
Novelist H. Rider Haggard reports that his daughter saw a sea serpent off Lowestoft, England.
US House Dems refuse to fund the two battleships a year the Taft administration wants built, despite the escalating German-British naval arms race and the alarming increase in sea serpents.
The first international Eugenics Congress opens in London.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Today -100: July 24, 1912: Of ships
Following Churchill’s announcement of an increase in Britain’s warship-building, the NYT says the US really needs to build more warships too, in case there’s a naval war with Germany or something.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Monday, July 23, 2012
Today -100: July 23, 1912: More rum, more sodomy, more lashes
Britain: First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill calls for more naval spending and ship-building to counter that of Germany.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Today -100: July 22, 1912: Of doctors’ strikes
The British Medical Association breaks off negotiations with Lloyd George over what the fee should be to handle National Insurance patients. And the BMA says that if any doctors accept the governments blackleg (that’s British for scab) rates, they will be ostracized socially by all respectable doctors.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Saturday, July 21, 2012
Today -100: July 21, 1912: Of slanderous eruptions and wolves
South Carolina Gov. Coleman Blease again denounces the investigation into his alleged corruption; he is also not happy with the “slanderous eruptions from the impure mind, foul mouth, and slanderous pen of Tom Felder” and with the man running against him for governor, former Chief Justice Ira Jones, who is “a cowardly liar.”
Such a great orator, isn’t he? He won an oratorical contest when he was a student at South Carolina University, which resulted in him no longer being a student at South Carolina University when they discovered he’d plagiarized it.
Texas, Arizona, New Mexico and Mexico are to cooperate in wiping out the wolf population of the region.
Headline of the Day -100 (LA Times): “Negro May Lead Harvard.” The Harvard track team, anyway.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Friday, July 20, 2012
Today -100: July 20, 1912: Of transportation
Portugal, having defeated the abortive monarchist uprising, is deporting royalists to the colonies. Very retro of them.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Without incident
Texas is experimenting with executing people using a single drug. I say experimenting although it’s a little hard to ask executed prisoners if it really did kill them more painfully than the old three-drug executions. Not a lot of scientific method, is what I’m saying.
Anyhoo, Texas claims the first execution using this method, performed Wednesday on Yokamon Hearn, was “carried off without incident.”
Unless you count the state of Texas killed a retarded dude as an “incident.”
Blog fail
Well, I tried:
1) Came up with “We, the ‘you people,’” googled it, found lots of people had already thought of it.
2) Texas state’s attorney John Hughes, defending voter i.d. law, told the court it’s not a big deal that some Texans would be forced to go 100 miles in each direction to obtain the i.d. Tried to find his phone number so Texans could ask him for a ride, since it’s not a big deal, but couldn’t find it.
3) Yesterday someone in his audience told Romney that Obama is a monster. The newspapers reported that Romney “disagreed” with her, but he actually said “That’s not a term I would use,” which is not the same as disagreeing. Anyway, I was thinking of having an “Obama’s not a monster, but if he were, what sort of monster would he be” contest, like I did with Hillary four years ago, but decided meh.
Today -100: July 19, 1912: Of hatchets and pusso alliances
Alma Belmont opens a women’s suffrage headquarters in Newport, Rhode Island, so it was obviously necessary that the NYT describe, in detail, what she was wearing.
British Prime Minister Asquith is in Dublin. A suffragette throws a hatchet at his carriage & others try to burn down the Theatre Royal a day before he is due to speak there.
NYT Index Typo of the Day: “PUSSO-JAPANESE ALLIANCE?; Expected Outcome of Prince Katsura’s Visit to St. Petersburg.” Probably some weird anime thing.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Today -100: July 18, 1912: Of transformations
Mathematician Henri Poincaré dies at 58.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
No worthy person
David Brooks complains that Obama’s anti-Bain Capital ad involves “the assumption that no worthy person would do what most global business leaders have been doing for the past half-century.”
Yes. Quite. And your point is?
(Incidentally, the complaint that Romney isn’t defending capitalism and out-sourcing properly, because surely everyone would agree that What’s Good for Bain Capital is Good for the Yoo Ess Ay if it were only explained to them slowly and using short words, is the exact mirror image of the complaint that Obama is failing to explain ObamaCare properly.)
Today -100: July 17, 1912: Of worrying insurance and buffaloes
The NYT says National Insurance is “worrying Britain.” A Mrs. Robinson Guffy has fired her 8 servants in protest at having to pay their insurance under
Headline of the Day -100: “Aviator Latham Slain by Buffalo.”
Topics:
100 years ago today
Monday, July 16, 2012
Today -100: July 16, 1912: Of socialised medicine
Britain’s National Insurance Act goes into effect. The NYT says it could never be implemented here as no one would put up with it because, you know, freedom and shit.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Sunday, July 15, 2012
Today -100: July 15, 1912: He’s got mixed blood in him, and I can’t get him to admit it
South Carolina Gov. Coleman Blease calls the committee of the Legislature which is investigating him “gutter snipes,” adding, “If they will come to me, I will call them something that will make any man in South Carolina fight.” He offers to “shoot it out” with any member of the committee who says they believe the charges against him. He says of former state Supreme Court Chief Justice Ira Jones, now running against him (after, according to Blease, “shaving the feathers off his legs,” whatever that means), “He’s got mixed blood in him, and I can’t get him to admit it.” And, just because he’s on a roll, Blease adds that the governor of Georgia doesn’t have the sense to raise a watermelon.
The NYT notes that Blease recently vetoed a bill for the medical inspection of school children, on the grounds that it was an infringement of personal liberty. Don’t ever change, South Carolina. Oh, right, you never do.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Today -100: July 14, 1912: Of pardons, the need for more Germans, ex-senators, and congresswomen
A private detective testifies to the South Carolina investigating committee that a friend of Gov. Coleman Blease promised that for $5,000 Blease would pardon James Johnson, alias Edward Murphy, alias Ed Howard, alias Gus Befold, alias G.M. Defeld, who blew open the safe of the Knoree Manufacturing Company.
Blease, who last year tried to get Atlanta attorney Thomas Felder extradited from Georgia, evidently in retaliation for Felder accusing him of having taken bribes when he was a state senator, last week tried to get him arrested on that warrant in Maryland, where Felder was a delegate at the Democratic convention.
President Taft will not campaign for re-election, because that sort of thing is beneath the dignity of the office.
The German government issues a warning against the “perilous decrease” in the birth-rate. There will be an inquiry.
The Senate expels William Lorimer (R-Ill.) 55-28 due to the massive corruption involved in his election. Lorimer says it’s okay because his family still loves him. Roosevelt takes credit for it, because two years ago he refused to sit at the same table with him at a public dinner.
Democrats in the 9th Congressional District of California (L.A.) select a woman, Musa Rawlings, as candidate.
Britain: a couple of suffragettes are arrested trying to burn down Colonial Minister Lewis Harcourt’s mansion.

Hey, did I mention the 1912 Olympics are going on? They totally are.
Topics:
100 years ago today
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)