It was an interesting series of postings this past week.
Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Sunday, April 14, 2019
Bests Posts of the Week of April 7, 2019
Running this a day later than I usually do, the beset posts of the week of April 7, 2019.
It was an interesting series of postings this past week.
It was an interesting series of postings this past week.
Sunday Morning Scene. Churches of the West: Methodist Church of Ten Sleep, Washakie County Wyoming
Churches of the West: Methodist Church of Ten Sleep, Washakie County Wyoming.
Methodist Church of Ten Sleep, Washakie County Wyoming.
Saturday, April 13, 2019
It's Record Store Day
I only realized that when I came in and found that the loyal fans of the record store across the street had gathered in anticipation of its opening.
Usually they have some really nifty window art up, so I'll have to go by later and see if that's the case this year.
Federal Hunter, Oregon 1908
There's some interesting details in this photograph, which I was originally going to post without comment.
The hunter, J. T. Jardine, is carrying the archetypal Winchester 94, the American rifle of the period. If I had to guess, it's probably a .30-30.
The two saddles that are visible are classic A fork saddles. Saddles of that period were nearly always 7/8s rigged A forks with high cantles and high pommels, like the ones in this photograph.
April 13, 1919. Funerals after assassinations and massacres.
Emiliano Zapata's funeral was held, which was a bit odd as it was held on a Sunday.
Lots of funerals were about to be held in the British Indian punjab region following a British commanded massacre of protesters at Jallianwallah Bagh in that region.
The area of the massacre some months later.
The British action was a gross overreaction to the gathering of a protest. Native troops of various ethnicities were ordered to fire on the collected protesters and continued to do so for about ten minutes. The protesters were trapped in a public garden area as all exists had been sealed off. Death estimates vary, but somewhere between 370 to 1,600 people were killed.
Not surprisingly, the details are somewhat sketchy. The protest was at least initially peaceful and had gathered to protest the deportation of two Indian national leaders. The crowd may have grown defiant. At any rate, things went grossly wrong.
Abandoned French huts in use by French returnees at Equancourt, France.
Name Tags: Torture for the introverted
I hate them.
Indeed, I often won't wear them.
I'll bet this doesn't bother other people one darned bit, but it bothers me.
Indeed, I often won't wear them.
I'll bet this doesn't bother other people one darned bit, but it bothers me.
Proposing what can't be passed and not acting when you can.
I'm not, obviously, a politician and I'll never be one. I don't have the temperament for it and even though, as a student of history, I commonly think of such things as "what would I have done" and "if I were in office, I'd do. . . ", and even though when I was younger I thought perhaps some day I'd run for the legislature, I'm not going to do so. It just wouldn't be something I'd like doing and I'd come to regret it nearly immediately.
I'm saying that by way of an introduction to this item.
Included in this article is this observation.
The Tribune, however, goes on to note this:
The conversation in Washington, however, could be changing, ushered in by a strange amalgamation of bipartisanship in Congress, carefully crafted policy platforms introduced from the bottom up and the hand of one of the U.S. Senate’s most influential – and media-savvy – Republican voices on environmental policy: Sen. John Barrasso.
Hmmm. . . .
It may be because I'm not a politician, but I just flat out don't believe that this will succeed.
Now, this isn't a comment on the ESA itself in any fashion whatsoever. But the Republicans hold the Senate. The Democrats hold the House. In order to pass anything, both parties have to get on board, and right now they aren't agreeing on anything.
Indeed, this is the most left wing Democratic Party the nation has seen since the Watergate era, assuming that one wasn't closer to the center than this one, which it may be. This may in fact be the most left wing Democratic Party since the 1930s. . .or maybe ever.
I guess we'll see. Odd things do happen in eras of great polarization. People come together in odd spots.
But I have to wonder. I've been hearing about changes to the ESA being proposed for decades. If there are solid proposed changes to be made, why didn't the GOP propose them when it controlled both houses?
For that matter, why is this the case on so many other things that the GOP claimed it was going to act on if it took both houses and the White House?
I'm saying that by way of an introduction to this item.
Barrasso looks to guide the first major reforms to the ESA in decades
Included in this article is this observation.
While a typical year in the 1990s and early 2000s may have seen roughly five attempts to amend the law, efforts to curtail its protections — from state governments, captains of industry and members of Congress — have begun to intensify. Between 2011 and 2015, the law faced 33 legislative attacks in Congress per year, according to research by Ohio State University. In the following two years, the effort had escalated, with nearly 150 attempts to reform or curtail the ESA.
All of those attempts have so far been unsuccessful.
The conversation in Washington, however, could be changing, ushered in by a strange amalgamation of bipartisanship in Congress, carefully crafted policy platforms introduced from the bottom up and the hand of one of the U.S. Senate’s most influential – and media-savvy – Republican voices on environmental policy: Sen. John Barrasso.
Hmmm. . . .
It may be because I'm not a politician, but I just flat out don't believe that this will succeed.
Now, this isn't a comment on the ESA itself in any fashion whatsoever. But the Republicans hold the Senate. The Democrats hold the House. In order to pass anything, both parties have to get on board, and right now they aren't agreeing on anything.
Indeed, this is the most left wing Democratic Party the nation has seen since the Watergate era, assuming that one wasn't closer to the center than this one, which it may be. This may in fact be the most left wing Democratic Party since the 1930s. . .or maybe ever.
I guess we'll see. Odd things do happen in eras of great polarization. People come together in odd spots.
But I have to wonder. I've been hearing about changes to the ESA being proposed for decades. If there are solid proposed changes to be made, why didn't the GOP propose them when it controlled both houses?
For that matter, why is this the case on so many other things that the GOP claimed it was going to act on if it took both houses and the White House?
Friday, April 12, 2019
The Citreon
One of only a couple I've ever seen.
Urban Farming, 1944. Rural Electricity, 1919.
This was a stunt to some extent. The Secretary of whatever it was (Agriculture?) didn't normally travel all over the Eastern Seaboard with Sparky and Rex and put in garden fields on common urban grounds. And he probably didn't finish the plowing here.
But on a day in which my cell phone started ringing at 7:15. . . . eell even though I know that this photograph was taken less than two months prior to Operation Overlord, in which thousands of men would die, and the same amount of time from when the Allies would take Rome, for which thousands of men had died, and three months away from the landings on Guam, it's hard for me to not look at this photo and be wistful.
Wistful isn't the way the electric companies were looking at thing a little over twenty years prior. This electric company advertisement aimed at farmers ran in the April 12, 1919 issue of The Country Gentleman.
I wonder where the electric company thought we'd been fighting? Sure, the Boy had seen a lot of the world, but it had probably been something like Camp Dix, and then on to some rural French town that didn't have electricity and where the villagers were still using privies, to some small German town that probably did but where he was told not to associate with the Boche, and then back to St. Naziere which was a rough dock town where he lived in a tent, to Camp Dix again.
"[E]lectric lights, running water, shower baths, and all that sort of thing"?
Probably no lights, shaving in cold water and showering in the same, and all that sort of thing.
He probably hadn't become that used to "city" life and he was probably sick of "army life" by this time.
Oh well. Electricity was coming on everywhere.
Synchronicity
Just about three or four days ago my son and I were joking about Julian Assange.
More specifically, we were finding it amusing that he was probably a really annoying house guest for the Ecuadorian Embassy in the UK.
Turns out he really was. Basically, he was a spoiled child and a titanic a*****e.
A couple of additional observations.
He was wanted in Sweden for a charge of rape, but the accusations against him in the US would only subject him to five years in the pen, assuming he got the full sentence. The charge in Sweden has expired due to some oddball interview deadline that Swedish law has, but after spending seven years in the Equadorian Embassy, which is not large, he's exposed to five in the US.
You have to wonder about the wisdom of his decision there.
Secondly, Pamela Anderson. . . you know, the girl from Bay Watch (which I've never seen) and the early years of Home Improvement, is Assange's girl friend.
Anderson is a pathetic case in her own right. She went to being cute, with minimal talents, to being plastic and in my view creepy. Assange is also creepy.
Well one more item of weirdness to be featured in the papers, in the Age of Weirdness.
More specifically, we were finding it amusing that he was probably a really annoying house guest for the Ecuadorian Embassy in the UK.
Turns out he really was. Basically, he was a spoiled child and a titanic a*****e.
A couple of additional observations.
He was wanted in Sweden for a charge of rape, but the accusations against him in the US would only subject him to five years in the pen, assuming he got the full sentence. The charge in Sweden has expired due to some oddball interview deadline that Swedish law has, but after spending seven years in the Equadorian Embassy, which is not large, he's exposed to five in the US.
You have to wonder about the wisdom of his decision there.
Secondly, Pamela Anderson. . . you know, the girl from Bay Watch (which I've never seen) and the early years of Home Improvement, is Assange's girl friend.
Anderson is a pathetic case in her own right. She went to being cute, with minimal talents, to being plastic and in my view creepy. Assange is also creepy.
Well one more item of weirdness to be featured in the papers, in the Age of Weirdness.
April 12, 1919. Turmoil.
Villers Carbonnel, France. Formerly a village of 500 souls. April 12, 1919.
Scenes like the one above may explain French discontent with the Peace, as reported by the Casper Daily News.
Bolshevik sympathy was reported as the cause of the recent mutiny or near mutiny in the 339th Infantry's Company I, fighting in northern Russia. That may seem extreme but in fact there was some truth to it. The Michigan contingent to the unit had been drawn from National Guardsmen who included a fair number of immigrants from Finland who held fairly left wing views going into service and who were, in fact, becoming somewhat confused over their role in Russia, and loosing sympathy with it. Of course, simply wondering why they were fighting and dying in a cause that they hadn't really signed on for had something to do with that as well.
Speaking of Bolsheviks, plenty was going on in Bavaria, as the paper noted. On this day the German Communist Party seized control of the Bavarian government, displacing the anarchist who had taken over a couple of days prior.
A little closer to home, tragedy struck in Fremont County when Harry Kynes from Shoshoni, only recently returned to the United States, died of what was undoubtedly the Spanish Flu.
Also closer to home, the news had now broken that Col. Cavendar's death was a suicide, as we earlier related, and was in the news again.
We discussed the sad tale of Col. Cavendar here earlier. His death was first reported as a heroic sacrifice, and then it was discussed as a scandalous example of mistreatment of National Guard officers.
The weekly The Judge was looking at baseball.
The magazine The Judge used a play on words on its cover, relating labor strikes, which had been much in the news, with striking out in baseball.
The Saturday Evening post was looking at Spring.
Tacoma Washing, April 12, 1919.
And Tacoma was photographed.
And so one really eventful week drew to a close. Communist revolution in Bavaria, a mutiny in the American Army in Russia, the assassination of Emiliano Zapata, Japanese troops firing on Korean civilians. .. it must of been frightening to pick up the paper.
Thursday, April 11, 2019
April 11, 1919. Lens Destroyed, Trooping the Colors, Threatened Mutiny, Bandit(?) Zapata reported killed, Domestic discord.
All photographs of Lens, France, taken on April 11, 1919.
The disaster the war had brought to Lens, France, was the subject of a photographer's work on this day in 1919. His images speak for themselves.
The British 78th Battalion was trooping the colors on the same day.
Elsewhere, the Casper paper was reporting on Emiliano Zapata having been assassinated in Mexico, using the pejorative "bandit" to describe him, which he certainly was not. The press tended to term all Mexican revolutionaries with that term at the time, which was only somewhat true of Pancho Villa and not really even completely true of him.
The papers were also reporting on a near mutiny by American troops in Russia, who were conscripted soldiers who were growing weary of what seemed like a forgotten and endless commitment. Apparently the mutiny did not fully develop, but clearly things were amiss.
The Munsell's, whoever they were, had the misfortune of having their divorce become front page news, something that would be pretty unlikely to occur now.
Indeed, by this time, the female secretary was very much a common thing, which only shortly before, it had not been. Women in office work was now common.
And with alcohol now gone, there was a campaign against tobacco, coffee, and tea ramping up.
When the question answers itself.
The problem is real:
But is the question, realistic?
Some sort of state level response to low retirement savings rates? I just don't see it occurring.
Which raises an interesting side question. Having been able to watch certain occupations, it's odd how some retire and some don't, who could.
Doctors retire. And that's a good thing as frankly they'd reach a point where their knowledge would start to become obsolescent and its absolutely necessary that their minds remain sharp.
That latter requirement is necessary for lawyers too, but as far as I can tell, most don't retire. They could, but simply don't. Some change career focuses, but they tend to hand on practicing until death as a rule.
Some ranchers retire, but many don't. I can understand that. When they do retire, it tends to be because the ravages of physical work have simply caught up with them.
There are exceptions to that, I'd note. I've known ranchers who funded retirements by selling their lands, and that takes their entire families out of agriculture. . . forever usually. That tends to come about however when nobody wants to step into their shoes.
Well anyway. This is a national crisis. But I don't expect it to be addressed anytime soon. And I can't see the state addressing it at all. Maybe it can't.
A few odds and ends to consider.
Recently here in the state we've seen coal miners who were depending on retirements from their mines potentially loose out as the pensions are going to be impacted. What a horror that must be for those men and women. Coal mining jobs were good jobs, and the men and women who opted to take them often opted to do so even though they could have gone on elsewhere and done something else. It allowed them to stay home close to where they were from, and I don't blame them.
Something ought to be done for them. And it shouldn't be the case that young men from Kemmerer have to opt to go to Denver or Salt Lake for careers. But more and more, that's the way things have gone.
I worry about people who have worked in jobs so long that it's become their life, although I sure see how that can happen. I think that's what happens to a lot of lawyers. They started off with lots of interests and by their mid 40s the law is the only one left, by necessity. It's pretty much a 24 hour a day, seven days a week, kind of job. I'm in my mid 50s and I work well over 40 hours a week at least six days a week, every week. That's really common. I can see how people who were interested in one thing or another let those interests drop away so by the time they were in their mid 60s, the law was the only thing left. That's not good.
Not everyone falls into that. People who are and do fall into that should take steps not to let that occur. Some people really think its praiseworthy to say "well. . . he was till coming into the office everyday at age 120 and died at his desk. . .". It isn't.
Indeed, a few years ago here there was an effort to raise the mandatory judicial retirement age up over 70. The effort failed, and I'm glad it did. The Federal bench has no such requirement and at least as of a few years ago there were a couple of senior judges over 100 years old. They didn't do much, but they were doing something, which is problematic in all sorts of ways unless you have wisdom approaching that of King Solomon and stamina approaching of that of a Sherpa guide. . . and you probably don't.
The mythic promise of the American economy has always been a linear one: You learn a trade, work hard, and, one day, you’ll be rewarded in retirement.
Over the past decade — and particularly after the 2008 recession — that dream has been profoundly tested. According to a Harris Poll last spring, 78 percent of all Americans said they were “extremely” or “somewhat” concerned about their retirement savings. One in five, meanwhile, have no savings at all and, for those who do, approximately one-third have less than $25,000 saved for retirement.
What would a state level response look like?
My guess would have to be no. I don't expect any response at the state level to this problem, and I can't even imagine one, quite frankly.Some sort of state level response to low retirement savings rates? I just don't see it occurring.
Which raises an interesting side question. Having been able to watch certain occupations, it's odd how some retire and some don't, who could.
Doctors retire. And that's a good thing as frankly they'd reach a point where their knowledge would start to become obsolescent and its absolutely necessary that their minds remain sharp.
That latter requirement is necessary for lawyers too, but as far as I can tell, most don't retire. They could, but simply don't. Some change career focuses, but they tend to hand on practicing until death as a rule.
Some ranchers retire, but many don't. I can understand that. When they do retire, it tends to be because the ravages of physical work have simply caught up with them.
There are exceptions to that, I'd note. I've known ranchers who funded retirements by selling their lands, and that takes their entire families out of agriculture. . . forever usually. That tends to come about however when nobody wants to step into their shoes.
Well anyway. This is a national crisis. But I don't expect it to be addressed anytime soon. And I can't see the state addressing it at all. Maybe it can't.
A few odds and ends to consider.
Recently here in the state we've seen coal miners who were depending on retirements from their mines potentially loose out as the pensions are going to be impacted. What a horror that must be for those men and women. Coal mining jobs were good jobs, and the men and women who opted to take them often opted to do so even though they could have gone on elsewhere and done something else. It allowed them to stay home close to where they were from, and I don't blame them.
Something ought to be done for them. And it shouldn't be the case that young men from Kemmerer have to opt to go to Denver or Salt Lake for careers. But more and more, that's the way things have gone.
I worry about people who have worked in jobs so long that it's become their life, although I sure see how that can happen. I think that's what happens to a lot of lawyers. They started off with lots of interests and by their mid 40s the law is the only one left, by necessity. It's pretty much a 24 hour a day, seven days a week, kind of job. I'm in my mid 50s and I work well over 40 hours a week at least six days a week, every week. That's really common. I can see how people who were interested in one thing or another let those interests drop away so by the time they were in their mid 60s, the law was the only thing left. That's not good.
Not everyone falls into that. People who are and do fall into that should take steps not to let that occur. Some people really think its praiseworthy to say "well. . . he was till coming into the office everyday at age 120 and died at his desk. . .". It isn't.
Indeed, a few years ago here there was an effort to raise the mandatory judicial retirement age up over 70. The effort failed, and I'm glad it did. The Federal bench has no such requirement and at least as of a few years ago there were a couple of senior judges over 100 years old. They didn't do much, but they were doing something, which is problematic in all sorts of ways unless you have wisdom approaching that of King Solomon and stamina approaching of that of a Sherpa guide. . . and you probably don't.
Wednesday, April 10, 2019
It is better to die on your feet than to live on your knees
It is better to die on your feet than to live on your knees.
Emiliano Zapata
Emiliano Zapata, the greatest of the Mexican Revolutionaries, assassinated
And with him died the hopes for a rational, just and democratic Mexican government for decades.
Emiliano Zapata was the Mexican revolutionary who embodied the best hopes for a real reform in Mexico that was not tainted by the radical spirit of the era, and who held the real hopes of most Mexican's closet to his heart. He was a great man, and in some way unique among North American revolutionaries and politicians. His attributes were, in some ways, also his faults, and those faults lead him in the end to unfortunately be ineffective when he could have been a national force. His death guaranteed the rise of of institutionalized socialist cronyism in Mexico from which it has only recently emerged.
Zapata was of the small farmer class from Morelos State. His class had been disadvantaged under the regime of Porfirio Diaz who favored the small farming class over the peasant class on water distribution, which was necessary for the production of sugar cane. This caused Zapata to become politically active at a young age.
During the first stage of the Mexican Revolution, Zapata formed and commanded the Army of the South, proving to be a highly effective military leader. This, together with the efforts of Pancho Villa in the north, proved critical if the defeat of the Mexican Federal Army. Once in power, however, Modero, under the influence to a degree of Diaz functionaries and military men who had been left behind and whom Modero did not displace, suppressed Zapata and denounced his views. In turn, Zapata issued the Plan of Ayala and went into rebellion against Modero in November 1911. The plan stated:
1. Taking into consideration that the Mexican people led by Don Francisco I. Madero went to shed their blood to reconquer liberties and recover their rights which had been trampled on, and for a man to take possession of power, violating the sacred principles which he took an oath to defend under the slogan “Effective Suffrage and No Reelection,” outraging thus the faith, the cause, the justice, and the liberties of the people: taking into consideration that that man to whom we refer is Don Francisco I. Madero, the same who initiated the above-cited revolution, who imposed his will and influence as a governing norm on the Provisional Government of the ex-President of the Republic Attorney Francisco L. de Barra [sic], causing with this deed repeated shedding of blood and multiple misfortunes for the fatherland in a manner deceitful and ridiculous, having no intentions other than satisfying his personal ambitions, his boundless instincts as a tyrant, and his profound disrespect for the fulfillment of the preexisting laws emanating from the immortal code of ’57, written with the revolutionary blood of Ayutla;
Taking into account that the so-called Chief of the Liberating Revolution of Mexico, Don Francisco I. Madero, through lack of integrity and the highest weakness, did not carry to a happy end the revolution which gloriously he initiated with the help of God and the people, since he left standing most of the governing powers and corrupted elements of oppression of the dictatorial government of Porfirio Díaz, which are not nor can in any way be the representation of National Sovereignty, and which, for being most bitter adversaries of ours and of the principles which even now we defend, are provoking the discomfort of the country and opening new wounds in the bosom of the fatherland, to give it its own blood to drink; taking also into account that the aforementioned Sr. Francisco I. Madero, present President of the Republic, tries to avoid the fulfillment of the promises which he made to the Nation in the Plan of San Luis Potosí, being [sic, restricting] the above-cited promises to the agreements of Ciudad Juárez, by means of false promises and numerous intrigues against the Nation nullifying, pursuing, jailing, or killing revolutionary elements who helped him to occupy the high post of President of the Republic;
Taking into consideration that the so-often-repeated Francisco I. Madero has tried with the brute force of bayonets to shut up and to drown in blood the pueblos who ask, solicit, or demand from him the fulfillment of the promises of the revolution, calling them bandits and rebels, condemning them to a war of extermination without conceding or granting a single one of the guarantees which reason, justice, and the law prescribe; taking equally into consideration that the President of the Republic Francisco I. Madero has made of Effective Suffrage a bloody trick on the people, already against the will of the same people imposing Attorney José M. Pino Suáez in the Vice-Presidency of the Republic, or [imposing as] Governors of the States [men] designated by him, like the so-called General Ambrosio Figueroa, scourge and tyrant of the people of Morelos, or entering into chains and follow the pattern of a new dictatorship more shameful and more terrible than that of Porfirio Díaz, for it has been clear and patent that he has outraged the sovereignty of the States, trampling on the laws without any respect for lives or interests, as has happened in the State of Morelos, and others, leading them to the most horrendous anarchy which contemporary history registers.
For these considerations we declare the aforementioned Francisco I. Madero inept at realizing the promises of the revolution of which he was the author, because he has betrayed the principles with which he tricked the will of the people and was able to get into power: incapable of governing, because he has no respect for the law and justice of the pueblos, and a traitor to the fatherland, because he is humiliating in blood and fire, Mexicans who want liberties, so as to please the científicos, landlords, and bosses who enslave us, and from today on we begin to continue the revolution begun by him, until we achieve the overthrow of the dictatorial powers which exist.
2. Recognition is withdrawn from S. Francisco I. Madero as Chief of the Revolution and as President of the Republic, for the reasons which before were expressed, it being attempted to overthrow this official.
3. Recognized as Chief of the Liberating Revolution is the illustrious General Pascual Orozco, the second of the Leader Don Francisco I. Madero, and in case he does not accept this delicate post, recognition as Chief of the Revolution will go to General Don Emiliano Zapata.
4. The Revolutionary Junta of the State of Morelos manifests to the Nation under formal oath: that it makes its own the plan of San Luis Potosí, with the additions which are expressed below in benefit of the oppressed pueblos, and it will make itself the defender of the principles it defends until victory or death.
5. The Revolutionary Junta of the State of Morelos will admit no transactions or compromises until it achieves the overthrow of the dictatorial elements of Porfirio Díaz and Francisco I. Madero, for the nation is tired of false men and traitors who make promises like liberators and who on arriving in power forget them and constitute themselves tyrants.
6. As an additional part of the plan, we invoke, we give notice: that [regarding] the fields, timber, and water which the landlords, científicos, or bosses have usurped, the pueblos or citizens who have the titles corresponding to those properties will immediately enter into possession of that real estate of which they have been despoiled by the bad faith of our oppressors, maintain at any cost with arms in hand the mentioned possession; and the usurpers who consider themselves with a right to them [those properties] will deduce it before the special tribunals which will be established on the triumph of the revolution.
7. In virtue of the fact that the immense majority of Mexican pueblos and citizens are owners of no more than the land they walk on, suffering the horrors of poverty without being able to improve their social condition in any way or to dedicate themselves to Industry or Agriculture, because lands, timber, and water are monopolized in a few hands, for this cause there will be expropriated the third part of those monopolies from the powerful proprietors of them, with prior indemnization, in order that the pueblos and citizens of Mexico may obtain ejidos, colonies, and foundations for pueblos, or fields for sowing or laboring, and the Mexicans’ lack of prosperity and well-being may improve in all and for all.
8. The landlords, científicos, or bosses who oppose the present plan directly or indirectly, their goods will be nationalized and the two-third parts which [otherwise would] belong to them will go for indemnizations of war, pensions for widows and orphans of the victims who succumb in the struggle for the present plan.
9. In order to execute the procedures regarding the properties aforementioned, the laws of disamortization and nationalization will be applied as they fit, for serving us as norm and example can be those laws put in force by the immortal Juárez on ecclesiastical properties, which punished the despots and conservatives who in every time have tried to impose on us the ignominious yoke of oppression and backwardness.
10. The insurgent military chiefs of the Republic who rose up with arms in hand at the voice of Don Francisco I. Madero to defend the plan of San Luis Potosí, and who oppose with armed force the present plan, will be judged traitors to the cause which they defended and to the fatherland, since at present many of them, to humor the tyrants, for a fistful of coins, or for bribes or connivance, are shedding the blood of their brothers who claim the fulfillment of the promises which Don Francisco I. Madero made to the nation.
11. The expenses of war will be taken in conformity with Article 11 of the Plan of San Luis Potosí, and all procedures employed in the revolution we undertake will be in conformity with the same instructions, which the said plan determines.
12. Once triumphant the revolution which we carry into the path of reality, a Junta of the principal revolutionary chiefs from the different States will name or designate an interim President of the Republic, who will convoke elections for the organization of the federal powers.
13. The principal revolutionary chiefs of each State will designate in Junta the Governor of the State to which they belong, and this appointed official will convoke elections for the due organization of the public powers, the object being to avoid compulsory appointments which work the misfortune of the pueblos, like the so-well-known appointment of Ambrosio Figueroa in the State of Morelos and others who drive us to the precipice of bloody conflicts sustained by the caprice of the dictator Madero and the circle of científicos and landlords who have influenced him.
14. If President Madero and other dictatorial elements of the present and former regime want to avoid the immense misfortunes which afflict the fatherland, and possess true sentiments of love for it, let them make immediate renunciation of the posts they occupy and with that they will with something staunch the grave wounds which they have opened in the bosom of the fatherland, since, if they do not do so, on their heads will fall the blood and the anathema of our brothers.
15. Mexicans: consider that the cunning and bad faith of one man is shedding blood in a scandalous manner, because he is incapable of governing; consider that his system of government is choking the fatherland and trampling with the brute force of bayonets on our institutions; and thus, as we raised up our weapons to elevate him to power, we again raise them up against him for defaulting on his promises to the Mexican people and for having betrayed the revolution initiated by him, we are not personalists, we are partisans of principles and not of men!
Mexican People, support this plan with arms in hand and you will make the prosperity and well-being of the fatherland.
Ayala, November 25, 1911
Liberty, Justice and Law
Modero's troops, which consisted of Diaz's former Federal Army, were very heavy handed in their campaign against Zapata, which ended up throwing support to Zapata. Those forces, lead by Victoriano Huerta, ended up deposing and assassinating Modero in 1914, ending Mexico's first really republican government of any kind in decades. Following that, former forces and elements that had supported Modero in the first stage of the Mexican Revolution joined forces with him in various regional uprisings in what might be regarded as its second stage, including forces loyal to Villa, Carranza and Obregon. They in turn defeated Huerta.
The problem had become, however, that with the death of Modero radical elements in the Mexican revolutionary forces were contesting a reactionary government. None of the forces opposing Huerta lacked radical ideas, but those that were coalescing around Carranza and Obregon were radically socialist and bordered strongly on concepts what would emerge across the globe in the form of Communism.
This not surprisingly lead to strong disagreements between the forces that ousted Huerta and efforts to reconcile the failed. A provisional government was formed under Eulalio Gutierez and Francisco Pancho Villa was appointed head of the new government's army. At that point, at least technically, Carranza, a socialist radical, was in defiance if not rebellion of the legitimate Mexican government.
Villa, as the Conventionalist General and head of its armies, Gutierez, the head of state, and Zapata, as always in traditional Mexican dress, at a state dinner in Mexico City after their near victory over Carranza.
The forces of that government, under what was then Gen. Villa and Zapata, successfully waged war against Carranza who withdrew his forces to Vera Cruz. Villa and Zapata entered Mexico city on December 6, 1914 with a force of 60,000 men. At that point, had they been more organized and unified, they could have potentially emerged the victors in the war, but their provincial views soon came into play. Zapata, always a provincialist, withdrew his men to his home state of Morelos, which granted is just south of Mexico City, and the alliance that had allowed for his side to take Mexico City and nearly drive Carranza into defeat fell apart. For his part, Zapata had turned out not to be impressed by Villa once they had become successful, which was a common impression of the man who was a brilliant cavalry commander but who was also extremely erratic without the stabilizing influence of Modero.
Without Zapata in the capital, Carranza reemerged and soon defeated Villa. Wild swings of fortune such as this were common in the Mexican Revolution. Villa remained in the field, but with very little in his control. Carranza, for his part, secured the support of President Woodrow Wilson in a bizarre twist of fate given that Carranza strongly disliked the United States and he was not sympathetic to Mexico's northern neighbor in any fashion. He was also a political radical.
Carranza's victory, however, can be partially attributed to Zapata. Carranza regarded Zapata as an uncultured savage but did try to treat with him when he was under pressure. It soon became apparent, however, that Zapata's withdrawal to Morales meant that the Constitutionalist had a free had against Villa in the north. This allowed the Constitutionalist to gain ground and install their regime in Mexico City, which soon acquired international recognition.
Returned to Morales, Zapata was for a time effectively its ruler and he put into place in full his agrarian reforms, which greatly benefited the average peasant but which also harmed other elements of society. He had a relativity free hand in doing this until 1916, when the victorious Carranza turned his attention on Morales and the Constsitutionalist army invaded and took it. Following this, Zapata engaged in a guerrilla war against Carranza's forces, which of course Pancho Villa was doing in the north as well. That same year, as we already know, Villa crossed into the United States and the U.S. entered onto Mexican soil as a result.
Indeed the war being waged by Villa in the north, and Felix Diaz in Oaxaca meant that the Cosntitutionalist were not able to reinforce their forces in Morales and Zapata re took the state by the end of 1916 showing how weak the Constitutionalist really were. During this same period Villa began to grow resurgent even as the U.S. sought a way to exit from Norther Mexico. By the turn of the year, however, Constitutionalist positions improved and resistance to Carranza outside of Morales started to collapse. Zapata, for his part, was content to have the state of Morales and not venture outside of it. Carranza in turn felt secure enough to hold elections in 1917 and to enact a constitution which incorporated Zapata's Plan of Ayala.
This lead to an uneasy state of quasi independence that couldn't last. Some of Zapata's supporters, recognizing this, sought to treat with the Constitutionalist. Zapata did not take that approach and looked for support in the country among the followers of Diaz, a political liberal, and even the United States. By late in the year a rebellion in Morales itself threw part of the state into the hands of Zapata's opponents.
The winter of 1918 proved to be a harsh one in Mexico and the Spanish Flu was devastating in the country. One quarter of the population of Morales died due to the Spanish Flu. In December of the year the Constitutionalist commenced an invasion of Morales and Zapata's forces suffered the loss of ground. With this, Zapata turned his attention to the upcoming 1920 election and threw his support behind Vazquez Gomez and publicly urged Carranza to resign, while also accusing Carranza of sympathy with teh Germans. This threat was not an idle one and did cause Carranza concern. He was urged by his supporters to openly campaign against Carranza but declined, feeling that his leadership of his troops was vital.
In March 1919 the Constitutionalist intended to resume their offensive in Morelos and Gen. Jesus Gaujardo was ordered to do so. Prior to that, however, he was caught carousing in a tavern and a public scandal ensued. Zapata naively saw this as an opportunity to cause Gaujardo to switch sides and sent him a note inviting him to do so. The note, however, made its way to Gaujardo's superior who called Gaujardo in and dressed him down to the point of tears, before offering him the chance to redeem his honor by enticing Zapata to a meeting as a ruse. An meeting was arranged between Zapata and Gaujardo on this day in 1919, in which Zapata believed the plan would be to work on the details of a military mutiny. Instead, he was mowed down by Gaujardo's troops. The brutal action would be used by Obregon, now a political candidate, against Carranza in the 1920 election.
The dead body of Zapata, photographed for proof of his demise.
Following Zapata's death, his senior commanders aligned with Obregon in ever fashion. Obregon's vision, however, was not the same as Zapata's. Zapata was an agrarian in his views and indeed it was his strong regionalism that in the end made him ineffective in a larger sense, even if some of his land reform programs did come into play.
Beyond that, of the principal Mexican revolutionaries of the period, he was the only one who generally fully embodied the view of average Mexicans and the long history of Mexican revolutions against autocracy. He was an adherent Catholic, if one who strayed (he had a large number of illegitimate children and one legitimate daughter) whose troops marched under a banner featuring the Virgin of Guadalupe, making him in the only notable revolutionary of that period who wasn't either 1) indifferent to religion (Villa); or 2) outright hostile to it, such as Carranza. The views of Mexico's revolutionary leaders on this point would lead to real hostility to the nation's average citizens and to the Catholic Church, which in turn would lead to the Cristero War in the 1920s.
While an economic radical of a sort, as an agrarian and as a sort of proto distributist, he was not any sort of capitalist and therefore American politicians of the day would not have been keen on his views. Having said that, however, he was not a quasi socialist like most of the Mexican revolutionaries of the period were, and far less radical in every sense than those who came into power with Carranza.
He was also so regional, however, that he had a difficult time seeing outside the boundaries of his own state, and that in the end doomed much of his efforts. In order to really be effective after his falling out with Modero he would have had to have been willing to play a central role in a national government, and he wasn't. That proved to be a national tragedy.
Indeed, that tragedy strangely played itself out in a Mexican revolution that odd mirrored the Russian revolution that came a few years after the commencement of Modero's, although it never reached the genocidal level of violence and the absolute extremes that the Russian Civil War did. Like that war, the first revolution saw a democrat take office but to fall in the face of other forces. The resulting civil war saw the more or less democratic forces at first prevail only to fall due to disunion. Like the Russian Civil War some of the forces were really purely local, within one of the significant ones in each country being an agrarian entity. And in both nations the side that ultimately prevailed was deeply antithetical to large portions of the nation's culture and absolutely opposed, in the end, to any political competition whatsoever.
Beyond that, of the principal Mexican revolutionaries of the period, he was the only one who generally fully embodied the view of average Mexicans and the long history of Mexican revolutions against autocracy. He was an adherent Catholic, if one who strayed (he had a large number of illegitimate children and one legitimate daughter) whose troops marched under a banner featuring the Virgin of Guadalupe, making him in the only notable revolutionary of that period who wasn't either 1) indifferent to religion (Villa); or 2) outright hostile to it, such as Carranza. The views of Mexico's revolutionary leaders on this point would lead to real hostility to the nation's average citizens and to the Catholic Church, which in turn would lead to the Cristero War in the 1920s.
While an economic radical of a sort, as an agrarian and as a sort of proto distributist, he was not any sort of capitalist and therefore American politicians of the day would not have been keen on his views. Having said that, however, he was not a quasi socialist like most of the Mexican revolutionaries of the period were, and far less radical in every sense than those who came into power with Carranza.
He was also so regional, however, that he had a difficult time seeing outside the boundaries of his own state, and that in the end doomed much of his efforts. In order to really be effective after his falling out with Modero he would have had to have been willing to play a central role in a national government, and he wasn't. That proved to be a national tragedy.
Indeed, that tragedy strangely played itself out in a Mexican revolution that odd mirrored the Russian revolution that came a few years after the commencement of Modero's, although it never reached the genocidal level of violence and the absolute extremes that the Russian Civil War did. Like that war, the first revolution saw a democrat take office but to fall in the face of other forces. The resulting civil war saw the more or less democratic forces at first prevail only to fall due to disunion. Like the Russian Civil War some of the forces were really purely local, within one of the significant ones in each country being an agrarian entity. And in both nations the side that ultimately prevailed was deeply antithetical to large portions of the nation's culture and absolutely opposed, in the end, to any political competition whatsoever.
Coal Trends
We ran this item back in 2017:
Me, third from right, when I thought I had a career in geology, and probably in coal.
And we ran this one yesterday:
The Tribune ran this article on the cover of its Sunday edition:
That article included this statement:
I did.
Having been a geologist, in the sense that I studied geology, and then entered the field at a bad time to do it, and also having always had an analytical mind (according to the Casper College history professor who gave me the idea of becoming a lawyer), and being a deep student of history, this seemed pretty obvious to me, and I so stated that in my 2017 item.
Also in the Sunday Tribune is this op-ed:
Now, headline aside, the author that article voiced this opinion:
The pattern evident in these past events is very troubling. Wyoming’s state and local governments need to connect the dots and set a course to somehow better control the entities that so greatly affect our workers and communities. It is vitally important that the state and county governments participate early and aggressively in bankruptcy proceedings to ensure that workers’ rights, fair payments for public services delivered and assurance of mine clean-up are protected. And it’s important that all government entities carefully vet outsiders with development schemes that seem too good to be true. We must not become a feeding ground for grifters and vulture capitalists who would leave Wyoming taxpayers on the hook for clean-up and reclamation costs.
And we certainly can't disagree with that.
These are interesting times in the extractive industries. I recently wrote a part one of two item for which I haven't gotten around to the second part yet that pondered what it would mean to Wyoming's economy should coal and gas use decline. Right now, there seems to be no petroleum collapse on the immediate horizon, but there are reasons to be concerned and planning. For the immediate short term, however, based on what's going on in our neighbor to to the south, we probably ought to be planning for increased oil exploration beyond that which we were already planning for.
And we should make no mistake. Petroleum oil is a much more necessary product than coal is. Even if we were able to cease use petroleum as a fuel tomorrow, petrochemicals would still remain vital in innumerable ways. That is going to keep on keeping on, no matter what. And given its chemical nature, petroleum oil is a substance that's much easier to modify in ways that adjust to changing times than coal is.
Prior to the American Civil War, there was a common thought in the South that the Union could never really force a change in slavery in the South as the North couldn't get along without cotton. The Civil War showed immediately that it could, and an economy that was based on a single product helped drive the South down into defeat. I'm not saying that this analogy is directly comparable to things in Wyoming, but during the past decade people have repeatedly stated that not only would coal return, but it'd return in force, bigger than it was. It's pretty clear that isn't going to happen. Pinning hopes on foreign exports and the like may prove to just be forlorn hopes and people need to plan around that being the case.
And ignoring the signs of external change are dangerous. Humans are notoriously poor at predicting the future but there are things that should be considered. We may be predicting inaccurately again, but failing to plan is hazardous.
Coal: Understanding the time line of an industry
Me, third from right, when I thought I had a career in geology, and probably in coal.
And we ran this one yesterday:
Playing Political Football With Oil In Colorado.
The Tribune ran this article on the cover of its Sunday edition:
Wyoming coal is likely declining faster than expected
That article included this statement:
The idea that coal would slowly decline, partly buoyed up by the results of carbon research, and just maybe an export avenue to buyers in the Pacific Rim, took hold. Wyoming made its peace with the idea that coal’s best years were likely behind her, but that a more modest future for Wyoming coal, with manageable losses over time, was also likely.
That may not be the case.
“The degradation of the basin is accelerating and we never thought that would happen,” said Sen. Michael Von Flatern, R-Gillette. “We didn’t see that happening.”
Having been a geologist, in the sense that I studied geology, and then entered the field at a bad time to do it, and also having always had an analytical mind (according to the Casper College history professor who gave me the idea of becoming a lawyer), and being a deep student of history, this seemed pretty obvious to me, and I so stated that in my 2017 item.
Also in the Sunday Tribune is this op-ed:
LeResche: Is Wyoming the next Appalachia?
Nah.Now, headline aside, the author that article voiced this opinion:
The pattern evident in these past events is very troubling. Wyoming’s state and local governments need to connect the dots and set a course to somehow better control the entities that so greatly affect our workers and communities. It is vitally important that the state and county governments participate early and aggressively in bankruptcy proceedings to ensure that workers’ rights, fair payments for public services delivered and assurance of mine clean-up are protected. And it’s important that all government entities carefully vet outsiders with development schemes that seem too good to be true. We must not become a feeding ground for grifters and vulture capitalists who would leave Wyoming taxpayers on the hook for clean-up and reclamation costs.
And we certainly can't disagree with that.
These are interesting times in the extractive industries. I recently wrote a part one of two item for which I haven't gotten around to the second part yet that pondered what it would mean to Wyoming's economy should coal and gas use decline. Right now, there seems to be no petroleum collapse on the immediate horizon, but there are reasons to be concerned and planning. For the immediate short term, however, based on what's going on in our neighbor to to the south, we probably ought to be planning for increased oil exploration beyond that which we were already planning for.
And we should make no mistake. Petroleum oil is a much more necessary product than coal is. Even if we were able to cease use petroleum as a fuel tomorrow, petrochemicals would still remain vital in innumerable ways. That is going to keep on keeping on, no matter what. And given its chemical nature, petroleum oil is a substance that's much easier to modify in ways that adjust to changing times than coal is.
Prior to the American Civil War, there was a common thought in the South that the Union could never really force a change in slavery in the South as the North couldn't get along without cotton. The Civil War showed immediately that it could, and an economy that was based on a single product helped drive the South down into defeat. I'm not saying that this analogy is directly comparable to things in Wyoming, but during the past decade people have repeatedly stated that not only would coal return, but it'd return in force, bigger than it was. It's pretty clear that isn't going to happen. Pinning hopes on foreign exports and the like may prove to just be forlorn hopes and people need to plan around that being the case.
And ignoring the signs of external change are dangerous. Humans are notoriously poor at predicting the future but there are things that should be considered. We may be predicting inaccurately again, but failing to plan is hazardous.
April 10, 1919. The Yankee Division returns home while Americans in northern Russia couldn't figure out why they weren't home.
The Troop Ship Mongolia, the first American ship to have sunk a submarine during World War One, arrives in Boston.
The 26th Division returned to the United States on this day in 1919. They arrived on the Mongolia, which had obtained a measure of fame early in the war by being the first American ship to sink a submarine, troop ship though she was.
On the same day, some Americans still overseas were questioning why they were.
Their question was logical enough. They'd been conscripted for a war in Germany, not Russia. Fortunately for them, a near mutiny was averted, but this certainly demonstrated that time was running out for the American mission in Russia.
Students at UW published what amounted to a late "April Fool's" issue, but in the spirit of the revolutionary times.
And Quebec, showing its Gallic roots, held a referendum that allowed for the sale of beer, wine and cider, overturning in their province a nationwide prohibition on alcohol.
Tuesday, April 9, 2019
April 9, 1919. Refugees return.
School children of Wervick Belgium. April 9, 1919. Note the wooden shoes.
British hut now occupied by returned Belgian refugees in Gheluvelt, Belgium.
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