Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Saturday, October 10, 2020
Southern Rockies Nature Blog: News Report: More Colorado Women Hiking with Firearms
Friday, October 9, 2020
October 9, 1920 Contests.
In the1920 World Series Game 4, the Brooklyn Robins went down to defeat, scoring 1 as opposed to the Cleveland Indians' 5 runs.
David Lloyd George declared in a speech that the British would not allow for Irish home rule and expressed British resolve to prevail in the Irish troubles.
Vilnius fell to Polish "mutineers" and Austria transferred South Tyrol to Italy, which retains it to this day, although it is an autonomous self governing Italian region.
Fire Prevention Week was inaugurated in the United States and Canada.
Potomac Park including Hains Point, as well as the Naval Air Station Anacostia (upper left) and the Army Air Service's Bolling Field. October 9, 1920.
Idaho senior enlisted leader is a horseman and a Guardsman
Thursday, October 8, 2020
October 8, 1920 Start of Żeligowski's Mutiny
On this day in 1920 Poland surreptitiously commenced a "mutiny" in Lithuania under General Lucjan Żeligowski. Just the day prior Poland and Lithuania had entered into an agreement fixing their borders. The rebellion was a successful Polish effort to redraw those borders before the agreement even went into effect.
Timeline of U.S. Army Enlisted Ranks, 1920 to Present
Timeline of U.S. Army Enlisted Ranks, 1920 to Present
I'm really quite surprised that Private E1s were at one time one stripers, where as now they are E2s. Likewise, I'm surprised that Corporals were E3s up until 1948 and likewise Sergeants were E4s.The lack of "buck sergeants" (three stripes) between 1948 and 1959 is extremely surprising, although I see the E5 grade was called Sergeant and had three stripes and a rocker.
I'm most familiar with the 1959 to present structure and had always assumed Army Sergeants, as opposed to USAF Sergeants, were E5s or the equivalent.
Some Gave All: Mellon Foundation Announces Quarter-Billion-Dollar...
Mellon Foundation Announces Quarter-Billion-Dollar Grant Commitment for “Monuments Project” to Reimagine and Rebuild Commemorative Spaces and Transform the Way History is Told in the United States | The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Mellon Foundation Announces Quarter-Billion-Dollar Grant Commitment for “Monuments Project” to Reimagine and Rebuild Commemorative Spaces and Transform the Way History is Told in the United States | The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation: A press release from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.And yet I still don't know what that means.
I do know that $250,000,000 is a lot of money. But is it a lot of money in this context. That depends, I suppose. But it'd depend on things that aren't clear, and its not clear what they really mean.
Wednesday, October 7, 2020
Sudden Declarations of the End of the Oil Age?
October 7, 1920. False diplomacy, wishful thinking, and the Robins take game three.
The Baby At The Office
Awwww. . . ooooo. . . awwww.
Yes, a baby at the office.
And yes, those voices are all female.
Idiots in faculty lounges or in the halls of Radical Thin Whites For Pacifistic Gender Free Government Basic Income who think that there's not a gigantic (and biologically proven, by the way) difference between men and women have apparently never been in an office when a baby arrives.
Women stop working.
You could have a deadline which will destroy the American economy if not met today, but that doesn't matter.
There's a baby in the office.
The men keep working.
Tuesday, October 6, 2020
October 6, 1920. East Coast Scenes
Monday, October 5, 2020
October 5, 1920. World Series begins, Russo Polish War ends, Railways reopen.
The 1920 World Series started on this day, in 1920.
The opening of the Jaffa-Jerusalem Railway was attended, as all such things were, by the senior British official.
While it has been closed from time to time, updates and reconstructions have meant that the rail line remains in use today.
A Little Laughter To Make it Through This Dark Time
Monday Morning Repeat from the week of June 7, 2009. Dual Careered Lawyer and Modern Transportation
Lex Anteinternet: Modern Transportation: Changes in transportation methods were brought home to me again this week. On Tuesday of this past week I drove 140 miles to Rawlins Wyom...
Lex Anteinternet: Dual Careered lawyer: Here's an interesting item from today's CST history column. I'm afraid that I'm interested in it for the wrong reasons. ...
Sunday, October 4, 2020
Sunday Morning Scene: Churches of the West: St. Rose of Lima Catholic Church, Torrington Wyoming
St. Rose of Lima Catholic Church, Torrington Wyoming
Saturday, October 3, 2020
Best Posts of the Week of September 27, 2020
The best post of the week of September 27, 2020. . . and its been one heck of a week.
And let the rampaging Anti-Catholicism begin. . .
September 27, 1920. Last Game for the Black Sox.
It is almost impossible for people to pose as reenactors for a photograph. . .
Wars and Rumors of Wars
Mid Week At Work: The Forest Ranger. W. Herbert Dunton circa 1913.
Thank Goodness Its Fat Bear Week
What are you reading?
What are you listening to?
Sheep
Casualties of the COVID Recession
Pandemic, Part 3.
The 2020 Election, Part 10
Notes On Nominations. Replacing Justice Ginsburg
Blog Mirror: Long distance hiking: 5 weeks
I can't help but be envious. In a couple of years I'll be 60 and I haven't had five weeks off my entire life.
Friday, October 2, 2020
October 2, 1920. Columbia's eyes, Canadian governing farmers, Runs in hose, Killer monkeys.
Leslie's wanted the nation to be reminded that the allegorical eyes of the nation were on voters in its issue out this day in 1920.
Meanwhile, the Country Gentleman was reporting on "Farmer Rule For Canada", which was an article predicting that results based on recent elections in Canada.
The Saturday Evening Post featured a less rural cover.
The last triple header to be played in major league baseball took place on this date when Pirates and the Reds played three games. The Reds one. Triple headers are now banned in the major leagues except under unusual circumstances that are sufficiently rare, they haven't occurred.
King Alexander was bitten by a monkey when he tried to intervene and save a dog that had been attacked by another monkey. The bite would result in an infection leading to his death, which brought King Constantine back to the throne.
King Alexander had been a controversial king. A playboy early on, he'd been smitten by a commoner whom he married over his family's objections. While the marriage was ultimately recognized, she was only accorded formal royal status after his death in order that their daughter be recognized as a royal.
Greece, under a government formed under King Constantine, would go into a war with Turkey that had disastrous results. Winston Churchill later remarked to the effect that the monkey's bit may well have resulted in the death of 250,000 people.
Thursday, October 1, 2020
There is no pendulum even if you have no idea what "the right side of history" is.
A friend of mine is fond of saying that history is a pendulum, it swings right, and then left, and then back again. His point is that if you don't like the way history is going, or society, or politics, just wait, and it'll swing back.
Well, it sort of does.
But only sort of.
It's more like a giant screw, or drill, it has left and right edges contacting what its going through, with that being history or time, I suppose, but it also keeps going in a direction. Every once and awhile, the drill hits something hard and diverts its path, and its really hard, if not impossible, to get it going in the same direction.
We're about to hit something hard like that. And my prediction is that it'll change things, permanently.
There have been things like that in the past. The United States had one character from 1776 to 1860, but 1860 to 1865 changed everything forever. Signs that something was going to happen were clear in the 1840s, and there were lots of arguments developing over it. But the Civil War brought the change and the United States in 1866 wasn't the same country it had been in 1859. It'd never be that earlier country again.
The Great Depression is another example. Going into the Depression in 1929 the country was pretty much the same country it had been in 1866. By 1945 it wouldn't be that country anymore.
Part of the hard spot, if you will, that the drill hit was just fatigue. The Civil War not only defeated the Southern slaveholders, it fatigued the entire South to the point where it accepted defeat. . . for time. The Great Depression fatigued the entire nation to where it accepted changes in the role of government that it would not have before.
And like it nor not, we're about to do that again, or so I suspect.
Fatigue has certainly set in, in the general populace.
The country has been struggling since the 1970s over developments that happened post World War Two and which culminated in the late 60s and early 70s. Since then, the pendulum, if you like that analogy, has swung back and forth. But something really started accelerating socially in the late portions of President Obama's second term, brought about in no small part by the sitting Supreme Court. A reaction in part to that but also in part to policies of the 1970s, including a high immigration rate, export of manufacturing, etc., all caused a slow burning populism to elect Donald Trump.
Trump's about to lose the election. Amy Coney Barrett is about to go on the Supreme Court. We're about to enter an era of political liberalism that's going to move the country permanently to the left, while at the same time one of judicial conservatism that will cause people to actually have to pay attention to their elected officials, who will have new powers in lots of ways they haven't since the early 1970s.
What that exactly does should be cold comfort to everyone. Nobody is going to get what they want. Some people are going to be howling in frustration, as I hinted at that here:
My prediction is that some of the social policy fights that we've been having but which we've been relying on the high court to mediate will come roaring back. Those fighting over gun control are going to find that the Supreme Court will hold that the 2nd Amendment is a real personal right restricting legislatures, but that won't mean that those same bodies, including the national one, can't actually impose some restrictions, and those restrictions are coming, and coming extremely rapidly.
Those on the left who have been depending upon the court to hold back the development of societal attitudes disfavoring abortion, but not completely eliminating it, are going to see some states go as far as they can, legally, soon to do just that. Some states will go the other way. There won't be one national law.
Those on the right who were hoping for the definition of marriage to return to the states, where it was before the court ruled otherwise recently, are going to be disappointed. That ship has sailed and the argument is now a cultural one not a legal one. On the other hand, those who are hoping for the expansion of all sorts of self definition based on ones private parts and inclinations are going to be disappointed as well as the law is going to stop at its current position and the mass of the populace is going to move on to "don't care."
General government involvement in all things, economic and otherwise, is going to increase and markedly and in a leftwards direction. Part of that will be in the area of environmental policy. Arguments about climate are about to end, and policies are about to arrive.
None of this means that you have to like any of it, and that gets back to what I posted above. The local Republican party, the only real party in the state, has been enduring an alt -right insurgency. That insurgency is about to be put on the political margins in the entire United States. And not only indefinitely, but maybe forever. The right wing from this point, nationally, is the middle right. Think of the Canadian right, or the British right. If their right wing seems left wing to you, well we're about to join them.
And again, a person doesn't have to like it. Indeed, they can decry it. But the drill has hit a hard spot and its' going to divert.
Of course, as noted, we never really know the course of history, or its outcome. Things do go back, or touch back, or come to be regarded as a place to aim for, in terms of standards and conditions. Some rapidly, some slowly, and some not at all.