Sunday: Hili dialogue

August 4, 2019 • 6:00 am

Good morning on Sunday, August 4, 2019, National Chocolate Chip Day. In the U.S. it’s Coast Guard Day, Sisters’ Day, and Single Working Womens’ Day.  I will call my sister!

Today’s Hili is up early because I couldn’t sleep.

News of the Day: Now there’s been a second mass shooting within a day: at least nine people were killed and 16 wounded in a murder spree this morning in Dayton, Ohio. The gunman was killed, and information is still scanty at this time.

The death toll in the El Paso Walmart shooting has now reached 20, with 26 wounded. The killer is 21 year old Patrick Crusius, who left a manifesto. According to the NYT, although the manifesto hasn’t been absolutely verified as his, it’s on 8chan and appears to be a tirade against immigrants, with praise for the mosque shooting in Christchurch, and so on. It’s sad that there’s a correlation between people who tout gun ownership and bigots against foreigners and immigrants.

If the manifesto turns out to be real, then it would be a hate crime and act of domestic terrorism, which could carry the death penalty in federal court.

Matthew sent this tweet. I can’t vouch for the statistics, but perhaps the data are correct:

https://twitter.com/shaunking/status/1157738093371437056?s=11

The gunman apparently targeted Hispanics in his murder spree, and Matthew sent this statement by the El Paso county sheriff:

Murder is not an appropriate way to address the immigration issue.

Stuff that happened on August 4 include:

  • 1693 – Date traditionally ascribed to Dom Perignon’s invention of champagne; it is not clear whether he actually invented champagne, however he has been credited as an innovator who developed the techniques used to perfect sparkling wine.
  • 1789 – France: members of the National Constituent Assembly take an oath to end feudalism and abandon their privileges.
  • 1873 – American Indian Wars: While protecting a railroad survey party in Montana, the United States 7th Cavalry, under Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer clashes for the first time with the Cheyenne and Lakota people near the Tongue River; only one man on each side is killed.

Custer survived that one, but died on June 25, 1876, killed (with all his men) in “Custer’s Last Stand” by a much larger coalition of Lakota and Cheyenne warriors. Here he is the year before his death:

More stuff that happened on August 4 includes:

  • 1892 – The father and stepmother of Lizzie Borden are found murdered in their Fall River, Massachusetts home. She was tried and acquitted for the crimes a year later.

Borden, who probably did commit the crime, remained in Fall River after the acquital, despite the community’s ostracizing her, and died in 1927. Here she is in 1890:

  • 1914 – In response to the German invasion of Belgium, Belgium and the British Empire declare war on Germany. The United States declares its neutrality.
  • 1964 – Civil rights movement: Civil rights workers Michael SchwernerAndrew Goodman and James Chaney are found dead in Mississippi after disappearing on June 21.

I remember this well. The three men: two Jews and an African-American, epitomize the long-gone period when members of these two groups worked together (they were registering black voters in Mississippi: a capital crime!). Eventually seven men were convicted of the murder, but none served more than six years. Here’s the “missing” poster for Schwerner, Goodman and Chaney before, acting on a tip, police officers found their bodies buried in an earthen dam:

 

  • 1993 – A federal judge sentences Los Angeles Police Department officers Stacey Koon and Laurence Powell to 30 months in prison for violating motorist Rodney King’s civil rights.

Notables born on this day include:

  • 1792 – Percy Bysshe Shelley, English poet and playwright (d. 1822)

Shelley died at only 29, having drowned in a boating accident in a gulf off Italy.

  • 1859 – Knut Hamsun, Norwegian novelist, poet, and playwright, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1952)
  • 1900 – Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother of the United Kingdom (d. 2002)
  • 1912 – Raoul Wallenberg, Swedish architect and diplomat (d. 1947)
  • 1955 – Billy Bob Thornton, American actor, director, and screenwriter

And note that Barack Obama turns 58 today. The Nobel Prize? Well, let’s just say it wasn’t a sterling choice for a Peace Prize, but he sure as hell was better than Laureate Henry Kissinger!

  • 1961 – Barack Obama, American lawyer and politician, 44th President of the United States, Nobel Prize laureate

Notables who snuffed it on August 4 were few; they include:

  • 1875 – Hans Christian Andersen, Danish novelist, short story writer, and poet (b. 1805)
  • 1962 – Marilyn Monroe, American model and actress (b. 1926)

Meanwhile in Dobrzyn, Hili ponders the words of John Donne about mortality:

Hili: For whom does the bell tolls?
A: Better not to ask.
In Polish:
Hili: Komu bije dzwon?
Ja: Lepiej nie pytać.

From the FB page “Amazing Things“:

A meme from Fat Cat Art on Facebook: “If Dracula had a cat”:

A tweet Grania sent me on December 3 of last year. She was fond of all thing space. Be sure to watch the video:

Two tweets from Nilou, the first showing a wonderful bird:

https://twitter.com/animalIife/status/1157375774363701249

A full-body shot from Wikipedia:

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Have you wondered how many flights are in the air at the same time? Here’s a shot from the other night in the U.S.:

From reader j.j.: what looks to be a multi-legged bird. But it’s parental care:

https://twitter.com/41Strange/status/1155512698420912128

Reader Barry says, “I know you’re not a dog person, but this is so sweet.”

Three tweets from Matthew. Sound up on this one, and make sure to read the caption:

Remember that in the UK, “fanny” doesn’t mean “butt,” but “vagina”:

And journalism standards from “back in the day”:

29 thoughts on “Sunday: Hili dialogue

    1. Agreed. Certainly better than, “In God we trust”, or, “thou shall have no other Gods before me”.

  1. I think the list of journalism standards are the kind of thing the vast majority of people follow. But it only takes a very few to taint the entire world with a lot of pain and sorrow.

  2. Mentioned this in the other thread but the El Paso shooter lived in Dallas. He drove 10 hours away from home to a border town specifically so there would be more Hispanics to victimize.

    1. In the Dayton shooting, there were 35 casualties in under a minute. I’m guessing that’s not the type of weapon a hunter needs to bag his limit during deer season.

    2. Probably some large percent of gun owners are not gun nuts. They keep guns primarily to protect themselves from the gun nuts. They are scared. Which is nutty, but makes the manufacturers very wealthy.

      1. It was just…when you consider that most gun owners own a single gun then you do the math and understand that many people out there who must have veritable arsenals….the mind boggles.

        1. Sure. I own 6 or 7 cameras because I’ve been fascinated by photography for many years. I tend to accumulate them. Many other photographers have far more than I do. It’s probably similar in the case of guns, though we all tremble to think there are a few gun nuts that accumulate arsenals because they fantasize about holding off an invading force come to take there guns away like in the movies.

          1. My guess is that many more gun nuts harbor the fantasy of needing their arsenal to defend themselves than collect guns for their historical or design value. The latter is just their cover story they use in civilized society.

        2. It’s not uncommon to have both a pistol and a long gun, as they are suited for different situations.

          As rickflick observes, it’s easy to accumulate a collection of items no matter the hobby.

    3. The stats above are correct. You are right in your assumption too. 3% own an average of 17 guns each. Only 40% actually owns a gun. The figures don’t include the military or law enforcement. Yemen’s number is c. 52/100. (I’ve seen the official stats recently and there’re more, but that’s all I can remember ottomh.)

  3. This morning both my most favored first cousin,
    Ms Linda, and Mr Barack Obama awaken
    to their 58th birthing day ‘celebrations.’

    “I am done with losing people, ” someone
    in Texas stated. Over a year ago.

    So am I.

    Blue

    1. Yes, but America can do better. We won’t stop until we have at least 80% of the guns.

      Texas Governor Greg Abbott famously tweeted:

      “Im EMBARRASSED: Texas #2 in nation
      for new gun purchases, behind
      CALIFORNIA. Let’s pick up the pace
      Texans.@NRA”

      1. That kinda gives the game away doesn’t it? It’s all about commercialism and encouraging people who already own guns to stockpile more and more. You can’t be a real man if you only own an arsenal big enough for a small militia. Real men could arm a platoon. Get to spending.

          1. How many of the women own many guns? (more than, say, 3 = body + house + car)

    1. Presumably it – the record – sold well?

      Someone has got to be paying for the adverts that fund places like 8chan.

      1. I have no idea what the market for death metal is. But it is nihilistic and morbid through & through, and being a fan should be considered a major red flag.

  4. Obama wasn’t simply unworthy of a Nobel Peace Prize, he just did not even deserve consideration for one. He got it for nothing more than mouthing platitudes and getting elected POTUS. Kissinger at least did do and get some things done, you may or may not think they were for good but he did act.

    1. Obama gave a mellifluous speech, then ordered double-tap drone strikes. Kissinger undermined the ’68 Paris peace talks. Mother Teresa let people suffer & die so long as she could save their soul. The Nobel Peace Prize is tarnished.

  5. I am a very serious grown up, and write books about science and race and history and I will never be grown up enough to not find this funny pic.twitter.com/52jOTps6ux

    To my (slight) surprise, it took nearly 90% of the thread before the venerable Swedish toilet paper brand “Krapp” got their picture posted.
    Or maybe that just made further contributors curl up and go white?

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