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☑ ☆ ✇ FOX News

On this day in history, May 21, 1881, Clara Barton, 'brave' battlefield nurse, creates American Red Cross

By: Christine Rousselle — May 20th 2024 at 23:02
American nurse Clara Barton founded the American Red Cross on this day in history, May 21, 1881. She led the organization until 1904, when she retired to her Maryland home.

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On this day in history, May 20, 1927, Charles Lindbergh departs for first solo nonstop flight across Atlantic

By: Christine Rousselle — May 19th 2024 at 23:02
Aviator Charles Lindbergh took off on his historic transatlantic flight on this day in history, May 20, 1927. He would not land until 33-and-a-half hours later.

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On this day in history, May 19, 1994, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, worldwide style icon, passes away in NYC

By: Erica Lamberg — May 18th 2024 at 23:02
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis died on this day in history, May 19, 1994. The former first lady was a style icon and talented in her own right; she unwaveringly supported husband John Kennedy's ideals.

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Top 5 fastest Preakness Stakes times in the history of the Triple Crown race

By: Ashlyn Messier — May 18th 2024 at 08:20
The Preakness Stakes is the second race in the Triple Crown series, held in Baltimore annually in May. Secretariat has the fastest Preakness Stakes time in the history of the race.

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Civil War taught how to influence news media. It nearly cost Lincoln re-election

By: Patrick O'Donnell — May 18th 2024 at 08:00
The idea of using news media to spin a narrative and push a political agenda is hardly new. The Confederate Secret Service used that strategy to try and defeat President Lincoln.

☑ ☆ ✇ DickMorris.com

How Israel Was Formed – Lunch Alert!

By: Dick Morris — May 18th 2024 at 06:00
This Dick Morris Lunch Alert! sponsored by Patriot Gold Group.  Click Here to give me your thoughts and continue the discussion. Please forward this email to any friends or family who may be interested in viewing my video. Thanks…
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On this day in history, May 18, 1980, Mount St. Helens erupts, triggers largest landslide in recorded history

By: Christine Rousselle — May 17th 2024 at 23:02
Mount St. Helens erupted on this day in history, May 18, 1980, triggering the largest landslide in recorded history. A total of 57 people lost their lives in the tumult.

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On this day in history, May 17, 1954, Supreme Court trounces segregation in landmark Brown v. Board case

By: Kerry Byrne — May 16th 2024 at 23:02
The U.S Supreme Court declared segregation in public schools unconstitutional in the landmark Brown v. Board of Education case on this day in history, May 17, 1954.

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On this day in history, May 16, 1986, Tom Cruise Cold War blockbuster 'Top Gun' jets across silver screen

By: Kerry Byrne — May 15th 2024 at 23:02
On this day in history, May 16, 1986, "Top Gun" is released — and after rising to the top of the charts, it went on to become a Hollywood movie classic of the big screen.

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Remains of 17-year-old soldier killed in Korean War identified

— May 15th 2024 at 15:36
The remains of 17-year-old Army Pfc. Thomas A. Smith — who was killed in the Korean War — have been identified, and will be buried in his hometown of Grant, Michigan.

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Rare pigeon parachute used to carry messages amid WWII found in old shoebox

By: Brittany Kasko — May 15th 2024 at 15:06
A pigeon parachute that was used to carry messages during World War II and D-Day was found in an old shoebox. The unique item is reportedly at least 80 years old.

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Turkey converts ancient church into mosque, sparking debate on heritage preservation

— May 15th 2024 at 11:18
Turkey has converted the ancient Chora church in Istanbul, previously a museum for over 70 years, into a mosque, marking the second major conversion in recent months.

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Why do we say ‘wear your heart on your sleeve’ and other love-drenched expressions? 3 fun origin stories

By: Brittany Kasko — May 15th 2024 at 03:00
Why do we say certain popular phrases involving love and emotion? Here are explanations for "It takes two to tango," "Wear your heart on your sleeve" and more.

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On this day in history, May 15, 1800, President Adams moves federal government from Philadelphia to DC

By: Christine Rousselle — May 14th 2024 at 23:02
President John Adams ordered the federal government to pack up offices in Philadelphia and move to the new home in Washington, D.C., on this day in history, May 15, 1800.

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On this day in history, May 14, 1973, Skylab, the first US space station, is launched

By: Christine Rousselle — May 13th 2024 at 23:02
Skylab, America's first space station, was launched into orbit on this day in history in 1973. The space station was damaged during liftoff, but the astronauts repaired it.

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Rhode Island clear-broth clam chowder offers taste of the sea, Native tradition

By: Kerry Byrne — May 13th 2024 at 04:55
Rhode Island clear-broth clam chowder is a local culinary tradition that traces its roots to Native Americans who prepared seafood stew before the arrival of cows and creams.

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On this day in history, May 13, 1981, Pope John Paul II survives assassination attempt

By: Christine Rousselle — May 12th 2024 at 23:02
Pope John Paul II survived an assassination attempt by a Turkish gunman on this day in history, May 13, 1981. The pope would go on to forgive his would-be killer.

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What is the history of Mother's Day and what made the founder turn against it?

By: Ashlyn Messier — May 12th 2024 at 02:30
Mother's Day has a long history in the United States, having been made an official holiday in 1914. Take a look back at the origins of the day and modern traditions of the occasion.

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On this day in history, May 12, 1965, Rolling Stones record 'Satisfaction' after Keith Richards dreamed a riff

By: Kerry Byrne — May 11th 2024 at 23:02
The Rolling Stones recorded "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" after guitarist Keith Richards captured the riff in his sleep on this day in history, May 12, 1965.

☑ ☆ ✇ DickMorris.com

Why Lincoln Was A Republican – History Video!

By: Dick Morris — May 11th 2024 at 06:00
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On this day in history, May 11, 1888, Irving Berlin, composer of 'God Bless America,' is born

By: Erica Lamberg — May 10th 2024 at 23:02
Irving Berlin was born on this day in history, May 11, 1888. The composer would go on to write 800 songs, many of them American classics, after starting his career as a boy singing in the streets.

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Civil War General Sherman's sword among relics headed to Ohio auction next week

— May 10th 2024 at 18:30
A sword once wielded by legendary Union Gen. William T. Sherman is among numerous historic relics headed for the auction block next week in Ohio's capital.

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On this day in history, May 10, 1977, iconic American actress Joan Crawford dies in New York City

By: Nicole Pelletiere — May 9th 2024 at 23:02
Joan Crawford, known for her Oscar-winning role in "Mildred Pierce," a feud with co-star Bette Davis and controversial relationships with her kids, died on this day in history, May 10, 1977.

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On this day in history, May 9, 1914, President Woodrow Wilson issues proclamation creating Mother's Day

By: Erica Lamberg — May 8th 2024 at 23:02
On May 9, 1914, President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed that mothers should be honored with flags flying at all government buildings. Later celebratory forms followed, including flowers and gifts.

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Sean Hannity traces modern policing back to its Wild West origins in new Fox Nation series

By: Taylor Penley — May 8th 2024 at 08:00
Fox Nation's "Outlaws & Lawmen" dives into the history of the Wild West to recapture the stories of heroes and villains who helped shape law enforcement today.

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On this day in history, May 8, 1945, President Truman announces 'flags of freedom fly all over Europe'

By: Fox News Staff — May 7th 2024 at 23:02
President Harry S. Truman, on this day in history, May 8, 1945, announced to the American people that Germany's forces had surrendered in World War II — marking the end of the war in Europe.

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Lincoln’s special forces battled Mosby’s Confederate Rangers with bravery and brains

By: Patrick O'Donnell — May 7th 2024 at 01:00
The Civil War wasn't all large battles. The future of US special forces was inspired by Lincoln’s Union Scouts who fought Confederate commander Mosby with bravery and brains.

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On this day in history, May 7, 1977, the song 'Hotel California' by the Eagles hits No. 1

By: Christine Rousselle — May 6th 2024 at 23:02
The song Hotel California hit number one on this day in history, May 7, 1977. The enigmatic lyrics of the rock song has led to many theories about its meaning.

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Polish prosecutors halt probe into skeletal remains unearthed at Hitler's wartime headquarters

— May 6th 2024 at 11:21
Polish prosecutors have halted an investigation into human skeletons discovered at Wolf's Lair, Hitler's wartime headquarters, due to the advanced decay.

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Painting thought to be lost Caravaggio is confirmed as authentic by Spain's Prado Museum

— May 6th 2024 at 09:46
The Prado Museum in Spain has confirmed the authenticity of a painting titled "Ecce Homo" by Italian Baroque master Caravaggio, previously thought lost.

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D-Day veteran, 99, spreads message of peace ahead of Normandy landings anniversary

— May 6th 2024 at 06:33
D-Day veteran Charles Shay is about to take part next month in the 80th celebrations of the landings in Normandy that led to the liberation of France and Europe.

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Arkansas statues at US Capitol to be replaced with civil rights leader Daisy Bates and singer Johnny Cash

— May 6th 2024 at 05:45
Arkansas is set to replace the statues of two figures from its history that have represented the state at the U.S. Capitol with contemporary figures, officials say.

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On this day in history, May 6, 1957, the last episode of hit sitcom 'I Love Lucy' airs

By: Christine Rousselle — May 5th 2024 at 23:02
The 181st episode of "I Love Lucy," titled "The Ricardos Dedicate a Statue," aired on this day in history, May 6, 1957. The now-iconic TV sitcom ran for six seasons in its original run.

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On this day in history, May 5, 1904, Cy Young pitches first perfect game in World Series Era

By: Kerry Byrne — May 4th 2024 at 23:02
Hall of Fame pitcher Cy Young hurled the first perfect game of the World Series era for the Boston Americans, later the Red Sox, on this day in history, May 5, 1904.

☑ ☆ ✇ DickMorris.com

How Kennedy Finessed Nixon – History Video!

By: Dick Morris — May 4th 2024 at 06:00
This Dick Morris Lunch Alert! sponsored by Patriot Gold Group. Click Here to give me your thoughts and continue the discussion. Please forward this email to any friends or family who may be interested in viewing my video. Thanks for…
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On this day in history, May 4, 1979, 'Iron Lady' Margaret Thatcher becomes first female PM of the UK

By: Erica Lamberg — May 3rd 2024 at 23:02
Margaret Thatcher became the United Kingdom's first female prime minister on this day in history, May 4, 1979, at age 54 — and led the U.K. for nearly 12 years, earning the moniker "Iron Lady."

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Villa once owned by Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels to be given away, Berlin government officials say

— May 3rd 2024 at 11:19
A villa once owned by Adolf Hitler’s propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels, is reportedly going to be given away in an effort to end a decades-long debate.

☑ ☆ ✇ Breitbart News

Narrative Busted: Colonialism and Slavery Did Not Make British Empire Wealthy, Report Finds

By: Kurt Zindulka · Kurt Zindulka — May 3rd 2024 at 03:36

The British Empire and other European colonial powers did not enrich themselves through slavery and colonialism, a report asserted.

The post Narrative Busted: Colonialism and Slavery Did Not Make British Empire Wealthy, Report Finds appeared first on Breitbart.

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Michigan researchers discover eerie 1909 shipwreck at bottom of Lake Superior

By: Andrea Vacchiano — May 3rd 2024 at 03:30
Officials with the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society announced this week that the remains of a 1909 shipwreck were discovered partially intact at the bottom of Lake Superior.

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On this day in history, May 3, 1937, Margaret Mitchell's Civil War saga 'Gone with the Wind' wins Pulitzer

By: Kerry Byrne — May 2nd 2024 at 23:02
Margaret Mitchell earned a Pulitzer Prize in Novels for her Civil War epic "Gone with the Wind" on this day in history, May 3, 1937. She died tragically at age 48.

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On this day in history, May 2, 1611, King James Bible published, helped fuel revolution in American colonies

By: Kerry Byrne — May 1st 2024 at 23:02
The King James Version of the Bible, the most popular book in the English language, was published according to scholarly estimate on this day in history, May 2, 1611.

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On this day in history, May 1, 1931, Empire State Building opens during Great Depression

By: Kerry Byrne — April 30th 2024 at 23:02
The Empire State Building, the world's tallest skyscraper at the time and perhaps still the most famous in the world, opened on this day in history, May 1, 1931.

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Michigan man discovers time capsule from over 100 years ago in kitchen ceiling: 'Connection to the past'

By: Sydney Borchers — April 30th 2024 at 03:00
Jesse Leitch found a time capsule in his kitchen ceiling with artifacts dating back to the early 1900s and he intends to make one of his own with both the old and some new items.

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On this day in history, April 30, 1789, George Washington inaugurated as first US president

By: Christine Rousselle — April 29th 2024 at 23:02
President George Washington was inaugurated as the first president of the United States on this day in history, April 30, 1789, at New York City's Federal Hall.

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Family's history in Scotland is focus of maze shaped in 5-pointed star: ‘Bringing it back to life’

By: Brittany Kasko — April 29th 2024 at 12:07
A unique family emblem forms the shape of a maze in Perthshire, Scotland. The maze at the Scone Palace tourism attraction is half a mile long and was originally planted in 1991.

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On this day in history, April 29, 2004, World War II Memorial opens in Washington, D.C.: 'Stirs memories'

By: Christine Rousselle — April 28th 2024 at 23:02
The World War II Memorial opened to the public on this day in history, April 29, 2004, after more than two years of work on its construction. It honors the lives lost in WWII.

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Historians uncover 18th-century bottles with mysterious liquid at George Washington's Mt. Vernon

By: Andrea Vacchiano — April 28th 2024 at 20:42
Archaeologists at George Washington's Mount Vernon estate in Virginia recently dug up 18th-century bottles filled with a puzzling liquid. The liquid may be the remains of cherries.

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On this day in history, April 28, 1967, Muhammad Ali refuses to serve military at height of Vietnam War

By: Kerry Byrne — April 27th 2024 at 23:02
Heavyweight boxing champ Muhammad Ali refused to join the United States military at the height of the Vietnam War on this day in history, April 28, 1967.

☑ ☆ ✇ Breitbart News

WATCH — 'Really Cool': Minnesotans Awed by 104-Year-Old Time Capsule Found During Demolition Project

By: Amy Furr · Amy Furr — April 27th 2024 at 13:40

Owatonna, Minnesota, residents took part in a historic event on Monday after construction workers found a 104-year-old time capsule.

The post WATCH — ‘Really Cool’: Minnesotans Awed by 104-Year-Old Time Capsule Found During Demolition Project appeared first on Breitbart.

☑ ☆ ✇ DickMorris.com

The Political Meaning Of The Wizard Of Oz – History Video!

By: Dick Morris — April 27th 2024 at 06:00
This Dick Morris Lunch Alert! sponsored by Patriot Gold Group. Click Here to give me your thoughts and continue the discussion. Please forward this email to any friends or family who may be interested in viewing my video. Thanks for…
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On this day in history, April 27, 1805, US Marines attack shores of Tripoli, key victory in Barbary Wars

By: Kerry Byrne — April 26th 2024 at 23:02
The United States Marines Corps proved its resolve by leading a mercenary force on an incredible attack on Tripoli during the Barbary Wars on this day in history, April 27, 1805.

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On this day in history, April 26, 1865, John Wilkes Booth is killed by Union troops for murdering Lincoln

By: Erica Lamberg — April 25th 2024 at 23:02
Union troops hunted down John Wilkes Booth, the Confederate sympathizer who shot President Abe Lincoln, before finding him in a Virginia barn and killing him on this day in history, April 26, 1865.

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Backyard discovery has retired geologist believing he's found Bronze Age arrowhead and more

By: Maureen Mackey — April 25th 2024 at 22:27
A retired U.K. geologist claims he's found Bronze Age-era artifacts in his backyard and surrounding areas, including blades and axes. "Finding the arrowhead was the starting point," he said.

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On this day in history, April 25, 1990, Hubble Space Telescope placed in orbit by Space Shuttle Discovery

By: Kerry Byrne — April 24th 2024 at 23:02
The Hubble Space Telescope, proclaimed by NASA to be the most significant advance in astronomy since Galileo, was placed in orbit on this day in history, April 25, 1990.

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D-Day veteran, 100, dies before he can honor fallen comrades one more time

— April 24th 2024 at 12:57
Bill Gladden, a British army veteran who played a significant role in the D-Day landings during World War II, has died at the age of 100, his family confirmed.

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On this day in history, April 24, 1800, Library of Congress is born, oldest federal cultural institution in US

By: Maureen Mackey — April 23rd 2024 at 23:02
The Library of Congress — the U.S.'s oldest federal cultural institution — was born on this day in history, April 24, 1800, when President John Adams approved the use of $5,000 to buy books.

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Aboriginal spears in England have been returned to Australia's Indigenous people after repatriation request

— April 23rd 2024 at 12:38
Four spears belonging to the Aboriginal Australians have been returned to the Indigenous community after being taken by Captain Cook in 1770 and presented to Trinity College in Cambridge.

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Memorial opens on site of former Nazi concentration camp following government removal of farm

— April 23rd 2024 at 09:51
A new memorial has opened in the Czech Republic on the site of a former Nazi concentration camp for Roma, capping a process that took decades, officials said.

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On this day in history, April 23, 1564, Shakespeare is born in Stratford-upon-Avon, becomes renowned writer

By: Christine Rousselle — April 22nd 2024 at 23:02
Playwright William Shakespeare may have been born on this day in history, April 23, 1564, in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. He would also die on this day, on (possibly) his 52nd birthday.

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Archaeologists uncover 850-year-old treasure in ancient grave: 'Sensational find'

By: Andrea Vacchiano — April 22nd 2024 at 20:32
The Jönköping County Museum in Sweden announced that it found 170 silver 'bracteates,' or coins, in a medieval grave. Experts said the coins are 800 years old.

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On this day in history, April 22, 1970, first Earth Day is celebrated: 'Rare political alignment'

By: Christine Rousselle — April 21st 2024 at 23:02
Earth Day, a demonstration against pollution and for improved environmental policies, was first observed on this day in history, April 22, 1970. Demonstrations occurred nationwide.

☑ ☆ ✇ DickMorris.com

How British Colonial Policy Spawned Modern Conflicts – History Video!

By: Dick Morris — April 20th 2024 at 06:00
This Dick Morris Lunch Alert! sponsored by Patriot Gold Group. Click Here to give me your thoughts and continue the discussion. Please forward this email to any friends or family who may be interested in viewing my video. Thanks for…
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The Only Vice President To Write A Hit Song, And Win A Nobel Prize – History Video!

By: Dick Morris — April 13th 2024 at 06:00
This Dick Morris Lunch Alert! sponsored by Patriot Gold Group. Click Here to give me your thoughts and continue the discussion. Please forward this email to any friends or family who may be interested in viewing my video. Thanks for…
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Women’s Suffrage, Prohibition, Income Tax, All Passed At The Same Time: Here’s Why – History Video!

By: Dick Morris — April 6th 2024 at 06:00
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How FDR Outfoxed Churchill Over The Atlantic Charter – History Video!

By: Dick Morris — March 30th 2024 at 06:00
This Dick Morris Lunch Alert! sponsored by Patriot Gold Group. Click Here to give me your thoughts and continue the discussion. Please forward this email to any friends or family who may be interested in viewing my video. Thanks for…
☑ ☆ ✇ Power LinePower Line

In Mind of the Time

By: Lloyd Billingsley — March 23rd 2024 at 14:17
(Lloyd Billingsley)

Joe Biden turning against Israel puts Scott “in mind of the time when England stood alone against a genocidal maniac.” That was the time when Hitler’s National Socialist regime was allied with Stalin’s Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. They signed their Pact on August 23, 1939, and Stalin began handing Jews directly to the Gestapo. In September, 1939, both powers invaded Poland, effectively starting World War II.

In November, 1939, Stalin invaded Finland and in April of 1940 Hitler invaded Denmark and Norway. On May 10, 1940, Hitler invaded France, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands. The genocidal maniac then turned his sights on England, standing alone during the Stalin-Hitler Pact. The American Communists, then collaborating with the pro-Nazi German-American Bund, picketed the White House to keep America out of the conflict, and fomented strikes in defense industries.

In the Battle of Britain (July 10, 1940 – October 31, 1940), England got some help from unofficial sources. Fliers from New Zealand, Australia, Canada, South Africa, Rhodesia, Belgium, France, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and even the USA, threw in with the Royal Air Force. As the Imperial War Museum explains:

Germany’s failure to defeat the RAF and secure control of the skies over southern England made invasion all but impossible. British victory in the Battle of Britain was decisive, but ultimately defensive in nature – in avoiding defeat, Britain secured one of its most significant victories of the Second World War. It was able to stay in the war and lived to fight another day.

In the style of John Lennon, “imagine” if the American president had been sending millions of dollars in cash to the Nazi regime. Imagine if the American president told Churchill to back off his military campaigns. Imagine if the American president and prominent senators had called for an election to remove Winston Churchill, and so on. Had such moves taken place, England might not have lived on to fight another day. The parallels are lost on Joe Biden, who in a 2020 debate said “Hitler invaded Europe,” like something from the drunk at the end of the bar.

As Scott notes, Biden and his brain trust “support the survival of Hamas,” genocidal maniacs pushing for a second Holocaust. The History of Jihad author Robert Spencer has thoughts on what this might mean for America:

What do Biden regime apparatchiks think will happen if Hamas defeats Israel and survives this war? Do they think that the jihadis will be so overflowing with gratitude to the U.S. that they won’t ever strike Americans or U.S. interests? They’re in for a rude surprise.

☑ ☆ ✇ Power LinePower Line

A personal note on the Ides of March

By: Scott Johnson — March 15th 2024 at 06:02
(Scott Johnson)

I ask readers to forgive me for repeating this personal note from last year. It is meant to pay tribute to my high school, my high school teachers — Latin teachers Lyman Hawbaker (who also taught ancient history) and Dave Sims in particular — and to my classmates. In the course of our high school years we were required to study Latin and dip our toes into Caesars’s Gallic Wars, among other things. We learned something about grammar, rhetoric, Rome, and English in the process. In English we read Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar and (I think) Thornton Wilder’s The Ides of March.

I was a member of the St. Paul Academy High School Bowl team during my junior and senior years. By unanimous consent Chuck Berde was captain of the team. Chuck went on to get M.D./Ph.D. degrees from Stanford and more or less invent the medical specialty of pediatric pain relief. Chuck is Senior Associate in Perioperative Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine at Boston Children’s and Professor of Anesthesia (Pediatrics) at Harvard Medical School. In high school Chuck was also a good athlete and musician who somehow found time to play in a rock band with Steve Greenberg. Steve went on to write and produce “Funkytown,” the record that reached number 1 on charts around the world in 1980.

John Fitzpatrick and Jim Vose were the other members of the team. John is the Director Emeritus of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Jim is a retired Minneapolis attorney. We were all friends. Below is a photo of us in our final appearance on the High School Bowl program. University of Minnesota Professor of Classical and Near Eastern Studies Robert Sonkowsky was the High School Bowl referee. He had to cool things down in case fights broke out. That is Professor Sonkowsky with his hand on my shoulder. I would like to say I was so much older then, but will leave it to Bob Dylan at this point.

In our last go-round during our senior year we won three weeks in a row and retired undefeated. In the third week we faced off against Hopkins High School. Chuck was good at everything, but he excelled in math and science. One of the questions our last week required knowledge of several scientific numbers and the performance of arithmetic operations on them to produce another number. What famous event occurred in that year? Without missing a beat, and I mean instantly, Chuck answered: “The assassination of Julius Caesar.”

☑ ☆ ✇ Power LinePower Line

Don’t RIP, Karl

By: John Hinderaker — March 14th 2024 at 20:04
(John Hinderaker)

Via InstaPundit, I learn that Karl Marx died on this day in 1883. I concur with Glenn Reynolds’ suggestion that March 14 should therefore be a holiday:

Marx performed the difficult feat of being wrong about everything. Most people are right about some things and wrong about others; the law of averages sets in. But if you are an ideologue, like Marx, and if your ideology is stupid, you can be wrong across the board. Marx’s historical analyses were either recycled conventional wisdom or wildly off the mark. He knew nothing about economics, which is why his labor theory of value–the lynchpin of his entire philosophy–is absurd. (Even Marx recognized that; he never finished the key section of Capital, leaving that inglorious task to Engels.) And he pontificated endlessly about workers and the means of production, without even once, as far as is known, setting foot in a factory.

Marx survives in historical memory for two reasons. First, hardly anyone has actually read Capital or his lesser works. Even a person of moderate intelligence could hardly do so without recognizing their foolishness. Second, Marx’s philosophy has served as a pretext for sadists to seize control of governments around the globe. Which is exactly what Marx intended.

Marx was a bad man, equally so in his private and public lives. He should be remembered only as an exemplar of how much damage a single-minded and hate-filled man can do.

☑ ☆ ✇ Power LinePower Line

2024 plus 1972 Equals?

By: Lloyd Billingsley — March 5th 2024 at 22:32
(Lloyd Billingsley)

As Steve notes, Joe Biden can’t even handle his cue cards and calls to dump the Delaware Democrat are surging by the day. That recalls events from the summer of 1972, another crucial election year.

The incumbent president was Richard Nixon, hated by the left for his role in exposing Stalinist spy Alger Hiss (see Perjury: The Hiss-Chambers Case). In 1972, the Soviet Union still controlled Eastern Europe under the Brezhnev Doctrine. For the American left, defense of the USSR was the primary task and in 1972 they had the candidate they wanted.

After WWII, George McGovern opposed President Truman’s “aggressive anti-Soviet policy,” which he considered “dangerous.” In 1948 McGovern supported Henry Wallace and the Progressive Party, a front for the Communist Party. In 1972, McGovern’s position on “arms control” was essentially the same as the Soviets. America is to blame for the Cold War, McGovern believed, so the Soviets must arm and America must limit.

Nixon retained vice president Spiro Agnew, former governor of Maryland. McGovern picked Sen. Thomas Eagleton, a Harvard law grad and devout Catholic who opposed abortion and the war in Vietnam. McGovern backed Eagleton “1000 percent,” but then came an anonymous call.

On three occasions during the 1960s, Eagleton had been hospitalized for depression and undergone electroshock treatment. After only 18 days, McGovern dumped Eagleton for Eunice Kennedy’s husband Sargent Shriver, who had never run for office. Nixon bagged 60.7 percent of the popular vote to McGovern’s 37.5 and in the electoral college Nixon topped McGovern 520-17. The South Dakota Democrat carried only Massachusetts and the District of Columbia.

“McGovern would have lost anyway to an incumbent Nixon,” notes Victor Davis Hanson, “but the margin of defeat in one of the greatest landslides in presidential history was often attributable to the sheer chaos of changing a vice presidential candidate so late in the campaign.”

In 2024, with chaos on every hand, Democrats seek to dump the addled Biden. As this plays out, Kamala Harris proves capable of rivaling Biden in sheer incoherence. As Trump likes to say, we’ll have to see what happens.

☑ ☆ ✇ Power LinePower Line

Happy Death Day, You Miserable Son of a Bitch

By: John Hinderaker — March 5th 2024 at 21:32
(John Hinderaker)

Josef Stalin died on this day in 1953. In his sleep; so, like Lenin, Mao and Castro, and unlike Hitler, Mussolini and Ceausescu, he never paid a price for his crimes. The Victims of Communism remember:

Stalin died on this day in 1953.

He left behind a legacy of terror, famine, and mass murder.

Remember the victims. pic.twitter.com/HUBBYUZMwh

— Victims of Communism (@VoCommunism) March 5, 2024


Stalin ranks second only to Mao among history’s worst mass murderers. Those who knew him best understood how evil he was: his wife committed suicide and his daughter defected to America. Stalin’s malignant legacy lives on, as Russia has never fully emerged from his dark shadow. It is unfortunate that he wasn’t strung up like Mussolini or shot like Ceausescu. At this point, all we can do is revile him.

☑ ☆ ✇ Power LinePower Line

When Ronnie Met Jeane

By: Lloyd Billingsley — February 23rd 2024 at 12:10
(Lloyd Billingsley)

Lifelong Democrat Jeane J. Kirkpatrick came to the attention of former Democrat Ronald Reagan though her 1979 Commentary essay “Dictatorships and Double Standards.” As America’s future UN ambassador contended:

The failure of the Carter administration’s foreign policy is now clear to everyone except its architects.

The pattern is familiar enough: an established autocracy with a record of friendship with the U.S. is attacked by insurgents, some of whose leaders have long ties to the Communist movement, and most of whose arms are of Soviet, Chinese, or Czechoslovak origin. The “Marxist” presence is ignored and/or minimized by American officials and by the elite media on the ground that U.S. sup- port for the dictator gives the rebels little choice but to seek aid “elsewhere.”

Our “commitment to the promotion of constructive change worldwide” (Brzezinski’s words) has been vouchsafed in every conceivable context. But there is a problem. The conceivable contexts turn out to be mainly those in which non-Communist autocracies are under pressure from revolutionary guerrillas. Since Moscow is the aggressive, expansionist power today, it is more often than not insurgents, encouraged and armed by the Soviet Union, who challenge the status quo. The American commitment to “change” in the abstract ends up by aligning us tacitly with Soviet clients and irresponsible extremists like the Ayatollah Khomeini or, in the end, Yasir Arafat.

So far, assisting “change” has not led the Carter administration to undertake the destabilization of a Communist country. The principles of self-determination and nonintervention are thus both selectively applied.

 Carter’s doctrine of national interest and modernization encourages support for all change that takes place in the name of “the people,” regardless of its “superficial” Marxist or anti-American content.

Surely it is now beyond reasonable doubt that the present governments of Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos are much more repressive than those of the despised previous rulers; that the government of the People’s Republic of China is more repressive than that of Taiwan, that North Korea is more repressive than South Korea, and so forth.

Groups which define themselves as enemies should be treated as enemies. The United States is not in fact a racist, colonial power, it does not practice genocide, it does not threaten world peace with expansionist activities. . . . We have also moved further, faster, in eliminating domestic racism than any multiracial society in the world or in history.

No more is it necessary or appropriate to support vocal enemies of the United States because they invoke the rhetoric of popular liberation. It is not even necessary or appropriate for our leaders to forswear unilaterally the use of military force to counter military force. Liberal idealism need not be identical with masochism, and need not be incompatible with the defense of freedom and the national interest.

That probably got by Sen. Joe Biden. As Mark Bowden (Black Hawk Down) noted in 2010, the Delaware Democrat “makes few references to books and learned influences.” In 2024, to paraphrase ambassador Kirkpatrick, the failure of the Biden administration is now clear even to its architects.

☑ ☆ ✇ Jihad Watch

Video: Hatun Tash and Robert Spencer on the Spread of Islam from the Umayyads to Ottomans, 661 to 1453

By: Robert Spencer — March 27th 2023 at 17:00
Video: Hatun Tash and Robert Spencer on the Spread of Islam from the Umayyads to Ottomans, 661 to 1453
Friday. Get The History of Jihad From Muhammad to ISIS here.
☑ ☆ ✇ Jihad Watch

UN top dog António Guterres: ‘For well over a millennium, Islam’s message of peace has inspired people’

By: Robert Spencer — March 15th 2023 at 16:00
UN top dog António Guterres: ‘For well over a millennium, Islam’s message of peace has inspired people’
For the reality of the fourteen centuries of Islam, see here. It would have been refreshing if Guterres had read out a bit more of Surah Al-Tawbah of the Qur’an, such as these verses: “Then, when the sacred months have passed, kill the idolaters wherever you find them, and take them, and besiege them, and […]
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