Monthly Archives: April 2018
Today in History – April 30
311 AD – The Diocletianic Persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire ends.
In 303, the Emperors Diocletian, Maximian, Galerius and Constantius issued a series of edicts rescinding the legal rights of Christians and demanding that they comply with traditional Roman religious practices. Later edicts targeted the clergy and demanded universal sacrifice, ordering all inhabitants to sacrifice to the gods.
If the Left thought they could get away with it, they’d to this today.
1789 – On the balcony of Federal Hall on Wall Street in New York City, George Washington takes the oath of office to become the first elected President of the United States. See? See??!! That’s where the country went wrong! The first president was sworn in on WALL STREET!!!! {/moonbat}
1803 – Louisiana Purchase: The United States purchases the Louisiana Territory from France for $15 million, more than doubling the size of the young nation. Down side? This is where we get New Orleans, bringing the worst of France into the nation.
1812 – The Territory of Orleans becomes the 18th U.S. state under the name Louisiana.
1863 – A 65-man French Foreign Legion infantry patrol fights a force of nearly 2,000 Mexican soldiers to nearly the last man in Hacienda Camarón, Mexico. The Legionaires take a butt-kicking in a brave and public fashion and the day is still celebrated by the Foreign Legion. This would be roughly equivalent to the Seventh Cavalry celebrating Little Big Horn Day.
1897 – J. J. Thomson of the Cavendish Laboratory announces his discovery of the electron as a subatomic particle, over 1,800 times smaller than a proton (in the atomic nucleus), at a lecture at the Royal Institution in London. Since then, we electrical folks have identified the homoton, a gay electron that runs around blowing fuses.
1900 – Casey Jones dies in a train wreck in Vaughn, Mississippi, while trying to make up time on the Cannonball Express.
1938 – The animated cartoon short Porky’s Hare Hunt debuts in movie theaters, introducing Happy Rabbit, who would evolve into Bugs Bunny, my favorite of all animated characters.
1945 – World War II: Fuehrerbunker: Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun commit suicide after being married for one day. Soviet soldiers raise the Victory Banner over the Reichstag building.
1957 – Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery entered into force in a typically toothless UN move. It is ignored in many Muslim nations.
1975 – Fall of Saigon: Communist forces gain control of Saigon. The Vietnam War formally ends with the unconditional surrender of South Vietnamese president Duong Van Minh. With the demise of the evil south Vietnamese government, Vietnam can get on with “Giving Peace a Chance”, refugees of which have provided a new ethnic enrichment to America. Thousands who couldn’t get out died in ‘re-education’ camps. Other thousands died by drowning as they tried to escape in overloaded boats.
1993 – The World Wide Web is born at CERN. Al Gore curiously absent.
Name Game Nope
Beautiful day. No birth announcements in the paper, though.
Today in History – April 29
1553 – Flemish woman introduces practice of starching linen into England.
1587 – Francis Drake leads a raid in the Bay of Cádiz, sinking at least 23 ships of the Spanish fleet. Today he’d be sitting onshore in “Merrie Olde England” sipping beer out of a plastic mug, his fleet sold for scrap, and hoping that the government could convince the UN to send a sternly worded letter…
1882 – The “Elektromote” – forerunner of the trolleybus – is tested by Ernst Werner von Siemens in Berlin. There’s that “S-word” that has caused me such heartache in recent years.
1945 – The Dachau concentration camp is liberated by United States troops. War! – What is it good for?
1965 – Pakistan’s Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO) successfully launches its seventh rocket in its Rehber series. Oddly enough, one of its design specifications is the ability land a payload in downtown New Delhi.
1992 – Los Angeles riots: Riots in Los Angeles, California, following the acquittal of police officers charged with excessive force in the beating of Rodney King. Over the next three days 53 people are killed and hundreds of buildings are destroyed. Korean shopkeepers arm themselves to protect their own lives and property when the police fail to provide services.
2002 – The United States is re-elected to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, one year after losing the seat that it had held for 50 years. A commission on human rights at the UN carries about the same logic as a symposium on chastity at a whorehouse.
2004 – Oldsmobile builds its final car ending 107 years of production. Now it’s Pontiac, Hummer and Saturn’s turn. 2011 – they’re history.
Food for Thought – 28 April 2018
Saturday Song #238
From a time when songs told stories –
Roger Whittaker with The Last Farewell:
Today in History – April 28
1789 – Mutiny on the Bounty, Captain William Bligh and 18 sailors are set adrift and the rebel crew returns to Tahiti briefly and then sets sail for Pitcairn Island.
1862 – American Civil War: Admiral David Farragut captures New Orleans, Louisiana. The Feds have been taking care of the place ever since…
1944 – World War II: Nine German E-boats attacked US and UK units during Exercise Tiger, the rehearsal for the Normandy landings, killing 946.
1945 – Benito Mussolini and his mistress Clara Petacci are executed by a firing squad consisting of members of the Italian resistance movement who became exceedingly brave once the Allies were on the peninsula and the Germans were on the run.
1947 – Thor Heyerdahl and five crew mates set out from Peru on the Kon-Tiki to prove that Peruvian natives could have settled Polynesia. I’ve read and re-read this story. It’s a classic tale of men against the sea.
1952 – Dwight D. Eisenhower resigns as Supreme Commander of NATO. He’s headed for the Presidency of the United States.
1969 – Charles de Gaulle resigns as President of France. This is akin to a fish losing its bicycle as the general who single-handledly won France back from Germany takes his well-deserved retirement.
1996 – In Tasmania, Australia, Martin Bryant goes on a shooting spree, killing 35 people and seriously injuring 21 more, resulting in draconian Australian gun laws that disarm the law-abiding. Crazy people, however, remain crazy, and criminals remain criminals.
Food for Thought – 27 April 2018
Today in History – April 27
1521 – Battle of Mactan: Explorer Ferdinand Magellan is killed by natives in the Philippines led by chief Lapu-Lapu. Magellan STILL gets credit for circumnavigating the world.
1749 – First performance of Handel’s Music for the Royal Fireworks in Green Park, London. Handel and fireworks? There’s only one thing better, this side of heaven.
1810 – Beethoven composes his famous piano piece, Für Elise. Who “Elise” was is uncertain, but we forever associate her with a delightful bit of music.
1813 – War of 1812: United States troops capture the capital of Ontario, York (present day Toronto, Canada). We gave it back. Shoulda kept it and let the Brits have New Orleans.
1865 – The steamboat Sultana, carrying 2,400 passengers, explodes and sinks in the Mississippi River, killing 1,700, most of whom were Union survivors of the Andersonville and Cahaba Prisons. More lives lost than the Titanic, but a boatload of millionaires is oh so much more photogenic than a boatload of smelly old soldiers.
1945 – World War II: Benito Mussolini is arrested by Italian partisans in Dongo, while attempting escape disguised as a German soldier.
1965 – RC Duncan patents “Pampers” disposable diaper. If you’ve never popped the lid on a container of yesterday’s dirty cloth diapers, you may never realize how big a step forward this product is…
1981 – Xerox PARC introduces the computer mouse. As one of my computer nut buddies tried to tell me, “That “mouse” thing and those little 3.5 disks are what makes the Macintosh a toy. REAL computers use DOS.” Today knowledge of a command line interface makes you either an ubergeek or a dinosaur (or both).
1987 – The U.S. Department of Justice bars Austrian President Kurt Waldheim from entering the United States, saying he had aided in the deportation and execution of thousands of Jews and others as a German Army officer during World War II. Now the entire Arab bloc of the UN actively supports the immolation of every Jew in Israel and that’s perfectly fine.
1994 – South African general election, 1994: The first democratic general election in South Africa, in which black citizens could vote. The Interim Constitution comes into force. This will make South Africa’s slide into the toilet like Zimbabwe all the more acceptable.
And it’s done…
So I was back out at the station this morning. Last night’s efforts went seriously off track when we discovered that the replacement bushings had ‘issues’.
You’d think that a company selling transformers and the parts for them would have the methodology for shipping those parts pretty well figured out.
You’d be wrong.
Shipped by the transformer manufacturer in THEIR box. Four of ’em. Marked ‘Fragile’. Two of them were chipped.
Now, if this was the middle of a stormy night and I was desperately trying to put the lights back on, I have techniques for dealing with the damage in that picture.
This ain’t that. We had time. We ordered NEW. We got crap. We did some finagling with two of the undamaged new ones and one of the old ones and we energized the transformer this afternoon.
Oh, and the leak? Two of ’em. One from a gasket issue, the other from this crack.
On a transformer that’s not yet three years old. The one sitting in the yard next to this one? That’s the one that blew up a year and a half ago. Same manufacturer. Matter of fact, this particular manufacturer built FIVE OF THE SIX transformers with which I’ve had issues. I am starting to develop a prejudice.
Food for Thought – 26 April 2018
Today in History – April 26
1607 – English colonists of the Jamestown settlement make landfall at Cape Henry, Virginia for the first British colony in North America.
1805 – That “shores of Tripoli” thing: United States Marines captured Derne, Tripoli under the command of First Lieutenant Presley O’Bannon. A freakin’ FIRST LIEUTENANT! Today we’d have to let the State Department petition the UN to get permission for us to even THINK about using harsh words. Back then, a lieutenant of Marines just goes ahead and takes the city. And we call this “progress”.
1933 – The Department of Homeland Security Gestapo, the official secret police force of Nazi Germany, is established.
1956 – SS Ideal X, the world’s first successful container ship, leaves Port Newark, New Jersey for Houston, Texas. She held 58 standard 33-foot containers. Now, 95% of the world’s non-bulk cargo goes in containers, and modern ships may carry 18,000 or more 20-foot containers.
1963 – In Libya, amendments to the constitution transform Libya (United Kingdom of Libya) into one national unity (Kingdom of Libya) and allows for female participation in elections. You can bet that after Barack and Hillary’s ‘Arab Spring’, the groups running the country now could give a damn about women voting. Or voting in general.
1970 – The Convention Establishing the World Intellectual Property Organization enters into force. The Red Chinese and Soviets ignore it.
1986 – A nuclear reactor accident occurs at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in the Soviet Union (now Ukraine), creating the world’s worst nuclear disaster. Comparing the Chernobyl reactors to the American version is like comparing apples to oranges, but every time you talk about nuclear power, the bunny-hugging left wants to bring up three-Mile Island (where the safeties worked) and Chernobyl, which didn’t have that same level of safety.
Somebody’s gotta do it…
Out of bed at 0600, breakfast of toasted Irish soda bread, buttered, with orange marmalade. Travel mug and half-liter thermos of coffee, and on the road to a nearby station to oversee repairs to a leaking transformer.
I’m not going to DO the work, I’m just going to observe, make sure things don’t go off-track, be a resource for ongoing education for our technicians at the site.
Sometimes I feel like a toddler’s teddy bear. HE needs me, even though it’s hardly likely that I perform an actual function.
So I sit and a watch and I talk, and I watch some more, then I drive home. Forty-five minutes, but there’s a Dairy Queen on the route and that means I treat myself to a chocolate malt for my diligence.
And I get to go back there tomorrow for MORE of this. (Click for the full-sized view)
All those people are on top of this little transformer because OSHA regulations require that we have rescue means employed when we have ‘confined space’ work. The manhole on top of the transformer is open, and if a worker ‘breaks the plane’ of the opening, he is, by definition, working in a ‘confined space’, so we have to bring in a safety contractor who deals with these situations.
We end up with FIVE people working in a 3×5-foot space that also has an open manhole and those three high voltage bushings. But we’re following regulations, so we’re absolutely safe, right?





















