Chamblee54

Underwear Veggie

Posted in Poem by chamblee54 on May 13, 2016

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Winston Churchill Said What

Posted in History, Library of Congress, Quotes by chamblee54 on May 13, 2016

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Another ghastly meme has surfaced on facebook. It has a large fuchsia quote mark for illustration. There is a quote from a famous man. The left side has a quote mark. The right side has a question mark, but no quote mark. The margins are much larger on the top, and left side, than on the right side, and the bottom. That this visual atrocity supports funding for the arts is a cruel irony.

Perhaps instead of the arts, the government funding should go for fact checking. The quote is generally considered to be bogus. For the record, here is the quote. “When Winston Churchill was asked to cut arts funding in favour of the war effort, he simply replied, “then what are we fighting for?” The quote is not in the Churchill archive, which is either fifteen million documents, or fifteen million words. The authorities use the figures interchangeably.

The Telegraph has an article debunking the meme. It has a splendid sentence: “But that anecdote does not so easily play into the screeching rhetoric of today’s 140-character political ding-dongs.” There are also some lovely quotes from Mr. Churchill.

pink quote marks01 In 1937, Mr. Churchill spoke before the Peel Commission It was discussing “partitioning British mandated Palestine into Arab and Jewish states.” At the time, Mr. Churchill was a minor figure in British politics, disgraced by his blundering in the Great War. The quote: “I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the manger even though he may have lain there for a very long time. I do not admit that right. I do not admit for instance, that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way, has come in and taken their place.”

Winston Churchill is quite the quote magnet. This is somehow fitting for a man whose most famous speech was read, on the radio, by an actor. There is a page on the internet devoted to times when he was falsely accused of saying something inspiring.

One of these stories is notable. “The only traditions of the Royal Navy are rum, sodomy and the lash… Churchill’s assistant, Anthony Montague-Browne said that although Churchill had not uttered these words, he wished he had.” This is a repost, with pictures from The Library of Congress.

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Backstreet Authority

Posted in Poem by chamblee54 on May 12, 2016

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Marilyn Monroe Sashays Tonight

Posted in Poem by chamblee54 on May 11, 2016

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Changing The Flag

Posted in Georgia History, GSU photo archive, Politics by chamblee54 on May 10, 2016

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This is a repost, with pictures from “The Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library”. It was written in first person. The issue discussed has mostly faded away, except for a few hardcore cranks. Politicians have found new issues to distract voters when they want to make crooked deals. These things too shall pass away.

In 1994 I was working in downtown Atlanta. I represented my company in a customer’s office, and there was often time with nothing to do. At the very least, there was no time clock. Lunch could slip into overtime with few consequences.

There was an issue in the news in 1994, along with some claims that I did not believe. This issue was whether, or not, to change the state flag. One day, I went to the library, and sat down with the microfilms of the Atlanta Constitution (Covers Dixie Like the Dew) for the Winter of 1956.

One of the fun things about doing research is the things you were not looking for. Elvis Presley made a personal appearance at the Fox Theater. Atlanta Blue opened a facility on West Peachtree Street. There was speculation about whether Dwight Eisenhower would have a different Vice President in the next election. Mr. President had a heart attack in 1955. Many did not want Richard Nixon to be Vice President. 1994 was 20 years after Mr. Nixon resigned the Presidency in disgrace. You wonder how things might have been different if Mr. Eisenhower found a new Vice President.

1956 was two years after Brown vs. The Board of Education, and many were concerned about school desegregation. A bill was proposed in the legislature to make it a felony to advocate integration.

The Governor at the time was Marvin Griffin. Georgia Tech played Pittsburgh in the Sugar Bowl that year, in spite of the fact that Pittsburgh had a black player. The Governor strongly objected, but was overruled. The game was played without incident.

The State of Georgia changed the state flag that year. The new flag had the state seal on a blue stripe next to the St. Andrews Cross, the battle flag of the Confederate States of America.

In 1994 many wanted to change that flag. Some said that it was a symbol of slavery and oppression; others said it was a reminder of battlefield valor. A native southerner, I could appreciate both points of view. I was neutral regarding a change of the flag.

One thing that I did not understand was an argument made for changing the flag. The line in those days…first expressed by Governor Zell Miller and endlessly repeated by the local fishwrapper media … was that the flag had been changed as a protest against desegregation.

I did not believe that for a minute. The legislature in 1956 was not that smart. They were a bunch of white males who were, with a few exceptions, racist, alcoholic crooks. If someone had suggested a flag change as a stand of defiance against desegregation, they might have thought it a good idea, but I somehow doubt that anyone thought like that. This was 1956. The sixties, where protest became the new national pastime, were a few years away.

After a few minutes of searching through the department store ads and sports pages, I found what I was looking for…. the article announcing the flag change. There was no mention of a protest against desegregation. They announced it as a way of honoring the Confederacy. This is in keeping with the times. Georgia in 1956 was still recovering from the War, and the Cult of Honoring the Confederacy was strong. Fergit Hell!

The flag was eventually changed during the administration of Governor Roy Barnes. The new flag was even uglier than the old one, which I did not think was possible. Sonny Perdue defeated Mr. Barnes in his bid for reelection, in no small part because he proposed a referendum on the flag. He forgot this promise as soon as he got into office, but the flag was changed once again.

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Another Roadside Attraction Part Two

Posted in Book Reports, GSU photo archive by chamblee54 on May 9, 2016

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This is the second, and final, part of a chamblee54 book report on Another Roadside Attraction, by Thomas Eugene Robbins. The book is due back at the chamblee library today. There are two possible reasons to hurry up, and finish reading the book. A overdue fine from the local library is less of a burden than a failing grade. The effect can be the same… not stopping to smell the verbal roses, but shovelling the animal product that facilitates growth. FWIW, part one is available for your perusal. Pictures today are from “The Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library”.

The first note is page 177. John Paul Ziller, and his wife Amanda, decline to get drunk. They consider alcohol to be an imperfect drug. This is a line that PG remembers from the 1978 reading of ARA. What was forgotten was Marx Marvelous, the narrator of the tale. He proceeds to get sloshed, and quotes Bertrand Russell: there is little difference between a man who eats too little and sees heaven, and a man who drinks too much and sees snakes.

Amanda replies that one of the men sees snakes. She says a lot of things in ARA. It is probably quite charming in person, especially when one is warm for her form. In the text, forty five years later, it can be rather annoying. On page 336, Marx Marvelous learns two things about Amanda: she loves him deeply, and it totally indifferent as to whether, or not, she sees him again. The concept of sexist condescention, germinating when ARA was written, has come to politically correct fruition in the age of Obama. If one is of the mind to do so, they could judge ARA harshly for this.

There is an order of renegade monks down the road from the Zillers. An associate, Plucky Purcell (more formally known as L. Westminister Purcell III) is a visitor at this facility. This residency is a marvel of totally unbelievable fiction, and is essential to the plot of ARA. The monks are a Vatican hit squad, and Purcell fits right in. In a stroke of impossible to forsee synchronicity, two *good* nuns stop by for a visit. They are Sister Elizabeth and Sister Hillary. They make two appearances… on page 183 and page 283. Amanda decides it is nun of her business.

The Zillers have a roadside zoo, and hot dog stand. It does not sell coffee, which is disappointing to many road warriors. “they stop for coffee, and feel cheated when they learn the meaning of meaning.” PG first heard the phrase “meaning of meaning” in an eleventh grade history class. It was presided over by a basketball coach, who was not interested in the dribbles and shoots of wars and civilizations. For the first test, “Dudley Doo Right” asked the class to write three pages on the meaning of meaning.

As second time readers know, the essential character in ARA is the body of Jesus. It was in the Vatican, until Plucky Purcell found it, and brought it to the Ziller’s hot dog stand. In this edition of ARA, the mummified savior appears on page 222. This is one third of the anti christ. There is something cosmic about a dead Jesus having a numeric value equal to one third of beelzebub. Or maybe it is merely comic, and the author had an extra s that he had to use before the expiration date.

One of the joys of google era reading is easy access to fact checking. (The proposed french word for google was a palindrome, googelegoog.) On page 280, TER reports that Carmen Miranda wore size one shoes. The page wikiFeet for Maria do Carmo Miranda da Cunha has pictures, which appear to be larger than size one. The Celebrity Shoe Size List has Carmen Electra (size 7) and Carmen Kass (size 8.5,) but no Carmen Miranda. PG thinks the diva detail to be an apparition of overactive imagination.

As ARA rambles on to the uplifting conclusion, a council of war is convened in the hot dog stand. The Zillers, Plucky Purcell, Marx Marvelous, and Mon Cul (John Paul Ziller’s pet baboon) try to decide what to do with the holy remains, known by now as “the corpse.” On page 290, there is a typo, unless “insited” is a scrabble approved word. On page 288, someone is called “utopianist.” This may reefer refer to utopia. A more whimsical vision sees a keyboard musician working for the United Thank Offering. Those Episcopals think of everything.

There are several sides in this debate. Amanda takes the historic approach, and washes her pretty hands of the corpse. Pontius Pilate hands her a bar of soap. Plucky Purcell wants to publicly display the corpse, with the idea of destrying the Catholic church. Marx Marvelous says that lots of Catholics are good people, and telling them that Jesus is dead would hurt their fee fees. Sister Elizabeth, and Sister Hillary, are used as examples.

In truth, the fictional debate has been rendered moot in the post Nixon, but not post racial, world. The Catholic church soldiers on. The revelation that *some* priests like to forcibly sodomize pre adolescent boys has barely mattered to the masses. The church has taken a (catho) licking, and kept on ticking. Co-dependent Protestantism does even better.

Page 290 was where PG had to throw down the book in disgust. Plucky Purcell, backing down from his plan to destroy the church, admits that *Jesus* was a pretty good guy after all. Never mind that the story he quotes is from the Bible… written by hundreds of anonymous authors, hand copied by anonymous scribes, compiled and edited by the Romanized church, translated by a queer English king. How can you trust a book like that? And yet, the PR of Jesus persists. Even the most vicious critics of the modern Jesus worship church have a soft spot for the old boy.

One *page 69,* John Paul Ziller warns against anthromorphizing, or assigning human emotions to non-human animals. And yet, 222 pages later, the text anthromorphizes the cult of Jesus. It must work, because the conclusion of ARA leaves the Roman Pedophile Church intact.

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Human Decency Standards

Posted in GSU photo archive, Undogegorized by chamblee54 on May 9, 2016

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Barack Obama was an obscure state senator when the babylon war was approved he did not have to answer to big money yet ~ Wasn’t the WHCD black tie? the alleged comedian did not know this ~ the n wordage was the funniest thing an alleged comedian said, at a black tie dinner where he was out of costume ~ put the con back in conservative ~ maybe it is the white half of bho that enjoys the n word ~ 50% Unusual, 50% Normal Throughout the course of your life, you’ve managed to maintain a steady balance between your weird side and your traditional side. You’re able to color outside the lines, while also knowing when to tone down the weirdness and be appropriate. You’re savvy in social situations and have the ability to feel out the crowd before saying anything unusual or bizarre. It would be nice if more people knew how to do this as well as you do! ~ Enter your email and I’ll send you my latest stories. and only that. and love of course! ~ This video is not accurate. It also does not say why Caucasian came to be the formal word for the “white” race. ~ With the Rethuglican race settled, there is a possibility of opposition party mischief. ~ You live on the parade route. To avoid pride, you will need to leave town. I have to travel into town. It is much easier for me to avoid the circus. ~ Got robo call from “Catherine Matthews” of a pro life committee. I was trying to take notes, and missed some of what the machine said. She asked if I was against abortion, or pro life, or opposed to abortion, or pro choice. I said I don’t know. She said thank you for your time and hung up. ~ being honest may not get you a lot of friends but it’ll always get you the right ones ~ @WernerTwertzog Youth is wasted on the stupid. ~ @piersmorgan Oh but you will, @Salon – you need me to get your clicks up. Can someone tell Mr. Morgan that lower case c, next to lower case l, looks very much like lower case d. ~ If I get started talking, I might never stop. Sometimes clicking “like” will have to do. ~
Medical error and inappropriate medication (including alcohol and drugs) is a “pro life” issue ~ This story was told on tell the bartender This man pays some people to kill his wife. The man is a cheapskate, and doesn’t make the final payment. The would be killers abducted his wife, told her what was going on, and let her go. The woman showed up at her own funeral. ~ I suspect the person who blocked you is not a member of the ruling class. The one percent know how freedom of speech works. You can say anything you want. Nobody listens. The ruling class does what it is going to do. ~ #ScareSomebodyIn4Words Hillary Diane Rodham Clinton ~ Here are two more twitterbugs Urethra Pistolwhip @RoddKlever Youtuber. Blogger. Bottomist. Transformerphile. Visual Artist. Lover. Partner. ProLBGTQ. ProBLK. ~ Diatonic Dissonance @urbangaygriot #NSFW Lover of Music and People… Candid, Sexual, Raunchy, and Intellectual. Professional Musician and Educator. LGBT and Social Service Advocate ~ ‏@chamblee54 @urbangaygriot sober since January 1, 1989 it is the only thing I have ever done right ~ ~ The first page of google does not show a source for this quote. The graphics are pretty, though. ~crude or profane language five s-words close to ten uses of h— six of a– two each of b–ch and d–n g-d’s name is abused at least ten times twice with d–n jesus’ name is abused once ~ We hope this review was both interesting and useful. Please share it with family and friends who would benefit from it as well. ~ those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities ~ before you do something mean to someone, remember that it is a .27% chance that today is their birthday ~ Aren’t you smart – you’ve found a word that is only available in the Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary. To view the full definition of parapraxia, activate your free trial today. ~ @WernerTwertzog I am not smart enough. I am not good enough. No one likes me. But I endure. #DailyAffirmations ~ which bathroom does #anncoulter use? ~ @McGrath_VII @ChrisRGun why use an expression in english to describe people who speak spanish? ~ @jaketapper If you see someone on a plane doing math and you’re wondering what his true intentions are, go ahead and axiom. ~ 1- @mbsycamore googled gluck, but made mistake, found this: Apr 10, 2012 – An owner of an Arlington strip club was charged Tuesday with 2-@mbsycamore trying to hire a hit man to kill Arlington Mayor Robert Cluck and a city attorney … ~ thank you… the person that told me that is someone i used to talk to on the phone all the time, and saw in person maybe a dozen times… lots of opinions, lots of inside information, and i always suspected that he was full of shit, but it was fun to hear him run his mouth… i haven’t seen him in years and years he was moving to new york the last time i talked to him, so who knows… i have tried to catch up with him on the internet but am hampered by the fact that i never really knew his real name ~ @pooroldkilgore I feel bad for people who rely heavily on comforting lies ~ @natsecHeather @dandrezner DD said Trump, GOP foreign policy thinking & human decency standards in same sentence ~ The revised comment section is intended for intellectual discussions over symmetry and aesthetics. Vulgar, hateful or sexually explicit comments have no place on this site. In short – stay classy ;) ~ some trite inspirational quote ~ 7 worst quotes GET YOUR FREE BOOKS Enter your details below to receive four free books to help you start living better today. ~ Genocide of the brain, the vile word that will not die and why Obama deserves better than to be called n***** by anyone ~ When Larry Wilmore said the N-word to President Obama, I felt black pride ~ The White House Says Larry Wilmore’s Use of the N-Word Was Totally Chill ~ Wilmore Whiffs at WH Correspondents Dinner as Sharpton Condemns Calling Obama the N-Word ~ The Taboo Larry Wilmore Broke ~ be in honest ~ meme ~ john did not say that ~ Researchers: Medical errors now third leading cause of death in United States ~ Black Female Employee Drops Bombshell About Trump ~ @miragonz becky with the gross and confusing hair ~ Lynne Patton “The Trump Family That I Know” – A Black Female Trump Executive Speaks ~ Find What You ~ Love and ~ Let it Kill You ~ tell the bartender ~ Anonymous takes down Black Lives Matter website to make point that ‘All Lives Matter’ ~ you can’t get rich in politics unless you are a crook ~ captain america ~ mistakes ~ How some national media called a Louisiana sheriff racist over incomplete information ~ The Big Questions ~ Walpurgis 2016 ~ just ice ~ 6 Signs Your Call-Out Isn’t Actually About Accountability ~ What Killer Mike Got Wrong About My Bernie Sanders Confrontation ~ LONG, SLOW BURN: PASSING JUDGEMENT ON THE ENDLESS PARTY. ~ Where Poetry Meets LGBTQ Youth Homelessness ~ Pictures today are from “The Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library”. ~ selah

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Indulgent Insufferable

Posted in Poem by chamblee54 on May 8, 2016

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Jean D. McKinnon

Posted in Georgia History, Holidays by chamblee54 on May 8, 2016

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The first picture in this episode is a family portrait of the Quin family in Washington Georgia. The nine surviving children of Hugh Pharr Quin are sitting for the camera. Mr. Quin had joined the Georgia State Troops of the Army of the Confederacy at the age of 16, and after the war went to Washington to live with his sister. Mr. Quin was in the church choir of the First Methodist Church when he met the organist, Betty Lou DuBose. They were married January 22, 1879.
The original name of Mrs. Quin was Louisa Toombs DuBose. She was the daughter of James Rembert DuBose. His brother in law was Robert Toombs, the Secretary of State of the Confederacy, and a man of whom many stories are told.
In this picture, Mrs. Quin is holding the hand of her second youngest daughter so she will not run away. This is Mattie Vance Quin. She is my grandmother.
After the Great War, Mattie Vance Quin was living in Memphis Tennessee, where she met Arthur Dunaway. Mr. Dunaway was a veteran of the war, and was from Paragould, Arkansas. On July 23, 1922 her first Daughter, Jean, was born. This is my mother.
Mr. Dunaway died in 1930, shortly after the birth of his son Arthur. There were hard times and upheaval after this, with the family settling in Atlanta. There her third child Helen Ann Moffat was born on December 12, 1933. This is my Aunt Helen and my mother’s best friend.

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Jean lived for many years with her mother and sister at 939 Piedmont, among other locations. She joined the First Baptist Church and sang in the choir. She got a job with the C&S bank, and was working at the Tenth Street Branch when she met Luther McKinnon. He was a native of Rowland, North Carolina. They were married October 6, 1951.
They moved into the Skyland Apartments, which in those days was out in the country. Mom told a story about Dad taking her home from Choir practice, and going home on the two lane Buford Hiway. There was a man who went to the restaurants to get scraps to feed his pigs, and his truck was always in front of them. This was a serious matter in the summer without air conditioning.
Soon, they moved into a house, and Luther junior was born on May 6, 1954. This is me. Malcolm was born May 10, 1956, which did it for the children.
The fifties were spent on Wimberly Road, a street of always pregnant women just outside Brookhaven. It was a great place to be a little kid.
In 1960, we moved to Parkridge Drive, to the house where my brother and I stay today. The note payment was $88 a month. Ashford Park School is a short walk away…the lady who sold us the house said ” you slap you kid on the fanny and he is at school”.
In 1962, our family followed the choir director from First Baptist to Briarcliff Baptist, which is where my parents remained.
In 1964, Mom went back to work. She ran the drive in window at Lenox Square for the Trust Company of Georgia until it was time to retire. She became a talk radio fan when RING radio started, and was a friend of her customer Ludlow Porch. She gave dog biscuits to customers with dogs.
During this era of change, Mom taught me that all people were good people, be they black or white. This was rare in the south. She later became disgusted with the War in Vietnam, and liked to quote a man she heard on the radio. “How will we get out of Vietnam?”” By ship and by plane”.
Eventually, it was time to retire. Her and Dad did the requisite traveling, until Dad got sick and passed away February 7,1992. Mom stuck around for a few more years, until her time came December 18, 1998. This is a repost.

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My Bad

Posted in Poem by chamblee54 on May 7, 2016

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May 6

Posted in Uncategorized by chamblee54 on May 6, 2016

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May 6is a day in spring, with 35% of the year gone by. It has it’s fair share of history, some of which did not turn out well. In 1861, the Confederate Congress declared war on the United States. In 1937, a German zeppelin named “Hindenburg” exploded while trying to land in New Jersey. In 1940, Bob Hope did his first show for the USO, somewhere in California.

Roger Bannister ran the first sub four minute mile, on May 6,1954. The current record is 3:43.13 by Hicham El Guerrouj on July 7, 1999, with a party with Prince to celebrate. Since most track meets now use 1500 meters, the mile record is more or less obsolete.

On this day, Georgia executed two notable prisoners. In 2003, Carl Isaacs was put to death. Mr. Isaacs was the ringleader in the 1973 Alday family killing, in Donalsonville GA. Five years later, in 2008, William Earl Lynd was poisoned by the state. This was the first condemned man to die after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that execution by poisoning was constitutional.

Taurus is the sign for those whose blood starts to pump May 6. Included are:
Maximilien Robespierre (1758) Sigmund Freud (1856) Rudolph Valentino (1895)
Orson Welles (1915) Willie Mays (1931) Rubin Carter (1937)
Bob Seger (1945) Tony Blair (1953) PG (1954) George Clooney(1961)
To make room for these folks, someone has to die. For May 6 this would mean:
Henry David Thoreau (1862) L. Frank Baum (1919) Marlene Dietrich (1992)
This repost, written like H.P. Lovecraft, has pictures from The Library of Congress.

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Crude Or Profane Language

Posted in Uncategorized by chamblee54 on May 6, 2016

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