Chamblee54

Trayvon Martin Judge

Posted in Library of Congress, Undogegorized by chamblee54 on August 8, 2020


Joe Rogan had a dandy show the other day. He featured two big dogs at the Innocence Project This description gives a few more details: “Josh Dubin is an Innocence Project Ambassador Advisor & President of Dubin Research and Consulting, Inc. He also hosts a podcast called “Wrongful Conviction: Junk Science.” Jason Flom is an Innocence Project Board Member, CEO of Lava Media, and host of “Wrongful Conviction with Jason Flom”

Innocence Project works with people who are in prison, and probably innocent. The show discussed some of the dirty tricks police use, like lying to suspects being interrogated. Questionable science is used, especially with bite marks, blood splatters, and arson investigation. The record of former prosecutor Kamala Harris drew sharp comments.

Clemente Aguirre-Jarquin gets special attention. A Honduran refugee, Mr. Aguirre-Jarquin was convicted of a gruesome murder. He was given the death penalty by the jury. After a while, the innocence of Mr. Aguirre-Jarquin became apparent. It is a powerful story.

Someone felt the need to embellish the story. The killing, and trial, was in Sanford FL. This is the town where Trayvon Martin was killed. There seems to be a connection between the two cases. “I find out that she (the judge in the Aguirre-Jarquin case) was the judge in the Trayvon Martin case, whose husband represented George Zimmerman, and wouldn’t recuse herself.”

PG had never heard this detail, and was curious. When the guest mentioned the judge for the third time, much later in the show, PG decided to do a bit of digging. First, you had to find out the name of the judge. Her name is Jessica Recksiedler. What role did she play in the George Zimmerman trial?

Associated Press April 18, 2012 ORLANDO, Fla — “The judge presiding over the Trayvon Martin shooting case has removed herself after George Zimmerman’s attorney said she had a possible conflict of interest. Florida Circuit Judge Jessica Recksiedler recused herself Wednesday because of a potential conflict that relates to her husband. He works with Orlando attorney Mark NeJame, who was first approached by Zimmerman’s family to represent the neighborhood watch volunteer. But NeJame declined and referred them to Mark O’Mara, who is now representing Zimmerman. NeJame has since been hired by CNN to comment on the case.”

Pictures today are from The Library of Congress.

Apple Pie

Posted in Poem by chamblee54 on August 7, 2020

Hiroshima 75 Years Later

Posted in History, Holidays, Library of Congress, War by chamblee54 on August 6, 2020

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At 8:15 am, August 6, 1945, Hiroshima got nuked. It was the start of a new era. Since Japan is 13 hours ahead of Georgia, and standard time was used, the literal anniversary is 8:15 pm, August 5.

Tsutomu Yamaguchi was working in Hiroshima when the bomb hit. He survived, and found a train to take hime to his home town, Nagasaki.

The device dropped on Hiroshima, the Little Boy, had an estimated force of 13 kilotons of Trinitrotoluene, or TNT. A kiloton of TNT is roughly a cube whose sides are ten meters. This device is fairly tiny compared to many of the warheads developed since. Many of the modern appliances are measured in megatons, or millions of tons of TNT. The Soviet Union had a bomb with a capacity of 50 megatons, or 4,000 times the size of the Little Boy.

The largest weapon tested by The United States is the Castle Bravo. This device destroyed Bikini Atoll in the Pacific. The two piece swimsuit was named for this island. The Castle Bravo device had a yield of 15 megatons of TNT. This is roughly 1,000 times the power of the Little Boy.

The decision to drop the bomb has long been controversial. There are a lot of factors and gray areas, and the issue does not lend itself to sound bite solutions. The conventional wisdom is that Japan surrendered because of the nuclear attack. This meant the war was shortened by at least a year, there was no invasion of Japan, and many lives were saved. PG is scared by the moral calculus involved in a decision like this….do 100,000 civilian deaths prevent the deaths of 500,000 soldiers? PG suspects that even G-d herself would lose sleep over that one.

There is also evidence that the bomb was not needed. Japan was whipped in August 1945. The air raids were conducted in daylight with little resistance. A debate was going on in the Japanese government on whether to continue the fight.

An event happened the day between Hiroshima, and Nagasaki, which influenced the Japanese decision to surrender. The Soviet Union had agreed to help the United States with the war against Japan. On August 8, The Soviet Union invaded Japanese occupied Manchuria. There are indications that Japan knew the fight was hopeless at this point, and would rather surrender to The United States than The Soviet Union. This is one of the gray areas that never seems to be mentioned.

The United States wanted the war to end quickly for obvious reasons, and a few subtle ones. America did not want to share the spoils of Japanese war with The Soviet Union. There were already tensions between the two allies, and the cold war was not far off. Many felt The United States used the Little Boy as a warning to The Soviet Union.

When you get your moral software out, you might want to figure in the effect of opening the nuclear Pandora’s box. Would the nuclear bomb have been developed by other countries if America had not led the way? The science is not that complicated…after all, America hit paydirt with the Manhattan Project fairly quickly. Nonetheless, there is karma involved in using a terrible new device on a civilian population. The United States started the wind of the arms race, and has yet to feel the whirlwind.

This is a repost. The pictures are from The Library of Congress. Ansel Adams took pictures of Japanese Americans, in a World War Two internment camp. The ladies in the bridge game are Aiko Hamaguchi, Chiye Yamanaki, Catherine Yamaguchi, and Kazoko Nagahama.




Water Walks

Posted in Poem by chamblee54 on August 5, 2020

One History Of Religion

Posted in Georgia History, GSU photo archive by chamblee54 on August 4, 2020

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I was a southern baptist all my life. Arguably, I became a baptist when my mother converted in 1938, but really didn’t get with the program until I was born in 1954. The story is that Daddy called the choir director at six in the morning to sign me up.

First Baptist in Atlanta was a big church on Peachtree street, about a mile north of downtown. (A few years ago, they sold the land to a developer, and moved to the suburbs. I was working a block away when they tore down the building, and got some chips of brick as a souvenir.) I sang in the “cherub” choir. This was quite an experience when we performed in front of a full house. I have good memories of Sunday school, vacation bible school, and the choir program.

One thing I did not like, even at that young age, was the preacher. He was a greasy haired man who shouted a lot, and had a mean streak. Years later, I heard persistent rumors that he was gay. (I should note that this is not Charles Stanley. It is the man who preceded him.) One Sunday, we were watching him preach, and he shouted, “this is the word of G-d”. He then waved a Bible in the air, and slammed it into the pulpit. I thought, if that is the word of G-d, maybe he shouldn’t slam it down like that.

In 1962, mom and dad decided to move to a church closer to home. I liked Briarcliff Baptist. About this time, I first heard about being “saved from sin”, and thought it was a pretty cool idea. I also was in the cub scouts, and since their meetings were the same day as choir practice, I quit the choir. I attended church regularly the next few years, but never did join the church, and get baptized. The custom of pressuring children to make a “commitment of faith”, and get baptized, reflects poorly on Jesus.There are some other family issues that came up about this time. They are too personal to get into here, but they affected my attitude towards the church.

After a while, I was 17 years old, and working in a restaurant that was open until 1am on Saturday night. I decided one Sunday that I didn’t want to get up for church. I have only been back to that building once in the intervening 47 years. This is a repost, with pictures from “The Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library”.

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Every Loathsome Government

Posted in Library of Congress, Weekly Notes by chamblee54 on August 3, 2020


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Cancelar/Cultura de la Cancelación – Uso en la Teoría de la Justicia Social

How to Make Your Arguments Stronger (Hint: Longer Is Not the Answer)
What if your arguments don’t add up? Niro Sivanathan TEDx London
Shots fired at Go Kart and gaming center, causing mass panic
The fallacy of white privilege — and how it’s corroding society
Descendants of Henry Grady seek civil discourse, positive change
From The Anthropocene To The Microbiocene
Mother intentionally hit car killing 3-month-old daughter, injuring child’s father
All Together Now: From Multiple Services Toward a Single Assembly
U.S. Megachurch Of 12,000 Members Shifts Toward House Churches
‘She had no remorse’: Why Kamala Harris isn’t a lock for VP
Victims attacked by kids selling water on Atlanta streets want them gone
Atlanta 3-year-old dies after she accidentally shot herself in head
Hello Liberals: Your Politics Will Not Get You to Justice
Will The Reckoning Over Racist Names Include These Prisons?
14 Things Madonna Taught You And You Didn’t Even Know
Artist Hélène Delmaire on Portrait of a Lady on Fire (Subtitled, interview from 2019)
Minneapolis Police Reportedly Identify Viral ‘Umbrella Man’ As White Supremacist
The Hot Mess Millennium ~ zoom virtual book launch
Americans are unhappier than ever — here’s how to find joy in troubled times
The real stakes in the David Shor saga
My purpose here is not to rehearse the arguments over masking mandates …
Immigrants Are Far More Patriotic Than the Right Fears or the Left Hopes
The Pivotal Irony of American Racism
SOS Raffensperger Refutes New York Times Hit Piece
Atlanta hospital system to pay $16 million to resolve false claims allegations
Do I Have To Be Okay With Transgender People
‘The protests were whiter than the police department’
Prosecutor: No charges for officer in Michael Brown’s death
The Zolas is a beautiful critique of the relationship between creator and muse
No, the Woke Won’t Debate You. Here’s Why.
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Holding a Black Lives Matter Sign in America’s Most Racist Town
Journalism’s Death by a Thousand Tweets … broken system is ad-driven media on Internet
Cosplay at a 1966 Science Fiction Convention
Les derniers mois ont été éprouvants pour tout le monde
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The Complex Relationship between Marxism and Wokeness
Kelly Loeffler takes BLM criticism to host with white supremacist ties
What an Audacious Hoax Reveals About Academia
How ‘good White people’ derail racial progress
Cajun Mutt Press The go-to place for all things on the poetic literary fringe.
Sen. Kelly Loeffler on WNBA protests, federal deployment
The Piety of the Impious – beneath callow progressivism lies a kind of spiritual fervour
Former Fort Morgan man accused of killing Hollywood starlet before taking his own life
How ‘To Live and Die in LA’ Racked Up 15 Million Downloads While Solving a Murder
Why Your Friends and Family Members Are So Easily Fooled by Conspiracy Theories
Not Every Loathsome Government Is Anti-Democratic
Mysterious ‘Suicide’ of Dr. Fauci’s Right-Hand Man at NIAID
The People, No: A Brief History of Anti-Populism Thomas Frank
Black Lives Matter Leader … Begs ‘Allah’ to Help Her ‘Not Kill White Folks’
Cuban community plans rally at NuLu restaurant in response to BLM demands
Police say 1 killed, 3 injured in 7-car pile-up in Chamblee; suspect facing felony charges
Dunkin’ worker fired, arrested after spitting in police officer’s coffee
Right-wing troll Andy Ngo busted for publishing stories by fake people
Portland’s Andy Ngo Is the Most Dangerous Grifter in America
whatsapp ~ ruptly ~ wokeness ~ ww1 ~ herman cain ~ peter green ~ susan rice
@XBIZ CAM Awards ~ Oppressive Moment ~ vest review ~ robert e lee
@chamblee54 @kausmickey @robertwrighter at the la times there’s pressure on you know old non-people of culture to retire so that … you mean non-people of color you said culture … yeah color … they have culture … um but anyway ~ @SaraBGibson Maybe everyone tweeting about burning bibles should look at the news source – Ruptly, which is a division of Russia Today – and consider who is putting out the information. ~ @chamblee54this comment is from reddit: There’s only one video of this incident, with no info being provided on its background or context … It could be staged. Such videos have been staged in the past, and this has some of the hallmarks: it’s anonymous, provided without context, and depicts only two participants … It’s real, but isolated. … no evidence has been presented to claim that this is part of a larger trend ~ pictures today are from The Library of Congress. This poem was presented at a virtual open mic event sunday:
my anger my attachment my pride my, gazing through a kerchief of delusion
forgiveness of sin is perpetual pie, only eat when thinking only think why
foggy water of alienation and confusion, my anger my attachment my pride my
if you are able to free yourself cry, cosmogonic feminine collusion
forgiveness of sin is perpetual pie, compassion is not required to be high
divine pasta out beyond seclusion, my anger my attachment my pride my
don’t be deceived by a transparent sky, staying in pain with warfare transfusion
forgiveness of sin is perpetual pie, alcohol dissolving a difficult lie
your future is a king-sized illusion, my anger my attachment my pride my
forgiveness of sin is perpetual pie ~ PG attended a writing workshop. The prompt was presented as two works in a gallery. The idea was to take the voice of one of the works, and speak to people viewing you. Here is how PG reacted to this prompt: The white box in the middle is the forgotten installation. Since I am white, and have been compared to a blank rectangle, I am going to assume that indentity. Or is this identity a lack of identity. ~ A blank white space is an opportunity to fill in the blanks. Since there is a black background surrounding it, I do not know if this white space is a stand alone, or it needs to presense of black space to define it. Maybe it the absense of color and content, surrounded by and quantified by the abundance of stuff on all four sides. ~ I should take a screen shot, so I can refer to this promptage later. I have been working on historic pictures this afternoon, so GIMP is still open, and available for screen shots. ~ While negotiating the screen shot, a newcomer entered the room. She needed to be reminded of the prompt. The host mentioned the two pictures, completely ignoring the white rectangle in the middle. This is life in America 2020. ~ I am fond of the golden rectangle, the fibonacci sequence of digits. The unmentionable white rectangle appears to be golden. Alas, it is not golden, and it is time to share this piece with the room. ~ selah

First Thunderstorm

Posted in Poem by chamblee54 on August 2, 2020

Herman Cain

Posted in Georgia History, Library of Congress, Undogegorized by chamblee54 on August 1, 2020


As you may have heard, Herman Cain (no middle name) died. He had been hospitalized following a positive test for COVID 19. Mr. Cain was an outspoken supporter of President Trump. He did not think wearing a mask was a good idea, and said so often.

It should be noted at this point that a mask does not protect the user. A mask assumes that the user might be infected, and can help prevent spreading the virus. We do not know when, and how, Mr. Cain contracted the virus. Wearing a mask would not have prevented Mr. Cain from becoming infected. It might, however, prevented Mr. Cain from spreading the virus further, once he was already infected. Speculation that Mr. Cain was infected at the Tulsa rally is just that… speculation.

The media, both social and anti-social, is having a big time with this. Since Mr. Cain was a Trump supporter, he is deemed worthy of slander and abuse. One facebook friend joined in, and then later claimed not to hate Mr. Cain. This prompted PG to break his do-not-argue-on-facebook rule, and issue a comment: “Maybe it is not hate, but “don”t deserve the air you claim to not be able to breath” comes mighty close. This is another one of God’s children.” PG made another comment, this one for the general population of facebook and twitter.

“Unlike most of the people commenting about the late Herman Cain, I briefly listened to his radio show. Very briefly. His radio show was unlistenable. I did not agree with him on many subjects. Nonetheless, I saw a good bit to admire. Mr. Cain was from humble circumstances. He got degrees from Morehouse University, and Perdue University. Mr. Cain succeeded in business.

In 2011, Mr. Cain ran for President. He did well for a while, until the “dog stories” from his past forced him out of the race. He opened a campaign headquarters in Doraville, not long after his departure from the race. I went to this opening, and got this picture.

The last few weeks of his life were something. A stage IV cancer survivor, he was no doubt compromised by years of industrial strength medicine. And yet, he made a public spectacle of attending dangerous events. It is an ending to a uniquely American story.”

The Presidential run was quite a story. Mr. Cain probably had little chance of getting the nomination. Still, he was the flavor of the month for a while, and got a bit of attention. Soon, stories of sexual misconduct began to arise, and Mr. Cain was forced to drop out of the race. He wound up back on the radio, and replaced Neal Boortz when that SAWB retired.

The last chapter in the Herman Cain story is a doozie. After beating back a serious cancer, Mr. Cain was clearly at risk. And yet, he made a much publicized refusal to wear a mask, and attended a notorious Trump rally in Oklahoma. Did he think he was virus proof? Or was this the last hurrah of an American? We will probably never know the real answer.

Chamblee54 has written about Herman Cain many times. (one two three four five six seven eight) Pictures today are from The Library of Congress.