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"Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it was once like in the United States where men were free." - President Ronald Reagan
Saturday, October 31, 1970
Happy Halloween!
Halloween costumes with Leslie Eastman & Daisy Viktoria
Friday, October 30, 1970
We remember Agustin Lara (1897-1970)
Wednesday, October 28, 1970
We remember The 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis with Barry Jacobsen
National security stories of the week with Barry Jacobsen 10/22 by Silvio Canto Jr | Politics Podcasts:
Guest: Barry Jacobsen, military historian and blogger, joins us for a look at the national security stories of the week..........the Benghazi hearings expose some of Secretary Clinton's management style.......the Russian military operations in the Middle East............the US rescues Iraqi soldiers from a POW camp..........we look back at the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.........the US and USSR over Cuba............and other stories from the week.....
Monday, October 26, 1970
We remember The Shah of Iran (1919-80)
Back in January 1979, The Shah of Iran and family fled Iran. He had ruled Iran since 1941. Under The Shah, Iran was a strong ally of the US, specially during The Cold War.
On a democratic scale, the Shah was not Jefferson or Washington. At the same time, Iran was stable, women were allowed to pursue university degrees and we didn't have to worry about him passing nuclear material to terrorists.
Give me the Shah. He was not perfect but he was a lot better than what we've known since.
Moral of the story: Stability matters, specially when anti-West religious fanatics come into power looking to get a nuclear weapon.
For more on the Shah, see this book below.
Tuesday, October 13, 1970
We remember Eddie Matthews (1931-2001)
——
He retired with 512 HR and was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1978.
Monday, October 12, 1970
October 1969: "Paul is dead" or so they said
The headline was that Paul McCartney had died in a car accident and buried in a secret grave. It allegedly happened in that long period of silence between the last tour date in San Francisco and Sgt. Pepper's in early 1967.
The next part was that The Beatles had clues on their LP covers and even messages hidden in songs like "Strawberry Fields Forever" and that horrible track called "Revolution # 9" from The White Album.
Like most crazy things, it got out of control and got silly crazy. Eventually, LIFE sent reporters to the UK to look for Paul. They found him, recently married to Linda and living in a farm up in Scotland. And then all of a sudden Paul was alive and well.
Saturday, October 10, 1970
Remember The Ronettes!
1966: Orioles sweep Dodgers
It was a classic mismatch on paper, namely because LA had Koufax and Drysdale. However, it was also a case of underestimating the young Orioles who ended up throwing 3 shutouts and a 0.50 ERA for the series.
Frank Robinson was the MVP but it was the Orioles' pitchers who made the difference.
Koufax retired a month after the Series. The Orioles came back in 1969, 1970 and 1971. It was the end of the Dodgers, who did not return to the Series until 1974, and the start of the Orioles who won 4 pennants over the next 6 seasons.
Friday, October 09, 1970
October 9, 1940: We remember John Lennon
We remember that John Lennon was born on this day in Liverpool in 1940.
Once in a while, I check out a Beatles' song with John doing the lead vocals. Let me tell you about two of my favorites:
"Strawberry Fields Forever" gets better with age. It is a song about his childhood in Liverpool.
"Dear Prudence", from the "White Album", is about their trip to India in 1968.
They are both great songs and wonderful reminders of John Lennon.
'They got him': The death of Che Guevara
By 1965, Che Guevara had faded from public life. His disappearance created all kinds of speculation about Che's relationship with Fidel and Raúl Castro. After all, some close to Castro in 1959 had been killed in accidents, like Camilo Cienfuegos, or stuck in political prisons, like Huber Matos. Cienfuegos's plane was never found, and Matos was eventually released in some prisoner exchange. Matos spent the rest of his life in exile.
Che reappeared in 1966 in Bolivia, where he hoped to bring about a revolution. How did he get there? Who paid his bills? Not sure. Why did he suddenly leave Cuba? No one knows. Many believe that Fidel and Raúl wanted him out, and starting a revolution in Bolivia was the exit. I think it's fair to say that Che had worn out his welcome with the Castro brothers, especially after they saw how popular he was with the international left. As we learned, there is only one "popular" person in Cuba, and that's Fidel.
Fifty-five years ago this week, Che was captured and executed by Bolivian troops operating with the CIA. It happened very fast. As we learned in his diary, Che and his men lacked food and medicine and were barely surviving in the jungle. It's possible that Che would have died of bad health and no medical care. He was battling asthma attacks constantly. Also, they were not getting a lot of help from Cuba, either by design or because the supplies could not reach them. My guess is that Che was happy to get captured and hoped for some prison time and then a return to Cuba. He did not get his wish.
Che subsequently became "the image" on all those t-shirts. He became the ultimate anti-U.S. symbol, the image that every left-wing group goes to when its members have a gripe against the U.S.
Ironically, he was captured because the campaign in Bolivia failed miserably. It failed for two reasons, as Humberto Fontova explained in Exposing the Real Che. Read the book for more details, but it went down like this:
1) Bolivia was not Cuba.
2) The natives in Bolivia never bought into the idea that a band led by a guy from Argentina and Cubans was there to save them. In the end, it was the villagers he was trying to "liberate" who turned him in. Again, the Bolivian campaign was a total failure. The locals never read the memo about Cuban health care, I guess.
Che was a murderer and a man who said awful things about blacks, for example. This is from Guillermina Sutter Schneider:
In his diary, he referred to black people as "those magnificent examples of the African race who have maintained their racial purity thanks to their lack of an affinity with bathing." He also thought white Europeans were superior to people of African descent, and described Mexicans as "a band of illiterate Indians."
Today, we would call him a racist and a homophobe! We'd cancel him from universities. Twitter would delete his account.
So I still remember my father saying in Spanish that they got him. Indeed they did, and many champagne bottles popped in the Cuban exile community this week in 1967.
1967: Che still dead after all these years
By 1965, Che Guevara had faded from public life. His disappearance created all kinds of speculation about Che’s relationship with Fidel and Raúl Castro. After all, some close to Castro in 1959 had been killed in accidents, like Camilo Cienfuegos, or stuck in political prisons, like Huber Matos. Cienfuegos’s plane was never found, and Matos was eventually released in some prisoner exchange. Matos spent the rest of his life in exile.
Che reappeared in 1966 in Bolivia, where he hoped to bring about a revolution. How did he get there? Who paid his bills? Why did he suddenly leave Cuba? Many believe that Fidel and Raúl wanted him out, and starting a revolution in Bolivia was the exit. I think it’s fair to say that Che had worn out his welcome with the Castro brothers, specially after they saw how popular he was with the international left. As we learned, there is only one “popular” person in Cuba, and that’s Fidel.
Fifty-five years ago this week, Che was captured and executed by Bolivian troops operating with the CIA. It happened very fast. As we learned in his diary, Che and his men lacked food and medicine and were barely surviving in the jungle. It’s possible that Che would have died of bad health and no medical care. He was battling asthma attacks constantly. Also, they were not getting a lot of help from Cuba, either by design or because the supplies could not reach them. My guess is that Che was happy to get captured and hoped for some prison time and then a return to Cuba. He did not get his wish.
Che subsequently became “the image” on all those t-shirts. He became the ultimate anti-U.S. symbol, the image that every left-wing group goes to when its members have a gripe against the U.S.
Ironically, he was captured because the campaign in Bolivia failed miserably. It failed for two reasons, as Humberto Fontova explained in Exposing the Real Che. Read the book for more details, but it went down like this:
1) Bolivia was not Cuba.
2) The natives in Bolivia never bought into the idea that a band led by a guy from Argentina and Cubans was there to save them. In the end, it was the villagers he was trying to “liberate” who turned him in. Again, the Bolivian campaign was a total failure. The locals never read the memo about Cuban health care, I guess.
Che was a murderer and a man who said awful things about blacks, for example. This is from Guillermina Sutter Schneider:
In his diary, he referred to black people as “those magnificent examples of the African race who have maintained their racial purity thanks to their lack of an affinity with bathing.” He also thought white Europeans were superior to people of African descent, and described Mexicans as “a band of illiterate Indians.”
Today, we would call him a racist and a homophobe! We’d cancel him from universities. Twitter would delete his account.
So I still remember my father saying in Spanish that they got him. Indeed they did, and many champagne bottles popped in the Cuban exile community this week in 1967.
P.S. You can listen to my show and follow my blog, (My new American Thinker post)
Sunday, October 04, 1970
October 4, 1969: Paul Blair dropped a bunt in 12th to win game 1 of the first ALCS
We forget that the first league championship series did not start until 1969. Well, Game 1 of the 1969 ALCS was a beauty indeed or Minnesota at Baltimore.
The Orioles won 109 games and ran away with the AL East. The Twins won 97 and beat the A's by 9 games. Both teams spent much of September waiting to play each other in the first ALCS.
The 1969 Orioles were one of the best teams of the 20th century with Frank Robinson (32 HR), Brooks Robinson (23 HR) and Boog Powell (37 HR). Paul Blair hit 26 HR with 20 stolen bases.
The 1969 Twins had eventual MVP Harmon Killebrew (49 HR & 140 RBI), Tony Oliva (.309, 24 HR & 101 RBI), Rod Carew (.332 and batting title) and Cesar Tovar who stole 40 bases.
The Orioles started Mike Cuellar (23-11) and the Twins sent Jim Perry (20-6) to the mound. It was a great game between two of the best pitchers and teams of that era.
The lead went back and forth and it was 3-3 in the bottom of the 12th. With two outs, Paul Blair dropped a beautiful bunt scoring Mark Belanger from third. It was exciting baseball and one of great chapters in Orioles' history.