Monday, April 24, 2023

Monday's podcast: Tucker and Lemon out....Common sense from Bill Maher...and other stories....


Monday's podcast:    

Tucker and Lemon out....Common sense from Bill Maher...and other stories.......click to listen:

P.S.  Check out my blog for posts, podcasts and videos. If you like our posts, please look for ”Donate” on the right column of the blog page.

Monday's video: Tucker and Lemon out....Common sense from Bill Maher...and other stories...


Monday's video: Tucker and Lemon out....Common sense from Bill Maher...and other stories...

P.S.  Check out my blog for posts, podcasts and videos. If you like our posts, please look for ”Donate” on the right column of the blog page.

 

Why is Bill Maher the only one making sense?


 (My new American Thinker Post)

It seems like every week we hear something rather sensible from TV host Bill Maher.  First, it was his attack on the cancel culture.  Then he pointed out that male swimmers are faster than female swimmers.  And now he asserts that black-on-black crime is a problem.  This is from his latest show:    

HBO host Bill Maher on Friday said Chicago Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson was "excusing horrific behavior" in a speech he delivered following several shootings in Chicagoland last week and questioned why black celebrities with large fanbases do not have opinions on these issues.

"Most of the shootings [in Chicago] are young black men killing other young black men. Is that not correct?" Maher asked.

"Yeah that's correct," guest Glenn Loury responded.

"Okay, much more than what the cops do. Why doesn't anybody talk about that? Why aren't there a hundred giant black celebrities who would have the respect of those people saying what are you doing to yourselves? Why are you killing each other?" Maher asked.

"It dishonors our community. Come on, we're better than this," Loury said.

"Right," Maher responded. "It's never addressed."

Wow.  Is anybody in the Democrat party listening?  What a great opportunity for a national black political leader to start talking about the breakdown of African American communities.  Unfortunately, there is no one like that around and it's much easier to blame everything on racism.

Maybe Bill Maher should run for president.

P.S.  Check out my blog for posts, podcasts and videos.


The day Harry Truman discovered a bomb in his pocket


(My new American Thinker post)

My guess is that then-V.P. Harry Truman imagined he'd be president sooner than later.  President Roosevelt's health was not a public issue, but everybody in Washington knew he was a sick man.  It was a matter of time when the nation was fighting a war in Europe and the Pacific.

On April 12, V.P. Truman became President Truman.  Two weeks later, President Truman learned about what it really meant to be president.  On this day in 1945, he was briefed on whatever was going on in New Mexico:

America's secret development of the atomic bomb began in 1939 [sic -- it was 1941] with then-President Franklin Roosevelt's support. The project was so secret that FDR did not even inform his fourth-term vice president, Truman, that it existed. (In fact, when Truman's 1943 senatorial investigations into war-production expenditures led him to ask questions about a suspicious plant in Minneapolis, which was secretly connected with the Manhattan Project, Truman received a stern phone call from FDR's secretary of war, Harry Stimson, warning him not to inquire further.)

When President Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945, Truman was immediately sworn in and, soon after, was informed by Stimson of a new and terrible weapon being developed by physicists in New Mexico. 

In his diary that night, Truman noted that he had been informed that the U.S. was perfecting an explosive great enough to destroy the whole world. 

On April 24, Stimson and the army general in charge of the project, Leslie Groves, brought Truman a file full of reports and details on the Manhattan Project. They told Truman that although the U.S. was the only country with the resources to develop the bomb–eliminating fears that Germany was close to developing the weapon–the Russians could possibly have atomic weapons within four years. They discussed if, and with which allies, they should share the information and how the new weapon would affect U.S. foreign-policy decisions. 

Truman authorized the continuation of the project and agreed to form an interim committee that would advise the president on using the weapon.

Do you wonder how he slept that night?

Looking back, I have a couple of thoughts.

Would a modern U.S. senator have kept the whole thing quiet as then-senator Truman did in 1943?  What a story to leak to a friendly reporter.  It would have hurt the war effort, and Truman was willing to give his commander in chief the benefit of the doubt.  It was a kind of honor and seriousness missing today.

President Truman did make the decision to use the bomb.  He understood that it had to be done to the end the war sooner rather than later.  Nevertheless, it must have been a heck of a meeting when he learned that the decision would be his to make.

P.S.  You can listen to my show.  If you like our posts, please look for ”Donate” on the right column of the blog page.

A word about April 24


Information about April 24

We say happy # 56 to Omar Vizquel who was born in Venezuela on this day in 1967. Omar was an outstanding shortstop.  However, let's not overlook his bat: .272 BA, 2,877 hits, 456 doubles and a very good .336 On Base Pct.     

Catch our 2016 podcast:  Another anniversary of The Battle of Waterloo with Barry Jacobsen..  CLICK TO LISTEN.     

P.S.  You can listen to my show.  If you like our posts, please look for ”Donate” on the right column of the blog page.happy # 56 to Omar Vizquel

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