Thursday, December 27, 2018

History for December 27

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History for December 27 - On-This-Day.com
Johannes Kepler 1571, George Cayley 1773, Louis Pasteur 1822
Image result for Johannes Kepler InventionsImage result for George Cayley InventionsImage result for Louis Pasteur

Marlene Dietrich 1901 - Actress, singer, Lee Salk 1926, Gerard Depardieu 1948
Image result for Marlene DietrichImage result for Dr. Lee SalkImage result for Gerard Depardieu

1831 - Charles Darwin set out on a voyage to the Pacific aboard the HMS Beagle. Darwin's discoveries during the voyage helped him form the basis of his theories on evolution.
Image result for Charles Darwin set out on a voyage to the Pacific aboard the HMS Beagle.

1947 - The children's television program "Howdy Doody," hosted by Bob Smith, made its debut on NBC.
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Wednesday, December 26, 2018

NBC Reports Trump Is First President Since 2002 Not To Visit Troops At Christmastime. Wrong. | Daily Wire

NBC Reports Trump Is First President Since 2002 Not To Visit Troops At Christmastime. Wrong. | Daily Wire:
Image result for flickr commons images NBC Logo
But as has been the case so often with the mainstream media and Trump-haters (but I repeat myself), the report wasn't true.
President Trump not only called troops to wish them a Merry Christmas on Tuesday, he and First Lady Melania Trump took a secret trip to Iraq on Christmas Day so they could greet those serving our country in person.

Donald and Melania Trump Make Surprise Trip to Visit U.S. Troops Iraq | Breitbart

Image result for flickr commons images president trumpDonald and Melania Trump Make Surprise Trip to Visit U.S. Troops Iraq | Breitbart:

President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump made a secret Christmas trip to visit the troops in Iraq, the White House revealed Wednesday.

Supreme Court Intervenes In Apparent Mystery Mueller Case | The Daily Caller

Supreme Court Intervenes In Apparent Mystery Mueller Case | The Daily Caller:
Image result for flickr commons images Chief Justice John Roberts
Chief Justice John Roberts stayed a contempt order in a case that likely arose from Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation on Sunday night.
Roberts’ order could mark the first time that the Supreme Court has intervened in the Mueller inquiry.
Very little is known of the case, which reached the justices on Saturday, because the matter has proceeded through the federal courts under seal, meaning strict confidentiality prevails over every detail.

The way we were-----Apollo 100 - Joy - [STEREO]

Boob-tube-----Top 10 Saturday Night Live Cast Members of All Time

Headline of the day-----Science Says: A big space crash likely made Uranus lopsided

See the source imageScience Says: A big space crash likely made Uranus lopsided:
WASHINGTON (AP) — Uranus is a lopsided oddity, the only planet to spin on its side.
Scientists now think they know how it got that way: It was pushed over by a rock at least twice as big as Earth.
...“It’s very strange,” said Carnegie Institution planetary scientist Scott Sheppard, who wasn’t part of the research..."

U.S. Taxpayers Billed $115M to Study Quails on Cocaine, Donkey Hunting

U.S. Taxpayers Billed $115M to Study Quails on Cocaine, Donkey Hunting
"...Last year, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said a border wall would be “very expensive” and asked, “Why don’t we use that money for roads?”
Likewise, Republican establishment lawmakers have claimed the border wall is too costly for them to support.
As the political establishment becomes budget hawks on funding a border wall, Sen. Rand Paul’s (R-KY) annual “Festivus Report” reveals that about $115 million in American taxpayer money funded a slew of government projects, including $200,000 to put on plays in Afghanistan.
American taxpayers this year have also been forced to subsidize:
  • $76 million to provide stipends to Somali National Army
  • $18 million to promote tourism in Egypt
  • $2.4 million to study daydreaming
  • $1 million to support “legislative priorities” in Libya
  • $875,000 to study the sexual habits of quails on cocaine
  • $635,000 to develop a Pashto-language TV drama series for Afghanistan
  • $400,000 to support asset seizure programs in Paraguay
  • $360,000 to study horse and donkey hunting on the ancient Anatolian Peninsula
  • $250,000 to teach Rwandan special interest groups how to lobby elected officials
  • $75,000 to make videos marketing U.S. colleges to Indian students
  • $75,000 to blow leaf blowers at lizards
  • $35,000 to encourage people in the Republic of the Congo to use local resources
  • $15,000 to fund a fictionalized opera about Prince Harry, called “Stone Prince”
  • $50,000 to create conceptualized games in India
  • $50,000 to teach female entrepreneurs in India how to “vlog”
  • $50,000 to fund museum trips in Bosnia & Herzegovina
  • American taxpayers have paid nearly $30 million since 2014 to fund “reintegration” gift bags for illegal aliens and their children who were deported from the U.S. to their home countries, Breitbart News reported..."

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Blames Canada's Illegal Immigration Woes On The United States | Daily Wire

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Blames Canada's Illegal Immigration Woes On The United States | Daily Wire:
Image result for flickr commons images Justin Trudeau
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is blaming President Donald Trump and the United States' stricter policies on immigration for Canada's burgeoning "immigration crisis," even though Trudeau himself told migrants he'd welcome them with "open arms."

GAO: Solar storm ‘blackout’ of electric grid could last 3 days to 2 years, impact 40 million

Image result for Solar storm ‘blackout’ of electric gridGAO: Solar storm ‘blackout’ of electric grid could last 3 days to 2 years, impact 40 million
"The federal government is escalating its warnings about threats to the U.S. electric grid, the latest in a just-released congressional report that indicates a national blackout from a solar storm hit could last from three days to two years, impacting some 40 million.
The Government Accountability Office, Congress’ auditor, also said that the national electric grid system is still in need of protection from solar weather and a nuclear attack.
...The GAO also spelled out the potential damage and impact on everyday life in a “blackout” or “black sky” situation..."

Apollo 8's perfect Christmas message - Jeff Jacoby

Apollo 8's perfect Christmas message - Jeff Jacoby
"Say something appropriate."
It was Christmas Eve 1968, and three American astronauts were in the midst of a mission to boldly go where no man had gone before.
Frank Borman, Jim Lovell, and Bill Anders — the crew of Apollo 8 — were circling the Moon.
At 8:30 p.m. Houston time, they were scheduled to make a live broadcast that would be beamed back to Earth.
NASA had cautioned the men that their words would be heard by the largest audience in human history.
An estimated 1 billion people — more than one-fourth of the world's population — would tune in. Yet the crew hadn't been told what to say. 
Their only instruction was: "Say something appropriate."
Going to the Moon hadn't been the original plan for Apollo 8.
As published accounts of the mission have noted, it was initially supposed to be a flight only to low Earth orbit, where the crew could start getting used to NASA's new lunar module, and run through simulations of re-entering Earth's atmosphere after a lunar voyage.
Then everything changed. 
In September, the Soviet Union launched an unmanned lunar probe, Zond 5, which successfully orbited the Moon and returned to Earth.
...With just four months to make it happen, the decision was made to send Apollo 8 the Moon.
The risks were enormous. 
No one had ever traveled more than 850 miles from the Earth's surface; Borman, Lovell, and Anders would have to fly 240,000 miles to reach their destination.
It would require the most powerful rocket ever built, the Saturn V, to propel Apollo 8 beyond Earth orbit.
But Saturn V was new and had never flown a manned crew.
In fact, it had only been tested twice — and the second test, in April, had gone very badly.
Even more unnerving was that Apollo 8's new lunar module, plagued by defects, still wasn't ready. That meant the crew would have no backup engine: no lifeboat. 
Apollo 8's perfect Christmas message
There would be only the single engine of the command module, which would be needed repeatedly — to fly to the Moon, to enter lunar orbit, to escape from the lunar orbit, and to return to earth. If that engine failed, the astronauts would be doomed.
The death of astronauts was no mere theoretical concern.
In January 1967, an errant electrical spark had triggered a flash fire that destroyed Apollo 1 during preflight testing, killing three astronauts.
Another such tragedy would be shattering to Americans, all the more so since Apollo 8 would be traveling over Christmas.
America in 1968 had already experienced so much anguish — the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy, race riots in US cities, the bloody Tet offensive in Vietnam. 
Chris Kraft, NASA's director of flight operations, later said that the decision to go to the Moon on such short notice "took more courage . . . than anything we ever did in the space program."
...And now it was Christmas Eve. Apollo 8 was making the ninth of its 10 scheduled revolutions around the Moon, and it was time for the crew to "say something appropriate" to a waiting world. When the onboard camera came on, the three astronauts described the tasks they had been performing and their reactions to what they were seeing.
Then, said Anders, "for all the people back on Earth, the crew of Apollo 8 has a message we would like to send to you."
As the bleak moonscape swept past below them, they read from the Book of Genesis:
"In the beginning, G od created the heaven and the earth. . . . And God said, 'Let there be light,' and there was light. . . And God saw that it was good."
Borman brought the transmission to a finish after the men had recited 10 verses.
"We close," he said, "with good night, good luck, a Merry Christmas, and G od bless all of you — all of you on the good Earth."
NASA hadn't known what the astronauts were going to say, writes Robert Kurson in "Rocket Men," a gripping account of Apollo 8's odyssey.
"Inside Mission Control, no one moved.
Then, one after another, those scientists and engineers in Houston began to cry."..."
Read all.

Lunch video-----2004 Tsunami Caught On Camera FULL VIDEO