Browsing: August

A Brief History On August 11, 2000, Southwest Airlines Flight 1763 from Nevada to Utah experienced one of those horrible moments when the lives of all on board were at stake. Digging Deeper An emotionally upset 19 year old man, possibly fueled by drugs in his system, engaged in an ongoing tirade in the airliner, culminating in his kicking in the cockpit door and attempting to enter the cockpit.  The flight crew pushed the angry young man out of the flight deck and concerned passengers swarmed the out-of-control passenger and subdued him. Unfortunately, the 19-year-old died while other passengers restrained…

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A Brief History On August 9, 1854, Henry David Thoreau published his book, Walden; or, Life in the Woods, a book about his life with nature and self-reliance, a reflective story of his own philosophy of Transcendentalism. Digging Deeper A leading proponent of Transcendentalism was Ralph Waldo Emerson, who along with Thoreau and other Americans decried the then current state of society in what they saw as senseless conformity and instead urged people to find their own individual way in the universe.  The Transcendentalists also developed an aversion to the institution of slavery. Emerson praised Plato, Moses, Jesus, Luther, Copernicus,…

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A Brief History On August 8, 2023, the island of Maui, Hawaii, became other than a tropical Eden when wildfires broke out and burned over 17,000 acres, killing over 100 people. Digging Deeper Oddly enough, Hawaii is the rainiest of the 50 United States, with an annual rainfall of almost 64 inches, more than 3.5 inches more than runner up Louisiana. Maui is the second largest of the Hawaiian Islands, and has uneven rainfall, with 17 to 20 inches falling on the Southwestern coast compared to as much as 300 inches in the area of Haleakalā National Park near Hana.…

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A Brief History On August 7, 1962, a reviewer from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Dr. Frances Oldham Kelsey, was recognized by President John F. Kennedy with the President’s Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service. Digging Deeper Kelsey had previously denied the use of the drug, Thalidomide, for use in the US after it had been used in West Germany since 1957 for a wide range of symptoms, including morning sickness in pregnant women.  Dissatisfied with the safety research and record to date, Kelsey turned down the drug for the US, ultimately saving untold hundreds or even thousands of…

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A Brief History On August 5, 2015, Colorado found out the hard way that the Federal Government is capable of massive blunders even when they are trying to “help,” when the EPA managed to spill three million gallons of wastewater and heavy metal tailings from the Gold King Mine into the Animas River. Digging Deeper Tasked with keeping our air, water and land safe, the Environmental Protection Agency was created in 1970.  In the Gold King Mine disaster, the EPA was working with a private company, Environmental Restoration LLC, to minimize environmental damage from toxic waste created by the closed…

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