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maga misses ole jesse and strom
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In re Jesse Helms: The stories I heard about Jesse's father, "Big Jesse" tend to make "Little Jesse" look like a calm, rational, contemplative man. Apparently "Big Jesse" who was Chief of Police, is reputed to have believed that when black person was caight red-handed in a crime, then it was a waste of time and money to go through the rigamarole of a trial and incarceration. And further, "Big Jesse" further believed his use of summary punishment had a calming effect on the rest of the black male population that benefitted both them and the comminity at large. The old "it's for their own good" rationale that was so popular in the South in the first half of the 20th Century.
As a follow-up to your recommendation of "Albion's Seed," GOOD GRIEF that is one brick of a book. I will try to digest it a bit more thoroughly than I did "Moby Dick" and "Portrait of a Lady" in a long ago American Literature (Eng 41) class taught by Kimball King, where each of the above was gulped down in a week amidst a torrent of other reading. As I best I can remember, "Moby Dick" was a novel of process, similar to books such as "Hotel" and "Airport," but about the whaling industry. "Portrait of a Lady" was a Guilded Age travel guide to Italy, serving the same niche as one of Rick Steves episodes on PBS does today.@05C40 -- "The basic fundamental ideas of ordered liberty that I hold dear can be traced back to these two groups."
Are you familiar with David Hackett Fischer's Albion's Seed?
My folks are triple-distilled on my Deddy's side and at least double-distilled (Palantine refugees) on my Momma's.As a follow-up to your recommendation of "Albion's Seed," GOOD GRIEF that is one brick of a book. I will try to digest it a bit more thoroughly than I did "Moby Dick" and "Portrait of a Lady" in a long ago American Literature (Eng 41) class taught by Kimball King, where each of the above was gulped down in a week amidst a torrent of other reading. As I best I can remember, "Moby Dick" was a novel of process, similar to books such as "Hotel" and "Airport," but about the whaling industry. "Portrait of a Lady" was a Guilded Age travel guide to Italy, serving the same niche as one of Rick Steves episodes on PBS does today.
ETA: So far the passage that would have received the greatest howls of laughter and assertions of its truth from my Scotch-Irish ancestors of my youth is the following characterization of their ancestors who had been expelled from both Lowland Scotland and Northern Ireland as a, "double-distilled selection of some of the most disorderly inhabitants of a deeply disordered land." And I feel certain they would have supplemented that with an assertion of "triple-distilled" to account for their ejection from Pennsylvania to the South via the Great Wagon Road.