Friday, April 11, 2014

Theory of Relativity 40 Years Later

Having spent many years traveling around the world while serving in the Military Service, I recently returned the a town near where I spent the first six years of my childhood to settle down and enjoy a more relaxed middle life. Now was the perfect opportunity to visit places which had been only a memory for so long. Places that were so dear to me back when I was discovering such amazing things as caterpillars, butterflies, bumble bees and June bugs.

Grandpa, as I remembered, had a big farm with a cow, a horse, a pasture, a big lake, chickens, a big house and a large field that was almost always planted in something. I spent many happy hours there chasing butterflies and June bugs or throwing rocks into the lake. I especially liked going to the barn to watch the evening milking. I was never awake early enough for the morning milking. I always carried my little tin cup with me to get it filled with milk, warm and fresh from the cow. The only farm chores I was allowed to help with were feeding the chickens, gathering eggs and picking tomatoes. "Only the red ones please." grandma would say.


Dobson's General Store and Post Office, where grandpa went to get his mail and buy just about everything else he needed, was only a short distance from my grandpa's farm. It was a huge place with great long shelves and tables lined up creating long aisles. There was a huge pot-bellied stove right in the middle-most part of the store where the local men would sit around on cold, rainy days talking about farming, politics and playing checkers.


The tables were always stacked high with overalls, socks, brogans, shirts, shoes, bolts of cloth and just about any thing people needed back then. The shelves were stacked with assorted canned goods, sugar, flour, salt and other food items. A glass-covered case of pocket knives was conspicuously displayed on the front counter next to the huge cash register (The kind with large numbers that popped up in a glass window on top.) The huge glass cookie and candy jars with their shiny tin lids were placed on a shelf behind the cash register well out of reach but not out of sight.


In the rear of the store to the right were nails, hammers, saws, chains, hinges and all manner of hardware items for repairing almost anything around the farm that was broken. Hanging from the ceilings and walls were plow points, harnesses and all those amazing implements used for tilling the soil, as well as lanterns, like the one grandpa carried to the barn to see how to milk before sunrise. The left rear corner of the store was caged-in and served as the post office.

I visited what was once my grandpa's farm and found that while not much had changed, somehow everything looked different. The fir st thing that caught my eye was the lake. To my amazement it seemed much smaller. It was more a farm pond than it was the lake of my childhood memory. The pasture seemed smaller too, as did the field that once produced an abundance of fresh vegetables. The big house that my grandparents lived in now looked very much like and ordinary six room frame house painted white.

A mile up the road I found Dobson's General Store still standing and to my amazement, open for business, I stopped and went inside and see what it was like now. I immediately recognized the elderly lady behind the now modern checkout counter as Mr. Dobson's daughter even though she was now grey-haired and 40 years older. After reminding her whose grandson I was, she remembered me. We talked at length about the days gone by and as we talked, I surveyed the interior of the store, comparing what I was now seeing with memories I had filed away in the archives of my mind 40 years ago. Nothing inside the store was as I remembered. All the farm implements were gone, the post office was gone, the tables stacked high with clothing articles were gone, and the building that a six-year-old could get lost in was now filled with pre-packed quick food items relevant to the 1980, stacked on modern shelves or hung from pegboards. The pot-bellied stove was gone, having been replaced by central heat and cooling. The store seemed much smaller somehow although I'm sure it wasn’t. I could now stand at the front counter and survey the entire store. Somehow the world of my childhood memories had gotten smaller.


I sat quietly in the evening hours of that day, contemplating all that I had seen. I was unable to think of a reasonable explanation for the difference between what I remembered and what I had seen. I began to wonder if it could possibly be true. Is the size of the world relative to the age and physical size of the person viewing it? Could it just be possible that Einstein was so caught up in his theory of relativity that he overlooked another important fact, that the size of the world is relative to the size of the individual viewing it?


Sunday, March 23, 2014

Turkey or Eagle, That Was The Question

On July 4th, 1776, the Continental Congress appointed a committee made up of Thomas Jefferson, John Adams and Benjamin Franklin to select a design for an official national seal. None of the designs suggested were acceptable. Benjamin Franklin said the turkey should be our national symbol because at the time he thought it was only native to the United States. Lady Liberty holding a shield of the 13 colonies was suggested but then rejected. 
The Alaskan Bald Eagle

It was William Barton, a Philadelphia artist who produced a new design that included a golden eagle. The golden eagle was rejected because it flew over England. Then the great bald eagle, which became our national bird was selected and accepted thinking that it was native to North America. It was not until much later they discovered it also is found in Canada and parts of South America.

Benjamin Franklin objected to the bald eagle on the grounds that it was an aggressive bird which would take food from lesser eagles and falcons rather than fend for itself. He was apparently not aware that the great bald eagle is an aggressive hunter which dives down on small rodents and animals on the ground grabbing them in their claws, carrying them to their nests to consume them and share them with their young.

As a patriotic American, I love the beauty of the bald eagle and think that our founding fathers made a great choice for our national symbol. 


Sunday, March 16, 2014

The American Flag and Cinco de Mayo

Mexicans, for political or economic reasons, should be glad to become Americans “Citizens”. These foreigners should be required to forsake their ties to their homeland. If they are set on becoming anything less than citizens they should be required to leave and return to their homeland where they have freedom to celebrate their independence from France. Cinco de Mayo is not really their Independence Day. Their real day of Independence is September 16th. Cinco de Mayo is a Holiday  which commemorates the victory of the Mexican Militia over the French Army at The Battle Of Puebla in 1862.Their Cinco de Mayo is of no consequence to American citizens. If th
Fort McHenry Flag of 1812
e immigrants, legal or illegal want to hold on to their Cinco de Mayo and be offended by the American flag then they truly have no interest in truly becoming Americans and leave voluntarily or be deported. 


All other immigrants, Italians, Irish, Dutch, et al before them became citizens of the United States and accepted the American flag as their own and swore loyalty to it. As American citizens we celebrate the fourth of July as our independence day. If the Mexican find it in their hearts to cling to Cinco de Mayo as their day of independence and find the American Flag offensive, they don’t belong here. Make me and thousands of other Americans happy by sending them back to the land they hold so sacred and let them try and reclaim it and celebrate all of its holidays there. There is no room here for an alien, legal or not who clings to his “homeland‘s celebrations” and finds the American flag offensive.


I am repeating myself but I would like to end with a quote from Theodore Roosevelt in 1907:


"In the first place, we should insist that if the immigrant who comes here in good faith becomes an American and assimilates himself to us, he shall be treated on an exact equality with everyone else, for it is an outrage to discriminate against any such man because of creed, or birthplace, or origin. But this is predicated upon the person's becoming in every facet an American, and nothing but an American...There can be no divided allegiance here. Any man who says he is an American, but something else also, isn't an American at all. We have room for but one flag, the American flag... We have room for but one language here, and that is the English language... and we have room for but one sole loyalty and that is a loyalty to the American people." — Theodore Roosevelt 1907


Para español presione por favor el número uno.




Saturday, March 15, 2014

What is this thing called Love

Yes, it is an old song written by Cole Porter in 1929 but he just posed the question, not the answer.

Never in my lifetime has anyone ever sat me down and explained just what love really is. An old farmer once told me: “love is a funny little thing, shaped like a lizard that runs around your heart and snaps at your gizzard.” The dictionary definition gives the word such a wide range of attributes that I’m no longer sure of its meaning. 

One definition of love is as  emotion of strong affection and personal attachment. Strong affection and personal attachment sounds a bit scary to me. In  the philosophical context, love is a virtue representing all of human kindness, compassion and affection. That sounds really good but I know a few human’s that kindness, compassion and affection is not in their nature. In a religious context, love is not just a virtue, but the basis for all being, (God is love), and the foundation for all divine law (the Golden Rule). Taking all that into consideration, then it would seem that love can be anything from I love chocolate cake to a strong, religious devotion to God.

The ancient Greeks decided they needed  five words for love. Agape is translated as affection of a deeper sense i.e. true love, and is the word used in chapter 13 of the Book of Corinthians, “the love chapter.” Eros is passionate love as associated with feelings of a sensual nature between a man and a woman. The Greek word Platonic is used to indicate a strong love between friends of a non-sensual nature. Philos is used to express love between friends and family. Storge, a not often used word describes love as between parents and offspring. As I understand it, Philos is probably the most preferred word used in family life.

Love, the one word in the English language used to describe every emotion that gives us any kind of pleasant feeling about almost anything from chocolate cake to the pretty girl we see walking down the street. The most miss-used word in the English language. We have been bombarded with love songs, romantic movies and television programs and provocative television commercials for years. Is it any wonder that children “fall in love” in Junior High School, I know I did. Or at least I thought I did…several times. Lucky for me I grew up. Love is a much too meaningful a word to be bandied about without serious consideration. We need to learn the difference between love and our hormonal which drive our carnal desires.

My advice to all those young kids out there who think they’re in love. “It’s just your hormones…you’ll get over it.”



Sunday, February 16, 2014

Time, Space and the Big Bang

On the far side of forever where neither time nor space existed, the Creator observed the indeterminable amount nothingness before Him. He spoke, and the vast nothingness before Him became filled with ions created by the power of His voice. These ions, vibrating from the resonance that echoes throughout His being, began colliding with each other creating atoms. First came lighter atoms such as hydrogen and helium. Then as the vibrations continued, heavier atoms began to form. Then with attraction atoms of similar nuclear and atomic order and gravity, a great cloud of energy began to form. It grew and continued to grow to immense proportions. Time was still not yet. At some point in this creation process, this great cloud of energy blew apart in an explosion that sent matter away from it’s center at speeds greater than the speed of light. As things began slowing stars, galaxies and things yet undiscovered were finding their place in the great universe. Now, with everything in its place and in motion, time began.

The Creator, for reasons known only to Him, began adding the planets. He added one particular one called earth. It was a very wet place where He separated the waters from the firmament, creating seas and dry land. He set the moon in just the right place to control the tides and give us the four seasons. After He filled the seas with fish, the air with birds, and the land with animals and plants, He saw that it was good. Then, for reasons known only to Him, He created man. In His own image created him, male and female created He them, and said it was very good.

It’s been thousands of years since the Creator has had such a close, personal relationship with his creation. After all, He did give man dominion over everything. In other words He left us in charge. Maybe we should take our job more serious.

Thursday, November 28, 2013

It's Time to be Thankful

The house is full of young’uns and there’s the smell of a feast being prepared in the kitchen. Just think, a couple dozen years ago none of this even existed. Remember, back when it was just you and your most favorite person in the world. Remember…you married that one and…well a lot of family history began to happen. Look around. You can find your oldest in the crowd somewhere. Remember when he was born? How you walked the waiting room floor and fretted…hoping both mom and child would be alright. Take a minute and dwell on that thought. 
  
Thanksgiving Dinner on the foot.
While you were learning to be a parent to one, number two comes along. Now you have two — two mouths to ask you dozens of questions, beg for ice cream or candy when you would rather they eat something more nourishing. You also have four eyes that watch your every move. Like good little primates; well, not really primates but you get the idea; they learn by watching and watch you they will. And those four little ears don’t miss a word. Mash your finger with the hammer…you had better say something nice.
  
After the boys reach a manageable age, along comes a daughter. Now a completely different set of rules kick in. The mouth still asks the same questions but the answers might need to be a little different for feminine ears. Two more eyes watch every move so care must be taken.
   
And getting this crew through school was one heck of a job. Looking back now I don’t know how mom and I managed to do it. I remember that it took a lot of effort to maintain our sanity and deal with two boys and a little lady and school studies which had so drastically changed since mom and I went to school, we were not much help with homework.
  
That seems to have been only yesterday. Today, I have three children, 9 grandchildren, and eight great grandchildren. 
  
Thanksgiving is a time to be thankful for all the great and good things God has provided for you and your family, but for me…But I’m also thankful that I lived through it and don’t have to do it again.

Now go and eat your turkey and be Thankful.

Friday, November 22, 2013

How One Man's Death Can Change History

Fifty years ago today I had gone the pharmacy picking up my wife something for her discomfort. When I returned home she said JFK has been assassinated. I told her she had to be kidding. Presidential assassinations are very rare and there must be some mistake. But there was not. As I sat watching Walter Cronkite on the television telling the details and time of death I felt as though the blood drained from my body.


I was a communications specialist in the United States Air Force stationed at Andrews Air Force Base. Even though I was not a democrat I liked the man. He didn’t know me but I felt he and I had gone through a bad time together. Remember the Cuban missile crisis? I do. When it started to look serious I got a call to report to base prepared to travel and be gone for a while. I packed my duffle and reported to the operations building and they told me to be prepared to leave at sunrise the next morning.



The next morning we took our duffle and were issued parachutes and put on old World War II C47's. We didn’t know where we were going but we were in the air at low altitude headed north. After a couple of hours we landed at a small field near an Army base. We boarded army buses and were carried to Fort Ritchie, Maryland. Our security clearances were reviewed and then we were fed and allowed to lounge around the rest of the day. We were told that after breakfast next morning we would continue our trip by Army bus.


I took time to write my wife and tell her were I was but I didn’t know where I was going next. After breakfast the next morning we again boarded the bus which drove some few miles and a mountain opened up and we went inside. For several miles we drove through a long, wide tunnel until we arrived at an area large enough for buses and other vehicles to make a wide turn around to go back out. They stopped in front of a large steel door which swung open to allow our admittance.

Once inside there were elevators and many levels in nuclear proof building. We were told which elevator to take to what level and to report to a particular Sergeant. We were told where we would sleep, eat, work, and take our showers. This place was filled with nearly all branches of the military plus many officers. As a communications specialist who handled highly classified information I was working in the communications room with a great number of teletype machines and radios. Even though I gave thought to my wife and children living just outside Washington, DC, I was far too busy to worry. The thought crossed my mind if Khruschev decided to go to war with us then my wife and kids may not be safe.

Eventually, after calling Khruschev’s bluff, JFK won out and Khruschev backed down.

Not many knew that there were nuclear armed Russian submarines off the coasts of Florida and Cuba who were on standby orders to attack. Our submarines, equipped with our sophisticated sonar picked them up and gave chase. Their every move was followed and one was captured. The commander of that submarine said he would rather surrender than to be the one who launched a nuclear attack against the United States. I don’t know what happened to that commander but I’m thankful that he didn’t launch his nuclear torpedo and start a nuclear war. The other two submarines, knowing they were being followed closely, turned and sailed away from our shores.

After all was over and things were back to normal, I was proud of how John Fitzgerald Kennedy had handled the situation. I know he must have had a long worrisome time wondering if he was making the right decisions. I can imagining him sitting in the oval office reading over the reports and studying over all of his options knowing there were nuclear armed Russian submarines off our coast and Cuba had long range missile sites aimed at us. It could have ended catastrophically. But JFK was, in my eyes, the hero of the day for his ability to think clearly and avert a disaster.

I had great admiration for John Fitzgerald Kennedy after that and his assassination was a great disaster for the country. It placed Lyndon Baines Johnson on the throne of the United States and Robert McNamara as his secretary of defense led us to the greater disaster for our country, the Vietnam Conflict. They refused to call it a war. McNamara ran the war in favor of the Military-Industrial complex and spent millions of tax dollars and the lives of tens of thousands of our young men on a war they had no intention of winning.

While John Fitzgerald Kennedy rests in peace in Arlington Cemetery, our country is much worse off because of his assassination. Isn’t it strange that one man’s death can change the history of a Nation?