Road Warrior Radio with Chris Hinkley, April 10, 2024 Hour 1

RBN
By RBN April 10, 2024 11:00

Congratulations! Happy (42nd) Anniversary, Julie! And may God bless your next “22,075,200 minutes” of wedded bliss…

If anything has ever ‘made America great’ it is folks like that (Mr. & Mrs. Julie) who through undoubted adversity, have persevered, demonstrating an integrity and strength of character to which we all would do well to aspire. Thank you, Julie for your shining example of what is possible – and what should still be ‘the norm’ in America – despite the overwhelming efforts to eviscerate all that is good and decent.

RBN Headlines

Mentioned on RWR Today

Do not be deceived: “Bad company corrupts good morals.” – 1 Corinthians 15:33 NASB95

“Progress, far from consisting in change, depends on retentiveness. When change is absolute there remains no being to improve and no direction is set for possible improvement: and when experience is not retained, as among savages, infancy is perpetual. Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

George Santayana, The Life of Reason: The Phases of Human Progress (1905-1906) Vol. I, Reason in Common Sense

“There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root, and it may be that he who bestows the largest amount of time and money on the needy is doing the most by his mode of life to produce that misery which he strives in vain to relieve.”

Henry David Thoreau, Walden (1910)

  • Columbia Falls Aluminum Company – McGarvey Law

    [From the featured NYTimes article:]
    IN 1985, the Columbia Falls Aluminum Company wrung a 15 percent pay cut from employees in return for an apparent will-o’-the-wisp: a share of profits from an aluminum refinery that was a perennial money loser.

    Brack W. Duker, the corporate executive who had just bought the refinery from the Atlantic Richfield Company for a symbolic $1, held out a firm promise, many workers recall. If the aluminum market ever recovered, Mr. Duker assured them as he lobbied for the plan, ‘’a dollar in your pocket is a dollar in mine.’’

    In the end, the workers reluctantly accepted the offer. And the price of aluminum did in fact recover – far beyond anyone’s expectations. Starting in 1986, Columbia Falls Aluminum became a money-making machine.

    But over the next five years, rather than splitting the take, Mr. Duker and his minority partner, Jerome Broussard, funneled much of the money into offshore bank accounts. Before they cut off their union and salaried employees altogether, the two men had awarded $84 million to them and $231 million to themselves. As it turned out, a dollar in the pockets of workers would be nearly $3 in those of the owners.

  • CFAC, Ruis announce sale agreement for 2,400 acres of land | Hungry Horse News

    The Columbia Falls Aluminum Co. has agreed to sell 2,400 acres of land it owns to Columbia Falls developer Mick Ruis.

    […]

    The transaction is expected to close once the Environmental Protection Agency releases the Record of Decision on the Superfund cleanup, which focuses on landfills at the site.

    […]

    “If I can build a 1,800 square-foot house with a garage for $550,000 … that’s my target,” he said.

    […]

    The Proposed Action to clean up the Superfund site calls for a slurry wall that would contain cyanide and fluoride that is in the groundwater in high concentrations near the West Landfill and the former wet scrubber sludge pond.

    The wall would contain the waste, the EPA said, and keep it from flowing away from the landfills. While concentrations of cyanide and fluoride are high in groundwater close to the landfills, the groundwater has low to no cyanide by the time it flows to the Flathead River.

    The Proposed Action also calls for scraping away contaminated soils on the site that were close to the plant and burying them on the wet scrubber sludge pond and then recapping it.

    The cost of that cleanup is estimated at $57 million.

  • 3) The Ultimate History Lesson: A Weekend with John Taylor Gatto (Hour 3 of 5) – YouTube
    • [17:11–21:12 total: 4:01] JTG: Beatrice Webb, Herbert Spencer’s niece; “Root hog, or die!” “Kill them with kindness vs. exterminate the brutes!”

On This Day

  • Happy Anniversary, Julie (and Mr. Julie)!

Holidays

Historical Events

  • 2010 – The President of Poland, Lech Kaczyński, dies in a plane crash: Several high-ranking officials, senior members of the Polish clergy, as well as relatives of the Katyn massacre victims were killed. The accident was blamed on pilot error and bad weather.[tad]
  • 2005 – Tiger Woods wins fourth green jacket: Tiger Woods won his fourth Masters with a spectacular finish of birdies and bogeys.[ap]
  • 2003 – PROTECT Act of 2003: The House passes the bill creating a national AMBER Alert system and strengthening child pornography laws.[tph] The PROTECT Act incorporates the Truth in Domain Names Act (TDNA) of 2003 (originally two separate bills, submitted by Senator Orrin Hatch and Congressman Mike Pence), codified at 18 U.S.C. § 2252(B)(b).[pa]
  • 1975 – Lee Elder becomes first Black golfer to play in Masters[his]
  • 1974 – Golda Meir announces resignation: Golda Meir announced her resignation as prime minister of Israel.[ap]
  • 1972 – Moscow Summit: The United States and the Soviet Union joined some 70 nations in signing an agreement banning biological warfare.[ap] Nixon became the first U.S. president to visit Moscow (and only the second president, after Franklin D. Roosevelt, to visit the Soviet Union), as he and Henry Kissinger arrived to begin a summit meeting with Brezhnev.[ms]
  • 1970 – The Beatles break up as Paul McCartney leaves the band: In their ten years of existence, the British rock group became one of the most successful bands of all time, selling over a billion albums, according to EMI. McCartney’s announcement came a week before the release of his debut solo album, the starting point of a successful solo career.[tad] In the midst of business disagreements with his bandmates, Paul McCartney announced his departure from the Beatles.[wik]
  • 1963 – Atomic submarine USS Thresher sinks in the Atlantic, killing all on board[his]
  • 1961 – South African Gary Player becomes first international Masters champion[his]
  • 1953 – First color 3-D film opens[his]
  • 1942 – Bataan Death March begins[his]
  • 1932 – Von Hindenburg 1st, Hitler 2nd: German President Paul Von Hindenburg was reelected in a runoff, with Adolf Hitler coming in second.[ap]
  • 1919 – Revolutionary leader Emiliano Zapata assassinated in Mexico[his]
  • 1912 – RMS Titanic sets sail: The British liner RMS Titanic set sail from Southampton, England, bound for New York on its ill-fated maiden voyage.[ap]
  • 1866 – ASPCA founded: The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) is founded in New York City by philanthropist and diplomat Henry Bergh, 54.[his][aspca]
  • 1865 – Lee’s Farewell Address: At Appomattox, Confederate General Robert E. Lee issues General Order #9, his last.[otd] After surrendering to Union, General Lee gives final address to troops[his]
  • 1849 – Safety pin is patented, rights sold for just $400.[his] Safety pin patented by Walter Hunt (NYC); sold rights for $100[vet] [This is how rumors get started!]
  • 1825 – 1st hotel in Hawaii opens[vet]
  • 1816 – 2nd Bank of US chartered[vet]
  • 1815 – Mount Tambora explodes in one of the largest volcanic eruptions in recorded history: At least 71,000 people were killed by the eruption. The explosion was heard up to 2000 km (1200 mi) away.[tad]
  • 1806 – General Horatio Gates dies[rwb]
  • 1790 – US Patent system forms[vet]
  • 1790 – Robert Gray is 1st American to circumnavigate the Earth[vet]
  • 1516 – Venice compels Jews to live in a specific area, establishing the first Jewish ghetto[otd]

Births

  • 1987 – Hayley Westenra, New Zealand soprano[tad]
  • 1951 – Steven Seagal, American actor [or is it Russian…?] (Above the Law, Hard to Kill), born in Detroit, Michigan[otd]
  • 1951 – David Helvarg, American journalist, activist[tad]
  • 1936 – John Madden, American Pro Football HOF coach (Oakland Raiders 1969-78; Super Bowl 1976) and sportscaster (16X Emmy Award winner; CBS, FOX, ABC, NBC; Madden NFL video games), born in Austin, Minnesota[otd]
  • 1932 – Omar Sharif, Egyptian actor[tad]
  • 1847 – Joseph Pulitzer, Hungarian/American politician, journalist, publisher, founded Pulitzer, Inc.[tad]
  • 1778 – William Hazlitt, English critic, painter[tad]

Deaths

  • 2023 – Al Jaffee, American cartoonist (b. 1921)[wik]
  • 1992 – Sam Kinison, American screaming comedian and actor (Back to School, Charlie Hoover), dies in a car crash at 38[otd]
  • 1966 – Evelyn Waugh, English author, journalist[tad]
  • 1965 – Linda Darnell, American actress[tad]
  • 1955 – Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, French/American priest, palaeontologist, philosopher[tad]
  • 1931 – Kahlil Gibran, Lebanese/American poet[tad]
  • 1919 – Emiliano Zapata, Mexican general[tad]
  • 1806 – Horatio Gates, English-American general (b. 1727)[wik]
RBN
By RBN April 10, 2024 11:00
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