marmorset

marmorset t1_j9zn8nn wrote

The positive part of this story is that unlike Australia and their loss in the Great Emu War, it put a victorious end to the US's Great Cattle Rebellion of 1863. Log cabins also know their place.

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marmorset OP t1_j6lr1o9 wrote

Yes, absolutely. People argue that's not what it means, but if you're calling yourselves "People" or "Human Beings," then everyone else are not "People" or "Human Beings" and that's that.

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marmorset OP t1_j6jsi4b wrote

This fight, the Second Battle of Adobe Walls, was considered such a heart-breaking defeat that the Comanche never recovered and didn't put up the same amount of resistance afterward. They'd had such strong faith that they would win and then realized they were completely outmatched.

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marmorset OP t1_j6i6hyp wrote

The Comanche people are properly called the "Nʉmʉnʉʉ," translated as "The Human Beings" or "The People." The Ute Indians introduced to the Spanish to the Nʉmʉnʉʉ calling them "kɨmantsi," which the Spanish wrote as Comanche. Kɨmantsi means "Enemy." Nʉmʉnʉʉ is pronounced "nuh-MUH-nuh."

Isatai'i led the Nʉmʉnʉʉ and some allies, a group estimated to be around 1,000 warriors against twenty-eight men and one woman armed with long-range hunting rifles who were staying in a small adobe building. A scout and hunter, Billy Dixon, killed a Comanche warrior from 1,500 yards away, one of the longest recorded sniper shots. Realizing they were vulnerable at such a distance broke the spirit of the attacking Native Americans. Dixon is one of eight civilians awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor.

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marmorset OP t1_j32apb8 wrote

Though she often wrote about religion and morality there's no information about specific religion. Her father's side of the family was from Wales and they appear to have been Baptists, but I couldn't find anything about her mother's side. I suspect if she had been a Quaker that would have been mentioned.

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marmorset OP t1_j31yig6 wrote

I didn't learn it today, I wrote about it today. I had read about Hale a while ago, I think when I took my family to New England. Last night I happened to see something that reminded me of the story so I found a link and posted it this morning.

Sawyer claimed the story as her own and tried to make a living off of it, selling wool and memorabilia. Sometime after her death Thomas Edison got involved. He'd heard the poem and they were the first words recorded on phonograph. Years later he had a book published supporting Sawyer's unfounded claims.

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marmorset OP t1_j31wlas wrote

That story is nonsense. It's written to suggest that the tale happened in 1815 and fifteen years later Hale published it as her own poem, but that's not remotely the truth. Hale's poem was published in 1830 and almost 50 years later a woman came forward claiming that she was the Mary in the poem and that a young man visiting the village wrote the poem for her on a slip of paper. She never produced the paper and there's no evidence that Roulstone wrote the poem other than the word of Mary Sawyer.

Roulstone himself died very shortly after having supposedly written the poem, he never wrote anything else and there's nothing tying Roulstone to the poem, Sawyer, or Hale, other than the word of Sawyer. It was never seen or published by anyone anywhere until Hale, a prolific author, journalist, and poet, put it in her book.

There's also no evidence that Mary Sawyer was the Mary in the poem. She came forward with that story only several months before the death of Sarah Josepha Hale.

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marmorset OP t1_j31ugqe wrote

Her father was a Revolutionary War veteran and a believer in education, which led to her becoming home schooled, unusual for a woman at that time. She worked as a schoolteacher for a time, then in 1811 she married a lawyer and they had five children. Her husband died only eleven years later, leading her to wear black the rest of her life. With support from her late husband's Freemason's lodge, she published a book of poetry. Four years later, in 1827, she released her first novel, one of the earliest novels condemning slavery.

She was then hired as the editor, or "editress" as she called herself, of the influential Ladies' Magazine. Continuing as a writer for the magazine and herself, she released another books of poems, including "Mary had a Little Lamb" based on an experience as a schoolteacher.

Starting in 1846 and over the course of seventeen years and five presidents, Zachary Taylor, Millard Fillmore, Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, and Abraham Lincoln, she urged that the local New England tradition of Thanksgiving become a national holiday. It became the third national holiday, after Independence Day and George Washington's birthday. It was her menu, described in one of her novels, that became the template for Thanksgiving dinner.

A believer in education, she helped found Vassar College and advocating the hiring of woman as professors and administrators. Hale was also instrumental in raising the funds for the Bunker Hill Monument. Her novels, articles, and poetry were very influential and inspired many women to become writers, publishing some in her magazine. Hale finally retired at the age of 89 and died the next year.

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marmorset t1_j0w7jpa wrote

That's not how it works. There's a default human form with shared characteristics but the embryo is created either XX or XY. Right from the beginning these genes start to direct development, that's why even at an early age male and female children have differences even though their bodies are very similar.

The fact that men have nipples is often used as proof of a female template, but that's just a shared characteristic. Humans start with the same set up and then the basic form is developed as necessary. The same argument about nipples could be made for hips and knees. The human template is obviously male because males have similar hips and knees their whole lives, but women's hips and knees change profoundly during puberty. That doesn't mean we're a male species, just that having "male" hips and kness doesn't hinder a woman and having "female" nipples doesn't hinder a man.

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u/treeofliife

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marmorset t1_j0w5bk4 wrote

Don Rickles used to say that Frank Sinatra saved his life once. Two thugs were beating up Rickles in a parking lot and Sinatra said, "Okay, boys, that's enough."

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