Interrogatories
Have you ever been to the Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade? How about the Hollywood one? The Rose Parade? Any parades?
Did your family follow politics when you were growing up? Do you remember watching the conventions and debates with them as a child? What was that like?
Do you prefer things to be scented or unscented?
How worried are you about the Supreme Court’s ultimate decision over this religious exemption?
The Twitter Emitter
#ThanksgivingTips Be sure to yell when arguing about Obama with young, liberal relatives. First one to raise their voice wins the argument!
— Top Conservative Cat (@TeaPartyCat) November 26, 2013
Walmart could pay its employees a living wage if it would stop trying to make some of the richest Americans richer. http://t.co/esn92X6mnj
— LOLGOP (@LOLGOP) November 26, 2013
Obama's approval ratings fell again on news that he's trying to make healthcare affordable for all and prevent nuclear war.
— Top Conservative Cat (@TeaPartyCat) November 26, 2013
Must be hard to be a neocon at #Christmas. Having to cross PEACE off every card and scrawling WAR instead #WarOnChristmas
— The Daily Edge (@TheDailyEdge) November 26, 2013
Sobering to know in a few days you'll be sitting at the dinner table with family members who don't care if you die from lack of healthcare.
— eclecticbrotha (@eclecticbrotha) November 26, 2013
I don't care what the Supreme Court says, corporations should have the right to a religion when they also get the right to go to jail.
— glenn o'brien (@lordrochester) November 26, 2013
There is no war on Christmas, dammit, but the war on Thanxgiving is REAL. The impoverished in America have nothing to be thankful for.
— David (@ahzoov) November 26, 2013
Ted Cruz believes that life begins when your boss says it begins. http://t.co/pWeyNOYufc
— LOLGOP (@LOLGOP) November 26, 2013
Religious exemptions are the road back to feudalism.
— Brent S. Sirota (@BrentSirota) November 26, 2013
If the Supreme Court allows religion in the workplace first thing I'm doing start a religion where work is prohibited on Monday mornings…
— Political Line (@PoliticaILine) November 26, 2013
On This Day
In 1901, the U.S. Army War College (which is exactly what it sounds like) was founded.
In 1924, the first Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade was held in NYC.
In 1965, President Johnson was told by the Pentagon that if their planned operations were to succeed, they’d need to increase number of American troops in Vietnam from 120,000 to 400,000 (a veritable surge).
In 1973, the Senate voted to confirm Gerald Ford as Vice President of the United States, replacing the disgraced Spiro Agnew.
In 1978, former city supervisor and ex-cop Dan White shot and killed San Francisco mayor George Moscone and openly gay city supervisor Harvey Milk.
In 2001, the Hubble Space Telescope detected a hydrogen atmosphere on the extrasolar planet Osiris. This was the first atmosphere ever seen on an extrasolar planet.
In 2005, surgeons in Amiens, France performed the first partial human face transplant.
Born on This Day
1635 – Françoise d’Aubigné, marquise de Maintenon, wife of Louis XIV of France (d. 1719)
1701 – Anders Celsius, scientist/inventor (centigrade temp scale) (d. 1744)
1798 – Rafael Tejeo, Spanish painter (d. 1856)
1809 – Fanny Kemble, British actress, author and abolitionist (d. 1893)
1820 – Thomas Baines, English painter (d. 1875)
1827 – Edouard Moyse, French painter, possibly the first to paint scenes of Jewish life in France. (d. 1908)
1853 – Frank Dicksee, English Victorian painter and illustrator (d. 1928)
1859 – William Bliss Baker, American landscape painter (d. 1886)
1878 – William Orpen, Irish painter (d. 1931)
1886 – Tsugouharu Foujita, Japanese painter who lived and worked in France (d. 1968)
1905 – Astrid Allwyn, American actress (d. 1978)
1907 – L. Sprague de Camp, American writer (d. 2000)
1917 – Buffalo Bob Smith, American television host (d. 1998)
1932 – Benigno Aquino, Jr., Philippine politician (d. 1983)
1937 – Gail Sheehy, American writer
1942 – Jimi Hendrix, American guitarist (d. 1970)
1951 – Kathryn Bigelow, American film director
1955 – Bill Nye (The science guy), American engineer and broadcaster
1957 – Caroline Kennedy, American journalist and attorney
1959 – Charlie Burchill, Scottish guitarist and keyboardist (Simple Minds)
1960 – Tim Pawlenty, American dullard, 39th Governor of Minnesota (the man who had a bridge collapse on his watch).
1962 – Mike Bordin, American musician (Faith No More)
Died on This Day
1654 – Pieter Meulener, Dutch painter (b. 1602)
1673 – Anthonie Palamedesz, Dutch painter (b. 1601)
1833 – Philip Reinagle, English painter (b. 1749)
1894 – Charles Burton Barber, British painter of sentimental pictures of dogs and children (b. 1845)
1895 – Alexandre Dumas, fils, French author (b. 1824)
1900 – Anton Seitz, German genre painter (b. 1829)
1901 – Antonio Gisbert, Spanish painter (b. 1834)
1918 – Bohumil Kubista, Czech painter (who, oddly enough, dabbled in Cubism) (b. 1884)
1925 – Roger de la Fresnaye, French Cubist-Fauvist painter (b. 1885)
1931 – Lya De Putti, Hungarian actress (b. 1899)
1932 – Evelyn Preer, African-American actress and singer (b. 1896)
1933 – Robert Anning Bell, English painter (b. 1863)
1945 – Josep Maria Sert, Spanish muralist (b. 1874)
1953 – Eugene O’Neill, American writer and Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1888)
1958 – Lucy Elizabeth Kemp-Welch, British horse painter (b. 1869)
981 – Lotte Lenya, Austrian singer and actress (b. 1898)
1988 – John Carradine, American actor (b. 1906)
1997 – Buck Leonard, Hall of Famer in Negro League (b. 1907)
1997 – Eduardo Kingman, Ecuadorian artist (b. 1913)
2005 – Jocelyn Brando, American actress (b. 1919)
Today is
National Bavarian Cream Pie Day
Pins and Needles Day
National Day of Listening
Tie One On Day
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