Thursday, June 25, 2026

Stephen King on Trump: “ No Horror Story I’ve Written Could Be as Terrifying as This Man”





I have been a fan of Stephen king for a long time. From the very first book of his that I read (which was Needful Things in the spring or summer of 1997), I was basically hooked. Since then, you could probably count me as one of his Constant Readers. 

The thing is, like with music and other things including other writers, part of the reason that I became a fan and remain one to this day is this sense that he is a decent person and has something to say. Clearly, when you write as many books as he has, that is literally true. He has a lot to say.

Yet, in these times, when people speaking out against everything that is going on in this country, and in this world more generally, is more important than ever, King has proven to have some things of substance to say. Obviously, that is not going to please everybody. In fact, it sure seems to piss a whole lot of people off.

All the better, frankly. The fact that King is willing to speak out even if it means losing some readers and potential book buyers shows me something, personally. 

This has been especially true during the age of Trump. At a time when we need people showing that common sense is not entirely dead. 

Many of the things which King posts are actually quite witty and funny. Some others are thought-provoking. 

Recently, he posted comments on X about Trump's obsession with blaming "vandals" for destroying the work which he ordered on the Reflecting Pool in Washington. This is what he said (see link below):

“Nobody is vandalizing the Reflecting Pool, and Trump knows it. This is a visible example of his corruption. A no-bid contract to some crony followed by sky-high cost overruns, and shoddy construction to boot. Classic Trump: I didn’t f*** up, it was my enemies.”

Yup. Makes sense. Trump ordered the Reflecting Pool to be redone in his particular tastes as one of his vanity projects for the national capital. Of course, he just ordered it done without seeking Congressional approval, and the bill is being footed by the American taxpayer. Of course.

So when it turned out to be a disaster, who else could be blamed but Trump?

But yeah, Trump never accepts responsibility for anything that could compromise him. So he claimed that vandals had done the damage, and somehow also blamed President Obama for the situation, even though Obama has been out of office now for nearly a decade.

Pathetic.

The paint job which peeled so easily hardly seems like it would be worth the small fortune which Trump claimed it to be. You have to wonder if that price was not inflated, and what happened to that extra money if it was indeed inflated.

King has been critical of Trump for a long time now. Ever since Trump's political rise. Here is one particularly damning thought which King shared of Trump shortly after King Con Don first took over in the Oval Office:

Take a look at these damning comments:

“Trump is a tumor in America’s veins. A tyrant who does not hesitate to set a country on fire for his narcissistic ego. No horror story I’ve written could be as terrifying as this man.”  

Hard to argue with any of that, frankly. Indeed, a major part of Trump's appeal, I suspect, is that he appeals to the darker side of people's nature. They seem to feel that he not only gives them permission to be on their worst behavior, but actually actively encourages it. That is why he has brought unprecedented greed and blatant corruption and power grabs and dictatorial tendencies. Meanwhile, it feels like Americans are, collectively, noticeably more mean-spirited and anti-democratic and selfish and narcissistic right along with Trump.

Dark days this country is going through. 

I am glad that we still have some people like King who are still awake and can see these horrors for what they really are.




Below are the links related to Stephen King offering up harsh criticism towards Trump and the Mindless MAGA Moron cult. Take a look:


X post by Stephen King, June 21, 2026:

https://x.com/StephenKing/status/2068838733932020205

Stephen King on X: "Nobody is vandalizing the Reflecting Pool, and Trump knows it. This is a visible example of his corruption--a no-bid contract to some crony followed by sky-high cost overruns, and shoddy construction to boot. Classic Trump: I didn't fuck up, it was my enemies." / X




Stephen King: Trump’s nuclear ability ‘worse than any horror story I ever wrote’  Comments: by Brandon Carter - 05/03/17:

https://thehill.com/blogs/in-the-know/in-the-know/331865-stephen-king-trumps-nuclear-ability-worse-than-any-horror-story/

Stephen King: Trump’s nuclear ability ‘worse than any horror story I ever wrote’



Custer’s Last Stand, the Battle of Little Bighorn (Or the Battle of the Greasy Grass) Took Place On This Day 150 Years Ago



A few years ago, my son and I took a trip to the Midwest and the West. While we were in Montana, we saw a sign for the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument, where Custer's Last Stand (known as the Battle of the Greasy Grass by Native Americans) took place. I decided to stop and briefly got off, before seeing another sign indicating that it would be the better part of an hour's drive away. This was towards the end of the day, after having driven for hours and as we were approaching the campground where we were staying for the night. So at that point, I thought better of it and turned back onto the highway we were on, heading once again towards our campsite.

It was a bit depressing, because this seemed like the one chance that we would get to visit this famous historic site.

However, we approached it and eventually drove right by it the next morning, which was exciting. So once again, I took the exit, only this time with the intent of actually paying the place a visit. Which my son and I finally did.

At the time, I was only passingly familiar with that chapter in history. But that was the kind of a place where the history feels to come alive. You almost sensed that this place had not really changed all that much since the actual events unfolded during that fateful battle. 

For the Native Americans, this has to feel bittersweet. On the one hand, it became a famous battle known as the one time that they actually defeated a modern army. Yet, this also marked the end of their independence and traditional way of life. Embarrassed by this defeat, the United States government came back with reinforcements and a vengeance, forcing some Lakota to flee, wanting to avoid the reservation system which would effectively imprison them. 

As for Custer and his men, you cannot help but think of some unanswered questions while visiting this place. How did the Native Americans manage to outsmart and defeat a powerful and modern army? What exactly happened, and did Custer die late in the battle, as often is depicted, or did he die early, as some contend? For that matter, one cannot help but wonder what his last thoughts were, just before perishing. 

Indeed, these questions and plenty more have added to the lore of the place. Yet, the questions themselves are part of the problem, because they are unanswerable:

“To study this battle is to enter quicksand,” historian Stephen E. Ambrose warned readers in his 1975 book, Crazy Horse and Custer.

So we are warned.

Yet, this place felt like it had part of the lore of the American West. After all, a major event, one which helped to define the West in some ways, had taken place here. Plus, this particular event has the air of mystery and intrigue to it, involving as it does the mysterious death of a prominent American figure, as well as the seeming last stand, ironically, of the Native Americans.

It has intrigued the popular American imagination enough to be not only the subject of movies and stories, but also to have those movies reflect the changing attitudes towards American history, and the Battle of the Little Bighorn in particular, over different times. Again, a snippet from the article (see link below):

Custer’s posthumous reputation would rise and fall over the decades, especially as historians replaced dime novel hacks in telling his story. Close to 70 movies, from the silent era onward, have also offered their own takes on the Custer legend. In They Died with Their Boots On, a huge 1941 hit, Erroll Flynn gave moviegoers a dashing and heroic Custer. A year earlier, future president Ronald Reagan had portrayed him as an earnest young West Pointer, pre-Little Bighorn, in Santa Fe Trail. But in 1970’s Little Big Man, Custer was reduced to a comical madman, with sitcom actor Richard Mulligan playing the role opposite Dustin Hoffman. 

So attitudes about the most famous - or perhaps infamous - figure involved in the Little Bighorn have shifted quite dramatically over time, and with different movies.

Yet, those might be temporary, as well. While older movies portrayed Custer in heroic terms, more people in recent days began to question him and his motives. Indeed, to view him almost as symbolic of everything that was (and perhaps is still) wrong with the American character and culture.

Take a look at this fascinating article below:





All of the specific quotes used above were taken from this short article (see link below) about the anniversary of this famous battle. I recommend reading it, because it was both interesting and illuminating. Take a look:

A Century and a Half After Custer’s Last Stand, the Battle of Little Bighorn Continues to Mystify by Greg Daugherty | History Correspondent  June 24, 2026:

The June 1876 firefight resulted in the deaths of George Armstrong Custer and 267 of his men. Historians continue to debate exactly how the Lakota Sioux and the Northern Cheyenne secured their victory over the U.S. Army 

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/a-century-and-a-half-after-custers-last-stand-the-battle-of-little-bighorn-continues-to-mystify-180988984/?utm_source=smithsoniandaily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=editorial&lctg=98217613&user_id=94e433415b0144d9acbc3fda312292e70f80b1a346bfc9e62a5a35be6c37fe99

A Century and a Half After Custer's Last Stand, the Battle of Little Bighorn Continues to Mystify





Below are some of the pictures that I took from our visit to Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument nearly three years ago. Enjoy:










A Century and a Half After Custer’s Last Stand, the Battle of Little Bighorn Continues to Mystify by Greg Daugherty | History Correspondent  June 24, 2026:

The June 1876 firefight resulted in the deaths of George Armstrong Custer and 267 of his men. Historians continue to debate exactly how the Lakota Sioux and the Northern Cheyenne secured their victory over the U.S. Army 

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/a-century-and-a-half-after-custers-last-stand-the-battle-of-little-bighorn-continues-to-mystify-180988984/?utm_source=smithsoniandaily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=editorial&lctg=98217613&user_id=94e433415b0144d9acbc3fda312292e70f80b1a346bfc9e62a5a35be6c37fe99

A Century and a Half After Custer's Last Stand, the Battle of Little Bighorn Continues to Mystify

June 25th: This Day in History

 



Once again, it should be reiterated, that this does not pretend to be a very extensive history of what happened on this day (nor is it the most original - the links can be found down below). If you know something that I am missing, by all means, shoot me an email or leave a comment, and let me know!


There was a slaughter of Jews in Germany during the first Crusade. Barbed wire was patented on this day in history.Three states were admitted back to the United States more than three years after the official end to the Civil War. The Battle of the Little Bighorn took place on this date. Hitler played the part of triumphant conqueror, visiting Paris. One year later, Finland declared war on the Soviet Union, and Germany invaded Dubno in Poland, and allowed the Ukranians to do with the Jews there as they would (12,000 died). The Korean War began on this day in history. The first color television transmission ever was broadcast by CBS. The tennis shoe was introduced. Madagascar gained independence from France. Iraq claimed that Kuwait belonged to it. This was an important date a couple of times in relatively early Beatles history. The 1,500th goal in World Cup history was scored, and record hot temperatures in Texas and New Mexico came on this date in 1994.


Here's a more detailed look at events that transpired on this date throughout history:


• 253 - St Lucius I begins his reign as Catholic Pope

• 524 - Battle of Vézeronce, the Franks defeat the Burgundians.

841 - Charles the Bald and Louis the German defeated Lothar at the Battle of Fontenay.

1080 - At Brixen, a council of bishops declared Pope Gregory to be deposed and Archbishop Guibert as antipope Clement III.

1096 - First Crusade slaughter Jews of Werelinghofen Germany

1139 - Battle of Ourique: Afonso I defeats Moors

• 1178 - 5 Canterbury monks report something exploding on Moon

1183 - Peace of Konstanz

1243 - Sinibaldo dei Fieschi elected as Pope Innocentius IV

1298 - Rindfleish Persecutions-250 Jews killed in Rothenburg Germany

1500 - Pope Alexander VI accept Treaty of Granada

1580 - The Book of Concord was first published. The book is a collection of doctrinal standards of the Lutheran Church.

1606 - Alkmaarse clergy asks "Great Dertelheyt"

1606 - St Jansday is forbidden

1607 - Mentally ill emperor Rudolf II signs Treaty of Lieben, giving up Austria, Hungary & Moravia



Royal France

• 1621 - French government army occupies Fort St Jean d'Angély at La Rochelle





1630 - Fork introduced to American dining by Gov Winthrop

1638 - Lunar eclipse is 1st astronomical event recorded in US

1646 - Thomas Fairfax' New Model-army occupies Oxford



• 1658 - Aurangzeb proclaimed himself emperor of the Moghuls in India.

1658 - Spanish garrison at Duinkerk surrenders to French and British



• 1667 - Dr Jean-Baptiste Denys, French doctor, performs 1st blood transfusion



1672 - First recorded monthly Quaker meeting in US held, Sandwich, Mass

1675 - Battle at Rathenow: Brandenburgers beat Sweden

1678 - Elena Cornaro Piscopia is the first woman awarded a doctorate of philosophy.

1716 - Eugenius of Savoye named land guardian of Austrian Netherlands

1749 - General fast because of drought in MA



• 1767 - Mexican Indians rioted as Jesuit priests were ordered home.





An image of the iconic "We the People" wording of the Constitution.

Virginia officially became the tenth state to ratify the Constitution on this day in 1788, thus becoming the tenth state of the Union. 




• 1794 - French troops occupy Charleroi



1798 - US passes Alien Act allowing president to deport dangerous aliens

1834 - Pope Gregory XVI's encyclical "Singulari nos" published

1835 - First building constructed at Yerba Buena (now SF)

1861 - Western Virginia campaign

1862 - Battle of Oak Grove, VA (Orchard, Henrico, French's Field) (Kings's Schoolhouse) Day 1 of 7 Days

1863 - US General George Meade replaces General Hooker to be more aggressive

1864 - Horse tramway at the Hague, opened

1864 - Union troops surrounding Petersburg, VA, began digging tunnels and building a mine tunnel underneath the Confederate lines.

1867 - First barbed wire patented by Lucien B Smith of Ohio

1868 - The U.S. Congress enacted legislation granting an eight-hour day to workers employed by the Federal government.

1868 - Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina were readmitted to the Union.

1868 - Pres Andrew Johnson passes a law that government workers would work 8 hr day

1870 - Opera "Die Walkure" is produced (Munich)

1870 - In Spain, Queen Isabella abdicated in favor of Alfonso XII.










• 1876 - Battle of the Little Bighorn: 7th Cavalry wiped out by Sioux and Cheyenne, death of Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer and the 210 men of U.S. 7th Cavalry were killed by Sioux and Cheyenne Indians at Little Big Horn in Montana. The event is known as "Custer's Last Stand."

June 25, 1876: Battle of Little Bighorn  On this day in 1876, Native American forces led by Chiefs Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull defeat the U.S. Army troops of Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer in a bloody battle near southern Montana's Little Bighorn River.    Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull, leaders of the Sioux tribe on the Great Plains, strongly resisted the mid-19th-century efforts of the U.S. government to confine their people to reservations. In 1875, after gold was discovered in South Dakota's Black Hills, the U.S. Army ignored previous treaty agreements and invaded the region. This betrayal led many Sioux and Cheyenne tribesmen to leave their reservations and join Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse in Montana. By the late spring of 1876, more than 10,000 Native Americans had gathered in a camp along the Little Bighorn River--which they called the Greasy Grass--in defiance of a U.S. War Department order to return to their reservations or risk being attacked.    In mid-June, three columns of U.S. soldiers lined up against the camp and prepared to march. A force of 1,200 Native Americans turned back the first column on June 17. Five days later, General Alfred Terry ordered Custer's 7th Cavalry to scout ahead for enemy troops. On the morning of June 25, Custer drew near the camp and decided to press on ahead rather than wait for reinforcements.    At mid-day, Custer's 600 men entered the Little Bighorn Valley. Among the Native Americans, word quickly spread of the impending attack. The older Sitting Bull rallied the warriors and saw to the safety of the women and children, while Crazy Horse set off with a large force to meet the attackers head on. Despite Custer's desperate attempts to regroup his men, they were quickly overwhelmed. Custer and some 200 men in his battalion were attacked by as many as 3,000 Native Americans; within an hour, Custer and every last one of his soldier were dead.    The Battle of Little Bighorn--also called Custer's Last Stand--marked the most decisive Native American victory and the worst U.S. Army defeat in the long Plains Indian War. The gruesome fate of Custer and his men outraged many white Americans and confirmed their image of the Indians as wild and bloodthirsty. Meanwhile, the U.S. government increased its efforts to subdue the tribes. Within five years, almost all of the Sioux and Cheyenne would be confined to reservations. 



1877 - In Philadelphia, PA, Alexander Graham Bell demonstrated the telephone for Sir William Thomson (Baron Kelvin) and Emperor Pedro II of Brazil at the Centennial Exhibition.

1888 - Republican Convention, in Chicago, nominates Benjamin Harrison

1894 - American Railway Union under Eugene V Debs goes on strike

1903 - Yanks and White Sox end deadlocked at 6-6 in 18

1903 - Boston Beaneater Wiley Piatt is only 20th-century pitcher to lose 2 complete games in one day, falling to Pittsburgh 1-0 & 5-3

1905 - Warsaw & Lodz revolt against Russian occupation

1906 - Pittsburgh millionaire Harry Kendall Thaw, the son of coal and railroad baron William Thaw, shot and killed Stanford White. White, a prominent architect, had a tryst with Florence Evelyn Nesbit before she married Thaw. The shooting took place at the premeire of Mamzelle Champagne in New York.  

1909 - George Sargent wins US Open golf tournament

1910 - Mann Act passed (no women across state lines for immoral purposes)

1910 - The U.S. Congress authorized the use of postal savings stamps.

1913 - Dutch Parliamentary election (confess party looses majority)

1913 - American Civil War veterans begin arriving at the Great Reunion of 1913.


Jun 25, 1915: Germans release statement on use of poison gas at Ypres  On this day in 1915, the German press publishes an official statement from the country's war command addressing the German use of poison gas at the start of the Second Battle of Ypres two months earlier.    The German firing of more than 150 tons of lethal chlorine gas against two French colonial divisions at Ypres in Belgium on April 22, 1915, had shocked and horrified their Allied opponents in World War I and provoked angry outbursts against what was seen as inexcusable barbarism, even in the context of warfare. As Sir John French, commander in chief of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), wrote heatedly of the German attacks at Ypres: "All the scientific resources of Germany have apparently been brought into play to produce a gas of so virulent and poisonous a nature that any human being brought into contact with it is first paralyzed and then meets with a lingering and agonizing death."    The German statement of June 25, 1915, was a response to this outraged reaction by the Allies; they considered it hypocritical, claiming that their opponents–namely the French–had been manufacturing and employing gas in battle well before the Second Battle of Ypres. "For every one who has kept an unbiased judgment," the statement began, "the official assertions of the strictly accurate and truthful German military administration will be sufficient to prove the prior use of asphyxiating gases by our opponents." It went on to quote from a memorandum issued by the French War Ministry on February 21, 1915, containing instructions for using "these so-called shells with stupefying gases that are being manufactured by our central factories?[that] contain a fluid which streams forth after the explosion, in the form of vapors that irritate the eyes, nose, and throat."    This memo, the Germans concluded, proved that "the French in their State workshops manufactured shells with asphyxiating gases fully half a year ago at least" and that they must have manufactured sufficient numbers for the War Ministry to issue directions on how to use the shells. "What hypocrisy when the same people grow indignant because the Germans much later followed them on the path they had pointed out!"    Though the French were, in fact, the first to employ gas during World War I–in August 1914 they used tear-gas grenades containing xylyl bromide to confront the initial German advance in Belgium and northeastern France–Germany was undoubtedly the first belligerent nation during the war to put serious thought and work into the development of chemical weapons that were not merely irritants, like xylyl bromide, but could be used in large quantities to inflict a major defeat on the enemy. In addition to chlorine gas, first used to deadly effect by the Germans at Ypres, phosgene gas and mustard gas were also employed on the battlefields of World War I, mostly by Germany but also by Britain and France, who were forced to quickly catch up to the Germans in the realm of chemical-weapons technology. Though the psychological impact of poison gas was undoubtedly great, its actual impact on the war–like that of the tank–is debatable, due to the low rate of fatality associated with the gas attacks. In total, the war saw some 1.25 million gas casualties but only 91,000 deaths from gas poisoning, with over 50 percent of those fatalities suffered by the poorly equipped Russian army.




1916 - Tsar Nicolaas II fires minister of Foreign affairs Sasonov



• 1917 - The first American fighting troops landed in France.  

1918 - Baku-Turkish communist party forms

1919 - First advanced monoplane airliner flight (Junkers F13)

• 1919 - Revolt of Spartacus in Hamburg

• 1920 - League of Nations places Intl head of Justice in Hague

1920 - The Greeks took 8,000 Turkish prisoners in Smyrna.

1921 - Samuel Gompers was elected head of the AFL for the 40th time.

1921 - Charlie McCartney scores 300 in 205 mins Aust v Notts

1925 - Military putsch under Gen Theodorus Pangulos in Greece

1927 - WVO soccer team forms in Oosterhout

1928 - NY Giant Fred Lindstrom ties record of 9 hits in a doubleheader

1929 - Pres Hoover authorizes building of Boulder Dam (Hoover Dam)

1932 - 36th US Golf Open: Gene Sarazen shoots a 286 at Fresh Meadows NY

1932 - Commencement of India's 1st Test cricket, v England at Lord's

1934 - Hedley Verity takes 15 wickets v Australia (7-61 & 8-43)

1934 - NY Yankee Lou Gehrig hits for the cycle beating White Sox 11-2

1934 - Yank pitcher John Broaca ties record by striking out 5 times

1935 - Joe Louis defeats Primo Carnera at Yankee Stadium

1937 - Cub Augie Galan becomes 1st player to switch hit HRs in a game

1938 - "A Tisket A Tasket" by Ella Fitzgerald with Chick Webb hits #1

1938 - Gaelic scholar Douglas Hyde was inaugurated as the first president of the Irish Republic.

1938 - Federal minimum wage law guarantees workers 25 cents per hour (rising to 40 cents by 1945) and a maximum 44 hour working week


• 1940 - Adolf Hitler viewed Eiffel Tower and grave of Napoleon in France

1941 - -26] Russian counter attack at Rovno


Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial in Washington, D.C.

• 1941 - FDR issues Executive Order 8802 forbidding discrimination






1941 - Fair Employment Practices Commission established

• 1941 - Finland declared war on Soviet Union

• 1941 - Germans invade Dubno Poland, giving permission to Ukrainians to do whatever they want to 12,000 Jews living there

1942 - British RAF staged a 1,000 bomb raid on Bremen Germany (WW II)


Statue of soldier, author and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in Parliament Square, London

1942 - British premier Winston Churchill travels from US to London







General Dwight Eisenhower, 34th President of the United States

• 1942 - Maj Gen Dwight Eisenhower appointed commander of US forces in Europe

Jun 25, 1942: Eisenhower assumes command of U.S. troops in Europe  On this day in 1942, General Dwight D. Eisenhower becomes commander of all U.S. troops in the European theater of World War II, continuing the steady ascent in military rank that would culminate in his appointment as supreme Allied commander of all forces in Europe in 1943. As U.S. commander, Ike developed diplomatic skills that he would later employ as America's 34th president.    U.S. Army military historians Carl Vuono and M.P.W. Stone have described Eisenhower as a dynamic leader who successfully planned and oversaw military strategy in a complex global environment. These qualities came in handy when Eisenhower was elected president in 1952. The Cold War between democratic and communist nations was in full swing and Eisenhower's ability to form cooperative relationships, his military experience and calm demeanor reassured anxious Americans.    Ike attended the U.S. Military Academy at West Point from 1911 to 1915, where he cultivated friendships with future generals Omar Bradley, James A. Van Fleet and Joseph T. McNarney. After graduating, Eisenhower served in relative obscurity stateside and in Panama, rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel. He went to the Army War College in 1928 and a year later worked as an assistant in the secretary of war's office. In 1935, he served as an assistant to General Douglas MacArthur in the Philippines. With war with Japan seeming imminent, Eisenhower returned to the states in 1941 to become a brigadier general in the Third Army. Between February and June 1942, Eisenhower was assigned to the War Department and rose rapidly within its ranks. As the leading general of the U.S. forces in Europe, Eisenhower was directly involved with planning and executing U.S. military strategy in the fight to liberate Europe from Germany and fascist Italy.    In November 1942, Eisenhower went on to become the commander of all Allied forces in North Africa, where he led the successful invasions of Sicily and Italy and dealt with irascible British General Bernard Montgomery and exiled French leader Charles de Gaulle. A year later he was appointed supreme commander of Allied Expeditionary Forces and planned and led the invasion of Normandy, France, more commonly referred to as D-Day. Eisenhower stayed on as general of the U.S. Army until 1951, when he resigned his commission to run his successful campaign for president. For two terms, Ike the war hero presided as the nation's commander in chief.   In a speech he gave upon leaving office in 1961, Eisenhower famously warned Americans of the growing power of what he termed the military-industrial complex, or the potential for danger that existed from the relation of the nation's commercial and military interests.  



1943 - Crematory III at Birkenau is finished

1943 - Racial unrest in Detroit

1943 - Seyss-Inquart orders mass arrests of Dutch physicians

1944 - British assault at Caen Normandy

1945 - Allied landing at Ternate Molukkas

1945 - Imperial General Headquarters in Tokyo announce fall of Okinawa


• 1946 - Ho Chi Minh traveled to France for talks on Vietnamese independence.  

1947 - First edition of Anne Frank's "The Back of House" published

1947 - Heavyweight Joe Louis KOs Tami Mauriello

1947 - Tennis shoe introduced

1948 - The Soviet Union tightened its blockade of Berlin by intercepting river barges heading for the city.

1948 - Joe Louis KOs Jersey Joe Walcott in 11 for heavyweight boxing title



• 1948 - Harry Truman signs Displaced Persons Bill (205,000 Europeans to US)

1949 - Presidential election in Syria (some women allowed to vote)

1949 - Long-Haired Hare is released in Theaters starring Bugs Bunny.

1950 - Israeli airline El Al begins service

1950 - Johnny Pramesa (Reds) and Hank Thompson (Giants) hit inside the park HRs

1950 - Korean conflict begins; as North Korea invaded South Korea

Jun 25, 1950: Korean War begins  Armed forces from communist North Korea smash into South Korea, setting off the Korean War. The United States, acting under the auspices of the United Nations, quickly sprang to the defense of South Korea and fought a bloody and frustrating war for the next three years.    Korea, a former Japanese possession, had been divided into zones of occupation following World War II. U.S. forces accepted the surrender of Japanese forces in southern Korea, while Soviet forces did the same in northern Korea. Like in Germany, however, the "temporary" division soon became permanent. The Soviets assisted in the establishment of a communist regime in North Korea, while the United States became the main source of financial and military support for South Korea.    On June 25, 1950, North Korean forces surprised the South Korean army (and the small U.S. force stationed in the country), and quickly headed toward the capital city of Seoul. The United States responded by pushing a resolution through the U.N.'s Security Council calling for military assistance to South Korea. (Russia was not present to veto the action as it was boycotting the Security Council at the time.) With this resolution in hand, President Harry S. Truman rapidly dispatched U.S. land, air, and sea forces to Korea to engage in what he termed a "police action." The American intervention turned the tide, and U.S. and South Korean forces marched into North Korea. This action, however, prompted the massive intervention of communist Chinese forces in late 1950. The war in Korea subsequently bogged down into a bloody stalemate. In 1953, the United States and North Korea signed a cease-fire that ended the conflict. The cease-fire agreement also resulted in the continued division of North and South Korea at just about the same geographical point as before the conflict.    The Korean War was the first "hot" war of the Cold War. Over 55,000 American troops were killed in the conflict. Korea was the first "limited war," one in which the U.S. aim was not the complete and total defeat of the enemy, but rather the "limited" goal of protecting South Korea. For the U.S. government, such an approach was the only rational option in order to avoid a third world war and to keep from stretching finite American resources too thinly around the globe. It proved to be a frustrating experience for the American people, who were used to the kind of total victory that had been achieved in World War II. The public found the concept of limited war difficult to understand or support and the Korean War never really gained popular support.







1950 - UN member states begin using integrated forces against N Korea




1951 - In New York, the first regular commercial color TV transmissions were presented on CBS using the FCC-approved CBS Color System. The public did not own color TV's at the time. It was transmitted by CBS from New York to Baltimore, Philadelphia, Boston, and Washington, DC.

1952 - "Wish You Were Here" opens at Imperial Theater NYC for 597 perfs

1952 - Dutch social democratic party wins 2nd-Parliamentary election

1953 - First passenger to fly commercially around the world < 100 hours


• 1953 - 86°F in Anchorage Alaska

1955 - "Can Can" closes at Shubert Theater NYC after 892 performances

1955 - "Imogene Coca Show," last airs on NBC-TV

1956 - 51 die in collision of "Andrea Doria" & "Stockholm" (Cape Cod)

1956 - WKNO TV channel 10 in Memphis, TN (PBS) begins broadcasting

1957 - "Jonathan Winters Show," last airs on NBC-TV

1959 - The Cuban government seized 2.35 million acres under a new agrarian reform law.

1959 - Eamon De Valera became president of Ireland at the age of 76.

1960 - Earthquake in NE Belgium

1960 - Madagascar gains independence of France

1961 - Balt and California use a record 16 pitchers in a game (8 each) in 14 inns

1961 - Iraq announces that Kuwait is a part of Iraq (Kuwait disagrees)

1962 - Inonu government forms in Turkey

1962 - Mozambique Liberation Front (FRELIMO) forms

1962 - The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the use of unofficial non-denominational prayer in public schools was unconstitutional.

1963 - Famous cricket draw at Lord's as England hang on against the Windies





• 1963 - JFK speaks at Pauls Church in Frankfurt






1963 - South Africa worker's union leader Curnick Ndlovu arrested



1964 - Prince A Taylor becomes 1st black methodist bishop (NJ)

1964 - WMCA (NYC) plays Beatles' Hard Days Night Album (10 days prior to its scheduled release date), they decide to release it June 26th



• 1964 - U.S. President Lyndon Johnson ordered 200 naval personnel to Mississippi to assist in finding three missing civil rights workers.  

1965 - Gyula Kallai succeeds Janos Kádár as premier of Hungary

 

• 1966 - Beatles' "Paperback Writer," single goes #1 and; stays #1 for 2 weeks



1966 - Dmitri Shostakovitch's 13th Symphony, premieres in Leningrad

1966 - Kosmos 122, 1st Soviet weather satellite, launched

 


 

    

• 1967 - 400 million watch Beatles "Our World" TV special







1967 - Mohammed Ali (Cassius Clay) sentenced to 5 years

1967 - First global satellite television programme - Our World

1968 - Bobby Bonds (San Francisco Giants) hit a grand-slam home run in his first game with the Giants. He was the first player to debut with a grand-slam.

1969 - Longest tennis match in Wimbledon history, Pancho Gonzalez beats Charles Pasarell in 112 game (5hr12m) marathon

1970 - The U.S. Federal Communications Commission handed down a ruling (35 FR 7732), making it illegal for radio stations to put telephone calls on the air without the permission of the person being called.  

1971 - Stevie Wonder releases "Where I'm Coming From"

1972 - Bernice Gera becomes 1st female umpire in pro baseball




Flag of Argentina

• 1972 - Juan Peron elected president of Argentina





1973 - Russian party leader Brezhnev visits France

1973 - Udo Beyer of East Germany puts the shot a record 20.47 m

1973 - Erskine Childers Jr. became president of Ireland after the retirement of Eamon De Valera.

1973 - White House Counsel John Dean admitted to the Senate Watergate Comittee that U.S. President Nixon took part in the Watergate cover-up.


• 1975 - Mozambique became independent. Samora Machel was sworn in as president after 477 years of Portuguese rule (National Day).



1976 - Ranger Toby Harrah is only shortstop not to handle a fielding chance in doubleheader

1977 - LBJ denies report he had a cancer during his presidency

1977 - Roy C Sullivan of Va is struck by lightning for 7th time!





• 1978 - Argentina beats Holland 3-1 in soccer's 11th World Cup at Buenos Aires





1979 - "Got Tu Go Disco" opens at Minskoff Theater NYC for 8 performances

1979 - Failed attack on NATO commander Haig in Obourg, Belgium

1980 - "Fearless Frank" closes at Princess Theater NYC after 12 performances

1981 - Supreme Court upholds male-only draft registration, constitutional

1981 - Microsoft is restructured to become an incorporated business in its home state of Washington.

1981 - The U.S. Supreme Court decided that male-only draft registration was constitutional.

1982 - Porn star John Holmes acquitted on murder charges

1982 - SF holds its 1st County Fair

1982 - Sec of State Alexander Haig Jr resigns, replaced by Schultz

1982 - Greece abolishes headshaving of recruits in the military.

1983 - "Evita" closes at Broadway Theater NYC after 1568 performances

1983 - India beat West Indies by 43 runs to win Cricket World Cup

1983 - Udo Beyer of East Germany sets record for shot put, 22.22 m

1984 - STS 41-D launch attempt scrubbed because of computer problem

1985 - Fireworks factory near Hallett, OK explodes (21 die)

1985 - ABC’s "Monday Night Football" began with a new line-up. The trio was Frank Gifford, Joe Namath and O.J. Simpson.

1985 - New York Yankees officials enacted the rule that mandated that the team’s bat boys were to wear protective helmets during all games.

1986 - Former Belgium premier Vanden Boeynants sentenced for fraud

1986 - Phillies give Steve Carlton, 41, his unconditional release

1986 - The U.S. Congress approved $100 million in aid to the Contras fighting in Nicaragua.

1987 - Austrian President Kurt Waldheim visited Pope John Paul II at the Vatican. The meeting was controversial due to allegations that Waldheim had hidden his Nazi past.

1988 - "Chess" closes at Imperial Theater NYC after 68 performances

1988 - 104°F highest temperature ever recorded in Cleveland in June

1988 - Cal Ripken Jr plays in his 1,000th consecutive game

1988 - Expos Pitcher Floyd Youmans suspended for 60 days due to drugs

1988 - Iceland's president Vigdis Finnbogadóttir was elected (90+%)

1988 - Netherlands soccer team wins European Cup (2-0 against USSR)

1988 - Roger Rabbit Cartoon Character debuts in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?"

1989 - "Day By Day," last airs on NBC-TV

1989 - First US postmark dedicated to Lesbian and Gay Pride (Stonewall, NYC)

1989 - Mets' defense does not record a single assist in a 5-1 win over Phils

1990 - "Dave Thomas Comedy Show," last airs on CBS-TV

1990 - 120°F in Phoenix Arizona

1990 - NBC decides to air episodes of "Quantum Leap" for 5 straight days

1990 - Supreme Court rules family members cannot end lives of comatose relatives unless those relatives previously made their wishes known

1990 - The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the right of an individual, whose wishes are clearly made, to refuse life-sustaining medical treatment. "The right to die" decision was made in the Curzan vs. Missouri case.


• 1991 - The last Soviet troops left Czechoslovakia 23 years after the Warsaw Pact invasion.



Flag of Croatia

• 1991 - Croatia and Slovenia proclaimed their independence from Yugoslavia, beginning the Yugoslavian civil war.





1991 - Martina Navratilova wins record 100th singles match at Wimbledon

1992 - "Les Miserables," opens at Vinorhady Theatre, Prague

1992 - Alexanders Department store closes all 11 stores

1992 - STS 50 launches (Columbia) 1993 - NY Islander goalie Billy Smith elected to NHL Hall of Fame

1993 - Parliamentary election in Morocco

1993 - Kim Campbell took office as Canada's first woman prime minister. She assumed power upon the resignation of Brian Mulroney.

1994 - 1,500th goal in Soccer World Cup history scored by Caceres of Argentina

1994 - 105°F (40.5°C) at Albuquerque New Mexico

1994 - 111°F (43.9°C) at El Paso Texas

1994 - Cleve Indians 18 game home win streak ends to Yanks 11-6

1994 - Gay Games close in NYC

1994 - Japanese premier Tsutomu Hata resigns

1995 - Betsy King wins ShopRite LPGA Golf Classic

1995 - Rockies' Andres Galarraga is 4th to HR in 3 consecutive innings

1996 - The Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia kills 19 U.S. servicemen.

1997 - Christies auctions off Princess Di's clothing for $5.5 million

1997 - Galileo, 2nd Callisto Flyby (Orbit 9)



• 1997 - Oceanographer Jacques Cousteau died.



1997 - Intelsat 802 Ariane 4 Launch, Successful

1997 - NHL approves franchises in Nash, Atlanta, Columbus, and Minn-St Paul

1997 - Progress M-34 Collides with and damages Mir Space Station

1997 - Jamaica issues a warrant for singer Sade, who fails to report to court on charges of failure to obey a cop who signaled her to stop

1997 - The Russian space station Mir was hit by an unmanned cargo vessel. Much of the power supply was knocked out and the station's Spektr module was severely damaged.

1997 - U.S. air pollution standards were significantly tightened by U.S. President Clinton.

1998 - The U.S. Supreme Court rejected the line-item veto thereby striking down presidential power to cancel specific items in tax and spending legislation.

1998 - The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that those infected with HIV are protected by the Americans With Disabilities Act.

1998 - Microsoft's "Windows 98" was released to the public.

1998 - In Clinton v. City of New York, the United States Supreme Court decides that the Line Item Veto Act of 1996 is unconstitutional.



• 1999 - Germany's parliament approved a national Holocaust memorial to be built in Berlin.



2000 - U.S. and British researchers announced that they had completed a rough draft of a map of the genetic makeup of human beings. The project was 10 years old at the time of the announcement.

2000 - A Florida judge approved a class-action lawsuit to be filed against American Online (AOL) on behalf of hourly subscribers who were forced to view "pop-up" advertisements.

2007 - 2007 United Kingdom floods, parts of Lincolnshire and Yorkshire flood including Louth, Horncastle and worst affected, Hull.

2008 - Atlantis Plastics shooting, An employee shot and killed five people after an argument, which ended in the gunman's suicide in Henderson, Kentucky.


• 2009 - Michael Jackson, lifelong musician, pop singer, and superstar, dies at age 50.

2012 - 33 Syrian army officers defect to Turkey





The following links are to web sites that were used to complete this blog entry:

http://www.historyorb.com/today/events.php

http://on-this-day.com/onthisday/thedays/alldays/jun25.htm

http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

After a Decade, Brexit Seems Like It Was a Huge Mistake For Britain


Yesterday marked exactly ten years since the fateful vote in favor of the Brexit for Great Britain.

Granted, I am not British. But it does seem like this decision has been pretty much disastrous for Great Britain. It can be argued that the only two advanced western nations which have inflicted greater harm to themselves during that time would be the United States by electing Donald Trump to the presidency- twice - and Israel with the dreadful war. Each of those countries made decisions which has seriously compromised their standing around the world. 

For Great Britain, that is not the company you want to be compared with. 

Yet, it feels like Britain's has been dragging through a period of serious political instability for what is normally quite stable. 

We just learned that Prime Minister Keir Starmer is resigning. Indeed, there has not been a Prime Minister who has lasted much longer than maybe a couple of years at most since Brexit. And a strong majority of British people now regret Brexit, according to polls. There are estimates that the British economy is probably something like 7% smaller than it would otherwise have been.

In short, this whole thing has been a fiasco.

Here is one stat which blew me away, illustrated by a snippet from this article by Geoffrey Wheatcroft (see link below):

In the 40 years proceeding 2016, there were in all six British prime ministers. Since the 2016 referendum, there have also been six.  

Yikes.

Indeed, it has felt a little bit like the position of Prime Minister has been a bit of a revolving door position for the past decade.

Frankly, this is what they majority who voted for Brexit were voting for, even if they did not realize it at the time. Much like Trump supporters in the United States, when you casually go in favor of a major destabilizing political action, the unpredictable results are yours to own.

As I have said now many times regarding Trump supporters experiencing buyer's remorse here in the United States, maybe this is a wakeup call to actually take their votes and what they are voting on seriously enough to actually pay attention.




BLOODY AWFUL Ten Years After Brexit, Every Grim Prediction Has More Than Come True by Geoffrey Wheatcroft / June 23, 2026: 

As the sixth prime minister since the historic vote calls it quits, most Britons agree it’s been an epic disaster. But in the next election, things may get even worse.

https://newrepublic.com/article/212131/brexit-ten-year-anniversary-predictions-came-true?utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=SF_TNR&utm_source=Facebook&fbclid=IwY2xjawSoP2pleHRuA2FlbQIxMABzcnRjBmFwcF9pZBAyMjIwMzkxNzg4MjAwODkyAAEeQ0JM9Ha_E6GOoJ7NnSCWuNGvgsyAq4URNXpOraU8DvnPRmFZyJ-xS6XDFUU_aem_qD1Z7GfveW-TH5e1u42J2A

Ten Years After Brexit, Every Grim Prediction Has More Than Come True | The New Republic