Thursday, July 2, 2026

Trump Recently Warned That Americans Might Have a ‘Problem’ if They ‘Don’t Respect the President’

This is a picture of a magnet that was being sold at Strand's Book Store in New York City a few years ago. No, I did not buy it, but I liked it and took a picture, which I am sharing here now. 



You see a headline like this, and you just know that it can be interpreted in several ways. 

Surely, one of the ways is very convenient to those who still support this president. Trump supporters will say that there was no implicit or direct threat in this recent statement by Trump, about how Americans could have a "problem" if they "don't respect the president." Perhaps the think that this man is a philosopher, talking generally about how the nation cannot be run without sufficient respect for the leadership in Washington.

For full transparency, here is all of what Trump said about respecting the president, and the circumstances in which he said it, according to a description in a recent article by Morning Honey staff (see link below):

While speaking at the Faith and Freedom Coalition’s policy conference in Washington, D.C., the 80-year-old argued that people must show deep respect toward the president. However, these remarks have quickly come back to haunt him, sparking intense anger and mockery across social media.

During his address at the conference, the president claimed that a past lack of respect for leadership damaged public service recruitment.   

Addressing the crowd, he said, per Indy100, “If you go back a year and a half, two years ago, you could not get anybody to join the army, the navy, the air force, the Marines, the Coast Guard, the space force – you couldn’t get anyone to join. We couldn’t get policemen and women, we couldn’t get firemen and women – anything with a uniform because they were ashamed of our country because we had people who were not respected.”

He then firmly added, “You have to respect the president. If you don’t respect the president, you’re going to have a problem. They had no respect.”

So yeah, Trump fans would look at that and say that Trump is talking generally about the issue of a lack of respect towards a president and the country more generally. And they likely would suggest that he has a point here.

Except that Trump himself has been one of the worst offenders of disrespecting presidents....unless he is the sitting president. When it has been anyone else, he shows a complete lack of respect, even when he himself is out of office. He claimed that Biden was the worst president in American history, doing more damage than the next ten worst presidents in history. Also, he routinely referred to Biden as "Sleepy Joe" and then showed a remarkable lack of class by urging people not to feel sorry for Biden after he had been diagnosed with cancer. 

Obviously, he attacked Obama relentlessly, dismissing the Obama White House as failed leadership and repeatedly indicating that they would soon launch a war against Iran as a "Wag the Dog" diversion tactic. Also, it was Trump who stirred up the whole birther controversy. All of that was before Trump himself had ever gotten into the Oval Office. So much for respecting the president, eh?

Rather ironic, is it not?

Even after Obama's presidency ended, Trump has obviously kept up the attacks. It has reached such a point that some feel that he is fixated with Obama, and trying to undermine any and all of Obama's accomplishments, whether or not they were best for the country. Let's also not forget that Trump had a social media post depicting the Obamas as monkey, which drew worldwide condemnation for being racist. 

Even a president belonging to the same party was not spared. Infamously, he suggested while referring to Bush that any president who started a disastrous war in the Middle East without grounds and while lying about it should be impeached and removed from office.

Again, quite ironic, no?

Let us not forget other times when Trump has been outrageously disrespectful with other prominent politicians. Remember his feud with John McCain? That they had differences and were political rivals might seem normal. But Trump, who remember dodged the draft during the Vietnam War, criticized war hero John McCain for being captured and becoming a Prisoner of War (POW) during that war. Even after McCain died, Trump showed astonishing levels of pettiness and a complete lack of respect by turning his back on a Navy ship - and all of those in service aboard that ship - simply because it was named after John McCain. That showed a lack of class to the service men and women, as well as to McCain's family and friends. And, frankly, the entire nation, as that certainly felt beneath the dignity of the office of President of the United States. 

However, it felt that Trump had a bit of an undertone of an implicit threat when he said that Americans needed to respect their president. That he was promising his opponents would find trouble if they were too vocal in their opposition to him.

Let's remember that one of the things that this man was clear about while campaigning was that he would seek revenge on his political opponents. And while he has demonstrably gone back on many of his campaign promises (during both terms), that was clearly one which he fully intended to keep. 

So to me, it feels like he is attempting to threaten Americans who might criticize him too much, or show what he feels is a lack of respect.

It's funny that he himself feels so entitled to respect while simultaneously feeling exempt from having to show any respect to anything or anyone else. 

Most people cannot have it both ways. But it seems like, once again, Donald Trump is the exception to that rule. Or at least feels himself to be an exception to that rule. 

Here's the thing: respect is earned. And at the risk of becoming one of those who Trump clamps down on in seeking revenge against, I for one feel that this particular president has done absolutely nothing worth respecting.

Nothing at all. 

So it is rich for this man to be demanding respect, since he never shows any respect. Even saying something like that towards his boss - the American people - is disrespectful and betrays his false sense of entitlement. Then again, some of the major things which he has time and again illustrated in abundance is a lack of respect towards historical presidential protocols and the rule of law. This is a man who infamously suggested that parts of the Constitution might need to be suspended, after all.

Again, nothing at all worth respecting there.

What depths this country is plunging to with this particular president. Unreal.




The link to the article I used in writing this particular blog entry, and from which I obtained the quotes used above, as right here. Take a look:


Trump warns Americans could have a ‘problem’ if they ‘don’t respect the president’ Story by Morning Honey Staff • June 30, 2026:

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/trump-warns-americans-could-have-a-problem-if-they-don-t-respect-the-president/ar-AA26Tz9Q?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=6a449c4c95b34769924a71eba178b20b&ei=13

Trump warns Americans could have a ‘problem’ if they ‘don’t respect the president’

Almost Nobody Is Buying Donald Trump's Threats Regarding Communism

When I was a kid, the world felt like it had not changed all that much in something like forty years. It was still the post-war world, dominated by the Cold War. And while McCarthyism might have been long gone, fears and even paranoia over the communist threat and the Soviet Union was still very much on people's minds. Ronald Reagan even had an advertisement warning about the "Russian bear" which still posed a threat, and that certainly contributed to getting him re-elected in 1984.

But that was then, and this is now.

The year 1984 was over 40 years ago. For those of us who can remember that year, it hardly seems possible that it actually was that long ago. But the calendar does not lie.

It becomes a bit easier to believe when you think about all of the things that have taken place since. Chernobyl and the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan. The Berlin Wall coming down, and mostly peaceful revolutions sweeping through eastern Europe. Germany reuniting. The Warsaw Pact being disbanded. Finally, the Soviet Union being dissolved. 

And most people would agree, the threat of Soviet communism basically ending along with the Cold War. It is a relic of the past, a bygone age that is now relegated to the history books.

Except, apparently, in the mind of Donald Trump. Recently, he tweeted about how in his mind, communism still poses the greatest threat to the United States. More than anything else, even 9/11. 

Somebody forgot to tell him that old-style communist regimes have gone the way of the dinosaur, for the most part. Except maybe for Cuba and maybe North Korea, arguably. Most certainly, we cannot regard China as a communist country anymore these days. And remember, the Soviet Union ceased to exist in 1991, and the Cold War ended well before that. So the threat sure feels severely outdated. Trump's concerns seem to betray how out of touch he is with modern realities.

To him, apparently, the biggest threat to the United States is still communism. Yes, even in 2026. 

And now, communism apparently has taken over the Democrats. 

Because, of course the Democrats - or should I refer to them as he does when showing off his iconic wit, the "Dumbocrats" - embody everything evil. After all, they are opposed to Trump and his policies, and that is something that Trump clearly cannot tolerate. Any kind of opposition is automatically "low IQ" and stupid and evil and now, yes, communist.

Yet, most people are not buying it. Apparently, many conservatives even are not buying it.

Maybe it's time for Trump to jump into the 21st century? 

Just saying.

What a moron. 






Donald Trump's communism threat backfires as Fox News viewers brand him 'stupid' Story by Jorge Solis, Chiara Fiorillo • June 30, 2026:

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/donald-trump-s-communism-threat-backfires-as-fox-news-viewers-brand-him-stupid/ar-AA26TgaD?ocid=entnewsntp&pc=U531&cvid=6a4477b9803446539e47372fe67682bb&ei=13

Donald Trump's communism threat backfires as Fox News viewers brand him 'stupid'


July 2nd: 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!


Very interesting day in history, filled with significant dates sprinkled throughout history, particularly American history.

Nostradamus died on this date. Cromwell's Parliamentary army won an important and very convincing victory. King James II disbanded Parliament. De Sade (the man from whom we get the term "sadist") shouted from the Bastille that prisoners were being slaughtered. The Second Continental Congress approved independence. The Battle of Gettysburg was decided in favor of the Union, and turned the tide of that war. A century later, the spirit of civil rights that Abraham Lincoln advocated during the Civil War was finally legally fulfilled, when Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act and Voting Rights Act, ending legalized Jim Crow segregation in the United States (particularly in the South). President Garfield was fatally shot. The Sherman Anti Trust Act was passed. In Germany, the first successful flight of a zeppelin was on this date. Amelia Earhardt disappeared on this date, while trying to fly around the world. Hitler ordered the invasion of England (Operation Sealion). This was the dater of the infamous crash in Roswell, New Mexico. North and South Vietnam were formally reunited. Elvis Presly recorded "Hound Dog". The Castros (Fidel and Raul) visited Moscow. The US Supreme Court reversed a former decision, and proclaimed that the death penalty was not "cruel and unusual". Susan B. Anthony coins became the first American coins to honor a woman. There was a stampede at Mecca that killed over 1,400 people. Vincente Fox Quesada of the opposition party was elected President of Mexico, ending seventy years of rule by the PRI. An oil tanker explosion in the Democratic Republic of the Congo killed well over two hundred.




On this day in 311, St Militiades began his reign as Catholic Pope. In 626 on this day, in fear of assassination, Li Shimin ambushed and killed his rival brothers Li Yuanji and Li Jiancheng in the Incident at Xuanwu Gate. On September 4, Shimin's father abdicated in his favour and Shimin became Emperor Taizong of Tang, Emperor of China. In China on this day in 706, Emperor Zhongzong of Tang had the remains of Emperor Gaozong of Tang, his wife and recently-deceased ruling empress Wu Zetian, her son Li Xian, her grandson Li Chongrun, and granddaughter Li Xianhui all interred in a new tomb complex outside Chang'an known as the Qianling Mausoleum, located on Mount Liang. The imperial army proclaimed Nicephorus Phocas to be Emperor of the Romans on the plains outside Cappadocian Caesarea on this day in 963. On this day in 1566, French astrologer, physician, and prophet Nostradamus died. The first English expedition from Massachusetts against Acadia, which was led by Samuel Argall, left on this day in 1613. In 1644 on this day, Lord Oliver Cromwell's Parliamentary forces crushed the Royalists at the Battle of Marston Moor near York, England. Marshall Saxe led the French forces to victory over an Anglo-Dutch force under the Duke of Cumberland at the Battle of Lauffeld on this day in 1747.

On this day in 1787 in Paris on the eve of the French Revolution, the Marquis De Sade shouted from the Bastille that prisoners were being slaughtered inside of the walls of the prison. This day in 1863 marked the second day of the Battle of Gettysburg of the American Civil War. It was the bloodiest battle of the war. In 1890 on this day, the U.S. Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act. On this day in 1932, future American President Franklin Delano Roosevelt made the first presidential nominating conventional acceptance speech for a major party. Adolf Hitler ordered the invasion of England (Operation Sealion) on this day in 1940 during World War II.


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


• On this day in 311, St Militiades began his reign as Catholic Pope.


• In 626 on this day, in fear of assassination, Li Shimin ambushed and killed his rival brothers Li Yuanji and Li Jiancheng in the Incident at Xuanwu Gate. On September 4, Shimin's father abdicated in his favour and Shimin became Emperor Taizong of Tang, Emperor of China.

• In China on this day in 706, Emperor Zhongzong of Tang had the remains of Emperor Gaozong of Tang, his wife and recently-deceased ruling empress Wu Zetian, her son Li Xian, her grandson Li Chongrun, and granddaughter Li Xianhui all interred in a new tomb complex outside Chang'an known as the Qianling Mausoleum, located on Mount Liang.

• The imperial army proclaimed Nicephorus Phocas to be Emperor of the Romans on the plains outside Cappadocian Caesarea on this day in 963.

1140 - Hartbert becomes bishop of Utrecht

1214 - Battle of La Roche-aux-Moines (Angers), part of King John of England attempt to reclaim Normandy from France

1298 - Battle on Hasenbuhl (Gollheim) between German kings Adolf of Nassau and Albrecht I of Austria   Albrecht I defeated and killed Adolf of Nassua near Worms, Germany.

1555 - Turgut Reis sacks the Italian city of Paola.

1561 - Menas, Emperor of Ethiopia, defeats a revolt in Emfraz.



On this day in 1566, French astrologer, physician, and prophet Nostradamus died.



1576 - Muitende Spanish soldiers conquer Zierik Sea

1578 - Martin Frobisher sights Baffin Island.

1582 - Battle of Yamazaki: Toyotomi Hideyoshi defeats Akechi Mitsuhide.

1600 - Battle at Newport: Earl Mauritius van Nassau beats Spanish Army


The first English expedition from Massachusetts against Acadia, which was led by Samuel Argall, left on this day in 1613.



1625 - The Spanish army took Breda, Spain, after nearly a year of siege.





English Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell

• In 1644 on this day, Lord Oliver Cromwell's Parliamentary forces crushed the Royalists at the Battle of Marston Moor near York, England.




1679 - Europeans first visit Minnesota and see headwaters of Mississippi in an expedition led by Daniel Greysolon de Du Luth.

1681 - Earl of Shaftesbury arrested for high-treason

1687 - King James II disbands English parliament

1698 - Thomas Savery patents the first steam engine



• Marshall Saxe led the French forces to victory over an Anglo-Dutch force under the Duke of Cumberland at the Battle of Lauffeld on this day in 1747.

1776 - NJ gave all adults who could show a net worth of 50 pounds right to vote




Independence Hall in Philadelphia, PA

1776 - Richard Henry Lee’s resolution that the American colonies "are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States" was adopted by the Continental Congress.

This seemed worthy of mentioning, as well: today also marks the date that the Second Continental Congress voted in favor of independence (same link as above):

July 2, 1776: Congress votes for independence    

On this day in 1776, the Second Continental Congress, assembled in Philadelphia, formally adopts Richard Henry Lee's resolution for independence from Great Britain. The vote is unanimous, with only New York abstaining.  

The resolution had originally been presented to Congress on June 7, but it soon became clear that New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland and South Carolina were as yet unwilling to declare independence, though they would likely be ready to vote in favor of a break with England in due course. Thus, Congress agreed to delay the vote on Lees Resolution until July 1. In the intervening period, Congress appointed a committee to draft a formal declaration of independence. Its members were John Adams of Massachusetts, Benjamin Franklin of Pennsylvania, Roger Sherman of Connecticut, Robert R. Livingston of New York and Thomas Jefferson of Virginia. Thomas Jefferson, well-known to be the best writer of the group, was selected to be the primary author of the document, which was presented to Congress for review on June 28, 1776.  

On July 1, 1776, debate on the Lee Resolution resumed as planned, with a majority of the delegates favoring the resolution. Congress thought it of the utmost importance that independence be unanimously proclaimed. To ensure this, they delayed the final vote until July 2, when 12 colonial delegations voted in favor of it, with the New York delegates abstaining, unsure of how their constituents would wish them to vote. John Adams wrote that July 2 would be celebrated as the most memorable epoch in the history of America. Instead, the day has been largely forgotten in favor of July 4, when Jeffersons edited Declaration of Independence was adopted.   





1777 - Vermont becomes first American colony to abolish slavery 




• On this day in 1787 in Paris on the eve of the French Revolution, the Marquis De Sade shouted from the Bastille that prisoners were being slaughtered inside of the walls of the prison.




1794 - Second Battle of Seneffe: France-Austria

1808 - Simon Fraser completes his trip down Fraser R, BC, lands at Musqueam







Chief Tecumseh urged Native Americans to unite against the encroaching white culture on this day in 1809.


Jul 2, 1809: Chief Tecumseh urges Indians to unite against whites 

Alarmed by the growing encroachment of whites squatting on Native American lands, the Shawnee Chief Tecumseh calls on all Indians to unite and resist.  

Born around 1768 near Springfield, Ohio, Tecumseh early won notice as a brave warrior. He fought in battles between the Shawnee and the white Kentuckians, who were invading the Ohio River Valley territory. After the Americans won several important battles in the mid-1790s, Tecumseh reluctantly relocated westward but remained an implacable foe of the white men and their ways.  

By the early 19th century, many Shawnee and other Ohio Valley Indians were becoming increasingly dependent on trading with the Americans for guns, cloth, and metal goods. Tecumseh spoke out against such dependence and called for a return to traditional Indian ways. He was even more alarmed by the continuing encroachment of white settlers illegally settling on the already diminished government-recognized land holdings of the Shawnee and other tribes. The American government, however, was reluctant to take action against its own citizens to protect the rights of the Ohio Valley Indians.  

On this day in 1809, Tecumseh began a concerted campaign to persuade the Indians of the Old Northwest and Deep South to unite and resist. Together, Tecumseh argued, the various tribes had enough strength to stop the whites from taking further land. Heartened by this message of hope, Indians from as far away as Florida and Minnesota heeded Tecumseh's call. By 1810, he had organized the Ohio Valley Confederacy, which united Indians from the Shawnee, Potawatomi, Kickapoo, Winnebago, Menominee, Ottawa, and Wyandot nations.  

For several years, Tecumseh's Indian Confederacy successfully delayed further white settlement in the region. In 1811, however, the future president William Henry Harrison led an attack on the confederacy's base on the Tippecanoe River. At the time, Tecumseh was in the South attempting to convince more tribes to join his movement. Although the battle of Tippecanoe was close, Harrison finally won out and destroyed much of Tecumseh's army.  

When the War of 1812 began the following year, Tecumseh immediately marshaled what remained of his army to aid the British. Commissioned a brigadier general, he proved an effective ally and played a key role in the British capture of Detroit and other battles. When the tide of war turned in the American favor, Tecumseh's fortunes went down with those of the British. On October 5, 1813, he was killed during Battle of the Thames. His Ohio Valley Confederacy and vision of Indian unity died with him.






1823 - Bahia Independence Day: the end of Portuguese rule in Brazil, with the final defeat of the Portuguese crown loyalists in the province of Bahia.

1843 - An alligator falls from sky during a Charleston SC thunderstorm

1847 - Envelope bearing 1st US 10 cent stamps, still exists today







Statue of Garibaldi

1849 - Garibaldi in Rome begins hunger strike






1850 - Benjamin J. Lane patents gas mask with a breathing apparatus

1850 - Prussia agreed to pull out of Schlewig and Holstein, Germany.

1857 - New York City’s first elevated railroad officially opened for business.

1858 - Czar Alexander II partially emancipated the serfs working on Russian imperial lands.

1861 - Battle of Hoke's Run, WV - small Union victory




Statue of Abraham Lincoln outside of the New York Historical Society

1862 - Lincoln signs act granting land for state agricultural colleges







A statue in Flemington, New Jersey, honoring veterans of the American Civil War.

• This day in 1863 marked the second day of the Battle of Gettysburg of the American Civil War. It was the bloodiest battle of the war. 

Jul 2, 1863: Fighting continues at the Battle of Gettysburg

On this day in 1863, during the second day of the Battle of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, Confederate General Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia attacks General George G. Meade's Army of the Potomac at both Culp's Hill and Little Round Top, but fails to move the Yankees from their positions.  

On the north end of the line, or the Union's right flank, Confederates from General Richard Ewell's corps struggled up Culp's Hill, which was steep and heavily wooded, before being turned back by heavy Union fire. But the most significant action was on the south end of the Union line. General James Longstreet's corps launched an attack against the Yankees, but only after a delay that allowed additional Union troops to arrive and position themselves along Cemetery Ridge. Many people later blamed Longstreet for the Confederates' eventual defeat. Still, the Confederates had a chance to destroy the Union left flank when General Daniel Sickles moved his corps, against Meade's orders, from their position on the ridge to open ground around the Peach Orchard. This move separated Sickles' force from the rest of the Union army, and Longstreet attacked. Although the Confederates were able to take the Peach Orchard, they were repulsed by Yankee opposition at Little Round Top. Some of the fiercest fighting took place on this day, and both armies suffered heavy casualties.  

Lee's army regrouped that evening and planned for one last assault against the Union center on July 3: the infamous Pickett's Charge.







1863 - R Morgan's: Burksville, KY to Salineville, OH [->JUL 26]

1864 - Gen Early and Confederate forces reach Winchester en route to Wash DC

1864 - Statuary Hall in US Capitol forms

1865 - William Booth founds Salvation Army (Army of the Salvation)

1867 - First US elevated railroad begins service, NYC

1870 - Jules Joseph d'Anethan is elected the tenth Prime Minister of Belgium.






1881 - Charles J. Guiteau, a disappointed office-seeker, shot and fatally wounded American President James A. Garfield in Washington, DC. Garfield died on Sept. 19.

Jul 2, 1881: President Garfield is shot  

On this day in 1881, President James A. Garfield, who had been in office just under four months, is shot by an assassin. Garfield lingered for 80 days before dying of complications from the shooting.  

Garfield's assassin was an attorney and political office-seeker named Charles Guiteau. He was a relative stranger to the president and his administration in an era when federal positions were doled out on a "who you know" basis. When his requests for an appointment were ignored, a furious Guiteau stalked the president, vowing revenge.  

On the morning of July 2, 1881, Garfield headed for the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad station on his way to a short vacation. As he walked through the station toward the waiting train, Guiteau stepped behind the president and fired two shots. The first bullet grazed Garfield's arm; the second lodged below his pancreas. Doctors made several unsuccessful attempts to remove the bullet while Garfield lay in his White House bedroom, awake and in pain. Alexander Graham Bell, who was one of Garfield's physicians, tried to use an early version of a metal detector to find the second bullet, but also failed.  

Historical accounts vary as to the exact cause of Garfield's death. Some believe that the physicians' treatments—which included the administration of quinine, morphine, brandy and calomel and feeding him through the rectum--may have hastened his demise. Others insist Garfield died from an already advanced case of heart disease. By early September, Garfield, who was recuperating at a seaside retreat in New Jersey, appeared to be recovering. He died on September 19. Autopsy reports at the time said that pressure from the festering internal wound had created an aneurism that was the likely cause of death. Upon Garfield's demise, Vice President Chester A. Arthur became the nation's 20th president. Guiteau was deemed sane by a jury, convicted of murder and hung on June 30, 1882.  

Garfield's spine is kept as a historical artifact by the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, D.C.







1885 - Canada's North-west Insurrection ends with surrender of Big Bear


• In 1890 on this day, the U.S. Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act.


1894 - Government obtains injunction against striking Pullman Workers

1900 - Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin 1st airship LZ-1, flies

1900 - Sibelius' "Finlandia," premieres in Helsinki



1900 - First zeppelin flight takes place on Lake Constance near Friedrichshafen, Germany.



1901 - Butch Cassidy & Sundance Kid rob train of $40,000 at Wagner Montana

1902 - John J McGraw becomes manager of NY Giants (stays for 30 years)

1903 - AL/NL batting champ Ed Delahanty, disappears, found dead days later

1903 - Pitcher Jack Doscher, 1 son of a major leaguer debuts with Cubs

1906 - Yanks win by forfeit, for their 1st time

1916 - Lenin says Imperialism is caused by capitalism

1916 - Russian offensive in Armenia

1917 - Riots in East St Louis Mo




On this day in 1917 during the Great War (now better known as World War I), Greece declared war on the Central Powers.


Jul 2, 1917: Greece declares war on Central Powers

On this day in 1917, several weeks after King Constantine I abdicates his throne in Athens under pressure from the Allies, Greece declares war on the Central Powers, ending three years of neutrality by entering World War I alongside Britain, France, Russia and Italy.  

Constantine, educated in Germany and married to a sister of Kaiser Wilhelm II, was naturally sympathetic to the Germans when World War I broke out in the summer of 1914, refusing to honor Greece's obligation to support Serbia, its ally during the two Balkan Wars in 1912-13. Despite pressure from his own pro-Allied government, including Prime Minister Eleutherios Venizelos, and British and French promises of territorial gains in Turkey, Constantine maintained Greece's neutrality for the first three years of the war, although he did allow British and French forces to disembark at Salonika in late 1914 in a plan to aid Serbia against Austro-Hungarian and Bulgarian forces.  

By the end of 1915, with Allied operations bogged down in Salonika and failing spectacularly in the Dardanelles, Constantine was even less inclined to support the Entente, believing Germany clearly had the upper hand in the war. He dismissed Venizelos in October 1915, substituting him with a series of premiers who basically served as royal puppets. Meanwhile, civil war threatened in Greece, as Constantine desperately sought promises of naval, military and financial assistance from Germany, which he did not receive. After losing their patience with Constantine, the Allies finally sent an ultimatum demanding his abdication on June 11, 1917; the same day, British forces blockaded Greece and the French landed their troops at Piraeus, on the Isthmus of Corinth, in blatant disregard of Greek neutrality. The following day, Constantine abdicated in favor of his second son, Alexander.  

On June 26, Alexander reinstated Venizelos, who returned from exile in Crete, where he had established a provisional Greek government with Allied support. With a pro-Allied prime minister firmly in place, Greece moved to the brink of entering World War I. On July 1, Alexander Kerensky, the Russian commander in chief and leader of the provisional Russian government after the fall of Czar Nicholas II the previous March, ordered a major offensive on the Eastern Front, despite the turmoil within Russia and the exhausted state of Kerensky's army. The offensive would end in disastrous losses for the Russians, but at the time it seemed like a fortuitous turn of events for the Allies, in that it would help to sap German resources. The following day, Greece declared war on the Central Powers.  

The new king, Alexander, stated the case for war dramatically in his official coronation address on August 4: "Greece has to defend her territory against barbarous aggressors. But if in the trials of the past Greece has been able, thanks to the civilizing strength of the morale of the race, to have overcome the conquerors and to rise free amidst the ruins, today it is quite a different matter. The present cataclysm will decide the definite fate of Hellenism, which, if lost, will never be restored." Over the next 18 months, some 5,000 Greek soldiers would die on the battlefields of World War I. 






1921 - 41st Wimbledon Mens Tennis: B Tilden beats B Norton (46 26 61 60 75)

1921 - Jack Dempsey KOs George S Carpentier in 4 for heavyweight boxing title 1st million dollar gate ($1.7m) boxing match (Dempsey KOs Carpentier)

1926 - The U.S. Congress established the US Army Air Corps; Distinguish Flying Cross authorized

1927 - 40th Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Helen Moody beats L de Alvarez (62 64)

1927 - Earthquake hits Palestine

1928 - British parliament accept female sufferage

1932 - 52nd Wimbledon Mens Tennis: Ellsworth Vines beats H Austin (64 62 60)




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

On this day in 1932, future American President Franklin Delano Roosevelt made the first presidential nominating conventional acceptance speech for a major party.






1933 - Carl Hubbell shuts-out Cards 1-0 in 18 innings without a walk

1934 - General Lazaro Cardenas elected president of Mexico

1935 - Great Britain boxers beat US team in 1st intl Golden Gloves

1937 - American aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart disappeared in the Central Pacific during an attempt to fly around the world at the equator.

1937 - 57th Wimbledon Mens Tennis: Don Budge beats G von Cramm (63 64 62)

1938 - 51st Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Helen Moody beats Helen Jacobs (64 60)

1939 - At Mount Rushmore, Theodore Roosevelt's face was dedicated.

1940 - Dutch PM Colijn publishes "Borders of 2 Worlds" (German victory)



• Adolf Hitler ordered the invasion of England (Operation Sealion) on this day in 1940 during World War II.

1940 - Lake Washington (Seattle) Floating bridge dedicated

1940 - PM Churchill meets gen-mjr B Montgomery

1940 - Indian independence leader Subhas Chandra Bose is arrested and detained in Calcutta.

1941 - DiMaggio breaks Willie Keeler's 44 game hitting streak (45th of 56)

1941 - Earthquake hits Palestine




1941 - Nazi mass murder in Lvov/Lemberg (7,000 dead)

1941 - Noel Coward's "Blithe Spirit," premieres in London 1943 - Gulf of Biskaje: Liberator bombers sinks U-126

1943 - Indians score 12 runs in 4th inning & beat Yankees 12-0

1943 - Lt Charles Hall, becomes first black pilot to shoot down Nazi plane

1944 - Marshal von Kluge replaces General von Rundstedt






1944 - American bombers, as part of Operation Gardening, dropped land mines, leaflets and bombs on German-occupied Budapest.

Jul 2, 1944: American bombers deluge Budapest, in more ways than one

On this day in 1944, as part of Operation Gardening, the British and American strategy to lay mines in the Danube River by dropping them from the air, American aircraft also drop bombs and leaflets on German-occupied Budapest.  

Hungarian oil refineries and storage tanks, important to the German war machine, were destroyed by the American air raid. Along with this fire from the sky, leaflets threatening "punishment" for those responsible for the deportation of Hungarian Jews to the gas chambers at Auschwitz were also dropped on Budapest. The U.S. government wanted the SS and Hitler to know it was watching. Admiral Miklas Horthy, regent and virtual dictator of Hungary, vehemently anticommunist and afraid of Russian domination, had aligned his country with Hitler, despite the fact that he little admired him. But he, too, demanded that the deportations cease, especially since special pleas had begun pouring in from around the world upon the testimonies of four escaped Auschwitz prisoners about the atrocities there. Hitler, fearing a Hungarian rebellion, stopped the deportations on July 8. Horthy would eventually try to extricate himself from the war altogether—only to be kidnapped by Hitler's agents and consequently forced to abdicate.  

One day after the deportations stopped, a Swedish businessman, Raoul Wallenberg, having convinced the Swedish Foreign Ministry to send him to the Hungarian capital on a diplomatic passport, arrived in Budapest with 630 visas for Hungarian Jews, prepared to take them to Sweden to save them from further deportations.





1946 - Dutch Beel government forms

1946 - Harbor workers end strike at Rotterdam & Amsterdam






1947 - Military coup discovered in France



1947 - An object crashed near Roswell, NM. The U.S. Army Air Force insisted it was a weather balloon, but eyewitness accounts led to speculation that it might have been an alien spacecraft.




The flag of the USSR (Soviet Union)

The Soviet Union rejected the Marshall Plan on this day in 1947, citing concerns over what they perceived as American "economic imperialism" and feared being compromised. 


Jul 2, 1947: Soviet Union rejects Marshall Plan assistance

Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov walks out of a meeting with representatives of the British and French governments, signaling the Soviet Union's rejection of the Marshall Plan. Molotov's action indicated that Cold War frictions between the United States and Russia were intensifying.  

On June 4, 1947, Secretary of State George C. Marshall gave a speech in which he announced that the United States was willing to offer economic assistance to the war-torn nations of Europe to help in their recovery. The Marshall Plan, as this program came to be known, eventually provided billions of dollars to European nations and helped stave off economic disaster in many of them. The Soviet reaction to Marshall's speech was a stony silence. However, Foreign Minister Molotov agreed to a meeting on June 27 with his British and French counterparts to discuss the European reaction to the American offer.  

Molotov immediately made clear the Soviet objections to the Marshall Plan. First, it would include economic assistance to Germany, and the Russians could not tolerate such aid to the enemy that had so recently devastated the Soviet Union. Second, Molotov was adamant in demanding that the Soviet Union have complete control and freedom of action over any Marshall Plan funds Germany might receive. Finally, the Foreign Minister wanted to know precisely how much money the United States would give to each nation. When it became clear that the French and British representatives did not share his objections, Molotov stormed out of the meeting on July 2. In the following weeks, the Soviet Union pressured its Eastern European allies to reject all Marshall Plan assistance. That pressure was successful and none of the Soviet satellites participated in the Marshall Plan. The Soviet press claimed that the American program was "a plan for interference in the domestic affairs of other countries." The United States ignored the Soviet action and, in 1948, officially established the Marshall Plan and began providing funds to other European nations.  

Publicly, U.S. officials argued that the Soviet stance was another indication that Russia intended to isolate Eastern Europe from the West and enforce its communist and totalitarian doctrines in that region. From the Soviet perspective, however, its refusal to participate in the Marshall Plan indicated its desire to remain free from American "economic imperialism" and domination.




1948 - 62nd Wimbledon Mens Tennis: Falkenburg beats Bromwich (75 06 62 36 75)

1949 - "High Button Shoes" closes at Century Theater NYC after 727 perfs

1949 - "Red Barber's Clubhouse" sports show premieres on CBS (later NBC) TV

 1949 - 56th Wimbledon Womens Tennis: L Brough beats M duPont (10-8 16 10-8)

1950 - Indian Bob Feller, wins his 200th game, 5-3 over Detroit

1950 - Kinkaku-ji in Kyoto, Japan burns down.

1950 - Henri Queuille is elected the seventh Prime Minister of the Fourth French Republic.

1951 - Bill Veeck buys St Louis Browns from Bill & Charlie DeWitt

1951 - Bob and Ray show premieres on NBC radio

1951 - Hugo Yarnold stumps 6 at Dundee, Worcester v Scotland

1951 - Island advisor of Curacao installed

1951 - Leidse astronomers discover radio signal out of Milky Way system

1952 - Princess Beatrice opens miniature city of Madurodam

1954 - 68th Wimbledon Mens Tennis: J Drobny beats K Rosewall (13-11 46 62 97)

1954 - Denis Compton scores 278 in 290 minutes v Pakistan

1955 - "7th Heaven" closes at ANTA Theater NYC after 44 performances

1955 - "Almost Crazy" closes at Longacre Theater NYC after 16 performances

1955 - "Lawrence Welk Show" premieres on ABC

1955 - 62nd Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Louise Brough beats B Fleitz (75 86)

1956 - Elvis Presley records "Hound Dog" and "Don't Be Cruel"

1956 - US performs nuclear test at Enwetak (atmospheric tests)

1957 - First submarine designed to fire guided missiles launched, Grayback

1957 - Pope Pius XII publishes encyclical Le pelerinage De Lourdes

1958 - US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Bikini Island

1959 - "Plan 9 From Outer Space," one of the worse films ever, premieres

1960 - "Once Upon a Mattress" closes at Alvin Theater NYC after 460 perfs

1961 - Maris hits 29th and 30th en route to 61 homers

1962 - Cubans minister of Foreign affairs Raul Castro arrives in Moscow

1962 - Fidel Castro visits Moscow

1963 - Giant Willie Mays' HR in 16th inning gives them a 1-0 win over Braves

1963 - Juan Marichal (Giants) beats Warren Spahn (Braves), 1-0 in 16 innings






    

1964 - Cilla Black records Beatle's "Its For You," McCartney plays piano






1964 - Grand jury indicts Beckwith in murder of Medger Evers







Bust of American President Lyndon B. Johnson

1964 - U.S. President Lyndon Baines Johnson signed the "Civil Rights Act of 1964" and Voting Rights Act into law. The act made it illegal in the U.S. to discriminate against others because of their race.


July 2, 1964: Johnson signs Civil Rights Act  

On this day in 1964, U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson signs into law the historic Civil Rights Act in a nationally televised ceremony at the White House.  

In the landmark 1954 case Brown v. Board of Education, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that racial segregation in schools was unconstitutional. The 10 years that followed saw great strides for the African-American civil rights movement, as non-violent demonstrations won thousands of supporters to the cause. Memorable landmarks in the struggle included the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955--sparked by the refusal of Alabama resident Rosa Parks to give up her seat on a city bus to a white woman--and Martin Luther King, Jr.'s famous "I have a dream" speech at a rally of hundreds of thousands in Washington, D.C., in 1963.  

As the strength of the civil rights movement grew, John F. Kennedy made passage of a new civil rights bill one of the platforms of his successful 1960 presidential campaign. As Kennedy's vice president, Johnson served as chairman of the President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunities. After Kennedy was assassinated in November 1963, Johnson vowed to carry out his proposals for civil rights reform.  

The Civil Rights Act fought tough opposition in the House and a lengthy, heated debate in the Senate before being approved in July 1964. For the signing of the historic legislation, Johnson invited hundreds of guests to a televised ceremony in the White House's East Room. After using more than 75 pens to sign the bill, he gave them away as mementoes of the historic occasion, according to tradition. One of the first pens went to King, leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), who called it one of his most cherished possessions. Johnson gave two more to Senators Hubert Humphrey and Everett McKinley Dirksen, the Democratic and Republican managers of the bill in the Senate.  

The most sweeping civil rights legislation passed by Congress since the post-Civil War Reconstruction era, the Civil Rights Act prohibited racial discrimination in employment and education and outlawed racial segregation in public places such as schools, buses, parks and swimming pools. In addition, the bill laid important groundwork for a number of other pieces of legislation--including the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which set strict rules for protecting the right of African Americans to vote--that have since been used to enforce equal rights for women as well as all minorities.  






1965 - 79th Wimbledon Mens Tennis: Roy Emerson beats Fred Stolle (62 64 64)

1966 - First France nuclear explosion on Mururoa atoll

1966 - 73rd Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Billie J King beats Frasier (63 36 61)

1966 - France performs nuclear test at Muruora Island

1967 - The U.S. Marine Corps launched Operation Buffalo in response to the North Vietnamese Army's efforts to seize the Marine base at Con Thien.

1967 - 22nd US Women's Open Golf Championship won by Catherine Lacoste

1967 - Catherine Lacoste becomes youngest (22), 1st foreigner (France) & 1st amateur to US Women's open golf tournament

1969 - Ireland bowl out WI for 25 at Londonderry, win by 9 wkts

1969 - Leslie West & Felix Pappalardi form rock group Mountain

1970 - First Boeing 747 to land in Amsterdam & Brussels

1970 - NY Yankees Horace Clarke breaks up a no-hitter in the 9th for 3rd time in 28 days

1971 - 78th Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Evonne Goolagong beats M Smith (64 61)

1971 - USSR performs underground nuclear test

1972 - "Fiddler on the Roof" closes at Imperial Theater NYC after 3242 perfs

1972 - 27th US Women's Open Golf Championship won by Susie Maxwell Berning

1972 - Bob Seagren pole vaults world record 5.63m

1972 - India and Pakistan sign peace accord

1973 - James R Schlesinger, ends term as 9th director of CIA

1973 - Nation Black Network begins operation on radio

1974 - Fernando Mameda of Portugal sets record for 10,000 m (27:13.81)

1976 - 83rd Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Chris Evert beats E Goolagong (63 46 86)

1976 -  In Gregg v. Georgia, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the death penalty was not inherently cruel or unusual.

1976 - North Vietnam and South Vietnam were formally reunited.

1977 - 91st Wimbledon Mens Tennis: Bjorn Borg beats Connors (36 62 61 57 64)

1978 - Pitcher Ron Guidry sets Yankee record of 13-0 start

1979 - Susan B Anthony dollar is issued, became the first US coin to honor a woman

1979 - The U.S. Mint officially released the Susan B. Anthony coin in Rochester, NY.

1980 - U.S. President Jimmy Carter reinstated draft registration for males 18 years of age.

1980 - Grateful Dead's Bob Weir and Mickey Hart are arrested for incitement

1980 - Julie Marie Bryan, 18, of Georgia, crowned America's Young Woman of Yr

1981 - Soyuz T-6 returned to Earth.

1982 - Larry Walters using lawn chair & 42 helium balloons, rose to 16,000'

1982 - Soyuz T-6 returns to Earth

1983 - 90th Wimbledon Womens Tennis: M Navratilova beats A Jaeger (60 63)

1985 - Andrei Gromyko appointed president of USSR

1985 - European Space Agency launches Giotto (Halley's Comet Flyby)

1985 - General Motors announced that it was installing electronic road maps as an option in some of its higher-priced cars.

1986 - After 14 wins, Roger Clemens suffer his first loss of year




Flag of Chile

1986 - General strike against Pinochet regime in Chile






1986 - Supreme Court upholds affirmative action in 2 rulings

1987 - Jim Eisenreich, comeback after nervous disorder in 1984

1987 - Nilde Iotti is named as the first female President of the Italian Chamber of Deputies.

1988 - 95th Wimbledon Womens Tennis: Steffi Graf beats Navratilova (57 62 61)

1990 - Imelda Marcos & Adnan Khashoggi found not guilty of racketeering

1990 - Panic in tunnel of Mecca: 1,426 pilgrims trampled to death

1991 - Riot at Guns N' Roses concert in St Louis

1992 - Braniff Airlines goes out of business

1993 - Boat sinks at Bocaue Philippines, 325 die

1993 - F-28 crashes at Sorong Irian Barat, 41 die

1993 - Kansas Royals rename stadium Ewing Kaufman Stadium after founder

1993 - Moslem fundamentalists in Sivas Turkey, set hotel on fire, kill 36

1993 - NY Met Anthony Young loses a record 25th straight game (goes to 27)





1993 - Pope John Paul II hospitalized for Cat Scan test



1994 - 101st Wimbledon Womens Tennis: C Martinez beats Navratilova (64 36 63)

1994 - 37 dies in US Air DC-9 crash in NC

1994 - John Wayne Bobbitt & Kristina Elliot arrested for domestic battery

1994 - Richard Johnson takes 10-45 for Middlesex against Derbyshire

1994 - US Air DC-9 crash in NC, 37 killed

1995 - "Rose Tattoo" closes at Circle in the Square NYC after 80 perfs

1995 - Thailand: Banharn Silpa-Archa's party wins election

1995 - "Forbes" magazine reported that Microsoft's chairman, Bill Gates, was the worth $12.9 billion, making him the world's richest man. In 1999, he was worth about $77 billion.

1997 - Actor James Stewart died in Beverly Hills, Calif. 2002 Steve Fossett became the first to circumnavigate the globe solo in a balloon.

1998 - Cable News Network (CNN) retracted a story that alleged that U.S. commandos had used nerve gas to kill American defectors during the Vietnam War.

2000 - In Mexico, Vicente Fox Quesada of the Partido Acción Nacional (National Action Party, or PAN) defeated Francisco Labastida Ochoa of the Partido Revolucionario Institucional.(Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI) in the presidential election. The PRI had controlled the presidency in Mexico since the party was founded in 1929, or over seventy years.

2001 - AbioCor self contained artificial heart created.

2002 - Steve Fossett becomes the first person to fly solo around the world nonstop in a balloon.

2003 - Silvio Berlusconi, Prime Minister of Italy, insults German MP Martin Schulz by calling him a "kapo" during a session of the European Parliament.

2004 - ASEAN Regional Forum accepts Pakistan as its 24th member.¨

2008 - Ingrid Betancourt and 14 other FARC hostages are rescued by the Colombian armed forces.

2010 - Oil tanker truck explosion in South Kivu, the Democratic Republic of the Congo kills at least 230 people

2012 - GlaxoSmithKline settle the largest healthcare fraud case in history for US$3 Billion \

2012 - Monsoon rain in East India kills at least 79 people and leaves 2.2 million homeless




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/jul02.htm

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

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Trump Wanted a Giant Fist Atop His Washington Arch

Not long ago, details were revealed of one of the ideas which Trump was floating around for one of his vanity projects.

Apparently, Trump wanted to put a giant fist on his Arch in Washington, which some have dubbed the "Arc de Trump."

No, that is not a joke. He really wanted to do that. 

God, can you imagine? That would be incredibly ugly and in bad taste.

Then again, it's Trump we're talking about. So you have to expect stupid, ridiculous nonsense like that with him.

What a farce.



Trump’s Insane Plan for Fist Vanity Project Revealed FIST FIGHT The president had plans to incorporate himself into a 250-foot monument. Ewan Palmer Ewan Palmer  Reporter  Updated Jun. 23 2026 12:59PM EDT  Published Jun. 23 2026 11:43AM EDT 

https://www.thedailybeast.com/trumps-insane-plan-for-fist-vanity-project-revealed/

Trump’s Insane Plan for Fist Vanity Project Revealed

🍁 🍁 Honouring Canada Day 🍁 🍁

 


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Two pictures which I took on a very soggy Canada Day in Ottawa in 2017, for the 150th anniversary of Canadian Confederation.


Bonne fête du Canada!

🍁 🍁🍁🍁  

Happy Canada Day!


Today, July 1st, is Canada Day.

This was an important date in Canadian history. Mostly because this was when the Confederation of Canada was created in 1867, but it was also important for some other reasons as well. American privateers attacked Lunenburg, in Nova Scotia. Nine years before Canada became a Union, it minted it's own coins (i, 5, 10, and 20 cent coins). The decimal currency system was incorporated in Canada, and Canada and the United States ended a fishery agreement. The first international telephone conversation took place on this day, with a call between Calais, Maine, and St Stephen, New Brunswick. Prince Edward Island officially became a province of Canada. Wilfred Laurier became the first French-speaking Prime Minister of Canada. Less happy history - it was on this date in 1933 that Canada suspended all Chinese immigration into the country. Eventually on this date, O Canada! became the official national anthem for Canada.

But most importantly, of course, it was on this day in 1867 that the Dominion of Canada came into existence. I have spent Canada Day inside of Canada a few times, most recently in 2017, for the 150th anniversary of Confederation. Usually, in Quebec City, where they traditionally have free outdoor concerts and other celebratory events during the time of the end of June until early July. That is because June 24th is St. Jean Baptiiste Day in Quebec province, and then Canada Day a week later. So, it's a good time to take a trip there. Plus, there's a good chance that you can catch a good band or two. I think it was 2005 that I saw Tea Party up there (no, not the ridiculous American pseudo-political movement, but rather the pretty cool band).

Now, having lived in the United States for most of my life - and unfortunately, never having lived in Canada - it seems pretty clear to me that ignorance of Canada is strong. I have known many Americans who really had no idea of what Canada was like. Some  - and I am talking about grown adults here - believed that it must be cold and possibly snowy all year long. Some - quite a few, actually - were under the impression that French was the dominant language, including one friend who I actually went to Quebec province with back in our college days. He actually was disappointed and claimed to be pissed off when I told him that, in fact, Quebec was the only province of the ten in Canada where French was the dominant language. Another, when I asked him what the "other" language (other than French) officially spoken in Canada, answered uncertainly that perhaps it was German. Apparently, he did not imagine that they spoke English there. And no, sadly, I am neither kidding nor exaggerating about any of this. These were actual things that people said of Canada, and that's arguably not even the worse thing. Indeed, I knew a guy - a young man who used to be a student at the school I worked at, but who had become a fully grown adult by this point - who was trying to move to Toronto and was stunned by how much paperwork was involved. He said that he could not remember anywhere near the same level of paperwork when he moved from New Jersey to New York. I told him (apparently informing him) that Toronto was in Canada, and thus, an entirely different country. He deleted the post shortly after that, perhaps out of embarrassment, although I will not speculate any farther.

Nor were they alone. I knew a guy in France who simply assumed that Quebec was France, for all intents and purposes. Tell that to the people of Quebec, and I think he might have been surprised by what their reaction to that might be. That is not to say there are not similarities and cultural ties, because obviously, there are. But the people inside of Quebec most certainly do not feel themselves de facto Frenchman and, in certain regards, live very different lives. 

The point is, knowledge about Canada outside of Canada itself seems to be extremely limited. Sadly, that seems particularly true in the United States, a fact which, as an American, embarrassed the hell out of me. I always loved taking trips to Canada ever since my first trip there in 1983. I have been there a number of times, but you would be amazed how many people seem to think that multiple trips to Canada would be pointless, as if visiting, say, Quebec City is the same exact thing as visiting Toronto or Vancouver. Or that visiting the Maritime provinces is the same thing as visiting the Canadian Rockies. Or that Canada is not actually as big as it is - it has long been the second biggest country in terms of land mass in the world - and does not have the vast diversity of various landscapes and the accompanying cultural differences that it is known for. Even the French-speaking community is not all one and the same. While Quebec province is the only province where French is spoken by a majority (and a wide majority, at that), it is not the only province where French is spoken. In fact, there are communities of French-speakers in literally every Canadian province, and nearly a third of the population of New Brunswick speak French. There are also over 100,000 people in Ontario who speak French as their first language, including just under 20 percent of the people of Ottawa, Canada's capital city. And within the English-speaking provinces, I might argue that there are more differences - both geographically and culturally - between those people in the rural province of Newfoundland and Labrador, and those in Ontario's capital of Toronto, which happens to also be Canada's largest city, with massive urban sprawl. And all of those people likely live very different lives than the people who live in Victoria, a city which looks and feels quite English. Indeed, it has sometimes been regarded as English Canada's answer to Quebec City for French Canadians. In fact, despite having visited London with my son last year, the only time that I actually ever had "tea time" at a restaurant remains in Victoria, British Columbia. 

Long have I believed that Americans really need to begin to pay attention to the world outside of their own sacred borders. And they could do worse than begin by learning more about our neighbors - sorry, our neighbours - to the north. And so, my recent blog entries on Canada for this week in between St Jean Baptiste (celebrated exclusively in Quebec province) and Canada Day (which is celebrated throughout Canada, and honors the day when Confederation was achieved back in 1867. 


Here are some pictures from our visit to Charlottetown, and particularly the Province House, which was billed the "Birthplace of Confederation."






 











Finally, I wrote an article on Canada Day for the Guardian Liberty Voice which was published on this date in 2015. Fairly recently, I found out that this was a widely viewed article, with thousands and thousands of views, most likely making it the most widely read piece that I have written to date. Hopefully, you take a look. Here's the link:


Canada Day Has a Long and Divided History:

https://guardianlv.com/2015/07/canada-day-has-a-long-and-divided-history/