Thursday, July 31, 2025

We Should Make Good On a Suggestion Once Made By California Congressman Eric Swalwell

 

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. 






"I don't say this lightly: when we escape this Trump hell, America needs a Presidential Crimes Commission. It should be made up of independent prosecutors who look at those who enabled a corrupt president."

~ California Rep. Eric Swalwell (D)


This was something which was suggested towards the end of Trump's first term.

Obviously, it did not happen. But it should have.

Right now, we are dealing with an even more extreme Trump administration. This time around, the MAGAlomaniac surrounded himself with "Yes" people. These are people who will simply not stand up to him, and will offer him only unconditional support and praise, no matter what. In short, there are no guard rails this time around, for Trump's second term in office. 

Still, what Swalwell suggested was the creation of a presidential crimes commission right after President Donald Trump left office the first time around. Swalwell focused "in particular at the president's reluctance to fund the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) amid concerns over the delivery of mail-in ballots."

Swalwell suggested that Trump sabotaged the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) in order to assure an election win in 2020.  

However, it feels like there is just so much more which Trump and his enablers are guilty of now. Especially in this second term, with a seeming complete absence of any kind of guard rails or limits this time around.

Once we finally do get this blatantly corrupt and incompetent man out of office, a presidential crimes commission really should be set up and target those who enabled King Con Don and his relentless, dictatorial grab for power. We simply have to make sure that there are no other aspiring dictator wanna be's who are eagerly awaiting their turn to try and empower themselves and line their overstuffed pockets at the expense of the taxpayers, not to mention American democracy.





California Rep. Says 'Presidential Crimes Commission' a Must After 'We Escape Trump Hell' by Brendan Cole, Senior News Reporter, Aug 15, 2020:

https://www.newsweek.com/eric-swalwell-donald-trump-postal-service-voting-hell-1525312






Rodney Berg  ·Facebook post on July 30, 2025:

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10229788675443339&set=a.10211934272934435

July 31st: 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!





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

 On this day in 30 BC, the Battle of Alexandria was fought. Mark Antony managed a minor victory over Octavian's forces, although it came at a price. Most of the army subsequently deserted, which ultimately helped lead to his suicide. 

On this day in 432 , St Sixtus III began his reign as Catholic Pope. 

In 768 on this day, [Philip] both began & ended his reign as Catholic Pope. 

 On this day in 781 was the oldest recorded eruption of Mt. Fuji (Traditional Japanese date: July 6, 781). 
 In 1291 on this day, Egyptian Mamelukken occupied Akko, and the Crusaders were driven out of Palestine. 



Royal France

 On this day in 1423 during the Hundred Years' War, the Battle of Cravant was fought. The French army was defeated at Cravant on the banks of the river Yonne.
 

 Jacques Cœur was arrested by order of Charles VII of France on this day in 1451. 

 On this day in 1498, djuring his third voyage to the Western Hemisphere, Christopher Columbus arrived at (note, did not discover) the island of Trinidad. 


On this day in 1588, the English fleet defeated the mighty Spanish Armada. 

In 1620 on this day, Pilgrim Fathers departed (through England) to America. 

Fronde-leaders surrendered in Bordeaux on this day in 1653. 

On this day in 1655 during the Russo-Polish War (1654-1667), the Russian army entered the capital of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Vilnius, and then held onto it for six years. 

Aurangzeb appointed himself as the Mongol Emperor on this day in 1658. 

On this day in 1664, Pierre Corneille's "Othon," premiered in Paris. 

In 1667 on this day came the Peace of Breda. The Second English War-Suriname vs New-Netherlands ended. 

On this day in 1703, Daniel Defoe was placed in a pillory for the crime of seditious libel after publishing a politically satirical pamphlet, but he is pelted with flowers. 

The Battle at Cape Passaro, when the English fleet destroyed the Spanish fleet, took place on this day in 1718. 

Prince Frederick of Wales escaped the English court on this day in 1737. 

On this day in 1741, Charles Albert of Bavaria invaded Upper Austria and Bohemia.  

A massive fire in Stockholm, Sweden, destroyed approximately 1,000 homes on this day in 1751. 

On this day in 1771, Paul Potters "Great ossendrift" sold for Ÿ9050 in Amsterdam. 




Statue of the Marquis de Lafayette on the exterior of the Louvre on the Rue de Rivoli, Paris



Statue of the Marquis de Lafayette at the Greens in Morristown, NJ


 In 1777 on this day, the Marquis de Lafayette of France, who was then only 19 years old, accepted the position of Major-General of the Continental Army in the American cause for independence. 



 The first U.S. patent was issued to Samuel Hopkins for his process for making potash and pearl ashes. The substance was used in fertilizer. 

 On this day in 1792,  the cornerstone of the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia, PA, was laid. It was the first building to be used only as a U.S. government building. 

 In 1809 on this day, the first practical US railroad track (wooden, for horse-drawn cars) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 

 The British invaded Plattsburgh NY, on this day in 1813. 

 Benjamin Chambers patented breech loading cannon on this day in 1849. 


The flag of New Zealand

 On this day in 1856  Christchurch, New Zealand, was chartered as a city. 


 On this day in 1864, Ulysses S. Grant was named General of Volunteers. 

 The first narrow gauge mainline railway in the world opens at Grandchester, Australia, on this day in 1865. 

 The US Coast Guard officers' training school was established on this day in 1876 in New Bedford MA. 

 On this day in 1893, Henry Perky patented shredded wheat. 

 Albert Trott hit Monty Noble over the Pavilion at Lord's on this day in 1899. 



On this day in 1901, Abraham Kuyper became the Premier of Netherlands. 

 On this day in 1905 the Matumbi rebellion occurred at Samanga in German East Africa.



1910 - Clement van Maasdijk gives flying demonstration
1911 - Hungarian education is only taught in German
1912 - RBC soccer team forms in Roosendaal
1912 - US government prohibits movies & photos of prize fights (censorship)

1914 - German Emperor Wilhelm II threatens war, orders Russia to demobilize

1914 - Oil discovered in Lake of Maracaibo
1917 - 3rd battle of Ypres begins

 Germany's Weimar Constitution was officially adopted on this day in 1919.  

 1922 - Italy's general strike against fascist violence
1923 - Belgian Chamber discusses bilinguality at Ghent University
1925 - Last allied occupying troops leave Ruhrgebied
1925 - Unemployment Insurance Act passed in England
1928 - 1st woman to win a track and field olympic gold medal, Halina Konopacka of Poland

1928 - MGM’s Leo the lion roared for the first time. He introduced MGM’s first talking picture, "White Shadows on the South Seas."   

1929 - Aristide Briand becomes premier of France

1932 - George Washington quarter goes into circulation
1932 - German Election (NSDAP gets 37.3%)

1932 - Enzo Ferrari retired from racing. In 1950 he launched a series of cars under his name.  

1935 - 3rd Dutch government of Colijn sworn in



Flag of the Olympics

 On this day in 1936, the city of Tokyo, Japan, was awarded the 1940 Olympic games, although they would ultimately be cancelled due to World War II.


1937 - Politburo enables Operative Order 00447: execute 193,000 Russians

1938 - Archaeologists discover engraved gold and silver plates from King Darius in Persepolis.
1940 - 38 U boats sinks this month (196,000 ton)
1940 - Riech's commissar Seyss-Inquart bans homosexuals




Auschwitz




 On this day in 1941, Hermann Göring, the Reichsmarschall des Großdeutschen Reiches (Reich Marshal of the Greater German Reich, the highest ranking military official of Germany at the time) and a Hitler's second in command, authorized Reinhard Heydrich to make preparations for the "total solution of the Jewish question in the area of German influence in Europe". This was a significant escalation in what came to ultimately be the systematic persecution and extermination of Jews  in Nazi Germany, which itself has come to be known as the "Final Solution". 



1941 - U boats sink 21 allied ships this month: 94,000 ton
1942 - German SS gases 1,000 Jews in Minsk, Belorussia
1942 - U boats sank 96 allied ships this month: 476,000 ton
1943 - Transport nr 58 departs with French Jews to nazi Germany
1944 - Last deportation train out Mechelen departs to Auschwitz
1944 - Transport nr 77 departs with French Jews to nazi-Germany
1944 - US troops occupy Sansapor New-Guinea

 Pierre Laval, the fugitive former leader of Vichy France, surrendered to Allied soldiers in Austria on this day in 1945 after the European theater of World War II had already ended.




Bust of American President Harry Truman
 U.S. President Truman helped dedicated New York International Airport, and later renamed John F. Kennedy International Airport) at Idlewild Field on this day in 1948.   


1949 - Lightning strikes a baseball field in Fla, kills SS & 3rd baseman
1951 - Japan Airlines is established.
1953 - Dept of Health, Education & Welfare created

 This day in 1954 marked the first successful ascent of Mount Godwin-Austen (K2), the world's second-highest peak, by an Italian expedition led by Ardito Desio.




1955 - Marilyn Bell of Toronto, Canada, at age 17, became the youngest person to swim the English Channel.   


1958 - Anti-Chinese uprising in Tibet

1959 - 1st exhibit of bongos at Cleveland Metroparks Zoo opens

1959 - The Euskadi Ta Askatasuna (ETA) was founded. The group is known for being an armed Basque nationalist and separatist organization.   



1960 - Elijah Muhammad, leader of Nation of Islam, calls for a black state

1961 - Israel welcomes its 1,000,000th immigrant
1962 - Federation of Malaysia forms


1963 - Arturo Illia elected president of Argentina

1964 - Al Parker glides 644 miles without any motor 



 1964 - The American space probe Ranger 7 transmitted pictures of the moon's surface.   


1964 - Rolling Stone concert in Ireland halts after 12 minutes due to riot

1964 - US Ranger 7 takes 4,316 pictures before crashing on Moon

1964 The U.S. space probe Ranger 7 transmitted pictures of the Moon’s surface.



1965 - Cigarette Ads banned on British TV



    

  Alabamans burned Beatles record and products on this day in 1966 following John Lennon' controversial - yet mostly misunderstood - remarks regarding the Beatles being more popular than Jesus.

1967 - Rolling Stone Mick Jagger & Keith Richards end 1 month jail sentence
1968 - Beatles close Apple Boutique, giving clothes away for free

1969 - Mariner 6 flies past Mars
1969 - National Guard mobilizes in racial disturbances in Baton Rouge, La

1970 - Black Tot Day: The last day of the officially sanctioned rum ration in the Royal Navy.

1971 - Apollo 15 astronauts take 6½ hour electric car ride on Moon

1971 - Men rode in a vehicle on the moon for the first time in a lunar rover vehicle (LRV).   


1972 - Thomas Eagleton withdraws as Democratic VP candidate
1973 - ABA Virginia Squires trade Julius Erving to NY Nets
1973 - Delta Airlines DC-9 crashes in fog at Logan Airport, Boston, killing all but one of 89 aboard. Lone survivor dies 6 months later

1976 - Seychelles Independence (Independence day)

1977 - E Henry Knoche, ends term as deputy director of CIA
1977 - John F Blake promoted from acting to deputy director of CIA
1978 - Gunman shoots his way into Iraqi Embassy in Paris

1980 - Soyuz 37 crew returns to Earth aboard Soyuz 36

  


1981 - Arnette Hubbard installed as 1st woman president of Natl Bar Association


1982 - Yugoslavia imposed a six-month freeze on prices.   

1982 - 46 kids & 7 adults die as 2 buses & several cars collide in France
1982 - Car/bus collision near Beaune, France, 53 die
1982 - Finland, Italy, Germany, Austria & France form American European Football Federation (AEFF)

1983 - Dutch July avg temp is 20.1°C; warmest July since 1852

1984 - Venz commandos terminate hijacking of an aircraft, 2 killed

1987 - Battle between Iranian pilgrims & Saudi-Arabian troops, 402 killed


1987 - Rockwell International awarded contract to build a 5th shuttle
1987 - A rare, class F-4 tornado rips through Edmonton, Alberta, killing 27 people and causing $330 million in damage.

1988 - 32 people are killed and 1,674 injured when a bridge at the Sultan Abdul Halim ferry terminal collapses in Butterworth, Malaysia.


1989 - A pro-Iranian group in Lebanon released a videotape reportedly showing the hanged body of American hostage William R. Higgins.   




  Bosnia-Herzegovina declared independence on this day in 1990.

 1991 - U.S. President George H.W. Bush and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev signed the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty.   


1991 - Russia & US sign long range nuclear weapons reduction pact
1991 - Senate votes to allow women to fly combat aircraft

1991 - The Medininkai Massacre in Lithuania. Soviet OMON attacks Lithuanian customs post in Medininkai, killing 7 officers and severely wounding one other.


1992 - Thai Airbus crashes into mountain at Kathmandu, 113 die
1
1993 - Inkatha-arm forces killed 49 ANC-followers in Johannesburg
1993 - Prince Ronald "Ronnie" Mutebi crowned king of Uganda



1994 - Stockholms avgs 21.5°C; their warmest July since 1855
1994 - UN votes 12-0 (2 abstentions) to authorize use of force against Haiti


1995 - The Walt Disney Company agreed to acquire Capital Cities/ABC in a $19 billion deal.  Disney movies, music and books   

 1999 - The spacecraft Lunar Prospect crashed into the moon. It was a mission to detect frozen water on the moon's surface. The craft had been launched on January 6, 1998.  
1999 - Discovery Program: Lunar Prospector - NASA intentionally crashes the spacecraft into the Moon, thus ending its mission to detect frozen water on the moon's surface.

2006 - Fidel Castro hands over power temporarily to brother Raúl Castro. This leads to a celebration in Little Havana (La Pequeña Habana in Spanish), Miami, Florida, where many Cuban Americans participated.

2007 - Operation Banner, the presence of the British Army in Northern Ireland, and longest-running British Army operation ever, comes to an end.

2007 - The iTunes Music Store reached 2 million feature length films sold.



2012 - Two car bombs kill 21 people in Baghdad, Iraq

2012 - A second power grid failure in two days leaves 670 million people in India without power





1790 The first U.S. patent was issued to Samuel Hopkins of Vermont for a process of making fertilizer. 1875 Andrew Johnson, the 17th president of the United States, died in Tennessee. 1954 Mount Godwin-Austen (K2), the world's second-highest peak, was climbed for the first time, by an Italian team led by Ardito Desio. 1964 The U.S. space probe Ranger 7 transmitted pictures of the Moon’s surface.

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/jul31.htm

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

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory

Professor of Rock Examines Living Colour's "Cult of Personality"

 



Some songs really hit you from the first time that you hear it. They become the defining songs - or at least one of them - of an entire era. To me, Living Colour's "Cult of Personality" was a lot like that.

Now, I admittedly don't remember the first time that I heard the song. However, I remember that at some point - it must have been sometime in 1988, even though I actually associate this song more with 1989, for some reason - it started to be played frequently on the radio. Remember, we didn't have cable, so I never saw the video on MTV, and only saw it years later (well, more like decades later) on Youtube. 

I was blown away.

First of all, the song has a raw energy and intensity to it which really appealed to me at the time. Also, the lyrics were thought provoking, which was something that I always looked for (yes, even back then, although I was on the young end of my teenage years). Apparently - although I did not know it at the time - the video also was quite impactful. In short, this song was the complete package.

So of course, it was not long before I got their first album, "Vivid," although that was on cassette. It wore out within a couple of years or so. Yet, their second album, "Time's Up," was one of the first cd's which I ever got (probably among the first three, certainly within the first five). It may have been a gift, either for my birthday or for Christmas, although the details now are a bit fuzzy (Hey, you're talking about more than three and a half decades ago now!).

I continued to be a fan and obtained their albums over the course of the years. I was very happy when they released Collideøscope in 2003, which was their first album in a decade. Once again, they had some hard rocking stuff and intelligent lyrics at a time when I was very hungry for exactly those things. For some reason, it hardly seemed to make a blip on the popular musical radar at the time, although that remains one of my favorite albums from this band, and one of my favorite albums from that time period.

But I digress...

Back to the 1980's, and their big hit "Cult of Personality."

Yesterday, in one of his "Revelations" series, the Professor of Rock dedicated a video focusing on this song, with band members Vernon Reid and frontman Corey Glover elaborating on the thought process, how they came up with the groove, and quite a bit more. It's a great video, and recommended for any fans of the band or, for that matter, people who are not familiar with them. They're a great band, and this is truly one of the great and defining songs of the late eighties, a time that was largely otherwise dominated by pop and hair bands. 

Take a look:




 It’s BULLSH*T…I’m at HALF the TRAFFIC I Usually GET Cuz I DARED to COVER This SONG-Professor of Rock

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

A Video Explores the Evolution of Christian Nationalism

While I never really was religious, there was a point of time in my life when I grew curious about religion, and the mindset of religious people. It seemed important to understand what they saw, what the appeal was to their religions.

And while there are still some religions which I am curious about and would want to explore, at least in an academic sense, it feels different for me these days. That is especially true here in the United States with those who believe in what is often labelled Christian Nationalism. Apparently, they do not particularly like or accept that title or description. Bottom line, however, is that when you want to try and impose your version of Christianity on the rest of the country by making sure that prayers and the Ten Commandments are brought into every classroom, and when they seem to believe that Christianity (again, their version of it) and the Bible are at least as important as the laws of this country, then yes, it sure seems to fit to call them Christian Nationalists.

Frankly, it seems that at least here in the United States, the people who are the loudest and proudest about their Christian faith are, to be quite honest, the least truly spiritual in any meaningful sense. When you see Christian evangelicals who support Trump and the evil bullshit that he brings, the greed, the lust for money and power and sex and pretty much all of the other decadence that Trump and his administration bring, both into the White House and on a personal level, it is hard to reconcile that with the actual teaching of Jesus in, say, the Beatitudes and the Sermon on the Mount. When you see them screaming about how gay people will burn in Hell, or applauding when Trump refers to countries with millions of people in Africa and Central American countries as "shithole nations," or applauding when he or other prominent MAGA members say blatantly racist things, or advocating for brutal concentration camps like "Alligator Alcatraz," which has become apparently become quite a tourist site for Trump supporters, many of whom would identify as good Christians, it frankly is disgusting. Is that what they think that it means to treat people as you would be treated yourself? Is that what they believe Jesus meant when he said show love and compassion towards foreigners? 

I have known people like that all of my life. And the more I get to know them, and the better I understand their actions, the less impressed I am by them, frankly. On numerous occasions, I have had people who identify as good Christians say things like "Have a blessed day" as if they were hurling a scathing insult, and it felt as if it were delivered in that same hostile spirit. Moe often than not, what they were outraged about was nothing more than a difference of opinion with them, but they showed little in the way of tolerance, let alone a real attempt to understand. Again, that does not feel like what Jesus had in mind when he advocated for his followers to turn the other cheek. 

So my curiosity about that particular version of Christianity has, admittedly, largely been extinguished. It's hard to be curious about something which is, truth be told, not really all that impressive to begin with. And again, these are the people who are quite literally trying to take over the country, to disintegrate established institutions and replace them with their own peculiar brand of what passes for Christianity, as they see it. 

Below is a video which explores who Christian Nationalists are, and where they originated from, historically. It also explores how they gravitated in their approach and grew more political and influential over time, so that now, they are a dominant force in the politics of the United States, particularly in the South and the massive interior, in most of the rural regions. Take a look at this video by Mr. Beat, because it's pretty good and informative. 




The Truth About Christian Nationalism

Jon Ossoff Makes a Compelling Case For Why Nothing Seems to Work Properly For Ordinary Americans

While I am still admittedly not all that familiar with Democratic Senator Jon Ossoff of Georgia, I must say that he is impressive in this short video clip (see below).

I just happened to run into this clip on my Facebook feed just days ago. But I watched it, and what he said about our present political realities resonated with me. 

Again, I do not know Ossoff or his stance on most issues, truth be told. Still, he makes some excellent points here, and it seemed worth sharing them here, for that matter.

Take a look and see if you agree.

Enjoy.





Ossoff: This is why nothing works for ordinary people.

July 30th - 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!



 On this day in 579, Benedict I ended his reign as Catholic Pope. 

 In 657 on this day, St Vitalian began his reign as Catholic Pope, succeeding Eugene I. 

 On this day in 1178, Frederick I (Barbarossa), the Holy Roman Emperor, was crowned King of Burgundy. In 1419 on this day, Anti-Catholic Hussites, followers of the executed reformer Jan Hus, stormed the Prague town hall and threw the judge, mayor and several city council members (either 7 or 13) out the windows. They all either died in the fall or were killed by the crowd outside. 

 On this day in 1502, Christopher Columbus landed at Guanaja in the Bay Islands off the coast of Honduras during his fourth voyage to the Americas. 

 On this day in 1537, the Ditch and French had a ceasefire during the Resistance of Bomy. A Spanish garrison of Rhine Birch surrendered to Earl Mauritius on this day in 1601. On this day in 1618, Prince Maurits' troops pulled into Utrecht. On this day in 1619, the first legislative assembly in English North America convened in Jamestown, Virginia (known as the House of Burgesses). An earthquake that killed an estimated 10,000 hit Naples, Italy, on this day in 1626. 

 On this day in 1646, the English parliament gives King Charles I of England the Newcastle Propositions. Prince Willem II occupied Amsterdam on this day in 1650. Johan de Witt was sworn in as pension advisor of Holland on this day in 1653. On this day in 1655, Dutch troops occupied Fort Assahudi Seram. English troops landed in Flanders on this day in 1678. On this day in 1715,  a fleet of Spanish ships carrying gold and silver disappeared off the coast of Florida, by St. Lucie. On this day in 1733, the first Freemasons lodge opened in the original thirteen colonies in Boston. 

 Caspar Wistar began glass manufacturing in Allowaystown, New Jersey, on this day in 1739. In 1756 on this day, Bartolomeo Rastrelli presented the newly-built Catherine Palace to Empress Elizabeth and her courtiers. 

The city of Baltimore was founded in Maryland on this day in 1759. 

In 1775 on this day, Captain Cook returned to England with Resolution. 




Images of the French Revolution



 500 men in Marseilles, France sang "La Marseillaise", the tune which would become France's now long standing national anthem, for the first time on this day in 1792 during the days of the French Revolution. 

 On this day in 1809, a British armed force of 39,000 landed in Walcheren, Netherlands, with the intent of opening up another front in Austria's struggle against Napoleon's France. 

 On this day in 1811, Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, the leader of the Mexican insurgency, was executed by the Spanish in Chihuahua, Mexico. 

In 1822 on this day, James Varick became the first bishop of African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. 

 On this day in 1824, Gioacchino Rossini became the manager of Theatre Italian, Paris. Malden Island was discovered on this day in 1825. 

On this day in 1826, Java prince Dipo Negoro launched a surprise attack on the Dutch colony, with 82 killed. 

 In 1836 on this day, the first English newspaper published in Hawaii. 

 Slaves rebelled and took over the slave ship Amistad on this day in 1839. 

 On this day in 1863, President Abraham Lincoln issued an "eye-for-eye" order to shoot a rebel prisoner for every black prisoner shot. Also on this day in 1863 farther West, Chief Pocatello of the Shoshone tribe signed the Treaty of Box Elder, promising to stop harassing the emigrant trails in southern Idaho and northern Utah. The Battle of Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, was fought on this day in 1864, and was burned by Union forces under McCausland. Also on this day in 1864 during the American Civil War, the Battle of the Crater was fought, when General Burnsides failed on his attack of Petersburg. Pope Pius IX visited Suriname on this day in 1865. 

 On this day in 1866, New Orleans's Democratic government ordered police to raid an integrated Republican Party meeting, killing 40 people and injuring 150. In 1870 on this day, Staten Island ferry "Westfield" burned, killing 100. On this day in 1872, Mahlon Loomis patented the wireless telegraphy. German anti-Semitism began during the Reichstag election on this day in 1878. Also on this day in 1878, there was a Russian assault on Plevna in the Ottoman Empire (modern day Turkiye), with 7,300 Russian casualties. This day in 1889 marked the start of Sherlock Holmes adventure "Naval Treaty." 

 On this day in 1898, Will Kellogg invented Corn Flakes. 

On this day in 1898, "Scientific America" carried the first magazine automobile ad. The ad was for the Winton Motor Car Company of Cleveland, Ohio. 



The Voortrekker Monument in Pretoria, South Africa.

 On this day in 1900 during the Anglo-Boer War in what is now present-day South Africa, Boer Generals Prinsloo & Roux surrendered to the British at Brandwater Basin. 

Anti-Jewish rioters attacked a funeral procession of Rabbi Joseph in New York City on this day in 1902. The Dutch Covenant of Worker's Union, NVV, formed on this day in 1905. Around the World Automobile Race ended in Paris on this day in 1908. On this day in 1909, the Wright Brothers delivered the first military plane to the army. 

 This day in 1913 marked the conclusion of second Balkan War. Austrian-Hungary & Russia proclaimed a general mobilization on this day in 1914, in the very early days of "The Great War," or World War I. French troops withdrew 10 kilometres from the German border on this day in 1914. John French was appointed as the British supreme commander on this day in 1914. 

• On this day in 1916, despite official American neutrality at the time during the so-called "Great War (World War I), German saboteurs blew up a munitions plant on Black Tom Island, in New Jersey. German saboteurs blow up a munitions plant on Black Tom Island, in Jersey City, New Jersey. On this day in 1917, the Board of Commissioners of Cleveland Metroparks held its first meeting. New Zealand claimed the Ross Dependency in Antarctica on this day in 1923. 

 Albanian boundaries were defined on this day in 1926. George Eastman showed the first color motion pictures in the United States on this day in 1928. 


 

The Championship for the first ever FIFA International World Cup Tournament was decided in the final match between Uruguay and Argentina on this day in 1930.




 Uruguay defeated Argentina 4-2 on this day in 1930 to win the championship at the first ever football/soccer World Cup  in Montevideo, Uruguay. The X modern Olympic games opened in Los Angeles, California, on this day in 1932. The first Penguin book was published on this day in 1935, starting the paperback revolution. On this day in 1938, General Metaxas named himself Premier of Greece. German occupiers forbid SDAP, VDB, ARP, RKSP, CHU and SGP in Netherlands on this day in 1941.OIn this day in 1942, FDR signed a bill creating Women's Navy Auxiliary Agency (WAVES). Members of WAVES were a part of the U.S. Navy. The German SS killed 25,000 Jews in Minsk, Belorussia, on this day in 1942. 

 Hitler found out that Italy would soon be joining in the war effort against Nazi Germany on this ay in 1943. German occupiers set a night curfew on Jews in Netherlands on this day in 1942. The US 45th Infantry division occupied San Stefano on this day in 1943.There were heavy battles at Tessy-sur-Vire and Villebaudon Normandy, on this day in 1944. Also on this day in 1944, the US 30th Division reached the suburbs of St-Lo, Normandy. 

 On this day in 1945, the USS Indianapolis was torpedoed and sunk within 15 minutes by a Japanese submarine. The ship had just delivered key components of the Hiroshima atomic bomb to the Pacific island of Tinian. Only 316 out of 1,196 men aboard survived the attack. It marked one of the greatest naval losses of World War II, resulting in the deaths of nearly 900 men. 

 On this day in 1946, the first rocket to attain 100 miles (167 km) altitude, in White Sands, New Mexico. In 1949 on this day, the British warship HMS Amethyst escaped down Yangtze River, having been refused a safe passage by Chinese Communists after a tense 3-month standoff. On this day in 1954, the "King" Elvis Presley joined the Memphis Federation of Musicians, Local 71. On this day in 1960, the first ever AFL (American Football League, which would become the American Football Conference once the league merged with the NFL) was played between the Boston Patriots and the Buffalo Bills in a preseason game. The Patriots beat the Bills, 28-7. In 1963 on this day, British spy Kim Philby was found in Moscow. 

 On this day in 1964, South Vietnamese forces fired on on Hon Ngu/Hon Mo, North Vietnam. 



Bust of American President Lyndon B. Johnson

 On this day in 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Social Security Act, which established Medicare and Medicaid, and which would become effective the following year. 


 


 In 1966 on this day, the Beatles' "Yesterday... & Today," album went to #1 and stayed there for 5 weeks. 


 Also on this day in 1966, England defeated West Germany 4-2 for soccer's 8th World Cup in London. For now, it still marks the one and only time that England won the world title. 


US airplanes bombed the demilitarized zone in Vietnam on this day in 1966. 

 Race riots erupted in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on this day in 1967, killing four. 

 The Beatles' Apple Boutique closed, and the entire inventory was given away on this day in 1968. On this day in 1969, Mariner 6 passed Venus on 3410 km (74 photos). 


 George Harrison released "Bangladesh" on this day in 1971. A Japanese Boeing 727 collided with an F-86 fighter on this day in 1971, killing 162. 

 The US Apollo 15 (Scott & Irwin) landed on Mare Imbrium on the Moon on this day in 1971. On this day in 1974, the House Judiciary Committee voted on the third & last charge of "high crimes & misdemeanors" to impeach President Nixon in the Watergate cover-up. 

 On this day in 1975, Teamsters President Jimmy Hoffa disappeared in suburban Detroit. On this day in 1976, Giulio Andreotti was sworn in as Premier of Italy. 

 Vanuatu (formerly known as the New Hebrides) gained independence from Britain and France on this day in 1980. 

 In 1981 on this day, the Belgian Senate accept laws against racism. The Alvenus tanker at Cameron La, spilled 2.8 million gallons of oil on this day in 1984. Also on this day in 1984, Holly Roffey (11 days old) became the youngest person ever to get a heart transplant. Discovery moves to Vandenberg Air Force Base for mating of STS 51-I mission on this day in 1985. 

 On this day in 1987, Indian troops arrived in Jaffna, Sri Lanka, to disarm the Tamil Tigers and enforce a peace pact. 

 Jordanian King Hussein renounced sovereignty over West Bank to the PLO on this day in 1988. King Hussein also dissolved Jordan's House of Representatives on this same day in 1988. 



Flag of Chile

 Chile amended it's constitution, not long after the bloody days of the Pinochet dictatorship. on this day in 1989. 


On this day in 1990, soldiers loyal to Liberian President Samuel Doe opened fire on worshippers in Monrovian church, with an estimated 200-600 killed. The first Saturn automobile rolled off the assembly line on this day in 1990. On this day in 1997, there was a terrorist double suicide bombing in Jerusalem, killing 14. In 1997 on this day, eighteen lives are lost in the Thredbo Landslide in New South Wales, Australia. 

 In 2002 on this day, the accounting law referred to as "The Sarbanes Oxley Act" was signed into law by President George W. Bush. In Mexico on this day in 2003, the last 'old style' Volkswagen Beetle rolled off an assembly line. 

 In 2009 on this day, a bomb exploded in Palma Nova, Mallorca, killing 2 police officers. A Basque separatist group ETA is believed to be responsible. A train fire killed 32 and injured 27 people in Andhra Pradesh, India, on this day in 2012. 

 Finally, on this day in 2012, an Indian power grid failure left over 620 million people (a bit less than 10 percent of the world's population at the time) without power.







  


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/jul30.htm

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

http://www.infoplease.com/dayinhistory