T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
483.1 | Here it comes... | KAOM25::RUSHTON | The frumious Bandersnatch | Thu Aug 01 1991 13:34 | 7 |
| I have a copy right here in my hot little hands.
I'll get your address and advise your of the charges via MAIL.
Cheers,
Pat
|
483.2 | I invented Rollerblades in 1957, but didn't do anything | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Aug 01 1991 14:43 | 5 |
| This business with the Norse discovery of America seems like a bunch
of hogwash to me...
The Norse sailors may have discovered America, but the certainly didn't
do anything with that discovery.
|
483.3 | McLeans, now that brings back memories | TRCOA::BOBMILLER | Bob Miller, DTN 637-3461 | Thu Aug 01 1991 14:48 | 46 |
| Speaking of McLeans, I wonder how they survive. While we were living in
Europe, we subscribed to McLeans to get news from home. The first year of our
subscription was at the Canadian rate (yes we did subscribe from Europe, not
send a change of address). When it came up for renewal (possibly the second
time, I don't remember exactly) the foreign subscription rate was about 3 times
the local rate; needless to say we were not that desperate and did not renew.
Anyway, we also had a subscription to TIME magazine and it is interesting to
contrast the two:
Aside from the price difference (the foreign surcharge for TIME was minimal),
the delivery time was radically different. TIME is simultaneously published
around the world at many different locations, including one in Europe (in the
Netherlands I believe), with some local content (mostly advertisements)
added. They send the bulk of the material including photos over a satellite
link. We received TIME within the same time domestic customers would. This
is only due to the fact the Canada Post handles 3rd class mail with much
higher priority than 1st class mail, IMO 1st class mail should be delivered
to any location in the country the next day (Sunday excluded) as is done by
the Deutsche Bundespost. In the case of McLeans we received it approx. 6-8
weeks late (usually 2-3 out of order within a few days of each other). Maybe
the new foreign rate included Airmail.
It is worth your while to compare the quality of the writing, editing, and
production in these two magazines. I would like to believe that we can do
anything as well or better than those ... Americans, but producing a
National (International?) magazine is not one of them.
The political slant/viewpoint between the two magazines is widely different
as is to be expected.
We accuse the Americans to be always inward looking, but I feel that TIME
devoted just as much effort to International issues as McLeans did (both of
which were dismally little). Of course for my purposes McLeans served very
well as I was trying to get Canadian news.
Needless to say, since returning to Canada I do not subscribe to McLeans as
other (IMHO better) sources to Canadian news are available.
Bob.
P.S. As you can tell I am not impressed with the service Canada Post provides,
but that is a topic in itself.
|
483.4 | Columbus is forgettable | KAOM25::RUSHTON | The frumious Bandersnatch | Thu Aug 01 1991 17:54 | 35 |
| ...and just what did Columbus do after he stumbled onto the Bahamas in
order to receive the dubious honour of the first white man to discover
America?
Gold, or the promise of it, was the 'carrot' that prodded
Columbus' beneficiaries to shower him with more men, ships, and soldiers
to consolidate his holdings in the New World.
But gold was not available in sufficient quantities in the
Caribbean islands. Not that that stopped Columbus and his relatives
from setting quotas for every native.
When the quotas were not reached, the natives were tortured
and killed (not a smart move if you expect to reach your quotas with
a diminishing population). Men, women and children were slowly roasted
on spits; villages were wiped out; the reign of terror caused some of
the natives to commit suicide. Eventually, the native population on
most of the Caribbean islands were completely annihilated - all this
occurred while Columbus and his relatives ran the Caribbean 'operation'.
Of course, we didn't say Columbus was a nice guy. We said he
was the first white guy to do something with his discovery in the New
World; the first of many. Most people today are unaware of the cruelty
and genocide that Columbus inflicted on the native population in his
search for gold. But it was recorded and published by a priest who
accompanied Columbus. That book is still available.
...now, what about the Norse? What about St. Brendan, the Irish monk
who probably pre-dates the Norse? Back to the books, chappies.
$ SET/SOAPBOX=OFF
K_O'Barbunk
|
483.5 | ...a thief too | KAOM25::RUSHTON | The frumious Bandersnatch | Thu Aug 01 1991 18:00 | 6 |
| One last bit about our hero, Columbus. A large sum of money was to be
given to the first man on his initial voyage who sighted the New World.
This was an attempt to prevent an imminent mutiny.
Well Columbus never gave the money to the guy in the crowsnest, he
kept it for himself. Of course, he did prevent the mutiny though.
|
483.6 | A mobster..... | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Sick in a balanced sort of way | Thu Aug 01 1991 21:51 | 7 |
| Columbus was also known to have stitched people's legs together and
then nail their heads to the floor.
This was of course when he was hanging around his two half step
brothers Doug and Dinsdale Columbus.
Glenn
|
483.7 | | OTOOA::POND | | Fri Aug 02 1991 13:39 | 4 |
| I believe Columbus' step-son Little Rat-Faced Git Columbus was involved
also in many of these atrocities.
|
483.8 | Cancel Columbus Day! | KAOM25::RUSHTON | The frumious Bandersnatch | Fri Aug 02 1991 14:29 | 27 |
| From "Destruction of the Indies", by Bartolome de las Casas, published
in 1552:
"He [Columbus] took the money reward for the first sighting of land away
from the Pinta lookout who deserved it; he wrote with glee to his king
of a fight he had staged between a monkey with two paws cut off and a
wild pig. He had the Caribbean chiefs hanged and roasted on slow-burning
fires to break all resistance against the forced collection of gold."
"...He set a gold quota for every Indian man and woman over 14 years of age,
and if they failed to bring it in, their hands were chopped off. Those who
fled to the mountains were hunted with dogs. Men, women, and children
were hacked to pieces and fed to the dogs."
"...The same Indians who had welcomed Columbus and his men as gods presently
started mass suicide through eating poisoned roots. It is generally accepted
that half the population of the island of Hispaniola [now Haiti and the
Dominican Republic], between 125,000 and half a million people were killed
under the governorship of Columbus and his two brothers. And within two
generations the entire native population of the Caribbean had been wiped
off the earth."
But the natives had their revenge, what Columbus' men brought back to the
Old World was not just gold. A new, virulent disease was sited at each
port that his returning ships entered. Syphilis reached epidemic
proportions in Europe in the 1530s [from "Syphilis, sive Morbus Gallicus"].
|