Message Forum

Welcome to the Richardson High School Message Forum.

The Message Forum is an ongoing dialogue among classmates. The goal is to encourage friendly interaction, including interaction among classmates who really didn't know each other. Experience on the site has revealed that certain topics tend to cause friction and hard feelings, especially politics and religion. 

Although politics and religion are not completely off-limits, classmates are asked to be positive in their posts and not to be too repetitive or allow a dialog to degenerate into an argument. 

Forums work when people participate - so don't be bashful! Click the "Post Response" button to add your entry to the forum.


 
go to bottom 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  
Next Page      

06/02/23 03:27 PM #27578    

 

Wayne Gary

I went to the "Texas Civil War Museum" In White Settlement (West side of Ft. Worth) today,  They had a quote from Robert E. Lee " It is well that war is so terrible, else men would learn to love it"

Tommy, Very few soldiers want ot go to war but are willing.

They had this movie telling about Texas and The Civil War




06/02/23 05:26 PM #27579    

 

Wayne Gary

Tommy,

I am interested ih history.  Several great thinkers said

Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” – George Santayana, The Life of Reason, 1905. From the series Great Ideas of Western Man

In 1948 speech to the House of Commons, Churchill paraphrased Santayana when he said 'Those who fail to learn from history are condemned to repeat it.

Did you not learn about your tribal history?


06/02/23 05:49 PM #27580    

 

David Cordell

Good video, Wayne.


06/03/23 09:19 AM #27581    

 

Sandra Spieker (Ringo)

Wayne,

I watched some of the video on "Our Honor, Our Rights: Texas and Texans in the Civil War.  I also saw this article on the museum:

https://news.yahoo.com/texas-civil-war-museum-near-182930669.html

The article praises the museum for the layout, artifacts and general presentation.  However it is critical of the museum for glossing over slavery and the states right issue.  Some of the commets at the end of the article are interesting. 

The museum is up for sale.  The owner plans to retire and will close the doors at the end of the year. 

If you love the Confederacy, you should visit Weatherford.  Each year some citizens dress up on Confederate uniforms, with civil war guns and flags and have a parade down the Ranger Highway to Greewood Road, which runs within a mile of my home.  It is quite a spectacle.  They bring their children and everyone cheers.  The South shall rise again.

 

 

 


06/03/23 09:25 AM #27582    

 

Sandra Spieker (Ringo)

More States Rights to come!

Texas passed a bill to let Chaplins serve as councelors in public schools, without any certification.  In addition, there is no limit to what the councelors can do, including preach whatever religion is their flavor.  The bill is awaiting Gov. Abbot's signature.  Schools can either deny this or embrace it in separate policies.

The South is indeed rising once again. 


06/03/23 12:51 PM #27583    

 

Russ Stovall

Wayne:          
liked the video.  


06/03/23 05:03 PM #27584    

 

Wayne Gary

The museum had 2 country pickers as a lead in.

Joe: Earl, I hear you are from Arkansas. What part?

Earl: All of me.

 

The museum is about equal divided betwee North an South.

They even had "housewiife" from both sides.

 

 

 

A housewife was a sewing kit the solders carried.

https://i.pinimg.com/originals/c2/9e/5d/c29e5de77d3c5de2c56bbffaa6877070.jpg


06/03/23 05:49 PM #27585    

 

Janalu Jeanes (Parchman)

The First Amendment does not declare that our government must be separate from religion.  It just says that there will not be a State religion here, in our country, and our Constitution is not a secular document.

It appears that Wayne enjoys learning about the Confederacy's history and enjoys the nostalgia of the era.  He doesn't like war, just as most of us agree, yet he can look back in the history of the world, back even before Biblical times, and see that man's nature has never achieved the goal of avoiding innate desires to conquer other lands.  Neither also, has man been able to tame his thirst for money or power over others.  Man should do better and be less animalistic, but man is what man is.  He will never achieve a dream of being properly reasoned in thought and deed, though he may try. 

Our Christian Bible foretells this message.


06/03/23 07:07 PM #27586    

 

Steve Keene

Wayne and Janalu,

Did you know that when Grant entered Richmond shortly after the signing of surrender at Appomattox Courthouse that all the southern slaves were freed and Grant's wife owned the only slave in Richmond that day.  She owned two other slaves that she had rented to Northern manufacturing firms at slave rates because it was not the growing season in the North.  Many Northerners who owned slaves leased them to companies in the winter.  The regular white workers were forced to work at the lower slave rate if they wanted to keep their jobs. That. Is where we get the expression "working for slave labor."  The slave woman with Mrs. Grant always stayed with her to wash, fit and mend her dresses at home and when she traveled.  Robert E. Lee freed all his slaves before the war started.  Isn"t that the heigth  of irony?


06/03/23 07:12 PM #27587    

 

Wayne Gary

Steve, Janalu,

The museum has one item that Lee was unable to get. Grants sword.  They have one on display. Those interested in clothing they have a large od uniforms as well as acollection of Victorian ladies dresses. They display the changes in bussels over time.


06/04/23 06:06 AM #27588    

 

David Cordell

For those of us who are confused about the whole LGBQT(etc.) situation, the City of Dallas produced a document called Workplace Gender Transition Protocols & FAQ. Here is the set of definitions used in the document.

Definitions
The definitions provided here are not intended to label employees but rather to assist in the
reader’s understanding of the subject. Employees may or may not use these terms to describe
themselves. This is not a comprehensive glossary, but rather an introduction to gender and sexual
orientation related terminology.
• Gender expression: An individual’s characteristics and behaviors (such as appearance, dress,
mannerisms, speech patterns, and social interactions) that may be perceived as masculine or
feminine.
• Gender identity: A person’s internal, deeply felt sense of being male, female, or something other
or in-between, regardless of the sex they were assigned at birth. Everyone has a gender identity.
• Gender non-conforming: Can be used to describe having, or being perceived to have, gender
characteristics and/or behaviors that do not conform to traditional or societal expectations. Keep in
mind that social expectations for gender vary across cultures and have changed significantly over
time.
• AMAB: “Assigned Male at Birth” – an individual who, based on external sex characteristics, is
designated male at the time of birth. This assignment may or may not match the individual’s gender
identity.
• AFAB: “Assigned Female at Birth” – an individual who, based on external sex characteristics, is
designated female at the time of birth. This assignment may or may not match the individual’s
gender identity.
• Intersex: A general term used for a variety of conditions in which a person is born with a
reproductive or sexual anatomy that doesn’t seem to fit the typical definitions of female or male.
• LGBTQ: A common abbreviation that refers to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer
communities.
• Sexual orientation: A person’s physical or emotional attraction to people of the same and/or
different gender. Straight, gay, bisexual, and queer are some ways to describe sexual orientation. It
is important to note that sexual orientation is distinct from gender identity and expression.
Transgender people can be gay, lesbian, bisexual, straight, or queer just like cisgender people.
• Cisgender: The opposite of transgender. Describes the identity held by the majority of people, in
which an individual’s experiences of gender agree with the sex they were assigned at birth
• Transgender: Having a gender identity and/or gender expression that is different from the sex
assigned at birth. This can manifest in various ways:
o When the sex assigned at birth is male, but the individual identifies as female (sometimes
referred to as a transgender woman or a male-to-female (MTF) transgender person)
o When the sex assigned at birth is female, but the individual identifies as male (sometimes
referred to as a transgender man or a female-to-male (FTM) transgender person)
o When a person’s gender identity is both (male and female), neither, or something else
(sometimes referred to as genderqueer, third gender, gender fluid, or as having a nonbinary
gender identity).
NOTE: Some people described by this definition don’t consider or label themselves transgender. They
may use other words or may identify simply as a man or woman or as both or neither. Regardless,
the protocols in this document apply.
• Transition: The process of changing one’s gender from the sex assigned at birth to one’s gender
identity. There are many different ways to transition. A transition can be social, legal, and/or
medical.
o For some people, the gender transition takes place over a long period of time. For others
it is a process that happens more quickly.
o Transition may include “coming out” (telling family, friends, and coworkers), changing
the name and/or sex on legal documents, and/or accessing medical treatment such as
hormones and/or surgery.


06/04/23 01:57 PM #27589    

 

David Cordell

Wayne's post caused me to check out some other videos. One was of the Battleship Texas's history, and it is only a couple of minutes long. I posted it below. Also posted is a blurb from the Texas Center at Schreiner University.

Also, in 1966, Clint LaRue, David Cordell, and Tommy Thomas visited Debbie Dupree at her family's bay house in San Leon. As a side trip, we stopped in Pasadena to see the Battleship Texas and the San Jacinto Monument. Here we are at the battleship.

 

Logo

The USS Texas being towed to Galveston for repairs and conservation on August 31, 2022

The Mighty Battleship Texas

On June 6, 1944, Allied forces crossed the English Channel and landed on the beaches in Normandy. This event, known to history as D-Day, began the invasion of France and the drive toward Germany and the end of the war.

 

Defending this coastline was the imposing Atlantic Wall—an imposing line of bunkers, trenches, and other fortifications designed with great precision to inflict high casualties on the assaulting troops.

 

To help neutralize this barrier, a vast array of warships bombarded the enemy positions to disable their imposing cannon and to save the lives of men coming ashore.

 

One of these ships was battleship BB-35, USS Texas.

 

On this day in 1944, the crew of this old workhorse warship were preparing for their part in destroying the Nazi’s and their Third Reich.




06/04/23 02:16 PM #27590    

 

Wayne Gary

I am reminded of this quote.  Not sure of origins.  Some say Abraham Lincoln, some say Mark Twain.  No evidence of either.

‘Tis better to keep quiet and be thought a fool than to speak and remove all doubt.


06/04/23 02:20 PM #27591    

 

Jerry May

A friend of mine moved to a small town to get away "the grind" as he said. 
When he first found it, and was going to buy acreage there, he drove to the old "downtown" of the the city. He had heard it had a well-known coffee shop......which served large breakfasts, and of course their always fresh coffee.

Before entering, he saw an older gentleman leaning back against the outside wall. A toothpick was jutting out of his mouth. After getting acquainted, he asked, "Well have you lived here all your life?" Without looking up he said, "Not yet!"


06/04/23 02:32 PM #27592    

 

Jerry May

Wayne,

It was President Lincoln~j


06/04/23 02:32 PM #27593    

 

Wayne Gary

Info on USS Texas. The Ranger battalion at Point Du Hoc was led by Ltc. Earl Rudder (A&M class of 32) and future President of A&M. The only casualties USS Texas had occured during the shelling of Cherbourg

On 7 June, the battleship received word that the Ranger battalion at Pointe Du Hoc was still isolated from the rest of the invasion force with low ammunition and mounting casualties; in response, Texas obtained and filled two LCVPs[53] with provisions and ammunition for the Rangers.[52]: 131  Upon their return, the LCVPs brought thirty-five wounded Rangers to Texas for treatment of whom one died on the operating table. Along with the Rangers, a deceased Coast Guardsman and twenty-seven prisoners (twenty Germans, four Italians, and three French) were brought to the ship. The prisoners were fed, segregated, and not formally interrogated aboard Texas, due to the ship bombarding targets or standing by to bombard, before being loaded aboard an LST for transfer to England.[54] Later in the day, her main battery rained shells on the enemy-held towns of Formigny[55] and Trévières to break up German troop concentrations. That evening, she bombarded a German mortar battery that had been shelling the beach. Not long after midnight, German planes attacked the ships offshore, and one of them swooped in low on Texas's starboard quarter. Her anti-aircraft batteries opened up immediately but failed to hit the intruder. On the morning of 8 June, her guns fired on Isigny, then on a shore battery, and finally on Trévières once more.[8]

After that, she retired to Plymouth to rearm, returning to the French coast on 11 June. From then until 15 June, she supported the army in its advance inland. By 15 June, the troops had advanced to the edge of Texas's gun range; her last fire support mission was so far inland that to get the needed range, the starboard torpedo blister was flooded with water to provide a list of two degrees which gave the guns enough elevation to complete the fire mission. With combat operations beyond the range of her guns on 16 June, Texas left Normandy for England on 18 June.[48][56]

Battle of Cherbourg


 
A heavy German coast artillery shell falls between Texas (in the background) and Arkansas while the two battleships were engaging Battery Hamburg during the battle of Cherbourg, France, 25 June 1944

On the morning of 25 June Texas, in company with Arkansas, Nevada, four cruisers and eleven destroyers, closed in on the vital port of Cherbourg to suppress the fortifications and batteries surrounding the town while the US Army's VII Corps attacked the city from the rear. While en route to Cherbourg, the bombardment plan was changed and Task Group 129.2 (TG 129.2), built around Arkansas and Texas, was ordered to move 6 mi (9.7 km)[clarification needed] to the east of Cherbourg and engage the guns of Battery Hamburg, a large shore battery composed of four 24 cm (9 in) guns.[57][58][59] At 12:08, Arkansas was the first to fire at the German positions, while the German gunners waited for Arkansas and Texas to be well in range to return fire. At 12:33, Texas was straddled by three German shells; five minutes later Texas returned fire with a continuous stream of two-gun salvos. The battleship continued her firing runs in spite of shell geysers blossoming about her and difficulty spotting the targets because of smoke; however, the enemy gunners were just as stubborn and skilled. At 13:16, a German 24-cm shell skidded across the top of her conning tower, sheared the top of the fire control periscope off (the periscope remains fell back into the conning tower and wounded the fire control officer, LTJG Paul Morigi and three others), hit the main support column of the navigation bridge and exploded.[57][60][61] The explosion caused the deck of the pilot house above to be blown upwards approximately 4 ft (1.2 m), wrecked the interior of the pilot house, and wounded seven. Of the eleven total casualties from the German shell hit, only one man succumbed to his wounds—the helmsman on duty, Christen Christensen.[62] Texas's commanding officer, Captain Baker, escaped unhurt and quickly had the bridge cleared. The warship herself continued to deliver her 14-inch shells in two-gun salvos and, in spite of damage and casualties, scored a direct hit that penetrated one of the heavily reinforced gun emplacements to destroy the gun inside at 13:35.[58]

At 14:47, an unexploded 24 cm shell was reported.[63] The shell crashed through the port bow directly below the Wardroom and entered the stateroom of Warrant Officer M.A. Clark, but failed to explode. The unexploded shell was later disarmed by a Navy bomb disposal officer in Portsmouth and is currently displayed aboard the ship. Throughout the three-hour duel, the Germans straddled and near-missed Texas over sixty-five times, but she continued her mission firing 206 fourteen-inch shells at Battery Hamburg until ordered to retire at 15:01.[5


06/04/23 03:46 PM #27594    

 

Lowell Tuttle

David, back in those days, they had the old San Jacinto Inn.   It was a bit like the Southern Kitchen, exept it was all Shrimp, oysters, fish, and fried chicken...plus the best hush puppies ever...It was family style serving...and I was like 6-10 dollars...awsome...

They have a Monument Inn there now...good, but not as...

There's a really special new restaurant in San Leon now called Pier 6, but they are middle rated by Yelp;...I've been wanting to go down...

Maybe I'll be able to in early Fall.


06/05/23 08:58 AM #27595    

 

Steve Keene

Lowell,

Speaking of bats. It must be a funny feeling for your Astros to be 35 wins with 24 losses and remain three games back.


06/05/23 09:04 AM #27596    

 

Steve Keene

Tommy,

I know you are trying to concatenate and build connections among class members but are there really that many that identify with the word game "Wordle?"  To me it is the same relationship between word and "Wordle" as the relationship between turd and turtle. Or is it curd and curdle?


06/05/23 09:44 AM #27597    

 

Wayne Gary

Lowell:

There used to be a seafood restaurant that was an all you can eat that was South of the Astrodome and I believe it was on Buffalo Speedway.  Do you remember the name?  It was a fun place.  When you entered there was a pirate dummy sitting on a barrel with a sign "tipping is not a city in China".


06/05/23 12:15 PM #27598    

 

Lowell Tuttle

Steve.   We are worried about those Rangers.   They are awesome...plus when their best pitcher comes back...

Astros won last year's ring.   At this time last year, the Yankees and the Dodgers were kicking ass...just like the Rangers are now.   

Astros and Phillies ended up in the World Series...

Astros pitching held up all year.

That being said, the Rangers' pitching is not too far behind the Stros..

We hope to have Brantley back as well as Urquide...

Lance McCullers Jr.  strikes out about 12 a game without throwing strikes...but he has issues with the same forearm he had Tommie John surgery on...

4 game series at the end of June/early July in Arlington...it should help decide the AL West...

Never know who is going to be hot in October...

Bull pen...

Astros score about 80% of their runs in innings 7, 8, and 9... 

But they don't score many runs...I am thus chagrinned...

If playoffs today?   Astros 3 in Baltimore    NY 3 in Minnesota...Then, Astros at Tampa Bay   and Yankees in Arlington...  No, there are 3 WC's.  So...Houston and NY 3   and Toronto at Minnesota...


06/05/23 12:25 PM #27599    

 

Lowell Tuttle

Wayne, a bunch of good places on S. Main.   There was a Gaido's there...and I forget the name of the other place...Something like Seafood Market...maybe Fisherman's Wharf...that's it   Angelo's Fishermans Wharf...

I think.

There's a Fisherman's Wharf now in Galveston where the old Crabshack was...

I was a spoiled baby boomer non foodie until after college when I moved my agency from Austin to Dallas and merged into my Dad's office.   He and I would go to Vehon's on Greenville...and to a Chinese takeout on NW Hiway...I got into Chinese/Asian food and started with oysters on the half shell one at a time there at Vehon's.

I have been adicted to oysters ever since.   But, when I started going to Captain Benny's on S. Main at Greenbriar in Houston was what really kicked it off.   

Oysters and gumbo and fried shrimp.   I would take dates there.   You would stand and order off a menu on the wall...The grumpy guy shellin oysters would memorize your oder.  You'd better not stutter or make any mistakes on the order or you would be chastised..."two dozen on the halfshell, large gumbo, and dozen fried..."  They would have filled the beer order upon arival.   That old guy reminded me of the Seinfeld Soup place...no soup for you...

That place was packed on Friday and Saturday nights...people eating standing up...



 


06/05/23 01:59 PM #27600    

 

David Cordell

In light of various conversations, this video seems appropriate.




06/05/23 02:34 PM #27601    

 

Hull Barbee

Tommy ...... I play the New York Times Wordle every day ........ today I got it in 4


06/05/23 02:41 PM #27602    

 

Janalu Jeanes (Parchman)

Wow, David!  Now that was quite impressive!  Doesn't seem like it was just smoke and mirrors, nor sleight of hand.

 

Do you remember that magician we used to see on TV when we were stuck inside on rainy Saturday afternoons?  His name was Mark Wilson, with his pretty wife as an assistant.  He recently died in January 2021.

 


go to top 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  
Next Page