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Seen some transcendent fortitude and steadfastness lately? Where?

memor day.jpg

It was the transcendent fortitude and steadfastness of these men who in adversity and in suffering through the darkest hour of our history held faithful to an ideal. Here men endured that a nation might live.

-Herbert Hoover

Hope your Memorial Day Weekend is starting well. As a country, I think we are a little short on transcendent fortitude and steadfastness. I thought it might be interesting to review a few things from our history that I have run across this week that reminded me of fortitude and steadfastness, and then maybe we could discuss a few other things that we should remember this weekend.


Memorial Day Weekend

Have anything planned to commemorate Memorial Day? I can't top my brother and his wife, who visited Bunker Hill.

Here are some ideas: Ways to Honor our Fallen Heroes on Memorial Day

This site also has a surprisingly detailed page about John Adams, under "Remembering our Founding Fathers". He was a man who exhibited some fortitude and steadfastness.

Johnn Adams.jpg

Here are some details from a different biography of John Adams, which you might share with young people who can read. It is more focused on basics of the development of the country:

John Adams, Biography of One of America’s Most Important Founding Fathers

John Adams was one of the most important Founding Fathers of the United States. He was born in Massachusetts, became a lawyer, and rose to prominence in the early days of the American Revolution. He admired James Otis and witnessed his speech against the Writs of Assistance. In 1764, he married Abigail Smith, who would go on to play an influential role in his involvement in politics.

During the Stamp Act Crisis, he was associated with the Sons of Liberty, along with his cousin, Samuel Adams. Despite his connections to the Patriot Cause, he defended the British soldiers who fired on colonists at the Boston Massacre, because he believed the men deserved a fair trial, and no other lawyers would take the case.

After the Coercive Acts were passed in 1774, he was elected as a delegate to the First Continental Congress and signed the Articles of Association. In 1775, he returned to the Second Continental Congress where he signed the Olive Branch Petition, however, a week later he nominated George Washington to lead the Continental Army. . .

How many kids today understand what is written above? Particularly the Adams quote?

I didn't remember this:

The XYZ Affair was a diplomatic scandal between France and the United States caused by French officials trying to bribe American diplomats in 1797. When the scandal was exposed, anti-French sentiment rose in America, and the slogan “Millions for defense but not one cent for tribute” became popular. As a result, the two nations became entangled in an undeclared naval war known as the Quasi-War. Peace was restored in 1800, but the XYZ Affair had serious long-term effects on the United States. The press was critical of President John Adams and Congress for how the affair was handled, which led to the passage of the Alien and Sedition Acts. Two Southern states — Virginia and Kentucky — passed resolutions that said the laws were unconstitutional and that the states had a right to “nullify” the acts. Later, the concept of Nullification became a direct cause of the Civil War.

John adamms.jpg

If only more of the French had been like Lafayette

From A Daily Dose of History. I think this summary underestimates the danger Lafayette faced after the rise of the Jacobins, due to his ties to aristocracy:

Gilbert du Motier, the Marquis de Lafayette, was one of the wealthiest men in France (which is to say in the world), when, inspired by the words of the American Declaration of Independence, he left the comfort and security of his home, traveled to America, and offered his service to the cause of American liberty. At age 19, he was commissioned major general, to this day the youngest person ever to hold that rank in the American army.

Lafayette soon became one of General Washington’s most trusted and capable generals. Having been orphaned at a young age, Lafayette greatly admired Washington, who became a father figure for him. And likewise, Lafayette became like a foster son to Washington, who had no biological children of his own.
To the end of his long and celebrated life, Lafayette remained devoted to his adopted county. He named his only son George Washington, and he named a daughter Virginia.

Having returned to France after the war ended, Lafayette become a key player in the cause of French liberty, and he remains a revered hero in that country as well. He was the principal author of the French Declaration of the Rights of Man, modeling it on the American Declaration of Independence.

Lafayette was 67 years old when, in 1824, President James Monroe and Congress invited him to come to the United States in honor of the nation’s 50th birthday. After Washington’s death in 1799, he had given up his dream of someday returning to Virginia and living near Mount Vernon, but Lafayette was delighted at the invitation and welcomed the opportunity to return to the country he had helped.

At age 76, Lafayette died at his home in Paris. At his request, his son George Washington Lafayette sprinkled the soil from Bunker Hill over his father’s coffin as it was lowered into the ground. An American flag has flown continually over the grave ever since.

When word of Lafayette’s death reached America there was an outpouring of grief that equaled that when Washington died. Flags were lowered to half mast, John Quincy Adams delivered a eulogy in a joint session of Congress attended by the president, the cabinet, the Supreme Court justices, and the American diplomatic corps. Twenty-four-gun salutes were fired by every American naval ship and at every American military post, followed by a single cannon shot every half-hour afterwards until sunset. For six months American officers wore black armbands, and American citizens wore mourning dress for thirty days.

Hundreds of places in America, including at least 36 cities and towns, are named in honor of Lafayette.

Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de La Fayette, the “Hero of Two Worlds,” died on May 20, 1834, one hundred ninety-two years ago today.

Lafayette.jpg

*

Little-known history. Is this why John Quincy Adams went skinny dipping in the Potomac most mornings?

* * * * *

Remembering American And Western Culture

We have seen a lot of reports lately about kids who can't read. I would be nice if they could read some things that would help keep American and Western civilization alive, in particular. Here's something different: Richard Nixon's book recommendations. What do you think?

How many kids today know who Thucydides is, much less what a 'Thucydides Trap' is? VDH on China and the USA

Are young people ready for uplifting content on the internet?

Or in a commencement address?

Tip: Don't mention Artificial Intelligence in such an address.


* * * * *

WEEKEND

The Week in Pictures: Messy Massie Edition

Greetings from Palermo, where I’m currently on a diplomatic mission to sort out the Europeans. Meanwhile, the salient news of the week is that Republicans seem to dealing with the anti-Semites in their midst while Democrats nominate theirs for higher office. More significantly, in purging Sen. Bill Cassidy and Rep. Thomas “Hot Mess” Massie (did Trump ever call him that?—he should have if not), Trump has achieved what Franklin Roosevelt failed to accomplish with his attempted purge of anti-New Deal Democrats in the 1938 election cycle. One more piece of evidence that the somnambulant Biden administration was merely a temporary and aberrant intermission in the Age of Trump. Maybe Massie will switch parties and come back as a Democrat. I hear they are still looking for a candidate for 2028.


* * * * *

Music

Buck Throckmorton included the lyrics of this song (and two others) in a Memorial Day ONT a couple of years ago. I think it is lovely.

*

Taps and Missing Man Formation

* * * * *

Hope you have something nice planned for this long weekend.

This is the Thread before the Gardening Thread.

Serving your mid-day open thread needs


* * * * *

Last week's thread, May 16, Artificial Intelligence vs. Woke?

Comments are closed so you won't ban yourself by trying to comment on a week-old thread. But don't try it anyway.

Really interesting comment thread on this post.

Posted by: K.T. at 11:08 AM




Comments

(Jump to bottom of comments)

1 Lots of space here.

Posted by: whig at May 23, 2026 11:08 AM (E4rtv)

2 second1

Posted by: JROD at May 23, 2026 11:10 AM (IlL6s)

3 Morning, KT!

Posted by: Duke Lowell at May 23, 2026 11:10 AM (2UnvF)

4 Good morning KT

Posted by: Skip at May 23, 2026 11:12 AM (Ia/+0)

5 Hi, Duke!

Hi, everybody!

Posted by: KT at May 23, 2026 11:13 AM (rdeQO)

6 FWIW, that source got the XYZ affair in reverse. One of history's great scoundrels, Talleyrand, demanded the American diplomats pay him bribes to even gain an audience with him. Talleyrand survived multiple different regimes doing the same job.

Being a scoundrel with the morals of an alleycat proved to be very useful for a Foreign Affairs Minister.

Posted by: whig at May 23, 2026 11:14 AM (E4rtv)

7 Thaks, KT. Our Founders sure knew their onions. As Pappy Eromero would say.

Posted by: Eromero at May 23, 2026 11:14 AM (LHPAg)

8 Drear weather today and tomorrow but at least Monday should clear up a bit

Posted by: Skip at May 23, 2026 11:16 AM (Ia/+0)

9 Veterans explain meaning of empty, decorated table at Arby's.

https://tinyurl.com/3wcmn9bz

Posted by: FenelonSpoke at May 23, 2026 11:16 AM (2qvfF)

10 "Our Founders sure knew their onions. As Pappy Eromero would say."
----

Of course they did. They were right there tied to their belts!

Posted by: Grand Pappy Simpson at May 23, 2026 11:18 AM (2Ez/1)

11 My opinion is the Thucydides Trap was accurate when Might Makes Right was the controlling factor but that since monarchy has disappeared and the United States became top dog the Trap isn't a given.

Posted by: Harry Vandenburg at May 23, 2026 11:18 AM (qrzX6)

12 Posted by: whig at May 23, 2026 11:14 AM (E4rtv)

He was French so what would one expect.

Posted by: Harry Vandenburg at May 23, 2026 11:21 AM (qrzX6)

13 My little town in blue Rhode Island is very patriotic. That might seem odd but this town has served as a military installation from the Revolution to WWII in various fashions. One of the parks I walk Elvis is named Battery Park because as you can probably guess it a cannon battery during the revolution protecting part of Narragansett Bay. Another is Ft Getty, WWII battery.

We will have our annual parade on Monday and it's great. Lots of current and former military, school band, fire trucks, the works. It culminates, appropriately enough, at Memorial Park which has a number memorials to individuals who died for this country through the years. The Park will be covered with 100 American flags that previously covered the caskets of fallen heroes and donated for use by their families.

I'll be there, rain or shine.

Posted by: JackStraw at May 23, 2026 11:26 AM (viF8m)

14 If I get this Thucydides Trap right in meaning, the 7 Years War was one, Frederick jumped before the Austrians had a chance to

Posted by: Skip at May 23, 2026 11:28 AM (Ia/+0)

15 That sounds fantastic, JackStraw!

Posted by: Duke Lowell at May 23, 2026 11:28 AM (2UnvF)

16 Why can't I seem to get used in more limericks?

Posted by: Narragansett at May 23, 2026 11:31 AM (2Ez/1)

17 I posted in the previous thread I would go out with my Dad on memorial weekend and Memorial Day to clean and put flags at the various military cemeteries and to have official services as part of what he did as Commander of a VFW post. Somber time but I enjoyed being with my Dad and his fellow veterans immensely.

Posted by: Harry Vandenburg at May 23, 2026 11:31 AM (qrzX6)

18 The bloodiest day in American history was September 17, 1862, the Civil War Battle of Antietam. It was significant because it ended Robert E. Lee's first invasion of the north and it provided Lincoln with enough credibility to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. One wonders if it was the hand of God that reaped the human harvest in the cornfield, in the sunken road, and at Burnside Bridge. If the Union had decisively defeated the Confederates, as they should have given their overwhelming superiority in numbers and their incredible intelligence given their finding of Lee's battle plans, the war may well have ended with a Union victory but with slavery still in existence in the South. If, as nearly happened, Lee had crushed the Union, the war may have ended in a Confederate victory with slavery still in existence in an independent South. It was only the bloody stalemate that allowed the Emancipation Proclamation and the end of slavery.

Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Fat, Dumb, and Happy at May 23, 2026 11:31 AM (ndZc7)

19 40,000 plus evacuation in garden grove, tank of chemicals burning, "will either spill or explode".

Posted by: Commissar of plenty and festive little hats at May 23, 2026 11:31 AM (Kt19C)

20 Because you don't rhyme with "bucket."

Posted by: Duh at May 23, 2026 11:33 AM (2Ez/1)

21 FenelonSpoke, I was kinda willowed on the last thread but thought you might like the looks of spray-painted allium...

A while back I painted some dried allium and KT was kind enough to post a photo on the garden thread...
https://acecomments.mu.nu/?post=407009

Posted by: Admirale's Mate at May 23, 2026 11:34 AM (/enuJ)

22 >>That sounds fantastic, JackStraw!

It really is. This little town is like Mayberry plopped down in the middle of "progress". I love it and the older I get the more I appreciate it.

Posted by: JackStraw at May 23, 2026 11:34 AM (viF8m)

23 Why can't I seem to get used in more limericks?
Posted by: Narragansett at May 23, 2026 11:31 AM (2Ez/1)

I'm sure you could fit garrett in there with you.

Posted by: Harry Vandenburg at May 23, 2026 11:35 AM (qrzX6)

24 " The bloodiest day in American history was September 17, 1862, the Civil War Battle of Antietam."

++++++++

It's a VERY sobering place to visit.

Posted by: Quarter Twenty at May 23, 2026 11:35 AM (2Ez/1)

25 40,000 plus evacuation in garden grove, tank of chemicals burning, "will either spill or explode".
Posted by: Commissar of plenty and festive little hats at May 23, 2026 11:31 AM (Kt19C)

Chinese are pointing at us like we point at them.

Posted by: Harry Vandenburg at May 23, 2026 11:36 AM (qrzX6)

26 LIBs. Give them CONVENIENCE (and a cell phone) or give them DEATH

LIB Strategic Insanity perpetuates itself that Pity for the Guilty is anything but Treason to the Innocent. that any compromise between food and poison can result in anything but Death.

This is their crusade, their inexorable march, where they breach the nobility and sovereignty of Evil as an inevitability while ignoring the obvious fact that the only Common Ground that exists for them is to put you in it.

LIBs live in FEAR for having abandoned their only means of survival -- their productive mind, and GUILT for knowing they have done so willingly and when faced with the inevitable realization that Life does have Meaning, Good Ideas do replace the bad, they lack the remaining intellectual fortitude, and, indeed, integrity to admit their faults, to throw open the window of their homeless/tent-city and admit: MAD AS HELL AND NOT GONNA LIB ANY MORE with the realization that their own leadership has lied to them and cheated them out of a future worth having.

They use pity as a weapon, and pity for themselves as a weapon -- and this is why Memorial Day is meaningly as immemorialness is a testament to their own failure

Posted by: MANFRED the Heat Seeking OBOE at May 23, 2026 11:39 AM (EhMju)

27 The Trump 'doo. Everybody's doing it!

https://tinyurl.com/y8bx6v7h

Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Fat, Dumb, and Happy at May 23, 2026 11:41 AM (ndZc7)

28 FWIW, that source got the XYZ affair in reverse.
——-

I think that picture of Adams is reversed, too. I believe that is the earliest known photograph of any living president, though he was long out of office. Called a Daugerretype. The internet likes to reverse things, apparently.

Posted by: Common Tater at May 23, 2026 11:48 AM (IDQSL)

29 There's more than one way to skin a cat.

Astronomers just discovered a "hidden route" to the moon after running hundreds of thousands of simulations

https://tinyurl.com/yyembb5c

-
I thought there was only one way. You know, up.

Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Fat, Dumb, and Happy at May 23, 2026 11:48 AM (ndZc7)

30 So sorry. Wrong link for the Vets and table link. This is correct:

https://tinyurl.com/4k2rxjz6

Posted by: FenelonSpoke at May 23, 2026 11:49 AM (n3VHW)

31 Posted by: Admirale's Mate at May 23, 2026 11:34 AM (/enuJ)

That's lovely. Thanks so much for reposting it

Posted by: FenelonSpoke at May 23, 2026 11:51 AM (n3VHW)

32 40,000 plus evacuation in garden grove, tank of chemicals burning, "will either spill or explode".
Posted by: Commissar of plenty and festive little hats at May 23, 2026 11:31 AM (Kt19C)
++++
Chinese are pointing at us like we point at them.
Posted by: Harry Vandenburg
====
In terms of the acute toxicity of methyl methacrylate, the LD50 is 7–10 g/kg (oral, rat). It is an irritant to the eyes and can cause redness and pain.[17][18] Irritation of the skin, eye, and nasal cavity has been observed in rodents and rabbits exposed to relatively high concentrations of methyl methacrylate. Methyl methacrylate is a mild skin irritant in humans and has the potential to induce skin sensitization in susceptible individuals.
- WIKI

Posted by: Itinerant Alley Butcher at May 23, 2026 11:51 AM (/lPRQ)

33 Wishing a Sad Memorial Day to all.

Posted by: Cicero (@cicero43) at May 23, 2026 11:52 AM (u/oMr)

34 @118

I'm working on an online book -- 100 Americans Who Should Be Famous (But Aren't).

One is Robert Smalls who has small fame in Charleston SC. In 1861, he was a slave who stole a ship he worked on to free himself, the black crew, and their families, while the white crew were carousing on a Saturday night.

He then gave the Planter to the Union Navy and met Lincoln. Later, Lincoln let Blacks join the Union Army and issued the Proclamation.

What's too often left out of his story is that he could have just left with his prize money from the Planter but instead volunteered to be a pilot for the US Navy as he knew Charleston harbor so well. Had he been captured you can only imagine. This is the man Lincoln met.

He later used his prize money to buy the plantation where he'd been a slave and served in the US Congress.

Posted by: Ignoramus at May 23, 2026 11:53 AM (dtajH)

35 13 The Park will be covered with 100 American flags that previously covered the caskets of fallen heroes and donated for use by their families.

I'll be there, rain or shine.
Posted by: JackStraw at May 23, 2026 11:26 AM (viF8m)

Wow! Excellent.

Posted by: m at May 23, 2026 11:53 AM (6wpGE)

36
Astronomers just discovered a "hidden route" to the moon after running hundreds of thousands of simulations

-----------

But first, you must answer three questions.

Posted by: Tim the Enchanter at May 23, 2026 11:54 AM (u/oMr)

37 The first thing I picked up when reading Bruce Catton about the Civil War, it was expected to be a very short war. All the denizens of DC and surrounding environs decided to watch the first battle at Bull Run, and make a picnic out of it. Kind of a short carriage ride. Well that battle didn’t turn out the way the experts predicted. The Rebels routed the Yankees, and chased all the dandies back from whence they came.

But, surely the boys will be home by Christmas. And that didn’t happen. And them the war stretched into 1862. Well, it will be over by Summer for certain. Surely by Christmas. And then 1863 … 1864… etc. And it probably didn’t need to last 4 years, not even close. But that’s how it turned out.

Posted by: Common Tater at May 23, 2026 11:55 AM (IDQSL)

38 Astronomers just discovered a "hidden route" to the moon after running hundreds of thousands of simulations
+++++++

Come join us Wednesday night at 7pm. We meet at The Elks Lodge.

Posted by: The Flat Moon Society at May 23, 2026 11:57 AM (2Ez/1)

39 I hope to plan a trip to Gettysburg next month and visit my sister and go to the battlefield, haven't been their in close to 30 years

Posted by: Skip at May 23, 2026 11:59 AM (Ia/+0)

40 I thought Memorial Day was to honor matters sales and Chevy Truck sales.

Posted by: Heroq at May 23, 2026 12:02 PM (ps+Pv)

41 Sometimes you can find fortitude and steadfastness in the smallest of places.
I recall one miserable night during a dust storm at the Yakima Training Area (part of the Ft Lewis Army complex) when the landline wire between my CP and one of my platoons went out. I had to do my rounds anyway, so I walked the line. Out there in the dark, sitting on the ground with his back to the wind, I found Private Washington. He was a big 'ol country dude from Louisiana. He was splicing the wire together.
"How's it going?" I asked.
"No problem, sir. I'll have the wire fixed in no time."
He did and it never failed again.
That was mumbly-mumbly years ago and I have never forgotten it.

Posted by: Diogenes at May 23, 2026 12:03 PM (2WIwB)

42 >>One is Robert Smalls who has small fame in Charleston SC.

You, of course, know that the Navy renamed the USS Chancellorsville after Smalls.

A friend of mine was the second commanding officer of the Chancellorsville. He wasn't pleased when the Navy renamed "his" ship.

Posted by: one hour sober at May 23, 2026 12:04 PM (J4Dwc)

43 A worm hole to the moon, what could go wrong?

Posted by: Skip at May 23, 2026 12:05 PM (Ia/+0)

44 This movie is on point and might be good.

https://tinyurl.com/344e929m

Posted by: Anonosaurus Wrecks, Fat, Dumb, and Happy at May 23, 2026 12:06 PM (ndZc7)

45 AW I will definitely go see that

Posted by: Skip at May 23, 2026 12:10 PM (Ia/+0)

46 @42 I didn't know that. It appears the renaming was primarly to purge references to all things Confederate.

Posted by: Ignoramus at May 23, 2026 12:11 PM (dtajH)

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