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President Trump & Mark Twain: Master Pilots on America's Great River
Free Republic ^ | 8/18/2019 | PoconoPundit

Posted on 08/18/2019 4:25:35 PM PDT by poconopundit

Edited on 08/18/2019 5:00:24 PM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]

Mark Twain is known as a "great American author", but not enough Americans have firsthand knowledge of his best work. 

In this vanity, I hope to interest you in rediscovering this witty social critic and humorist.

I'm probably like you: I read a bit of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn in grade school.  At the time, those American-slang "classics" didn't thrill me, and maybe it's because those books were not written for kids anyway.

Twain wrote for readers who have a few decades of life experiences behind them.  And when he did speak through the voice of a child (or animal), Twain was usually poking fun at — or deftly critiquing — adult stupidity, lies, prejudices, pride, and mischief.

A few months back I fell in love with many of Twains short stories.  And I believe this is where his best treasures lie. 

What got me hooked was a terrific audio CD compilation I found at my local library: a 7-hour audio CD series entitled, The Mark Twain Audio Collection (Harper Collins).

Now working as a tech industry pundit, Twain's humor and storytelling style give me great lessons in plain English talk and keeping reader engaged.


And Twain's writing skill reminds me of a living author whose political "haikus" I read everyday — President Donald J. Trump. 

Sure, staff writers are supporting President Trump's Twitter enterprise, but the off-the-cuff dexterity President Trump shows in answering tough journalist questions s proves there's a "Very Stable Genius" communicator in the Oval Office.  And there's no doubt his Twitter page is driving momentous changes in America and the world.

 

So being a fan of both Twain and Trump, it's natural for me to notice parallels in the two men's lives and skillsets.  So I'm now going to highlight a few of those parallels in six categories:

NOTE: There's a lot to read here — and I've also furnished links to one-page samples of Twain's work.  So I suggest you bookmark his page.  Or, you can always find this story indexed in my FR profile.

   

In my Navy days aboard a destroyer, when we arrived outside a port like Hong Kong or Kaohsiung, Taiwan, a boat would come alongside and drop off a pilot.

The job of a nautical pilot is to steer a ship through the dangerous waters of an inner harbor.  Now a pilot may not know much English, but what the pilot does know — backwards, forwards, and sideways — is every peculiarity and hazard in the harbor.  And by custom, not even the captain of the ship can meddle with the pilot's steering commands inside that harbor.  

Mark Twain famously became a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi River.  After studying under an expert pilot for a few years, he served as a full pilot for two years till the Civil War arrived which brought steamboat commerce on the River to a near standstill.

But though his years as a pilot were short, the risk-bearing responsibility and burden of learning the Great River — and keeping abreast of its constant physical changes — strongly molded Twain's character.  It made him utterly confident in his own abilities. 

Some of the best parts of Life on the Mississippi are when Twain talks about the challenges of piloting:

    "One cannot easily realize what a tremendous thing it is to know every trivial detail of twelve hundred miles of river and know it with absolute exactness.  Imagine taking the longest street in New York as you travel up and down it, conning its features patiently until you know every house, window, door, lamp-post, and big and little sign by heart.

    You must know them so accurately that you can instantly name the one you are abreast of when you are set down at random in that street in the middle of an inky black night.  If you can do that, then you have a tolerable notion of the amount and exactness of a pilot's knowledge who carries the Mississippi River in his head.

    And then, if you will go on until you know every street crossing, the character, size, and position of the crossing-stones, and the varying depth of mud in each of those numberless places, you will have some idea of what the pilot must know in order to keep a Mississippi steamer out of trouble.

    Next, if you will take half of the signs in that long street, and change their places once a month, and still manage to know their new positions accurately on dark nights, and keep up with these repeated changes without making any mistakes, you will understand what is required of a pilot's peerless memory by the fickle Mississippi."



The meticulous nature of steamboat piloting and being constantly mindful of the risks to the safety of passengers: that sounds a lot like the vigilance and smarts a builder and financer of skyscrapers must have.

During the 2016 campaign, I chuckled whenever someone at CNN would say, "Trump is not really qualified to be President of the United States."  Hogwash.  No man has ever been better prepared for the Office than Donald J. Trump.  Throughout his entire career, Trump dealt with clever bankers, corrupt politicians, shady contractors, demanding customers, and people of many cultures.

What's more, Donald J. Trump, as a businessman, carries on his back today the tremendous responsibility of safety to the people living and working in his buildings.  To succeed for decades at that job requires a high degree of mindfulness and managerial talent that very few men possess.

A good President isn't measured by the number of bills signed or foreign dignitaries met.  He's measured like a pilot is -- on results, on the safe passage of passengers, and on steering clear of sunken wrecks that if carelessly run over could tear a steamboat to pieces.



The life-and-death dangers a President is responsible for these days are tremendous: ISIS, domestic terrorists, MS-13 gangs, hurricane damage, and a Southern Border invasion supported by violent Mexican cartels. 

America also requires careful piloting to restore the Republic from the major quality-of-life damage politicans have caused: corrupt city governments, foreign nations gutting our manufacturing base, plus the great regulatory and tax burdens that threaten the American Dream.

 

Now a pilot's never-ending alertness to danger often has a long range influence on the way he sees the world.

In Chapter 9 of Life on the Mississippi, Twain explains how becoming a skillful pilot caused him to no longer notice the great splendor of the River he enjoyed as a youth.

   

Donald J. Trump is a Class A Entrepreneur.  He parlayed a million dollar loan from his Dad to build a multi-billion dollar private company.  Though Trump struggled mightily to save his company in the recession of the early 90's, he made a spectacular comeback — to the point where his Organization today is financially solid and self-funded, and thus not controlled by banks, venture capitalists, or Wall Street.

Leveraging that financial self-reliance, Trump built his American dream.  With great pride in workmanship, he led his Organization to pioneer its future.  How? . . . by working hard and constantly tinkering with business ideas to discover what works and what creates new value — then putting those winning ideas into practice. 

Trump explained his mission in what I call his Farewell to Real Estate speech, given at the October 2016 opening of Trump International Hotel in Washington:

    "My job is to look at undeveloped spaces and imagine what they could be.  Today is a metaphor for what we can accomplish for this country.

    This [Old Post Office] building is a historic landmark, a true American original.  It had all the ingredients of greatness, but it had been neglected and left to deteriorate for many, many decades.  It sat there so beautiful and was left to deteriorate for many, many decades.

    It had the foundation of success: all of the elements were here.  Our job was to restore its former glory, honor its heritage, but also to imagine a brand new and exciting vision for the future.  To create a new place for people and families to come together and a magnificent place at that."


Mark Twained loved the independent life he carved out for himself via lectures and book sales, but he was not financially savvy. In particular, he went heavily in depth investing in a new typesetting machine that never became a commercial success.

Fortunately Twain warded off bankrupty by getting back on the lecture circuit and also made money from writing General Grant's autobiography.  In a few years he fully paid off his creditors.

But we must still consider Twain a successful self-employed entrepreneur who still called his own shots as a publisher/writer, world traveler, and successful family caretaker.

Twain talked about his love for the independent work life he enjoyed as a river pilot in the book Life on the Mississippi.

 


   
The new media Donald J. Trump pioneered as entrepreneur, politician, and President is pretty extraordinary:

  • His The Art of the Deal, written in the 1980s, remains one of bestselling business books of all time.  Instead of copying the boring business textbook model, Trump broke new ground by simply telling his own interesting life story in business, detailing his challenges, successes — even a few failures.

  • In the NBC reality TV show Apprentice, Trump created a ingenious way to dramatize business strategy, achievement, teamwork and office politics — and turned it into a top-rated show for 15 years.  Trump was not only the show's star, but he also owned 50% of the show's profits.

  • Even the Trump Rally improves quite a bit on the political stump speech.   A Trump Rally is a MAGA conversation and audience-participation event, complete with "Build that Wall!" chants, red hats, and Trump showering politicans and fellow deplorables with his praise.  Another trademark: Trump's dramatic entrances and Trump Jet arrivals at airline hangers.

  • And don't forget Governing the Country via Social Media?  His RealDonaldTrump Twitter feed allows the President to bypass the news media filter and take his message directly to We the People.  It's become a powerful way to spotlight MAGA success stories and criticize opponents/people/institutions who are harming the Republic.

  • Last but not least, President Trump has even directed the creation of World Peace Media.  I refer to the 4 minute movie-trailer-styled video he showed North Korea's King Jong-un in Singapore.  The video powerfully presents the argument for North Korea to abandon its nuclear arsenal and open the its doors to economic properity.

Media was limited in Twain's day: movies, television, and radio hadn't been invented yet.  But he made blazed new trails with the media outlets available to him:

  • Entertaining Lectures and speeches were Twain's main money-makers.  And the national publicity gained by his lecture tours paved the way for his book sales.  When a San Francisco newspaper paid him to write a series of newspaper stories on the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii), Twain turned those stories into 92 paid lectures in cities and towns from New York to California.

  • Twain had an American working man's heart.  He wrote his stories for Everyday "Deplorable" Readers, explaining his method in the opener to his Autobiography:

      "This autobiography of mine does not select from my life its showy episodes, but deals mainly in the common experiences which go to make up the life of the average human being, because these episodes are of a sort which he is familiar with in his own life, and in which he sees his own life reflected and set down in print."

  • Twain popularized the Foreign Travel Guide book category as he travelled the world and wrote about local customs, history, and experiences in his books Tramp Abroad and Innocents Abroad.

  • Another innovation of his was Speaking Through Animals, imagining what animals are thinking and saying, then putting that into words.  Two famous tales of this genre are What Stumped the Blue Jays and Tom Quartz, the Mining Cat.

  • Finally there are the Clever Plots he employs in many of his short stories.  One of the best examples is The Million Pound Bank Note: a young American businessman, by accident, finds himself in London in ragged clothes, hungry, and with no money in his pockets.  Then two rich English gentlemen set him loose on the city for 30 days with a banknote — worth one million pounds — he can neither cash nor take to the bank because he'll be arrested.

    The Million Pound Banknote's 8,500 words contain multiple themes: rags-to-riches, boy-gets-girl, sudden-celebrity — and lots of humor and surprises.  The story also pokes light-hearted fun at English society — from an American's perspective.  But Twain, having lived in England for some time, wrote it in a way that endeared the story to the English people who adopted Twain as their own celebrity.


   
In his 2017 Inaugural Address, President Trump courageously told the truth, that our Nation's government is a fraud:

    "For too long, a small group in our nation's capital has reaped the rewards of government, while the people have borne the cost.  Washington flourished, but the people did not share in its wealth.  Politicians prospered, but the jobs left and the factories closed."

And every day since, President Trump has tirelessly told the truth about dishonest Fake News, traitorous witch hunts, violence and fraud on our Southern Border, and globalist policies that harm America's interests.

President Trump has is a one-man wrecking ball to Political Correctness: a key element of his strategy is simply exposing the Truth that politicians, special interest groups, and crony capitalists have been been hiding for their own benefit.

Fortunately he's an Equal Opportunity Critic and Cheerleader.  It doesn't matter what your race, gender, religion or politics are, if you're doing something good for America, you'll hear words of praise.  If you're out to drag America down, you'll hear some pushback.

Twain was also a friend of Truth.  Reading Life on the Mississippi you get exactly what the book title advertises: an interesting discussion of the customs, attitudes, commerce, and ways of the people who lived along the Mississippi River in the 1800s. 

This is not your average history textbook that focuses on wars, politicians, and macro-economic trends.  Rather, Twain's stories are micro-history — history explained by understanding the lives of everyday people, often more fun to read anyway. 

Twain's books and stories expose human nature or the Irreducible Element of Rascality in man — and Twain was too much of a rascal himself to ignore talking about it.  A great example of this "rascality" is his description of the Steamboat Apprentice Engineer.

 

As a rule, Twain doesn't tell the unvarnished truth to his readers directly, but lets his characters reveal it through their actions.  However, one great exception to this practice is a passage in his Autobiography entitled, The Character of Man.  Interestingly, Twain had his Autobiography published only after his death, enabling him to pour out his true feelings in that text.

   
Perhaps America has never produced a more skillful "publicity hound" than Donald J. Trump.  In fact, his masterful ability to get press as a New York real estate mogul eventually allowed Trump to diversity into new trades: best selling book writer/publisher, golf courses, licensing the Trump name on commercial properties, The Apprentice TV show, and more.

Of course, the billions of dollars in free publicity he earned during the 2016 Presidential campaign and continues to earn today as President is amazing.

Publicity also played a big role in Mark Twain's career.  After the Civil War when his steamboat pilot days were over, Mark Twain traveled West and briefly held a job as a newspaper reporter in San Francisco (1864).  Though he came to hate the druggery of city reporter work, that experience led him to break new ground as a writer of humorous stories.

Visiting a California Gold Rush town called Angel Camp, he conceived the outrageous tale of a country bumpkin who loved betting on animal contests: horse races, dog fights, and frog jumping bouts.  He submitted the story, The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County to an editor in New York.  When published, it became a sensation, paving the way for new opportunities.


Next, Twain got an reporter's assignment to visit the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii) and write a series of stories about the Islands, its culture and people.  And this experience enabled Twain to become a national lecturer. 

Twain soon created a virtuous circle of writing short stories, then dramatizing them in paid lectures.  This publicity then led to his writing books, including travel guides that were simply commentary on his international travels.

He got his first break on the lecture circuit in New York City where he placed a clever advertisement in the paper on his "Lecture on the Sandwich Islands".  Read the humorous ad and an enlarged photo of the Hawaiian belle at right.

 

   
One of President Trump's key goals has been to been to root out injustice.  Chief among his concerns is to get Washington leaders to stop lining their own pockets and start caring about We the People.

From the beginning, he's worked closely with law enforcement to break up criminal gangs like MS-13.  He's now in a terrific fight against the Mexican cartels who commit an estimated 150,000 murders at our Southern Border each year.

President Trump continues to call out politicians for their corruption and foolish polities that do grave injustice to small business and private job creation, especially the inner cities.

Mark Twain also had a strong mind to fight injustice, and he fought using his skill as a writer to put a spotlight on humanity's corruption and sins.

He lived through a period of American history when slavery was an accepted social custom.  And after the Civil War, Twain wrote a short story titled, A True Story, Word for Word as I Heard It

The story is a moving first-person account by a former black slave woman who was outwardly cheerful, but harbored a deep sense of injustice when her young son was taken away from her, and sold to another family.

Another powerful story about injustice is A Dog's Tale.  What's special here is the story is told through the voice of the dog who narrates about life. 

The story begins humorously, but the mood steadily changes when a near calamity strikes at the dog's human family.  The ending is sad, but a powerful message for animal rights.  

Incidentally, Twain was a big fan of cats and once wrote: "When a man loves cats, I am his friend and comrade without further introduction."




TOPICS: Humor; Pets/Animals; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: donaldtrump; marktwain
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To: poconopundit

bkmk

Thanks!


21 posted on 08/18/2019 7:40:01 PM PDT by kanawa (Trump Loves a Great Deal (NorthernSentinel))
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To: poconopundit; Admin Moderator

Wow! ...and thanks, mod.


22 posted on 08/18/2019 7:47:40 PM PDT by Bob Ireland (The Democrap Party is the enemy of freedom.They use all the seductions and deceits of the Bolshevics)
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BOOKbump


23 posted on 08/18/2019 9:52:19 PM PDT by S.O.S121.500 (Had ENOUGH Yet ? ........................ Enforce the Bill of Rights .........It is the LAW...)
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To: poconopundit; null and void; aragorn; azishot; AZ .44 MAG; Baynative; Beautiful_Gracious_Skies; ...
.

PING

President Trump & Mark Twain: Master Pilots on America's Great River
Free Republic ^ | 8/18/2019 | PoconoPundit

Thank you, poconopundit.

24 posted on 08/18/2019 9:57:56 PM PDT by LucyT
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To: poconopundit
My compliments to you on a thoroughly good job presenting a new perspective of Donald Trump as seen through examination of Mark Twain.

My experience as a youth reading Huckleberry Finn, however, differed greatly from yours:

I'm probably like you: I read a bit of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn in grade school. At the time, those American-slang "classics" didn't thrill me, and maybe it's because those books were not written for kids anyway.

Unlike your experience, I was utterly "thrilled" by Huckleberry Finn as a prepubescent kid when I read it several times. I've picked it up again many times and and I am unfailingly thrilled again as a grown man. I disagree with you, it is indeed a brilliant kids' book that every boy who fidgets in the constraints of school can immediately identify with. But, as you say, it is also in adults' book. That is the genius of the book, it forces us to a new vision of our world by making us see the world through the eyes of a boy, a technique not unlike that used by science fiction writers who create a new paradigm to expose old myths. Mark Twain was so brilliant that he could write a book for two very different audiences yet captivate each. In doing so, Mark Twain tackled the most important issue in American history.

Life on the Mississippi is an evocative book of an age gone by, brilliantly, nostalgically, realistically written but it simply does not soar to the level of the Great American novel as does Huckleberry Finn

From a 13-year-old reply of mine:

… a masterpiece of American letters. Huckleberry Finn is arguably the greatest American novel ever written.

The irony of all this is that Mark Twain in this uniquely American work has undertaken seriously and sensitively to deal with the unique American original sin. As I have observed in my about page, the sin of slavery and, after the war, the sin of racism was in effect papered over in the Declaration of Independence and compromised away in the Constitution. Mark Twain deals with this uniquely American history in a uniquely American book, written in the uniquely American idiom. [That is why I also take issue with your description of Huckleberry Finn as a book of "American-slang." The use of the American idiom is absolutely critical to the fundamental historic question that has challenged the American ethos to this very day]. That idiom, to be truly American, requires the use in that context of the word nigger. Moreover, both plot and character developement - which is the awakening of tolerance personified in Huck Finn-require the sensitive use of the word. If Huckleberry Finn were not a bigot to begin with, he would have no need to be edified. Both he and America would have learned nothing.

No one who boasts of any acquaintanceship whatever with American letters can have failed to have read, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.

Chapter 31 of the novel makes the ultimate argument against slavery and against racism, done in the American idiom, and sent in time and place. It is the essence of the novel and it is the essence of America's moral struggle:

Miss Watson your runaway nigger Jim is down here two mile below Pikesville and Mr. Phelps has got him and he will give him up for the reward if you send.

HUCK FINN

I'd see him standing my watch on top of his'n, stead of calling me, so I could go on sleeping; and see him how glad he was when I come back out of the fog; and when I come to him agin in the swamp, up there where the feud was; and such-like times; and would always call me honey, and pet me, and do everything he could think of for me, and how good he always was; and at last I struck the time I saved him by telling the men we had smallpox aboard, and he was so grateful, and said I was the best friend old Jim ever had in the world, and the only one he's got now; and then I happened to look around, and see that paper.

It was a close place. I took it up, and held it in my hand. I was a trembling, because I'd got to decide, forever, betwixt two things, and I knowed it. I studied a minute, sort of holding my breath, and then says to myself:

"All right, then, I'll go to hell"- and tore it up.

It was awful thoughts, and awful words, but they was said. And I let them stay said; and never thought no more about reforming. I shoved the whole thing out of my head; and said I would take up wickedness again, which was in my line, being brung up to it, and the other warn't. And for a starter, I would go to work and steal Jim out of slavery again; and if I could think up anything worse, I would do that, too; because as long as I was in, and in for good, I might as well go the whole hog.

As to comparisons of Twain to Trump, I would simply observe that Twain was at heart certainly no conservative, at best he might be described a modern day libertarian. Probably he might in some respect be likened to the curmudgeonly Baltimore columnist, HL Mencken. This from a reply in 2015:

Twain was certainly an iconoclast and rebel his entire life.

He was a deserter from service in the Confederate militia in the Civil War and fled to the far West. Even his earliest writings reflect an ability to see the mirror image of life. I think Twain was, as he suggests, a pessimist. Certainly, personal tragedies such as the death of his child deepened his darkest perceptions.

If one looks at Huckleberry Finn which is a searing indictment of slavery, its brilliance lies partly in the fact that Twain works his magic by writing the mirror image of his intended result. For example, Huck Finn's decision that he will commit a mortal sin and go to hell by being a friend to "Nigger Jim" leaves the reader to reverse the logic and in doing so penetrate the veil of rationalization which had sustained slavery and Jim Crow.

Huckleberry Finn is perhaps the great American novel as Hemmingway said (I agree) because Twain makes the reader really part of the process of grappling with America's original sin but he gives the devil every advantage yet still succeeds in making all of us believers.

The irony of modern race baiters agitating to remove Huckleberry Finn from libraries because it contains the word "Nigger" is very sad.

A final personal word, on an early visit to Germany I was kindly put up by a German family overnight in their spare attic bedroom where I came across A Tramp Abroad and found the essay The Awful German Language which set me howling with laughter because I was then in the throes of trying to master that awful, fascinating language. Later, I discovered that there was a recording rendered by a German and free for the listening under the Gutenberg Press website but decided that an American version of "American-slang" was the way an essay about an American amusingly stepping all over himself trying to master a difficult language, while at the same time shifting all of the blame from himself onto the language itself, deserved an attempt by an American so I recorded it.

The Awful German Language offers another reversal, a writing technique of which Twain was an absolute master. The entire theme of Huckleberry Finn culminates in the reversal in the mind of Huckleberry Finn as quoted above.


25 posted on 08/19/2019 12:07:57 AM PDT by nathanbedford (attack, repeat, attack! Bull Halsey)
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To: nathanbedford

“The irony of modern race baiters agitating to remove Huckleberry Finn from libraries because it contains the word “Nigger” is very sad.”

Yep - makes me wonder if they ever read the book. Two friends, willing to do what it took for each other, regardless of the consequences, and regardless of the color of their skin. And - just a really fun book full of adventure!

I read it twice to my son when he was a child, just starting to read. When we got to the word nigger I told him that was a word used back then - but today it is considered a bad word. So we could either use it knowing that, or replace it with another word.

I think he decided that we should use “slave” instead.


26 posted on 08/19/2019 12:19:59 AM PDT by 21twelve (!)
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To: poconopundit

Master pilots is correct....
“Twain” literally means “two.” As a riverboat pilot, Clemens would have heard the term, “Mark Twain,” which means “two fathoms,” on a regular basis. According to the UC Berkeley Library, Clemens first used this pseudonym in 1863, when he was working as a newspaper reporter in Nevada, long after his riverboat days.


27 posted on 08/19/2019 3:53:20 AM PDT by trebb (Don't howl about illegal leeches, or Trump in general, while not donating to FR - it's hypocritical.)
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To: poconopundit

Bookmarked AND saved! Thank you.


28 posted on 08/19/2019 4:24:26 AM PDT by moovova
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To: trebb
Thanks, trebb. I also recall a passage (somewhere?) that someone else used the name before, so he acknowledged that in his writings.

In Life on the Mississippi, Chapter 7, there's a story about how Horace Bixby, the master pilot who trained Mark Twain, and his skill in crossing a reef.

The leadsmen (men dropping a lead line into the water to measure the depth) call out their readings:

'M-a-r-k three!... M-a-r-k three!... Quarter-less three!... Half twain!... Quarter twain!... M-a-r-k twain!... Quarter-less—'

29 posted on 08/19/2019 4:36:43 AM PDT by poconopundit (Will Kamel Harass pay reparations? Her ancestors were black Slave Owners in Jamaica.)
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To: nathanbedford
Wonderful, nathan. You've convinced me I've got to get back into Huck Finn.  I have H.L. Mencken's Smart Set Criticism at home, and reading it just now he says that Huck Finn improves as you read again and again.

I also ran across Tramp Abroad on audio at my local library and enjoyed hearing about Twain's adventures in Germany, Italy, Switzerland and so forth.

Great to hear both your scholarly and teenage-reader impressions of Twain.

30 posted on 08/19/2019 4:49:32 AM PDT by poconopundit (Will Kamel Harass pay reparations? Her ancestors were black Slave Owners in Jamaica.)
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To: poconopundit
You've captured why Trump is loved by the common people... insightful piece pundit.

When I watched the McCain funeral it showcased the elitist shallowness of Washington DC... the opposite of the Trump effect... Out-of-touch elites showing up in their finery for McCain, ensconced in a cold elegant cathedral clutching speeches written by others... But there were no citizens lining the streets - no one saying their good byes as the hearse drove by - - either in Arizona or DC...

When Trump dies ‘the elites’ and their speech writers will be absent but the people will line every street with love and respect and sorrow.

Mark Twain's funeral was a celebration of his life by people from all walks of life:

http://www.twainquotes.com/19100424a.html

When the people had been filing past only a few minutes it could be seen that almost every nationality was represented. There were several negroes. Jervis Langdon, who was standing near the head of the coffin, was much interested in one of the persons who passed him. He said that the man looked the very picture of tramphood, but his bearing was easy, and he seemed to be unconscious of his tattered clothes, stopping for along look at he face of Mark Twain. Mr. Paine also saw him, and said he was probably some one who had seen better days, in which he had read Mark Twain and conceived a liking for his work. All religions were represented. Some of those who passed crossed themselves as they did so.

31 posted on 08/19/2019 8:27:32 AM PDT by GOPJ (Epstein - Child-Rape Pimp for White Liberal Elites... FOB - Friend of Bill...Invisible to the NYT's)
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To: GOPJ

Thanks for a nice comparison, GOPJ.

Certain people in history have moved people with their character and ability to relate to the common man. Churchill, Ghandi, Twain, Trump, Pope John Paul.

We are so fortunate to have this man at this critical hour in our Republic.


32 posted on 08/19/2019 7:22:50 PM PDT by poconopundit (Will Kamel Harass pay reparations? Her ancestors were black Slave Owners in Jamaica.)
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To: Bravada; V K Lee

Bravada, did you ever hear back from the White House for your letter?

I’ll note that when I was a young boy of 10 years old, I memorized Kennedy’s Inaugural Address and my Dad would have me recite it when folks would come to visit.

We had a summer apartment attached to our house on Cape Cod, and one time we a Secret Service agent assigned to the President staying with his family at that apartment.

I gave the address to him and about 4 weeks later, he had mailed a beautiful poster for the address and a personal typed letter signed by Jackie Kennedy.

My Mom and Dad had that suitably framed. And it’s since been lost. But at that time I was well aware that good Public Relations was being done in the White House.


33 posted on 08/20/2019 3:36:21 PM PDT by poconopundit (Will Kamel Harass pay reparations? Her ancestors were black Slave Owners in Jamaica.)
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To: EveningStar

Hey EveningStar. Another one for your collection...


34 posted on 08/21/2019 6:02:15 PM PDT by poconopundit (Will Kamel Harass pay reparations? Her ancestors were black Slave Owners in Jamaica.)
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To: poconopundit; boxlunch; ransomnote; IChing; Bratch; laplata; chiller; ebiskit; ...
(Very) belated pingout.

I have a confession of bias.

My personal experience in trying to get something formatted just so for presentation goes back to my Fortran days, simply trying to get the calculated result to display with the proper number of significant digits. I remember being infuriated one day that the displayed result simply would not come out the way I thought my code “guaranteed” that it would. A situation made even more annoying when my boss made a patronizing remark about what I was doing.

But that was just one instance: I found that kind of issue to be the general case. I could conceive of a useful program to analyze a certain kind of data, and within a week I would probably have the technical details coded so that it would always give the required results. But it would take longer than that to get the I/O working right. In the general case

Likewise on FR. Without even thinking of using fancy graphics, it can readily take more time getting spellings right - and editing the text to say (hopefully with some precision) what I mean - than it does to compose my thoughts. Using cut and paste is a wonderful time saver, but so often in using it I can come out needing to change the number or tense of some word, or eliminate a stray negation of my entire point.

From that perspective - and considering that newspapers, and especially TV, are all about great production values - I have a bias against great presentation values. If you spent the time to create great production values, how much time could you possibly have spent, you know, actually thinking about the point you’re making?

poconopundit seems to provide a strong counterexample to that prejudice on my part.

Bookmark and ping for a great post with edifying links well worth the clicking.


35 posted on 04/22/2020 7:41:16 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion (Socialism is cynicism directed towards society and - correspondingly - naivete towards government.)
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion
Thanks for the compliment, conservatism.

This post is the trickiest one I've ever posted on FR.   When I first posted it, I had to quickly get the Moderator to repost it with a code fix because it didn't display properly.

Things would be easier if we could use in-line CSS styling and javascripts on FR.  But it's a wise move to restrict that — given the security problems that would cause and the open nature of our forum.

I'm sure when you worked in Fortran, you learned certain undocumented "tricks" that made life easier.  That's really all it is.  Of course, the tricks are there to steal: just look at the source code and replicate it.

In my life as a self-employed tech industry analyst/journalist, I've recently been studying Javascript and I'm working on some "low tech" methods to create a more interactive page with overlay HTML divs with pictures and content.

But for that, I'll need to tease FReepers to go to a outside webpage, then come back to FR to comment on it.

One of things I'd like to do is help enable guys like yourself who want to do research and write about a particular &mdash in your case, squashing the Fake News and libelous press.

For example, my website of FR posted vanities and memes, freeper.org gives my content long lasting exposure.

The code for that website is freely available on w3Schools.com.  It's the page, How to Create a Portfolio Gallery with Filtering.

But having that code only gets you halfway there.  Because you still have to organize your photos, links, and figure out how to automate some things.

Hats off to SunkenCiv and DoughtyOne who are applying their data crunching and research skills in support of FR. ... And having fun along the way.

36 posted on 04/22/2020 8:32:38 AM PDT by poconopundit (Joe Biden has long been the Senate's court jester. He's 24/7 malarkey and more corrupt than Hunter.)
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion; poconopundit

Good gosh, I know exactly what you are talking about.

However, I find I have less issue, because I don’t have to spend as much time with spelling and composition because I feel that organically, it just comes out right for me.

I hate spell checkers, because more often they introduce a damned error in context even if the word is spelled correctly.

And I admit...I look down my nose and sneer at products like “Grammarly”, and find myself in the less desirable situation of feeling like a snot, looking askance at people who feel they have to use it!

Sigh. I admit, I don’t like feeling like that. Some people really DO need to use those kinds of tools.


37 posted on 04/22/2020 9:11:33 AM PDT by rlmorel (The Coronavirus itself will not burn down humanity. But we may burn ourselves down to be rid of it.)
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To: nathanbedford

Excellent post!

I must say, in my life, I have found much humor in the way people make fun of of the sound of languages other than their native one.

I think every single person, in every single culture finds to one degree or another, humor in this.

I know a guy who does a drop dead Indian accent that has people falling on the floor (as much for the content, as the sound of it)

And there was NOBODY who could imitate (in utter phonetic gibberish) to an uninitiated ear the sound of other languages like Robin Williams! I swear I have heard him mimic with that gibberish a dozen other languages, and as an ignorant listener, could accurately identify every one of them! (Never mind the various American accents!)

But the one that tickled me more than any other and has stuck with me, is having this conversation with a German guy who confirmed the truth that all cultures do this, but his twist was:

“You know what Americans sound like to us Germans?” and followed that with a coarse, loud, abrupt “ARF ARF ARF ARF!” that made me spit my drink!


38 posted on 04/22/2020 9:25:12 AM PDT by rlmorel (The Coronavirus itself will not burn down humanity. But we may burn ourselves down to be rid of it.)
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To: rlmorel; poconopundit
I don’t have to spend as much time with spelling and composition because I feel that organically, it just comes out right for me.
I guess I change my mind, at least subtly, when I compose. So I do reverse course in the process of a composition. Consequently I’m green with envy of anyone who can just “let it rip” and have it come out satisfactorily.

39 posted on 04/22/2020 10:40:32 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion (Socialism is cynicism directed towards society and - correspondingly - naivete towards government.)
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion

When I;m doing an industry interview, I audiotape my phone discussion with an industry expert and their content is inevitably excellent. That’s the easy part, because I merely have to polish up the prose of already solid ideas.

The hard task is to step back and try to say something significant as a lead-in to the interview. I spend much time doing that. But it’s key because it sets the context, and gets the reader hooked into reading more.

I find synonym checking (in Word and sometimes Google) very useful. Often I’m looking for a simpler word. As a substitute for “difficult”, I might choose “tough” because it’s a more emotional word and only has one syllable.

One thing I know: regular writing and reading on FR improves your writing ability. I follow a few people here simply because I love their style of writing and thinking.


40 posted on 04/22/2020 1:14:19 PM PDT by poconopundit (Joe Biden has long been the Senate's court jester. He's 24/7 malarkey and more corrupt than Hunter.)
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