In his interview with Philip Taubman on the development of the U-2 spy plane and reconnaissance satellites:
LAMB: … what did the "U" and the "2" stand for?
In his interview with Philip Taubman on the development of the U-2 spy plane and reconnaissance satellites:
LAMB: … what did the "U" and the "2" stand for?
Submitted without comment:
From Joseph Persico’s interview on Booknotes:
“… what you're referring to is the fact that Sumner Welles, who was the undersecretary of State in the Roosevelt administration and who was an important figure, he was Roosevelt's man. The secretary of state was Cordell Hull, and Roosevelt pretty much circumvented him and--and worked through Sumner Welles, who was an old family friend. Welles had made some sexual advances on trains, part of his--his business trips, to black porters on these trains, who reported him. This was concealed for a long time. It was two or three years before it finally erupted. Roosevelt is under tremendous pressure from people who fear that having a man with homosexual tendencies in such a sensitive position at State--we have to remember we're not talking about the current world; we're talking about the attitudes of the--of the 1940s. He's looked upon as a--as a--a security threat, and Roosevelt very unhappily eventually dismisses Sumner Welles.“
Neffy with “Youth” … great voice … made me stop in my tracks … thanks to the Spotify algo … you can buy the track here….
In his interview with Dana Priest on mission creep in the US military:
LAMB: I can`t leave this without me asking you why your first name is pronounced “Danna?” and did [your parents] want a boy?
Mall Cop once again perfectly on point in today’s stream:
Jensen McRae, what a great voice… writing songs from her heart:
In his interview with Stuart Rochester on the experience of American prisoners of war in Southeast Asia (mainly Vietnam):
LAMB: Here's another line in the book and it just--I was taking these out of context. `I couldn't quite put my finger on it, but the atmosphere was changing for the worse. By November, for starters, food rations at the Zoo were cut drastically and kitchen staff were no longer washing off the human fertilizer the Vietnamese used for their crops.' A lot of reference to human feces being in--in rice, you know, all over these cells. How much--explain the human fertilizer business.
In Danish … 116 minute running time so 16 minutes too long … weird one from Denmark … a thriller which turns into a mystery which turns into a comedy which turns into a rumination on the meaning of life and tragic death and chance and coincidence … I didn’t hate it, it was laugh-out-loud funny in parts, but I also can’t recommend it.
You need to get some help, Dad.
Since my night in Twitter jail, I have been much less active on the service. I only use Tweetdeck to read a handful of private lists, unlike the old days where I really did read everything that everyone I followed tweeted.
Several things ruined Twitter for me, starting with the shift to 280 characters. The 140 character limit forced people to be thoughtful and clever when constructing a tweet, which is not the case with 280. The introduction of an RT button was also a problem, though the worst thing is injecting tweets into your stream that someone you follow *liked.*
I paid a Russian programmer a handsome sum to build a custom Twitter client for me which stripped out all of the nonsense and made the stream readable again, but Twitter quickly banned it and I took the large loss (the Russian programmer made out well, lol).
Anyway, I’m using Discord more and more now, esp. with different groups of day trading buddies, and have shifted away from Twitter. I think everyone else who trades for a living already did this years ago, but I’m slow to change.
Here’s the home screen of my phone now. Is it possible that I’ll stop using Twitter completely one day? Probably not, though I read next to nothing there now. I still like to talk to myself on there throughout the day, mostly tweeting random nonsense and things that amuse me (and no one else); I’ve never once thought about my “audience.”