Berkeley CSUA MOTD:Entry 54563
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2025/05/24 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
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2012/12/19-2013/1/24 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/California/Prop] UID:54563 Activity:nil
12/19   Tea Party Patriots have been with us for a long time:
        http://preview.tinyurl.com/bso455m
2025/05/24 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
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You may also be interested in these entries...
2012/11/6-12/18 [Politics/Domestic/California, Politics/Domestic/Election] UID:54524 Activity:nil
11/6    Four more years!
        \_ Yay! I look forward to 4 more years of doing absolutely nothing.
           It's a much better outcome than the alternative, which is 4 years
           of regress.
           \_ Can't argue with that.
        \_ Massachusetts went for Obama even though Mitt Romney was its
	...
2012/11/5-12/4 [Politics/Domestic/Election, Reference/Tax] UID:54521 Activity:nil
11/5    "Tax Policy Center in Spotlight for Its Romney Study":
        http://www.csua.org/u/y7m (finance.yahoo.com)
        'A small nonpartisan research center operated by professed "geeks" ...
        found, in short, that Mr. Romney could not keep all of the promises he
        had made on individual tax reform ....  It concluded that Mr. Romney's
        plan, on its face, would cut taxes for rich families and raise them
	...
2011/4/17-7/30 [Politics/Domestic/California, Reference/Tax] UID:54087 Activity:nil
4/17    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_no_taxes
        "The super rich pay a lot less taxes than they did a couple of decades
        ago, and nearly half of U.S. households pay no income taxes at all."
        And people are still complaining about taxes being too high.
        \_ yeah but only 3 out of the 5 people who aren't rich but complain
           are actually counted.
	...
Cache (5001 bytes)
preview.tinyurl.com/bso455m -> www.slate.com/blogs/crime/2012/12/18/bath_school_bombing_remembering_the_deadliest_school_massacre_in_american.html
MySlate is a new tool that lets you track your favorite parts of Slate. You can follow authors and sections, track comment threads you're interested in, and more. the deadliest school-related massacre in American history happened in 1927, at an elementary school in Bath, Mich. A school board member named Andrew Kehoe, upset over a burdensome property tax, wired the building with dynamite and set it off in the morning of May 18. Kehoe's actions killed 45 people, 38 of whom were children. At the time, Bath was a small farm community with under 300 residents. available online here, Kehoe's neighbor, Monty J Ellsworth, noted that the consolidated school was markedly superior to the "common country school" that preceded it. It was also more expensive, and the township raised property taxes in order to repay the school's bonds. A local farmer with training as an electrical engineer, he was a severe, stubborn man fond of drastic solutions to small problems; Ellsworth writes that Kehoe once shot a noisy dog and killed his own horse because it was lazy. noted that Kehoe "was known through the countryside as a dynamite farmer'. Neighbors detailed how he was continually setting off blasts on his farm, blowing up stumps and rocks." Kehoe really hated taxes, and joined the school board to argue against them. The Times reported that, as a board member, he "appeared to have a tax mania and fought the expenditure or money for the most necessary equipment." In 1926, he ran for town clerk, but his obstructionist reputation preceded him, and he was defeated. His loss in that race, coupled with the news that his farm was facing foreclosure, appears to have triggered his plan. Over the course of several months, Kehoe gained access to the school and packed it tight with dynamite that was wired together so expertly that, after the explosion, investigators could hardly believe that Kehoe had acted alone. A few days before the attack, Kehoe visited Monty Ellsworth for a round of target shooting; afterwards, Ellsworth looked inside Kehoe's vehicle and saw "a box in the back about two feet long and 12 or 14 inches wide which was about half full of rifle shells. At that point, after killing his wife and destroying his farm, Kehoe hopped inside an explosive-laden truck and drove to the school. Thirty minutes after the initial attack, while conversing with the superintendent, he detonated the truck bomb, killing himself, the superintendent, and a few others. investigators found that a short circuit in Kehoe's wiring was the only thing that stopped the attack from claiming more lives, as "more than 500 pounds of dynamite and several sacks of gunpowder were found under a portion of the building that remained standing." If the explosion had gone as planned, Bath's entire downtown might have been destroyed. Kehoe Farm The ruins of Andrew Kehoe's house, post-explosions. Wikimedia Commons Like the Newtown school shooting, the Bath bombing was a major news story. Ellsworth writes, "I think we had the greatest demonstration of American sympathy ever awarded a grief stricken community. Thousands and thousands of cars stayed in line for hours. I have a gas station one-half mile west of Bath on the main road to Lansing, where there was a double row of traffic all day. In the afternoon it took about four hours to get three miles, but I don't remember ... Bath Massacre: America's First School Bombing, noted that "there wasn't a media frenzy like today. Three days after it happened, Lindbergh took off and flew to Paris, and that part of it was over." In 2009, NPR went back to the town and found several survivors of the attack still living. the survivors noted that "we still look at ourselves as survivors. So you look after one another differently, because you know that the absolute unthinkable can happen, even going to school." An inquest eventually determined that Kehoe had acted alone. Amid the ruins of Kehoe's farm, they found a sign attached to a fence. By Forrest Wickman | December 18, 2012 * 2 "We Still Look at Ourselves as Survivors": More Than Eighty Years Later, Remembering the Deadliest School Massacre in American History By Justin Peters | December 18, 2012 * 3 Help! 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