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Thursday, October 1, 2020

Oct 1 1949

 

Oct. 1, 1949 was one of the most monumental days in history but nobody notices. Just one week before, President Truman announced “We have evidence that within recent weeks an atomic explosion occurred in the USSR.”So how did they get the secrets of atomic bomb?  Ask the Rosenburgs. Or maybe ask the 1527 communists who had infiltrated the federal government.  Our cryptologist women of the Venona Project would later discover 406 of them as Soviet operatives.  (McCarthy’s estimate of 51 was far too low.)  The opening of the Soviet Union’s KGB files provided the rest of the names.  On Oct. 14, 11 communist leaders were found by federal court to have conspired to overthrow of USA. Lesson: This is what happens when you aren’t guarded about communist and fascist fanatics.  Nations such as China can destroy us. So can clever  socialist rioters in cahoots with sympathetic government officials.

Oct. 1 began a nation-wide steel strike that didn’t end until Nov. 11.  No wages agreed to but the union managed to get a massive increase in pensions, thus setting the stage for future contract agreements by unions.  Hence, part of the financial disasters in many manufacturers we have seen recently played out. They were due to the fact that current management kicked the can down the road, letting their company become pension providers in such extremum that they could no longer remain solvent in some future date.  Lesson: the same can be true of a country which promises more than it can deliver. On Oct. 26, 1949, the Minimum Wage Act was voted into perpetual continuance raising from 40 cents per hour to 75.

Sept. 7- Oct. 1 most of the Pacific Islands were transferred from military control to the US Interior Dept. as Territories. The month before Congress passed a program to encourage Alaska development and future statehood. USA was never colonial-minded and already plans were being made for these tiny populations to choose whether to remain territories or commonwealths or some other arrangement. Lesson: a wise move. By January we would be involved in arguments about protection of Taiwan-Formosa. Truman didn’t want it; R’s did. A colleague who was born there and immigrated declared that the R’s made a helluva wise move.

Finally, a couple days later, Congress appropriated funds for reforestation and revegetation of national forests and range lands—some argue, the first true environmental legislation.

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