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by seamusTX
Fri Feb 19, 2010 4:04 pm
Forum: Off-Topic
Topic: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre
Replies: 15
Views: 1593

Re: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre

threoh8 wrote:... what about the Happy Land Nightclub
arson?
I forgot about that incident.

My only comment is that that guy did not plan to kill 87 people. He was angry, drunk, and stupid. The loss of life was compounded by fire code violations.

- Jim
by seamusTX
Fri Feb 19, 2010 12:06 pm
Forum: Off-Topic
Topic: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre
Replies: 15
Views: 1593

Re: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre

Here's a list that I posted a while back: http://www.texaschlforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=83&t=18100" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

- Jim
by seamusTX
Fri Feb 19, 2010 8:05 am
Forum: Off-Topic
Topic: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre
Replies: 15
Views: 1593

Re: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre

The Texas sunset law was passed in in 1977 and went into effect the next year.

I misunderstood it until now. The sunset law does not abolish all old laws; it abolishes agencies if they are not renewed: http://www.sunset.state.tx.us/faq.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

As a practical matter, agencies are often renewed wholesale in the last hours of a legislative session, so not much changes. That's what happened with DPS last session.

- Jim
by seamusTX
Fri Feb 19, 2010 7:18 am
Forum: Off-Topic
Topic: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre
Replies: 15
Views: 1593

Re: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre

Just a reminder that there is nothing new under the sun.

- Jim
by seamusTX
Mon Sep 08, 2008 9:38 am
Forum: Off-Topic
Topic: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre
Replies: 15
Views: 1593

Re: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre

No. We're way past the point where the slate needs to be wiped clean.

Texas has sunset provisions that make old laws expire. Unfortunately, the feds do not, generally.

- JIm
by seamusTX
Sun Sep 07, 2008 8:33 pm
Forum: Off-Topic
Topic: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre
Replies: 15
Views: 1593

Re: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre

anygunanywhere wrote:I was pointing out the obvious that laws never prevent behavior.
I would differ only to say that laws deter entirely rational behavior. I am not going to engage in obstruction of justice, insider trading (if I had the opportunity) or tax evasion, both because they are wrong and the penalties far outweigh the illicit gains.

Impulsive, irrational , desperate, and suicidal people are never deterred by laws.
anygunanywhere wrote:Keep posting them Jim!
I plan to. I will try to find a positive example next week. I don't want anyone to think I am obsessed with bombings.

- Jim
by seamusTX
Sun Sep 07, 2008 8:02 pm
Forum: Off-Topic
Topic: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre
Replies: 15
Views: 1593

Re: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre

You're welcome, Venus.

Anygun, murder has been illegal since before Cain killed Abel. That has never stopped a determined or impulsive criminal or lunatic.

I might also point out that Kehoe's actions resulted in higher taxes (though obviously he did not have to pay them, since checks written in Hades can't be cashed at the local bank).

- Jim
by seamusTX
Sun Sep 07, 2008 1:12 pm
Forum: Off-Topic
Topic: Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre
Replies: 15
Views: 1593

Forgotten history: The Bath School Massacre

On May 18, 1927, 45 people were killed in the deadliest criminal act in U.S. history up to that time, a record that would remain intact until the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.

The perpetrator was a lunatic named Andrew P. Kehoe. He was a farmer, 55 years old at the time of the bombing. By contemporary accounts, he was an unpredictable man. He could be friendly, but he was often argumentive, demanding, and stingy. (Sounds to me like manic depression or narcissistic personality disorder.)

He was fascinated by machinery and explosives. When he was a teenager, his step-mother was injured by the explosion of oil stove. No one suspected foul play at the time; but in retrospect, it is certainly possible that Kehoe sabotaged the stove.

Kehoe was fanatically opposed to taxes, and in 1924 he was appointed to a vacancy on the Bath, Michigan, school board.

Kehoe had financial problems, which he blamed on school taxes, though it seems they were caused mostly by his own mismanagement. As the date of the disaster approached, he was on the verge of foreclosure and bankruptcy.

He had access to the school building and performed some repairs at no charge. Apparently he mined the building with explosives at that time.

The morning of May 18, he killed his wife by a blow to the head. He confined his livestock inside the barn and detonated explosives that had been placed in all the buildings. Of course, the fire department responded to that incident and was far from the school when, an hour later, the school building exploded.

An hour after the school explosion, Kehoe drove a car packed with explosives and shrapnel to the scene. He forced the school superintendent, Emory Huyck, whom he hated, into the vehicle and detonated it. The third explosion caused havoc among the rescuers.

In all, 45 people, mostly young children, died, and 58 were seriously injured. Kehoe was ruled the lone actor. Some of his actions in the weeks before the bombing were later seen as indicators of suicide, but no one connected the dots at the time.

The only failure in his evil plan was a bomb in the school that failed to explode, sparing many more lives.

This incident is very well documented but largely forgotten. Just search for "Bath school massacre."

- Jim

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