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April 19, 2024
NPS Stamp Tour, Stop 14 (Final); Chickamagua/Chattanooga battlefields

This stop was personal.
About 25 years ago, I was hanging with @MyBuddyBob at his house in Spotsulvania VA one spring weekend.
We were bored, he lived near the Battlefield, so we decided to go check it out and walk around.
Just after you turned towards the battlefield from his development, there was a Confederate Cemetery on the left.
So we stopped to check it out. I knew my family had been from South Carolina before the war, in fact they were a ‘founding family’ in 1750.
So I asked him to pull up in front of the SC burial area. To my surprise, front and center was ‘Lt. Hugh Blakeney, Co D, 8th SC Inf, 2nd SC”

I obtained his records from the National Archives, he is my 4th great uncle.
He was wounded 12/13/1862 in Fredericksburg VA, wounded 09/20/1863 Chickamagua, Oglethorpe GA.
Mortally wounded 05/08/1864,
Died 05/09/1864 Spotsylvania CH VA
He was 2 months short of his 19th birthday.

Battle of Chickamagua
Kershaw’s brigade
2nd SC RGT
Killed 65
Wounded 438
Missing 1

The assault was up a hill against:- Battery D, first Michigan; Battery M, 1st Ohio; 65th Ohio Inf RGT; and the 3rd Kentucky RGT.

The monument at the top of the hill is the SC state monument.
There are also makers where the Canons, and Inf emplacements.

Hugh was most likely one of the 438 wounded assaulting this hill.

——////—-////
Lieut Hugh Blakeney
BIRTH
8 Jul 1845
Chesterfield County, South Carolina, USA
DEATH
9 May 1864 (aged 18)
Spotsylvania Courthouse, Spotsylvania County, Virginia, USA
BURIAL
Spotsylvania Confederate Cemetery
Spotsylvania Courthouse,Spotsylvania County, Virginia,USA

Son of John "Jack" Blakeney III and Sarah Evans; great-grandson of Captain John Blakeney, member of the South Carolina Congress and American Revolution Captain of Militia in General Francis Marion's ("Swamp Fox" ) Brigade.

Company D, 8th South Carolina Infantry, Kershaw's Brigade, Kershaw's Division, 1st Corps, Army of Northern Virginia, C.S.A.

Residence Chesterfield District, SC.
Enlisted 4/13/1861 at Florence, SC for 12 months' service, he was mustered 6/1/1861 into Company D, 8th South Carolina Infantry, as 5th Corporal.
Promoted to 3rd Corporal 11/19/1861.
Promoted to 2nd Corporal 12/20/1861.
Re-enlisted 1862 (date not listed).
Elected 2nd Lieutenant 5/13/1862.
"Wounded in battle" 12/13/1862 in the 1st Battle of Fredericksburg, VA.; hospitalized; given 90-day Medical Furlough at home from 1/2/1863.
Promoted to Lieutenant 1/8/1863.
"Wounded in battle" 9/20/1863 in the Battle of Chickamauga, GA; given Medical Furlough at home.
Mortally wounded 5/8/1864 in the Battle of Spotsylvania Court House, Va.
His father filed a Settlement Claim 2/8/1865.

The 8th Infantry Regiment was organized at Marion, South Carolina, during the spring of 1861. Many of the men were from Darlington and Marion counties.

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November 18, 2025
Socrates
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November 17, 2025
Plato

“Human behavior flows from three main sources;
desire, emotion, and knowledge.”

— Plato

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November 14, 2025
Aristotle

“The most important relationship we can all have is the one you have with yourself, the most important journey you can take is one of self-discovery. To know yourself, you must spend time with yourself, you must not be afraid to be alone. Knowing yourself is the beginning of all wisdom.”

— Aristotle

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March 02, 2022
This is my Darth Vader voice

For you doubters…
😂🤣😂😂🤣

This is my Darth Vader voice
18 hours ago
And now…

For some ‘happy news’

The Armed Citizen, The NRA ‘American Rifleman’ Magazine, Nov 2025.

An armed mother in Mississippi used her firearm to shoot an allegedly diseased monkey that had escaped from an overturned truck, according to police.

The mother of five armed herself after her 16-year-old son reported that he thought he had seen a monkey running around outside of the family's Heidelberg, Miss., home. After getting out of bed and arming herself, she stepped outside and saw the monkey approximately 60 feet away. She and other residents had been warned that the monkey was allegedly carrying diseases, so she fired.

“I did what any other mother would do to protect her children,” the woman told The Associated Press. “I shot at it and it just stood there, and I shot again, and he backed up and that’s when he fell.”

The encounter occurred after a widely reported October 14 incident on a Mississippi highway, when a truck carrying a number of Rhesus monkeys overturned, allowing ...

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October 13, 2025
The 'Man in the arena'

“It is not the critic who counts: not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs and comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without error or shortcoming, but who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself in a worthy cause; who, at the best, knows, in the end, the triumph of high achievement, and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who knew neither victory nor defeat.”

 

—Theodore Roosevelt

Speech at the Sorbonne, Paris, April 23, 1910

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November 21, 2025
My take on ‘The castle doctrine’

Here’s an article about a man being charged with manslaughter, for ‘defending’ his ‘home’.

For the record, I’m a second amendment ‘absolutist’. I believe that the second amendment gives me the right to own (keep) ANY firearm I can afford to purchase.
Yes, this includes ‘Machine guns’, while I don’t own an ‘automatic’ weapon, I’ve the right to and any law to the contrary is an infringement on my second amendment right. I further believe I’ve the right to carry a firearm (bear) anyplace in the US or its territories. Even places where that’s currently prohibited.

I believe I’ve the right to defend myself and my home, and to use deadly force if necessary.

In this case, I unfortunately agree with the state of Michigan…
Wow, that tasted dirty just saying it.

Mr. Knapton was not only never in danger, the individuals in question were not in his house, they were in his garage.
The way he approached the garage, from the outside, leads me to believe that it was not connected ...

November 30, 2022
The Day I Retired

Its almost the sixth anniversary...

 

Some of you may have looked at my photos and thought; what young looking handsome man… He couldn't be old enough to retire …

 

Thank you Mama

 

Anyway, I am 60 and I retired at 55 in July of 2017. I was given a retainer for two more months in order to be on call. I couldn’t always get a reliable Internet connection and I can’t take someone’s money for nothing, so I shut that down in Sept 2017…

 

So you are thinking, what day in July did you retire? I didn’t really retire in July 2017. I quit going to work then…

 

I retired Thursday, around 1:35 PM, December 15, 2016…

 

Life was good for @The_CINC and I.

It was shortly before Christmas 2016. Tiny dancer, our surprise baby was a junior in college. We had a 4K sqft house on 7 acres, 40 miles south of Washington DC. It was our second house in 33 yrs of marriage. We had lived there for over 20 yrs. The final house payment was due Nov 10, 2017.

The CINC was at the highest point you can achieve as a civilian Govt Employee without going into the Senior Executive Service. When she was offered SES, the CINC had gotten to the point at which it would have meant more work, more time away from home, for no more money (because of the pay structure) for at least five to seven years. We also knew we wanted to Retire, so it made no sense to invest the time required for an SES position.

She worked for OSD, DOD, WHS (The office that runs the Pentagon, they are the ‘Landlords’) for 34 years. At one point she ran a division that had a yearly budget of $1 Billion.

She would be eligible to retire in April 2017. We really hadn’t decided what we were going to do. My top-secret NSA/DOD clearance was supposed to be coming through anytime. One of my specialties was encrypted secure communications.

I was a subcontractor for IBM and they were paying $50,000 for my vetting. It had been 2 years because I was a traveling consultant that didn’t associate with my neighbors… I was gone all of the time and I couldn’t see any of them from my house anyway..

Once that clearance came through, I could double or triple my salary which wasn’t small in the first place.

Here we were, at the top of our earning potential, few bills, house almost paid for, kids all gone…

 

Life was good…

 

Then Thursday, around 1:35 PM, December 15, 2016, happened…

I was in Birmingham AL, working at the US HQ, of a regional US bank that had been acquired by a Spanish bank. I was digitizing and updating their manual and electronic bank and treasury transactions. I had been on this contract for three years. The last 10 months or so I had been mostly remote, working from my lazy boy.

They wanted me to come in for some end of the year meetings and Christmas parties.

I flew in Monday mornings, getting to the office around 10:00 AM. I would work 10 hours Monday, 12-14 Tuesday and Wednesday, 6-8 Thursday and then catch a flight home around 4:00 pm Thursday. I would have 40-45 hours in 4 days by the time I caught my flight home.

 

I was sitting at my ‘station’, there weren’t really ‘cubes’, just tables with 3-4” dividers that had plugs. It was basically a giant open room, semi closed at each end by meeting rooms. My seat was near the meeting rooms. Behind me to my right was a large opening which led to a spacious elevator lobby.

The bank of elevators were the divider for another large working area. If you really tried, you could easily get 150-200 people in the elevator lobby.

 

I had just come back from lunch. I was trying to wrap a few things up before heading to the airport. A woman calmly walks behind me and says “Does anybody know first aid?”

I stood up “Excuse me?!?” She pointed to the elevator lobby behind her.

So I walked that way to see what was happening…

 

I am a trained first responder. I was a police officer at the pentagon and I was a FFX County VA police officer. I am also a trained BSA leader with back country first aid training.

 

As I entered the elevator lobby I saw an extremely obese man laying partially on his back. A woman by his side rubbing his hand looking concerned. Another man near his feet watching. I looked around, there were about 10 gawkers.

“MA’AM!”

I startled the woman to look at me…

“We have to treat him for shock”

First thing I could think of, get him flat on his back, elevate his feet.

"Go get that footstool"

That gave her something to do and think about.

I looked at the gentleman "Find me something to keep him warm."

I got him on his back. He must have weighed 400 Lbs.

I ripped his shirt open, put my head on his chest.

No Breathing, no heartbeat.

I took his pulse at his carotid artery to make sure.

No, pulse, his face was white, blue lips, his eye lids were partially open, his eyes were already clouding over...

He was already dead.

I looked up for a second...

At least 175-200 people were watching me...

I could hear people sobbing..

Where the hell did they all come from?

So I measured up his sternum, and began compressions..

If you've never really done CPR...

The first time will gross you out. I broke every bone in his chest away from his sternum. It sounded like I was crushing a bag of potato chips.

Another gentleman, kneeling beside me asked "Shouldn't you do the breaths?"

I was doing this for show. I knew he was dead. I have seen and handled many dead bodies. He was already dead, he wasn't coming back.

I looked over at the decedent's face, my compressions were forcing his lunch out of his mouth.

"Turn his head to the side, sweep his mouth, knock yourself out."

About that time a woman came over with an automatic defibrillator.

As I was giving compressions, I talked her through placement of the electrodes. She was so upset, she couldn't read the instructions.

She placed the electrodes, hit the switch, and audible countdown started from 15. When it got to one, it would send the charge.

I kept doing compressions until the Defib audibly said 'CLEAR', at which time, for some reason , I through my arms up like a touchdown. As soon as the cycle was over, I started compressions again.

I was starting to get winded, when I heard the elevators open and EMTs emerged.

one immediately kneeled across from me and took over.

 

I simply stood up, and walked away.

I didn't want to be there anymore.

I walked back to my station, and packed my stuff.

I was going to the airport.

As luck would have it..

I followed the gurney down to the lobby, one of the EMTs on the guy's chest still giving compressions.

 

On the drive to the airport, the shakes hit... I can stay extremely calm in the most stressful situations, but it takes a heavy toll later.

After arriving at my gate, I sat down, my cell phone rang. It was my boss from the bank "I just wanted to let you know that the guy didn't make it."

'I know" I said, "I knew that before I left, thanks for letting me know"

 

I called @The_CINC and told her everything. I then said "I don't want to die in a cube farm. Let's retire"

 

The Bank, and my employer tried to do some kind of ceremony for me. I told them not to, it was a dumb idea. If he would have lived it would have been a celebration of his life. He died, there was nothing to be proud of.

 

That was why they gave me the retainer...

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