June 3 – "Nobody's Land" Tossed Out

Posted on June 3, 2017


If you say something absurd or racist in Latin, does it sound better?

There was a Latin phrase used in Australia as settlers from Britain and elsewhere began to explore and settle that continent: terra nullius

It meant "nobody's land," and it is generally used to describe territory that has never belonged to any nation -- territory that is therefore, apparently, "up for grabs."

To use this term for Australia and its nearby islands was completely incorrect, of course. People DID live in those places, and these native Australians (also known as indigenous peoples or Aboriginal people) should have been acknowledged as the rightful "owners" of the land. 

But ever since British explorer James Cook spotted the world's largest island, or the world's smallest continent, it was considered terra nullius. This was what could be called a legal fiction, a way of making it "legal" to steal other people's land.



Which brings us to Mabo Day. Today is Mabo Day because, on this date in 1992, a Torres Strait Islander named Eddie Koiki Mabo won a landmark decision in Australia's High Court. The decision ended the fiction of terra nullius and gave an indigenous person land rights. 

Mabo didn't just happen to win a court case. He worked to establish the idea of indigenous land rights; he spoke out on the subject, earned a reputation as a radical and met a lot of resistance, but he continued to speak out. Eventually he found some lawyers interested in helping him make a test case for indigenous land rights.

Unfortunately, Mabo died of cancer before the case was decided. But five months after his death, the decision was reached and announced, and centuries of British attitudes about land ownership on Australia were overturned.

 Now Mabo's name is enshrined in a public holiday!


The two-tone blue flag is the Torres Strait Island's flag.
The yellow sun on a black and red field is the Aboriginal flag.



  

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June 2 – Sgt. Pepper Turns 50!

Posted on June 2, 2017




Back in the summer of 1967, the Beatles were already huge, worldwide. They'd already "invaded" the U.S. with their records in late 1963, and with their first in-person visit in early 1964. Almost half of all Americans tuned in to see the first Beatles appearance on American TV (the Ed Sullivan show), and Beatlemania was such a big thing that some concert goers could hardly hear the band over the screaming fans. Within just one year, 30 different listings had appeared on the CashBox "Hot 100."

However, four years and five studio albums later, the Beatles-as-an-absolute-craze had died down. For one thing, they had decided not to do commercial tours anymore (after their August, 1966, concert tour). For another thing, as incredibly important as the Beatles' music had been, some people had turned with interest to newer bands for a fresh new style.

Then *WHAM*! The Beatles released a new album - with a fresh new style.

And it Just. Took. Over!

The cover was as influential as the music!

On June 1, 1967, Sgt. Pepper was released in the U.K., and many people interrupted their day to pull over in their cars or stop whatever they were doing to listen to the entire album played on the radio in one long set.

The next day, on this date in 1967, Sgt. Pepper was released in the U.S. Unlike earlier albums, in which the record producers included different songs than those released on the British album, the Beatles had made sure that Sgt. Pepper was the same in the U.S.A. as it was in the U.K.

Did American kids give it the same reception as British kids?

Yes, yes they did.

Every car seemed to be tuned into a radio station playing Sgt. Pepper. Radio stations, at least at first, played the entire album at one time. People stopped what they were doing to really listen. Every hair salon, book store, and diner seemed to be playing the song.

The album stayed #1 for an amazing 27 weeks in the U.K. and 15 weeks in the U.S. It has become one of the best-selling albums in history, with more than 32 million copies worldwide sold.

For Sgt. Pepper's 50th, the songs
have been remixed and re-released.
Th album won applause from music critics, too. Suddenly, rock 'n' roll was taken more seriously, and Sgt. Pepper's ended up winning won four Grammy Awards. It was the first rock LP to win Album of the Year! People talked about the album being art, not just pop music, and it has consistently been called one of the most influential, one of the most important, as well as one of the "greatest" LPs of all time.

Everything about this album has been copied
and / or referenced by others.

Here, the cast of the Big Bang Theory has some Sgt. Pepper fun!





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June 1 – Arrival of the Swiss in Geneva

Posted on June 1, 2017


If you look at a map of Switzerland, there are little bits that stick out into neighboring nations of Italy, Austria, Germany, and France. These bits are cantons (a canton is a subdivision of a country, like a U.S. state) that are surrounded on three sides by another nation.

In the case of the Canton of Geneva (the red bit on the left, above), it's like a Swiss peninsula in an "ocean" of France (see below).



Today is the anniversary of the 1814 arrival of about 300 Swiss troops at Geneva's port. They came by boat, on a lake, so that they would not have to cross French territory to get there. 

The people of Geneva wanted them there! Although the Genevans spoke French and had been a part of France, this was no invasion - it was a welcome intervention against the French.

People shouted, "Vive Genève, Vive la République, Vive le nouveau Canton!"

Earlier, in 1798, Revolutionary French forces had conquered Switzerland, had renamed it the Helvetic Republic, and had definitely NOT won the "hearts and minds" of the people. When Napoleon took over France, and war broke out all over Europe, the Swiss refused to fight on behalf of the Helvetic Republic. In 1803, Napoleon restored some of the Swiss cantons' sovereignty (self-rule), but it took until 1815 before Switzerland fully regained its independence and achieved a status of permanent neutrality.

That is the background of the general region; during that time the independent Republic of Geneva had fought against the French revolutionaries in what could be called a counter-revolution. But they were invaded and annexed by France. That is why Genevans welcomed soldiers from the Swiss Confederation, in 1814, and gladly became a Swiss canton the next year.

Geneva is...

...known for watchmaking.

Not only is Geneva the center of Swiss watchmaking,
you can visit a watch museum and see a large floral
clock there.

...expensive!

Apparently, Switzerland is the most expensive European country
for tourists, these days.

And Geneva isn't any exception to that...


...a place where people talk about and study peace.

This is the Palace of Nations, built to be the head-
quarters of the League of Nations and now used for the
United Nations Office at Geneva.

This extremely large "Broken Chair" is a piece
created to convince officials from around the world
to outlaw land mines.




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