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In Through the Out Door / My Naval Heritage 2

11 Nov

from January 10, 2007

Aside from my family’s much-chronicled rich naval tradition, perhaps the part of my ancestry of which I am the most proud is the part the Jacobs family has played in the forging of our great nation.

During the early peopling of this country, groups came from all over England to colonize this land. Puritans, Quakers, Shakers, Rastafarians, Aborigines, pretty much anyone with a bone to pick with the King of England loaded themselves into creaky rafts to try to reach our shores. These people must have been pretty pissed off to make the voyage in boats half the size of a Chevy Lumina. And what happened? Most of those boat people were picked up by the Coast Guard and sent back to Cuba.

However, many of them made it, without a green card or legal documentation of any kind, to start some of the well-known colonies that grade schools make so much out of. One such colony was Roanoke, which disappeared under mysterious, unrevealed circumstances, but which likely had to do with the fact that no one had grown any food for a while, they all being shoe salesmen, and they all died of starvation, yet with fancy shoes on their feet. Another colony was forged upon the shores of West Virginia near a small protected cove where the Native Americans (Indians to you) were friendly and the natural resources were abundant. Yes, Jacobs’ Landing was an early American settlement.

Jacobs’ Landing was named after Whitford Barry Jacobs, a man who had been forcibly placed upon a boat to America rather than face the gallows for hideous crimes against the Crown of which I will not go into here. Suffice it to say that Whitford B. Jacobs was man of passion, a man of courage, a man of conviction, (the last conviction also carried a death sentence) and above all, a con man, a hustler, a buggerer, and a man who knew a good thing when he saw one. Thus, when the captain of the HMS Theramin Trio died due to his being thrown overboard during a poker dispute, Whitford B. Jacobs stood ready to take command.

And command he did. His first command was “turn this boat the Hell around!” However, cooler heads prevailed, and, at gunpoint, Whitford led the boat to America. Upon landing, while the religious people made thanks to their Lord, Whitford immediately found the nicest piece of land, with running water and large tracts of arable soil, and said “Dibs!” In this way, Whitford became an early Land Baron. He set about making treaties with the local Indians and soon had a thriving business trading with them. They sold Whitford pelts which he sent back to England at a huge markup. In exchange, Whitford sold whiskey and cigars to the native Hekawi Indians.

Jacobs’ Landing grew and prospered through the years. As it’s leading citizen, Whitford was elected Governor and eventually Dictator, though he soon relinquished that title.  Jacobs’ Landing became the center of industry in the Mid-Atlantic Region. Thanks to Whitford’s “African colleagues” there was an inexhaustible supply of African “buddies” to do the dirty work while Whitford watched his colony grow into a near Empire.

The years passed and so did Whitford. He is buried today in the family plot outside of Jacob’s Falls, West Virginia. However, at the outbreak of the Civil War, his great-grandson, Bradley “E.” Jacobs soon made a name for himself.

In truth, Bradley had no middle name. In his zeal to become a military commander, he took the initial “E” to make himself sound more like Robert E. Lee. Few people saw a resemblance but he stuck with it. What Bradley lacked in courage, he made up for in, well, he had friends in high places.

Upon enlistment, Bradley immediately shot himself in the foot. This was his crafty way of getting out of the army. Bradley had realized, as many do, that the army is not all it is cracked up to be. Sure, the ads said “Join the Army and See Manassas,” but all he would see was swamp after swamp as he was relegated to the Green Mountain Swamp Boys. However, cooler heads prevailed, and, after a large “donation” to a general’s favorite “charity,” Bradley found himself with the rank of Colonel, a commission, and the right to sit in a comfortable chair and boss around the enlisted men.

It was from his comfortable chair, now on display in the Smithsonian Institute, that Colonel Jacobs directed the most-discussed battle of the Civil War, the Battle of Jacobs Landing. Many books have been dedicated to his military acumen, but let it be said that, when the time came for decisive action, Bradley was the first to say to his men- “Go out and protect me!” And protect him they did. In fact, the whole Battle of Jacobs Landing was a defensive action when, in fact, the opposing Northern Army was not even attacking. A mess hall cook, two wounded sergeants, and a mule had become separated from their unit. Tired, hurt, and hungry, they had come to Jacob’s Landing to desert their posts. Bradley panicked and called out the troops, and soon the whole Southern Third Cavalry was involved, running around, peeking into haystacks, laughing behind Bradley’s  back. The Yankees were captured when they lay down to take a nap beside a mulberry bush. Bradley did, however, receive numerous medals for his “actions” that day. In truth, Jacobs’ Landing was a vital Southern center of industry . Jacobs’ Landing was then and remains now the center of the whiskey and cigar industry in America. If that had fallen into Yankee hands, the whole liquor industry today may have beeen vastly different.

While there have been many notable members of the Jacobs clan, Whitford and his great-grandson Bradley “E” are two of whom we remain most proud. Every February 5th we set aside to honor the men without whom this nation would be far, far different. Not necessarily worse, just different.

Mr. Know-It-All and the Mysteries of the Hebrews

9 Nov

from January 8, 2007

Mr. Know-It-All is back, kids! Listen to me and you’ll go far. Don’t listen to me and I may hit you over the head with a blunt object. Just kidding! Mr. know-It-All is a peaceful man.

This week, as I stumbled my way through yet another work week in a drunken haze, I came across this wonderful “Ask the Rabbi” site. Now, I know what you’re thinking: “What is this shit I’m reading and what’s wrong with him?” The question you should be asking is: “Is Mr. Know-It-All qualified to tackle the tough issues of the Talmud? I know he’s handsome and gifted in the pants, but what is his background in the area of Judaic scholarship?” Let me explain.

At an early age, I received Rabbinical training from Mortimer Schultz, a cantor with a sore throat who was looking to make a few bucks on the side. Sadly, I never completed my training as I was called away to aid a mysterious old man and his two droids as they rescued a space-princess from the Death Star. I promised that I would return, but sadly my mentor died and I was turned to the Dark Side.

Now on with the advice, tools.

  

From: HMATTHEW@AOL.COM

 

A BOY AND HIS COINS

We have a new baby boy and I heard something about having to “buy him back from a kohen.” What do I have to do – and how much is this going to cost?

I know this from experience. I once had to buy a child back from a coven. It was 1978 and my family and I were driving across the desert. In the middle of nowhere, we were surrounded by a gang of satanic bikers, Hell’s Hellions, and they tied up my wife and forced my infant child into a side-car. I tried to stop them, but- what? You asked me about a coven. “Kohen?” What the fuck is a “kohen”? OK, the best I can do is that, right now, in Cambodia, babies go for about $3 a pound. Hope that helps.

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And here’s the next Jew:

MARLBORO MAN?

From: Clifford Harroo of Port of Spain,Trinidad charroo@saintmail.net 2/1/2000

I was born and raised on the island of Trinidad in the Caribbean. It appears that in the western world, a “man” is expected to be macho, keep up with the latest fashion, smoke, drink alcohol, be a womanizer, etc. But experience has shown me that there is something wrong with this definition.

Could you please give me a correct definition from the Torah of what a “man” should be?

The Torah is very clear on the subject: A man should have a penis. A big, thick, Mr. Know-It-All penis. A man should be a man at all times. Men in history, like Dean Martin, were drinkers. Benjamin Franklin was a drunk. Stephen Hawking was a star high school athlete until he became a drinker. Dick Cheney drinks formaldehyde. A man hits horses, a man swaggers when he walks, a man writes an advice column, dammit. In short, in my rabbinical opinion, Mr. Know-It-All is the only real man left.

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Victim, er, letter-writer number three:

GRANDPA’S BAR MITZVAH

From: Jay Wallet – jwallet@bealenet.com 2/1/2000

Many years ago, my grandfather turned 83 and decided to have a second Bar Mitzvah. This was held in conjunction with our oldest son’s Bar Mitzvah. My grandfather said that when you turn 83, its is like 13, since Torah gives a man’s life span as 70 years.

My question is, was my gramps putting one over on us, or was he correct?

You fell for the oldest Jewish trick in the book. The bible is full of nonsense like that. Stuff like “unleavened bread.” Do you know who created unleavened bread? The matzoh companies, that’s who. “Oh, it’s biblical” they say. Mr. Know-It-All says “bullshit!” Streits, Meullers, they’re all in it together. They can make bread cheaper without yeast and mark it way up for the holidays. They’re not fooling me. And this “second Bar-Mitzvah” nonsense is just more of the same. You grandfather ripped you off. Want to know some other things that are allegedly in the bible but aren’t?  How about Noah’s Ark? Who builds an arc if the world is ending? Now I admit that I have only read a few pages of the bible, but I didn’t see any Noah or his ark. If the world was ending I would grab the most beautiful woman I know or just the closest woman I see and tie her up and do stuff that if I wrote it here you’d all want it too. (The women I mean. No homo.)

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Doing good so far:

From: Peter Walters – PeterWalters@bath221254.freeserve.co.uk

I often see a warning on printed material that says: “This contains the Name of God — please dispose of reverently.” I would be grateful if you could give me some advice on how this is done.”
“Reverently” in Mr. Know-It-All language means “with booze.”

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STAR WARS MANIA

From: – ride_the_wave@juno.com 1/27/2000

I recently saw the new Star Wars film “The Phantom Menace” and couldn’t help but think about the spiritual undertones throughout the movie: the Force, the Dark Side, Jedi Knights and Lightsabers. What’s the Jewish perspective on all this?

Ah, the Jewish perspective. Frankly, Jews, Catholics, and almost all religions of the world agree on this topic: That film blows.

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Mr. Know-It-All follows one tenet- what Mr. Know-It-All wants, Mr. Know-It-All gets.