Timesuck with Dan Cummins - 41 - Blood and Glory: True Tales of the Texas Rangers
Episode Date: June 26, 2017If it weren't for the Texas Rangers, Texas probably wouldn't be a state today. These wild, eccentric frontiersman rode into battle on crippled legs, gun wound shortened arms, shot horseshoes out of ca...nnons and did whatever it took to get the job done and win independence from Mexico. Meet the real Walker, Texas Ranger, meet the man who brought down Bonnie and Clyde, and learn some gritty Texas history along the way. Timesuck goes deep in the heart of Texas to tell Texas-sized tales of it's first and fierce lawmen. Today's timesuck sponsors!  ApplicationNinja.com Get one month of the most affordable, customizable, and user friendly Application Management Software on the market for free and hire the best employees for your business with ease. Simlisafe! Powerful window and door sensors, 105 decibel sirens, 24/7 security professionals waiting to send police to your home, and more for only $15 a month! Get 10% off of the best home security system on the market and slip easy by going to Simplisafe.com/listen Own the best luggage on the market when you buy from Away! Stylish and virtually indestructible, with amazing features like a carry on with a USB charger capable of charging an iPhone five times over! Get $20 off by using the promo code TIMESUCK after heading to awaytravel.com/timesuck
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Who are the Texas Rangers?
Well, in this episode, they're not the Arlington, Texas-based baseball team that originated
as a Washington Senators in 1961 after the original Washington Senators moved to Minnesota
and became a twins.
And then the new Senators moved from Washington, D.C. to Texas in 1972.
Uh-uh.
Today, the Texas Rangers we're going to be talking about is not the team that professional
flamethrower, Nolan, I have no problem putting Robin Ventura in a headlock and punch in his noggin repeatedly, Ryan, through 301 strikeouts
for 1989 and only 239 innings of work at the age of 42.
When he can still throw 97 miles an hour of heat like a goddamn cyborg created by SkyNet.
We're not talking about those Rangers.
We're talking about the original Texas Rangers before the baseball team, before the lone
ranger, before Chuck Norris Walker Texas Ranger.
Think Chuck Norris is tough?
Well, he is.
He's very tough, much tougher than myself.
He was Black Belt magazine's 1969 fighter of the year and six time world karate champion
for fuck's sake, dude held his own with Bruce Lee.
But he's not as tough as the real Walker Texas Ranger, Samuel Hamilton Walker. six-time world karate champion for fuck's sake, dude held his own with Bruce Lee.
But he's not as tough as the real Walker Texas Ranger, Samuel Hamilton Walker, a man who
escaped from the Mexican military to join the Texas Rangers, and designed, along with gunmaker,
Sam Colt, the infamous 44 caliber Walker Colt, the largest and most powerful black powder
repeating handgun ever made.
Or Frank Hamer, remember him?
The man who came out of retirement to end Bonnie and Clyde's reign of terror.
The man who legend has it survived 50 gun fights.
How many gun fights have you been in?
I'm sitting at zero and hoping to keep him that way.
Alright, no intention of a gun fight.
Or how about John Harris Rogers, who had some of the bone removed in his arm
after being shot in the shoulder by bandits in 1889,
but instead of retiring,
had a Winchester rifle modified to fit his shortened arm
and stayed in law enforcement for an additional 31 years.
Who the fuck does that?
Real life heroes do that.
So kick back, shut your yellow-bellied mouth
and prepare your soft 21st century ass
for some tales of true grit
Tails of heroism sacrifice
Hardship and the wild western bad ass area of the men who cried one riot one ranger
Slip off your spurs pour yourself the tall glasses of warm whiskey and get ready for thick hair to sprout forth from your chest in
This old time to stosterone laced edition of TimeSuck.
Happy Monday everybody. I'm Dan Comments and thanks for mosing on back over to TimeSuck.
Today's Texas Ranger TimeSuck is brought to you by application ninja dot com.
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Okay, time for a few thank yous.
Thanks to Lamar Jose, who's been dying for this episode, requested numerous times across
numerous social media platforms for months.
Hope it lives up to the expectations, brother.
Big thank you to TimeSucker Sarah Lilly, a new TimeSuck intern and member of the Bojangles
research team.
She's a research machine and I cannot thank her enough for organizing this episode's content
and giving me everything I needed to give you guys a fine, texasized suck and she gave
me so much stuff.
Couldn't fit it all in, but I think I got the stuff that I found most interesting and
I hope you enjoy it.
Thanks as always to all you suckheads, all you time suckers for all the iTunes reviews,
getting closer and closer to that Vlad the Impaler Dracula bonus suck.
Thanks for all the subscriptions, used to the, used to the Amazon and PayPal buttons at
time suckpodcast.com for the recommendations for others to listen.
Appreciate you spreading the suck.
The suck has grown to somewhere around 100,000 people, actually I think more depending
on just based on recent downloads and it just blows my mind.
I thought maybe, maybe.
I could get to that number by the end of the year
if everything worked out like a dream.
Can't believe it's here already.
Thanks for continuing to listen.
Do my best to stay on top of this time suck horse,
just like in galloping forward.
And I love how hungry some of you are for this suck
and how you continually want more.
I really do love it.
When you want more episodes per week,
I know a lot of you requested two episodes a week,
more silliness in the store.
Thanks for buying those sweet, bojangles,
summer teas in addition to the flat earth
and first generation teas, by the way.
I know I'm out of numerous sizes
in the first couple of t-shirts
and I'm working to remedy that.
And I added a bunch of pictures of time suckers
wearing them last week to my Instagram
at Dancommon's Comedy.
But I also know that, you know, more of you student suckers wearing them last week to my Instagram at Dan Cummins Comedy. But I also know that, you know,
more of you student suckers have been using the suck
as a resource for presentations and research papers.
I never anticipated that,
but I think it's fucking awesome.
And I know you want book lists for the episodes.
You know, for research, for further reading,
for to cite as a source and reports and things,
you'd like downloadable show notes
with the bibliography for some more sucking.
And I wanna do all that. And we're going to do all that in time. For me, the end goal
of this podcast is having an online community built on shared curiosity, a place where for a tiny
membership fee of a few bucks a month, a fee had to charge to hire someone to run this new sweet
time-soaked app I would like designed and a new website with tons of extra content, like lots of
content. I want a place where you can have show tons of extra content, like lots of content.
I want a place where you can have show notes
for each episode, you can have a message board
where you and other listeners can discuss the information
thrown out into each episode as deeply as you want.
You can update each other instead of just me,
a place where you can meet other time suckers,
form new friendships, maybe even form
new romantic relationships built on a shared sense of humor and curiosity.
Why not have a dating site, you know, on the new app?
You know, kick off some serious sucking.
I actually think that would be really cool.
I hear women complain all the time, especially on social media about how many gross,
bros before hose type douchebags are out there in the dating pool, and I hear good dudes
complain all the time about how women don't seem to be interested in finding good dudes.
Let's change that.
99.9% of the hundreds of messages I get every month now are from people who seem super
fucking cool.
Whether they agree with me, disagree, almost always.
I'm talking 99.9% of the time, super respectful and super cool, and I think it's time some
of you cool single suckers found each other.
You know, because if you're gonna fuck somebody, why not fuck somebody cool?
That could be the motto of the dating app, you guys.
Fucks would be cool with an asterisk.
At the bottom of the page,
you could have like,
after getting to know them,
at least a little bit,
respecting them as a human, blah, blah, blah, blah,
and then, you know,
fucking them in a consensual manner
according to their tastes.
But seriously,
it could be a place where all the possible show topics
could be organized into a list,
you know, because you keep sending them in.
And maybe like an image or type thing,
you could vote up, upvote the topics you wanna hear,
downvote the ones, you're less curious about.
And really as a community decide
what the next week's episode is gonna be,
at least one of them, maybe one where I kinda pick
out of your options and then one where you pick.
I think, you know, democratize the suck, let's do it.
Let's get this app going. You know, have bonus episodes kind of like a talking dead walking dead
thing where I could have a Q&A episode each week, taking a discussion of the previous week's
episodes even further. We can do so much cool shit and we're going to. Listership has grown over
10 fold since beginning this year because if you share in this podcast with those around you
and if listenership can double one more time, if we can get to 200,000
people, I'm going to just going to figure it out.
I promise I will just figure out how to make this thing a reality.
We'll do it.
So, so know that I read all those emails.
I read all the messages.
I'm working as fast as I can to give you what you want and give you what I want.
I fucking love this.
So, that's my goal.
I hope you're into it.
And if you're listening and you happen to specialize
in app and web development,
cause I don't know shit about either.
I can barely handle a WordPress website.
Hit me up at admin at timesockpodcast.com.
Would love to talk to you
about how we can take this to a really cool place.
And now time for some time sucker updates.
This is the kind of shit that makes me want to launch that community I spoke of earlier
with the app.
Okay, first one says, I'm writing to let you know, one of your podcast episodes helped
with my last final of my college career, my final questions regarding the McMartin preschool
case.
Fortunately, I listen every week and got my suck on during the Scientology episode.
Most of these topics are actually something discussed in class such as Jim Jones, Scientology,
etc.
I appreciate your time and effort into these podcasts.
Also, if this makes it to Aaron Monday, you can give a shout out to Eileen.
Can you give a shout out to Eileen, my girlfriend of two years.
Saturday, May 27th will be our two-year anniversary together and I want to surprise her with this
shout out.
Thanks again.
Can't wait to hear from you, keep on sucking Andrew Tau.
Well, sorry I'm late.
Sorry I'm late Andrew.
I got way behind on emails.
Trying to stand top.
Those come up with a new system to do that.
So sorry, I took forever,
but I hope I lean to listen now.
I hope you're still together.
Hope this shout-out is not just adding
to the pain of a recent breakup,
where it all fell apart.
I hope that's not the case.
So congrats you, suckers.
Hope you're happy. And I'm glad you could use some of the sucked
for some school stuff. And a super inspiring message. This is from Mac Woodbury on Instagram
at M Woodbury 99. He says, Hey, Mr. Cummins, my name is Mac Woodbury. I'm an 18 year old
high school student in a Michigan prep school called Cran's Brook Kingswood. You are hands
down. My favorite comment. I love the suck. I wanted to message you to say thank you. The
past two years of my life have been very difficult.
I've been boarding away with my family for four years now, and I've had to deal with
a lot of shit by myself.
All the freshman year, I was bullied and had no friends.
Sophomore year was the same situation.
Junior year was just as difficult when I actually got friends they were expelled.
I was diagnosed with depression following that.
I'm not mentally healthy as what I'm getting at.
Anyway, your humor is something that helps take my mind off the bad thoughts that constantly I was diagnosed with depression following that, I'm not mentally healthy is what I'm getting at.
Anyway, your humor is something that helps take my mind off the bad thoughts that constantly
entangle my head.
Your comedy and your endless curiosity is a reminder to me that there is good in the world.
I love this podcast.
It has been a literal life saver.
I hope one day to meet you, master sucker.
Thank you for all the knowledge and last.
Keep on sucking.
And then a separate message.
Just had a friend die from an accidental overdose acquired his heroine from the dark web
Sad day thanks for making me smile during hard times
Well, Mac first off so sorry life has been handing you
Handling you a little roughly lately second
Honored that I could help out in some small way and third condolences regarding your friend and fourth. I love you buddy
Love that you're fine and humor amidst the darkness.
Love that you're fine with some curiosity in life,
amidst some death.
And just honor to have you as a fan.
Don't stop suckin' motherfucker, all right?
And yeah, this is again, I'm just so glad
that there's just a little community developing
where we can find more than just a little knowledge
and some laughs.
That makes me feel great, man.
I'm glad I could help in some small way.
And last, a little bit of love.
We're gonna end up with some love with this time suck update.
This is from Michelle Kinkan on Instagram.
She says, my suck head husband introduced me to Timesack
a couple months back and we love it.
He's currently deployed.
And even though we don't get to talk too often,
he keeps listing overseas and we keep checking in
to chat about our thoughts on the episode.
So thanks, Sergeant Sucker, for bringing two people
on opposite sides of this flat earth, a little closer.
Hope you come to Maryland, when he gets back in the States,
we'll be getting a babysitter and getting our suck on.
Keep on sucking Michelle.
That's fucking beautiful, Michelle.
The suck has brought together people
from my own family as well.
My kids and I have intense discussions about the subjects.
I talked to my sister, Donna, more now than I have in years.
She's gonna help research an episode. My dad and I have great talks about the topics so to my wife and I and even my in-laws
Recently, it just gives us all something to talk about. I've never been good at small talk
I've always found it maddening and I just love having something interesting to dig into now and so now
Let's get some even more interesting stuff to share. Thank you guys so much for all the emails
Tall tales that are actually true. Let's talk about them and let's get some even more interesting stuff to share. Thank you guys so much for all the emails, tall tales that are actually true.
Let's talk about them and let's suck on some Texas Rangers.
Okay.
Good day.
Good day.
Good time, sucker, updates.
All right, so who are they?
Who the hell are the Texas Rangers?
Well, over the past century, two competing images
of the Texas Rangers have emerged, both
in scholarly studies and in popular thought.
There's the cartoonishly brave and honorable version presented by Professor Walter Prescott
Webb of the University of Texas in 1935.
I presented an image of men who were quiet, deliberate, righteous, men who could be gentle
and kind, men who could also gaze calmly into the eye of a murderer, divine his thoughts, anticipate his action, and ride straight up to death,
men who knew no fear and called on unlimited reserves of courage.
You know, just regular nights in shining armor. And then beginning in the 1960s,
revisionist scholars drew a darkly contrasting portrait. They depicted a brutal,
lollus ranger, one who, as a soldier, indiscriminately dehumanized and slaughtered
Native Americans in Mexicans like Ruthless Lawmen, who systematically practiced Le Dofwega,
law of the fugitive in which prisoners were routinely shot while supposedly trying to escape.
Hard, cold, racist men who shot first and asked questions later. So who were they?
Were they the preposterously virtuous heroes
who inspired Hollywood to produce the lone Ranger TV series
that ran from 1949 to 1957?
The 1989 Lonesome Dove mini-series,
some of my dad's favorite hours of television, by the way.
Were they the men who inspired Chuck Norris' walker Texas Ranger
that ran for eight seasons from 93 to 2001?
And somehow didn't manage to produce
one memorable quoteable line.
Over 9,000 television minutes of programming,
you don't hate, but can't remember
what exactly you watched half an hour
after you're done watching it, impressive in a weird way.
Or were they the villains more akin to the warden character
in Paul Newman's cool hand loop?
Just what we've got here is failure to communicate.
Just some, you know, it's kind of sadistic, sadistic power
trippers.
I'm guessing like almost everybody, you know,
there was somewhere in the middle between bad and good.
The real rangers probably weren't all good.
Yeah, I'm sure they weren't, and I'm sure they weren't
all bad either.
But they were definitely tough as hell.
All right, well, let's not speculate and start
examining some facts.
And then, you know, you draw your own conclusions as to whether they were mostly brave men fighting
for what was right and protecting people, or mostly bloodthirsty killers who happened
to be on the right side of a badge.
Not much different than the men they tracked and killed.
Or, you know, a little bit of both.
So let's give an overview of the organization, the small time suck timeline, and then bounce
out and look a little more closely at some of its most famous
rangers.
Shrap on those boots soldier, we're marching down a time suck timeline.
Okay, so the beginning of the Texas Rangers in 1823, only two years after Anglo-American
colonization formally began in Texas, Stephen F. Austin
and Emprasario, a person who had been granted the right to settle on land in exchange for
recruiting and taking responsibility for the new settlers.
A man known as the founder of Texas hired 10 experienced frontiers men as Rangers for
a punitive expedition against a band of Native Americans that had attacked some of his initial
colonists.
Now the origin has definitely added to their legend. They didn't start off as a trained army.
You know, it was so much rougher than that. No barracks, no uniforms, just some dudes. So Americans, living in Mexico, some of those first unofficial Rangers, possibly citizens of Mexico,
some of them would become a citizen of Mexico, bringing their own guns from home,
riding their own horses, sleeping out into the stars as they battle Native Americans
and then later battle Mexicans, who had recently laid claim to Texas after winning independence
from Spain in 1821.
Previously, Spain and the US had disagreed about who actually owned Spain thanks to some ambiguous
language detailing land boundaries in the Louisiana Purchase.
Thomas Jefferson was like, I'm pretty sure the line should look this way.
And then he kind of swoop way down towards Mexico
when he was pointing at the map.
And then the Spaniards were like,
ah, nice deep more kind of like this.
And they'd sweep the line up to Oklahoma and Nebraska
or somewhere.
It's like there were two kids
trying to divide up one cookie into, quote unquote, equal hats.
Well, the US had bought approximately 828,000 square
miles of land from Napoleon's France in 1803 in Louisiana, purchase. Land Napoleon had
recently acquired from Spain in a deal made in 1799. And then again, after the deal, both
the Spaniards and the Americans thought they laid claim to the land that is now Texas.
Meanwhile, I'm sure various large Native American tribes, such as the Comanche and Cherokee, were like, fuck all you people.
Real cool how you ask holes or fighting over which one of you owns the land were still
living on.
Can you imagine that?
What is some new type of human with weapons unlike any weapons you've seen suddenly showed
up in your backyard and started fighting over your property. God damn the tribes got
the shaft. How much the Native Americans hate Europeans in 16th to 19th century during the big
transition from native control to European control? I'm sure there's a lot of hatred now still.
You know, you would live in your hunter-gatherer lifestyle, undisturbed for centuries by anyone other than
you know, other hunter-gatherers, you know, you know, just the military technology,
you know, comparatively primitive. You have the occasional bone arrow fight with other tribes.
You throw some spears, take some scouts, sucks to fight, but at least you got to fight in chance
against your enemies, against all your enemies. And then here comes some cocky white assholes on horses.
Native Americans didn't even have horses. Not until the Spanish conquisitador, Hernán Cortez introduced them to America in 1519.
They hadn't been horses in the North America
for hundreds, if not thousands of years before that.
And these assholes, they got their gunpowder boomsticks.
Native Americans didn't have gunpowder.
The biggest weapon Europeans had was invisible
to them and the Native Americans at a small box.
Tribes hadn't built up immunity over center
of his exposure and many times the battle with the tribe
was over before a single shot him in fire,
with the initial settlers.
And then these assholes, they just set up shop
in your land, don't ask permission, just do it.
Most of your family get sick, dies,
do nothing to show up and then if you get pissed
and tell them to get off your property,
they don't fucking care.
And then when you snap because they don't care
and you kill a few of them, they call
for a whole bunch of other white dudes to come and just fucking slaughter you.
Kill far more than you kill, and somehow you're the savage.
And look, I understand the world's been shaped by war since the very beginning.
One civilization conquering the next, and I'm glad European settled North America because
if they didn't I wouldn't be here.
But I still feel terrible for Native Americans.
Holy shit, they could fuck over.
No matter who was fighting who, the Spanish, the British, the French, the Mexicans, the
Americans, one group always lost, and that was the tribes.
Even when they won, they lost.
Because winning a battle here and there just meant that the nation who citizens you attacked
was going to fuck you over twice as hard as anyone you ever fucked over.
The revenge was always worse than the initial attack.
Oh my God.
But anyway, back to the rest of what life was like when the Rangers were forming in Texas.
In 1819, back to Louisiana Persuade Disagreement, Spain and the US were going back and forth
about who should control Texas.
And then in 1819, the Adams-Onees Treaty was signed with Spain, which gave, Spain gave
Florida to the US in exchange.
The US gave up its claim to Texas and let Spain have it.
Also in 1819 was the panic of 1819. The first time the new country of America, the United States, had a long,
protracted economic collapse that lasted until 1821.
And, and what because of the panic of 1819, some Americans wanted to leave the new country to create better financial opportunities for themselves.
People like Stephen F. Austin.
Stephen F. Austin moved roughly 300 American settlers into Spanish Texas in 1821, and a
deal his father Moses Austin who worked out with the Spanish governor in 1820 to settle
some of the land and manage it, but then on August 24th, 1821, Mexico achieved independence
from Spain, and basically the deal with Stephen F. Austin is null and void.
So Stephen F. Austin, I assume that's what the F stood for, traveled to Mexico City to
work out a new deal with the new government and he got it done.
He was still allowed to have his American settlers and be in Eprasario.
And then the 1820s all the way until 1836, really weird time in the history of Texas in
Mexico.
Mexico has now laid claim to the land in present day Texas.
The U.S. has ceded to Spain and they want to settle it.
But they don't have enough people.
So they encourage immigration.
So they let some American settle it as long as those Americans agree
to cultivate the land, take care of the land,
govern themselves with these emphrasarios essentially,
and become Mexican citizens and also convert to Catholicism.
I love that part.
You're welcome to settle our land and live amongst our people, but you will respect Mother
Mary.
You will respect the same thing that priesthood or you can get the fuck out.
How times have changed though, right?
In 1821, Americans were leaving America and heading to Mexico for better financial opportunities.
Sometimes you're up, sometimes you're down.
Interesting thing to keep in mind, presently, with the general state of fuck out of my country vibe,
going around many parts of the US of A.
I'm not for letting in any and all immigrants
and collapse in the entire economy.
That's just ridiculous, but no one knows what the future holds.
And someday some of us could be begging some other nation
to let us in so we can provide for our families.
We're all just trying to get by and improve our lives
at the end of the day.
So, you know, let's play nice. Let's play nice as much as possible. Anyway, Americans moving to
Mexico was Stephen Fuckin Austin, Stephen Fuckin A, but the transition isn't smooth because Mexico
is a brand new country and there is a significant amount of turmoil within its government. Mexico had
nine different leaders during the first 12 years of its existence. There was military coups, constant wars,
resignations, a lot of turnover.
But the land, these new settlers were getting,
made all this turmoil worth it.
Those initial 300 settlers got 640 acres
for each head of the family.
320 acres more if there was a wife.
160 additional acres for each child,
and 80 more acres for each slave.
That's right, a slave.
Let's talk about that for a moment.
Let's talk about that word and what it means
and collectively unpucker our buttholes before we move on.
Remember how I talked a second ago
about Native Americans always losing
during this period of history?
Well, African Americans were right there with them.
Natives and Africans fighting for the right to claim
who got the shittiest end of the shit stick.
Examining this period of history is always hard
because even the good guys had slaves,
you know, most of the time, which begs the question,
can you be a good guy and be a slave owner?
And that's a tough question,
but I think it's important to remember
that just like African Americans didn't ask
or want to be born into a period when they were enslaved, European
settlers also didn't ask to be born into a period of history when other humans were being
enslaved.
And it's also worth noting that colonial Europeans did not invent slavery.
That's rarely talked about for some reason.
Far from it, the point is rarely brought up in discussions of American slavery as if evil
European settlers just invented the entire concept. Well, slavery was not some new evil white Americans concocted
in their evil imperialistic hearts. No, African tribes have been enslaving each other for centuries,
Middle Eastern civilization had slaves, Europeans had enslaved each other in various forms numerous
times over throughout millennia. There have been slaves for hundreds and hundreds of years
was times over throughout millennia. There have been slaves for hundreds and hundreds of years
in Asian civilizations, the Romans had slaves, etc. You know, it doesn't get talked about as much but various Native American tribes from the top of Canada all the way down to the bottom of South
America also had slaves before Europeans showed up. It was in their history. Throughout history,
slavery has also been instituted along racial lines in Europe, Africa, Asia, Americas. That concept wasn't introduced by European colonists either.
And I just bring all this up to illustrate the world was just very fucking
different back then. I think it's so easy to be to look back into history and
say, well, the fuck could they do that? I would never do that. Bullshit.
You're using, you're saying that now, you know, if you were born 200 years
ago, statistically speaking, you probably would have done the same goddamn things.
Don't kid yourself under the guise of some unreasonably
noble kind of revisionist thinking.
You'd act the same way because you would think about life
and equality in the comparatively sophisticated terms
of the day, you wouldn't think about it, sorry,
in the sophisticated terms of the day.
You'd be using your early 19th century noggin
to do that thinking for you.
And that brain isn't as good in some ways or is socially
evolved as a brain you have now. Back then slavery was just a way of life. You know, when society
in mass was only beginning to question it. So who knows how future humans will judge
our current morals? I think about that. You know, why do you drive to work instead of riding
a bike? Bike is better for both you and the environment. 200 years from now, if the ozone layer is fucking shot,
maybe future humans will look back and think,
fucking assholes, they're so selfish.
They didn't care about the future,
they didn't care about future generations.
So I wanna put their lazy asses in a car.
But most of us don't think that way now,
we just fucking drive, because it's easier,
just the way things operate.
So sorry, I probably went on a little too long with that part. I just know that whenever I run into these, supposed good guys
in a period of history when those guys had slaves, I just have this, oh man, seriously,
fuck. How am I supposed to think? You're cool, George Washington, you dickhead slave-owned
and motherfucker. So I have to take a second to recalibrate my mind and remind myself
that while slavery was never ever cool, it was normal
for the time in a way we'll never be able to truly understand now.
But again, I digress.
We're heading back to Texas.
But before we get there, let's talk about staying safe.
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let's get back to the weird and personal period of Texas's US settlement history. Steven
Fuckinay Austin's compensation for service in obtaining land, duly surveyed with title,
delivered to his expense was to be at a rate of 12.5 cents an acre. A colonist could reduce
the normal grant to fit his or her, well, I just added my own
21st century brain there. I was going to say his or her resources, but the women weren't allowed in on the deal.
His resources, or with Austin's permission, augmented. Austin's permit was granted by Spanish officials.
He'd make some money bringing colonists to settle the land. The settlers get to be landowners
for working the land. The Native Americans get killed because they don't get to fuck off the land
The slaves get beat for being unlucky enough to live on that land and Mexico gets to expand the banners of its land
So everybody wins except slaves and natives
They get fucked over as they did constantly in the 19th century
but then
Tensions started to mount between Mexico's new government and the Stephen fucking a Austin crew. The government keeps changing the law regarding emphrasarios and Stephen has to keep getting
exemptions for his sellers to keep him getting kicked to fuck out of Texas.
Super annoying.
He is like, so over it you guys.
And then Mexico abolishes slavery in 1829 when Vicente Guero, a hero in Mexico's fight
for independence from Spain becomes a Mexico second president. He was half African, half a mestizo, which is a mix of Spanish and
indigenous Mexican. Look at that Mexico figure that shit out 30 years before the
U.S. The slave owning settlers are not fans of this. This was not the deal they
signed up for. They're not interested in releasing their slaves. They're very
content to remain dehumanizing racist profiteers.
Meanwhile, more settlers have been moving in to Texas from America and just squatting on
the Mexican land that Mexico doesn't have the power or the manpower to patrol.
They've just finished fighting the Spaniards and now they're in constant battles with the
Pachies and Commandchies who are attacking their settlers.
And the Mexicans aren't happy to discover that American settlers are supplying the Pachies
and Commandchies with guns to fight the Mexicans.'t happy to discover that American settlers are supplying the Apaches and Comanches with guns to fight the Mexicans.
Things are getting mullymall.
April 6, 1830.
Mexico bans any further Americans from immigrating to Mexico.
They're pissed.
Now tensions are really building between American settlers and the Mexican government.
Adding even further to this tension, Americans keep pouring into Texas illegally.
And again, the irony of talking about this now, complete Bizarre World flipped around.
Americans just pouring into Texas, you know, i.e. Mexico illegally.
And the new illegal American settlers don't give a shit about the Mexican government or
converting to Catholicism.
They start wearing t-shirts to say, fuck Mother Mary.
Mm-hmm.
The men start jerking off openly in front of priests.
Most of whom kind of into it,
the women start wearing crosses between their giant fake breasts
and they have contests to see who can give the priests,
the biggest boners, so big that they can see them poking
out of the priest's robes.
Never works because the priests are usually thinking
about dudes jerking off.
Okay, all right, all right.
I didn't take it quite that far.
That got weird. But they really don't even pretend to be right. I didn't take it quite that far.
That got weird.
But they really don't even pretend to be Catholic.
They don't care about any of the laws.
And Mexico is not happy about it.
And then after a decade of political and cultural classes, clashes between the Mexican government
and the increasingly large population of American settlers in Texas hostilities erupted violently
in October 19th or 1835.
In the early 1830s, the Mexican army
had loaned the citizens of Gonzales,
one of the first Anglo settlements in Texas
in a town of about a 7,000 people today,
a small cannon for protection against Native American rates.
But then after a Mexican soldier
bludgeoned a Gonzales resident on September 10th, 1835,
probably arguing about Mother Mary,
tensions between the government and the town grew to the point
that the government didn't feel comfortable
leaving the settlers in charge of that cannon.
And a small force about 100 men
came to take the cannon back, about 100 Mexican soldiers.
And the settlers, fearing they'd be slaughtered
if the cannon was taken, were like,
hey guys, Mucho fucked that, Mirada.
And in the early hours of October 2,
approximately 140 Anglo-Tex and volunteers attacked the
Mexican soldiers.
The skirmish was brief.
Only two Mexican soldiers were killed and one Texan wounded, but the Mexicans retreated
without their cannon.
News of this, you know, uh, victory, if you can call it that.
I guess it was on some small victory, but a victory spread throughout Texas and just
like that, a revolution has begun.
And in the middle of this new revolution, the Texas Rangers are officially born.
1835, November 24th, 1835, newly appointed Texas lawmakers fighting for independence from
Mexico institute a specific force known as the Texas Rangers.
This initial organization had a complement of 56 men and three companies, each officer
by a captain and two lieutenants,
whose immediate superior and leader had the rank of major and was subject to the commander-in-chief
of the regular army. The major was responsible for enlisting recruits and 14 rules and applying
discipline. Offers received the same pay as the United States' privates, buck 25 a day,
however they supplied their own mounts, equipment, arms, and rations. At all times, they had to be ready to ride, equipped with a good and sufficient horse,
with 100 rounds of powder and ball.
In these early days, Rangers usually joined for three to six months.
This would change to a longer period later on.
There was no uniform or flag, and there wasn't the traditional military regulation and discipline.
They didn't have time for that shit.
They were scrambling to form this new country, and they just had to get get stuff done and they had to get it done quickly. And I love that they
weren't drafted military. You know, they were just the toughest frontiers been around who were
willing to ride and die for their new little colony they were forming. And the first leader of
the Rangers, the first major was 31-year-old Robert McAlpine Williamson, a man who at the age of 15
had contracted tuberculosis
arthritis that caused his right leg to permanently stiffened at a 90 degree angle.
In order to walk a wooden leg had to be fastened to his knee because of this, he later acquired
the nickname, Three Legged Willie.
And this Three Legged son of a bitch would later receive 640 acres for participating
in the Battle of San Jacinto, a battle he fought in on horseback.
Bojangles keeps a photo of Willie above the bar and is then to gaze at for inspiration.
Not a lot of three-legged heroes out there to be inspired by.
How fucking crazy is that?
One of his legs is permanently bent at a 90 degree angle.
He cannot straighten one of his legs ever.
And he's like, you know what?
I want to fight with the Rangers.
Someone had to say something like,
oh, hey, Willie, how about you helping a different way?
That'd be cool.
Maybe you could sit at a desk and file papers
or you could sit at a desk and help plan battles.
Or you know what, what if you sat at a desk
and stayed out of everyone's way?
And he was like, fuck you, Gary.
I'm not just joining the Rangers.
I'm leaving the Rangers. I will hop upon joining the Rangers. I'm leading the Rangers.
I will hop upon my steed and I will shed Mexican blood.
And they were like, all right, all right, Willie, shit.
Jesus, calm down.
I hate it when you get that crazy look in your eye.
Craves to me to fuck out.
Fine, you can, you can lead the Rangers.
I'm putting a picture of this three-legged Willie
up at timesuppodcast.com,
along with the episode description.
So you can see I'm not bullshitting by the way.
There's even a statue of this dude. this bad ass son of a bitch in Georgetown,
Texas. It's there today. It's across McCowney Courthouse. Well, okay, February 23rd through
April 21st 1836, the Rangers joined the fight for independence, helping recover supplies
from the ruins of the Battle of the Alamo, then they joined the fight, the Battle of
San Jacinto on April 21st, where the cry cry remember the Alamo was heard, the battle that won Texas Independence from Mexico.
The earliest Texas ranger started to make a name for themselves in these early battles
of independence.
March 2, 1836, the Republic of Texas is formed and announces itself to the world as a new
North American nation.
The U.S. wants to annex Texas and make it a state and Texas is into this is well but Mexico threatens
the war with the US and the US backs off initially. So they refuse to recognize Texas as
a new nation. And Texas actually doesn't become a state until December 29th 1845. And during
this early independent period, the Texas Rangers really get going, right? Because Texas is
kind of on its own. I mean, they're allied with the US in a sense. But period, the Texas Rangers really get going, right? Because Texas is kind of on its own.
I mean, they're allied with the US in a sense, but again, the US doesn't want to, like,
really bring them into the country because they don't want to piss off Mexico yet.
And so, yeah, again, they're on their own.
They're independent.
And in this independence is when the Texas Rangers really get going.
You know, the Texas Rangers are formed to kind of protect the Texan settlers from Mexican soldiers who
refused to accept Texas's autonomy from cattle rustlers, gunslingers, hostile Native American
tribes, etc. I had no idea. Rangers really became a thing long before Texas was even part
the U.S. Well, in 1845, Texas joins the Union on December 29th, 1845. Texas is admitted to
the United States as a 28th state, being the 15th
state in the order of admission to the Union after the original 13 colonies. And Mexico is pissed.
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You will love it. All right, meanwhile, back in 1846, when
people had to travel by fucking wagons and died all the time, some way worse than airports.
Mexican general, Mariano Aristos, act on behalf of Mexican president, president, Mariano
Paredes, crosses the Rio Grande Enforced in April of 1846 to besiege the isolated Fort
Texas just across the border where Brownsville
Texas is now located in the Mexican-American War is on.
Estas en San Dito.
U.S. General Zachary Taylor is expected, is expected in the move.
And on May 1st 1846 Taylor marches most of his troops to his supply depot at Point Isabelle
on the Gulf of Mexico.
It was there the veteran U.S. general would meet an incoming naval fleet carrying supplies
needed to endure an extended siege.
General Taylor, left major Jacob Brown, the US seventh infantry, and portions of the
third artillery, some 550 men, to hold the post on the river.
And then General Zachary Taylor dispatched and expressed the settlements of Texas for
aid, and the Rangers here in respond in an incredible short space of time.
The Texas Rangers were there rescuing the Ranger Regiment of Jack Hayes and Woods were in
route as with Sam Walker and the incomparable troops of peerless Ben McCulloch.
The first Texans to reach General Taylor's Army in the Rio Grande were two independent
companies of mounted men commanded by Captain Samuel, H. Walker and John T. Price.
The former participated in the first two engagements, those of Palo Alto and Rosacca de la Palma, both
of which were fought in Texas.
The second and third regiments of mounted men were present at the capture of Monterey in
September 1846.
On September 27, 1846, seven companies of Texas Rangers commanded by Colonel Hayes and Lieutenant
Colonel Walker participated in the storming of Independence Hill, a strongly fortified
and commanding position.
It was in the war with Mexico that the mounted volunteers first clothed the name of Texas
Rangers with its traditional glory, 1847.
In April and May, 1847, another regiment of mounted Rangers commanded by Colonel John C.
Hayes was organized at San Antonio, being mustard into the service of the United States
for 12 months or the duration of the war.
It consisted of two battalions, five companies each.
The command was attached to the army under General Winfield Scott and started on the victorious
march to the city of Mexico.
Hayes men remained in Mexico until peace was declared on February 2, 1848, a peace that
the Rangers had a huge hand in giving Texas.
Later in the spring of 1848 with the war over, the Rangers are temporarily disbanded. Their duty is complete. The US Army takes over the duty of protecting
Texans from various native tribes, perpetual war with the settlers, which had
been a big portion of the Rangers' duty since their inception. But unlike the
Rangers, they don't meet the tribes on their own land. Their station and various
forts. Some of them many, many miles apart from each other and from the settlers.
And that just doesn't work.
A different level of vigilance was required to keep the settlers safe.
When a large band of natives raid and then kill various settlers across the state in the
spring of 1848, Texas governor George T. would form six new ranger companies.
Then when tribes attacked settlers near Corpus Christi in early 1849, two more ranger companies
totally in 150, are formed.
They're back in business, and their business is mostly fighting Native Americans around
this time.
The Rangers would battle Comanches and other tribes and various battles right up until the
Civil War, and then they would get right back at it after the war.
I'll get into more details as we examine the lives of individual Rangers later on.
February 1st, 1861, Texas, a siege from the Union and joined the Confederacy in the Civil War.
1873, following the Civil War, the Texas Rangers are replaced by the Texas State Police.
But then Governor Richard Koch and the State Legislature recommissioned the Rangers in 1873
after the TSP proved to be ineffective and they further divine themselves,
to find themselves as Wild West Legends. During these times many of the Rangers miss or born, such as their success in capturing
or killing Tori's criminals and desparados, including bank robber Sam Bass, gunfighter John
Wesley Hardin, their involvement in the Mason County War, their decisive role in the defeat
of the Comanche, the Kayaoah and Apache peoples.
Also during these years the Rangers suffered their only defeat in their history of any substance.
When they surrender at the Selonero Revolt in 1877,
when a citizen militia of roughly 500 Mexican sellers
overtook 25 Texas Rangers and dispute
over local natural resources.
I said, actually, said Mexican American 500 sellers.
Despite the fame of their deeds,
the conduct of the Rangers during this period
was very questionable at best.
In particular, Leander, H. McNally,
and his man to use ruthless methods
that often rivaled the brutality of their opponents,
if not exceeded that, their opponents' brutality,
such as taking part in summary executions,
executions in which a person is accused of a crime,
and immediately killed without benefit
of a full and fair trial.
They also induce confessions with use of torture and intimidation.
1909, the Rangers redeem their reputation when they were present as security in El Paso
with a summit of President William Howard Haff and Mexican President Porfirio Diaz in 1909
and present and prevent the assassination of both leaders.
Frederick Burnham, a world-renowned army scout from Britain, hired to head a security detail
for the Taft and for President Taft and C.R. Moore, a Texas Ranger, discovered a man holding a
concealed palm pistol standing at the El Paso Chamber of Commerce building along the procession route.
Burnham and Moore captured and disarmed the would be assassin within a few feet
of taft and DS. Given the lawlessness near the mextian border, it was the responsibility of the
ranger to preserve law and order any cost. Following this high point was another really low point
for the rangers. January 13, 1918, hundreds of new rangers are hired by the state with no regard
for the background due to the bandit wars
Between uh, I'm sorry. I said I give that date that date something's gonna come up in a bit between 19 and 10 and 19 15
Hundreds of new Rangers were hired by the state with no regard for their background yet because of the bandit war
On the Texas Mexican border Mexican revolutionaries and bans were attacking towns rancas and railroads in in the state needed more men to patrol their border and needed them fast.
And many of the new rangers took advantage of their new positions of power and brutalized
Mexican citizens.
And also Mexican American citizens.
On January 13, 1918, rangers slaughtered 15 Mexican men, ages 16 to 72, and poor veneer,
Texas, and inquiry by the Texas legislature revealed that Rangers were responsible for the deaths of anywhere from 300 to 500,000 people, primarily Hispanics from 1915 to 1919, very dark period of Texas Ranger history known as the La Ma,
Tanza, La Matanza, or the Massacre, when the Rangers killed La Body Mexican Americans along with La Lus Mexican Bandits.
This is where that shoot first asked questions questions later image of the Rangers comes from.
The subsequent investigation results
in the reduction of the Rangers' force
to four companies of only 17 men each.
So they're a very small group after that dark period.
And then the 1930s, the Great Depression,
forced both the federal and state governments
to cut down on personnel and the funding
of various organizations.
And the number of commissioned officers of Texas Rangers was reduced to only 45 totals, now they're
even smaller. And the only means of transportation afforded to these Rangers is free railroad passes
or using their personal horses. So they're a very bare bones operation, kind of like when they
very first officially started again. 1933, the agency is dealt a further blow when they support Governor Ross Sterling in his
re-election campaign in 1932 in Texas, but after his opponent Miriam Amanda Maugh Ferguson
wins, she proceeds to discharge all serving rangers in 1933.
So now they're kind of done.
But then, you know, they'll be back in a few years.
1934, former ranger Frank Hamers brought back into action
out of retirement for a special assignment
at the request of Colonel Lee Simmons,
head of the Texas prison system.
He is to track down and kill Bonnie and Clyde,
and he does so on May 23rd.
And then 1935, the present day,
depression, era, budget cutbacks,
created tremendous disorganization
within the Texas state law enforcement,
you know, 1933 and 1934,
and then the legislature brought back the Rangers one final time.
The Rangers were merged with a Texas Highway Patrol under a new agency called the Texas
Department of Public Safety, the DPS.
They were given an initial annual budget of 450,000, and since 1935, each Texas Ranger has
been allowed to kill one citizen.
No questions asked.
No trial, no rest, just to make things a little fucking easier.
All right, that's not true.
That's not that one part's not true about them.
You know, kill somebody.
But, you know, kind of awesome, kind of scary, if it was.
With minor rearrangements over the years, the 1935 reforms
have ruled the Texas Rangers organization
until the present day.
Highly new members, which historically in moments
have been largely a political decision,
is now achieved through a series of examinations
and merit evaluations, promotion relies on seniority,
performance is a, and performance in the line of duty.
Today, the historical importance and symbolism
of the Texas Rangers is such that they are protected now
by a statute from ever being disbanded again.
According to their own website, the Texas Ranger Division
is a major division
within the Texas Department of Public Safety
with lead criminal investigative responsibility
for the following, major incident crime investigations,
unsolved crime, slash serial crime investigations,
public corruption, public integrity investigations,
officer involved shooting investigations
and broader security operations.
The fucking big stuff.
The big stuff that goes on in Texas,
big crimes in Texas, you kill a few people, all right?
The Texas Rangers, they're gonna be fucking coming after you.
All right, they're not gonna be on horses anymore.
They got fucking cell phones, GPS,
and some shit we don't even know about.
And the Texas Ranger Division is comprised
of 222 full-time employees,
including 162 commissioned Rangers,
and 60 support personnel, including administrative
staff, border security operations center, joint operations
and intelligence centers, and the special weapons and tactics
teams.
They continue to commit brave acts of heroism
to this day.
Now let's really have some fun and examine the exploits
of some of their more famous members over the years
and hop out of this timeline.
Good job, soldier. You made it back.
Barely.
All right, now we know a little bit about the history of Texas and the formation of the Texas
Rangers. I know it's a lot of information, but you know, just wanted to give you a sense of
you kind of how they formed out of this chaotic period in Texas history.
And so now let's talk about the guys who fought within their ranks.
Tough guys, I've always been fascinated with tough guys.
Let's forget, if we can for a moment, forget about any kind of racial stuff or anything.
Just think about what it was like to be a dude who was willing to give up your life in
battle after battle, after battle.
Back in a day when there was an emergency room,
doctors, when doctors had saws,
fucking whiskey, whiskey, you know, a lot of them,
that kind of thing.
And I've just been fascinated with how tough these guys were.
Ever since I was a little kid,
I saw my dad get into a fist fight once in an intersection.
When I was about five years old,
when we had left Riggins for a few years
to live in Anchorage, Alaska,
and I'll tell you what, man,
senior dad trade blows with a couple of other dudes
in an intersection in 10s childhood experience.
Leads quite an impression on you.
Around that same time, my dad taught me
how to throw a punch, but despite my rage
that I've had since childhood,
I've never actually punched another person in the face,
in like a fight, like like a real punch. I've threatened people, I've pushed people, hit a neighbor kid in the stomach
a few times, threw a kid off my porch once in college, bounced down the stairs, you know, after
dragging him out of my house, threw a guy off stage once at a comedy show, but punching in the face
always just seemed excessive, you know. I would really have to be in fear of my safety or the
safety of someone around me to just start punching somebody in the face, and that's just, You know, I would really have to be in fear of my safety or the safety of someone around me
to just start punching somebody in the face. And that's just, you know, never happened. Knock on
wood, hopefully, doesn't, doesn't happen. I've been punched in the face numerous times in grade
school. In fact, and I remember deserving every hit. I don't remember what I said in any of the
instances, but I do remember like, I'd be riding some kid up and eventually he couldn't take it.
And he punched me in the mouth, you know, usually where he punched me somewhere around the mouth.
And then I would just kind of shrug it off and be like, yeah, now you have to serve that.
Just walk away with that feeling.
And then I just would go on with my life.
The only kid I ever really fought growing up was a neighborhood, a neighborhood a year younger
and bigger than me, this kid Paul.
One day he turned a garden hose on my sister when she was playing on the front porch, my sister Donna, she came and crying.
And I ran out and told Paul if he did it again,
I was gonna jump the fence, I was gonna beat his ass.
And well, some of the bitch did it again.
So I jumped the fence, he tried punching me in the face,
I ducked his punch, grabbed him through him on the ground,
jumped on top of him and I punched him
in the stomach several times.
And he started bawling,
we must have been around 11, 12 years old this time.
And I remember I had a clear shot at punching him
in his snivel in face.
I didn't like his face, but I still didn't punch it.
I felt I had made my point, you know?
So I let him get up and let him run into his house crying.
He's bawling his eyes out.
Before you think I'm too nice of a guy for letting him up,
I also whipped Paul in a separate incident
with a will stick about 10, 15 times on his back,
leaving giant welps after he with me one time
and didn't even give me a welp.
I guess it welps the first time,
but you know what I fucking meant, welts.
I've always been too much of a slow thinker,
I think, to be a good fighter.
It doesn't naturally, I don't make like lightning fast
decisions in intense situations.
I like to try and weigh my options,
think about consequences.
And I feel like good fighters don't generally sit around
and deliberate, you know, to take action.
Quick and decisive, I've always admired that quality.
They don't think, well, what if I hurt this guy?
Really bad, that I get an illegal trouble.
And then he's to me, and I lose my home.
Now I can't save up and buy a new home.
Because the dead's just too much.
And I'm depressed, and my home life's full stress
and sadness would please me to another divorce.
And then I'm just miserable, I'm just miserable.
I'm just, blah, blah, blah, blah.
You know, they don't fucking think that.
They just start fucking punchin'
and they deal with repercussions when the punchin's done.
I'm in awe of that, I really am.
I've always wanted to be that bold and violently impulsive.
I probably shouldn't want that, but I do.
At least you know, once or twice,
it must feel so good to have someone say or do something
unacceptable to you and then you just punch them
in their fucking face.
Drop into the ground, go about your day.
Uh, I want to tell you about two of my favorite tough guy stories before we get into the Texas
Ranger Tough Guy stories. The first one, this is kind of like, you know, what maybe you
want to do this episode, just my fast nation with these dudes. The first one is a dude, I
worked alongside of when I was in high school working for my dad in construction. His name
was Albert. And when I met him, he must have been in his late 40s, but he looked older,
mostly bald, up top,
with a gray beard.
You know, he had a thicker bill, but not really muscular.
He looked like a guy who used to be muscular,
but hadn't worked out in, you know, many years.
Kind of like a grandpa, he used to be a tough guy,
but now only looks tough when he rides as Harley, you know?
But Albert was still super fucking tough.
He was quite dude, you wouldn't think it,
he's quite dude, and he was friendly, kept himself,
and I find out from another guy's working with,
God, my dad had beat up on two separate occasions,
actually, when they were in their late teen-jowlies 20s.
That this guy, Albert, had served in Vietnam
for a few years, where apparently,
he was a member of a special forces unit.
Albert never said shit about his war exploits.
And I've noticed that generally,
the toughest guys aren't the ones
telling you how tough they are.
They don't talk about being tough,
they just do tough shit, when it needs to be done. And I never saw Albert get mad,
but apparently at a temper, especially when it came to other dudes hitting on his wife, Jesse,
who is about half a age and just gorgeous. And guys to their detriment often assumed Albert was
his wife's harmless father. And my dad told me a story about how one day, years so after
our last work with him, I'm off in college.
Albert and Jesse were in a potluck dinner in my little bar in Riggins, Idaho, my hometown.
Two four service dudes from out of town started hitting on Jesse as Albert sat in
at his dinner.
And then my dad, who was at his dinner, said that all of a sudden, he looks over to small
crowd of people who have gathered over the freshly knocked out bodies of two men laying
on the bar room floor.
And then he saw Albert sitting there calmly eating his dinner.
It all happened so fast, it took a while for everyone to process what had just happened,
except for the few people who saw it, you know, who were eyewitnesses.
What had happened is the guy said something to Jesse that Albert found unacceptable,
and he just casually stood up, faced those guys, didn't even say anything
from what I remember through two punches
and knocked out a grown man with each punch.
I didn't see this myself,
but my dad swears to me this happened.
What the fuck?
Knockin' two dudes out in epic fashion,
didn't even stop Albert from returning
to his potluck meal.
He just pop, pop, turns around,
sits back down, starts eating again.
You know, I don't know, I guess after several tours
have been a special forces, you know,
military person, Vietnam,
he just, he just become that casual violence.
That is some fucking tough guy shit, my god.
The only other man I've met who seemed to me as tough
as Albert was another middle-aged normal sized man.
I met in South Africa years ago.
When I was doing a comedy festival there,
we were down in, where I met this guy was in Johannesburg.
And just like with Albert, this guy,
this guy's name was Buzz.
And other people knew that Buzz, who at the time,
was around 50 years old, you know, about five, six,
weighed about 180 stocky,
but not full of intimidating muscles.
Other people told me that he had been
in various wars around South Africa as a chopper pilot.
And basically kind of as a mercenary was what they hinted at.
And one night a bunch of us comics buzzed several of Buzz's friends and Buzz's wife and young
adult kids were having dinner.
And Buzz's son was a huge muscular rugby player.
A lot bigger than his dad, maybe about 18, 19 years old.
And Buzz was busting his son's balls and I joke that he better watch out or his son's
gonna slap him around.
Because the son of his was a big looking dude dude and his son told me like, uh,
now, I'm not mess with my dad.
And you know, laughing, joking, but you could tell there was some like truth behind it.
Later I asked him when we're all just kind of mingling, having drinks.
I asked his son about how tough Buzz was and he tells me his story that's always stuck
with me.
He said it happened a few years before.
He said his mom and dad were heading home from church.
They're all in the car.
Him and his sister, the teenagers,
they're in the backseat.
Some dudes start flipping his dad off in traffic
in a moment of road rage.
And his dad, he doesn't like this going down
in front of his family.
He said his dad never said anything to this guy,
but then when they were parked next to each other
at a red light, the guy just kept squawking
of Senity's flying.
Doesn't like this going down in front of his wife and kids.
And he said that his dad, a buzz just just calmly unbuckled his seatbelt,
got out of the car, walked around to the man yelling at him,
and punched him in the fucking face through his open window,
and then punched him a few more times, literally beating him unconscious.
And then he drugged the guy out of his own car, tossed him over his shoulder,
walked him to the side of the road, threw his ass
off into the fucking embankment, let's him roll down, walks back to his car, sits down,
buckles his seatbelt, drives off, never speaks of it again.
Never speaks of it again, are you fucking kidding me?
His son brought that up to me and private away from his dad.
If I did that, I would tell that story every day for the rest of my life.
And again, I wasn't there, I didn't see it for a tan, but this guy seemed to really, really retellin' me the truth. Oh my god. I would be shoe-horning
that story into every conversation I could for the rest of my life. That'd be the fucking coolest
story I would have in my story bank by far, you know. I'd be always talkin' about it. Okay,
man, cool new car. Cool new car, man. Good for you. Did you buy it or lease it? Oh, you bought it?
Oh, that's a good call, man. That's a good call. Hey, you know what? That reminds me of the time.
I bought this dude a one-way ticket to knockout's a good call, man. That's a good call. Hey, you know what?
That reminds me of the time I bought this dude a one-way ticket to Knockout's Ville.
He wouldn't shut his mouth so I walked over, I punched him out, I threw him over the fucking
ditch.
Yes, I am the baddest man alive.
I'm just constantly talking about it.
Thank you so much, that stake was excellent.
We'll definitely come back here again.
No, no, I don't need to receipt.
And neither did the dude who I served for consecutive knuckle sandwiches to in the middle with Goddamn straight,
knocked him out, drug him out of his own car,
threw him the ditch.
How about that shit?
I did that.
I did, honey, tell him how I did that.
Tell our waiter how I did that, how you saw me do that.
I have like a, maybe it's just like a story
about it printed on a t-shirt and just wear it every day.
Man, buzz and Albert, those are the kind of guys who could have been Texas Rangers.
Well, here are some real ones. We got Benjamin McCulloch, 1811 to 1862. Benjamin McCulloch was one
of the first Texas Rangers to make a name for himself early on. He was born Perry Winkle von Twinkle
Toes, but he hated the way that sounded. And he made a new name for himself, Benjamin McCulloch,
way better and more fitting for a ranger.
No, but seriously, McCulloch was born on November 11th,
1811 in Rutherford County, Tennessee, in 1835.
He, along with his brother Henry and Davey Crockett,
made their way to Texas.
Two of Ben's older brothers briefly in tenant school,
taught by a close neighbor and family friend in Tennessee,
another man who would do some damage in Texas,
Sam Houston. And they knew he was setting some would do some damage in Texas, Sam Houston.
And they knew he was setting some stuff up for himself in Texas.
So following the move with his friend, Sam Houston, the founder of Sam's Club, kidding
again, Sam Houston would go on to become president of the Republic of Texas and help Texas transition
into statehood.
Well, due to the measles, Ben didn't make it to the alamo before it fell, which most likely
saved his life.
Kind of like how Milton Hershey was going to be on the Titanic, but had to leave early
because of business.
Right?
Everything about that, how close we came to never having peanut M&Ms.
The outbreak of the Mexican War, McCulloch raised a command that became Company A of Colonel
Jack Hayes' first regiment, Texas mounted volunteers, showing great skill in tracking and
scouting during the Mexican War, McCulloch earned the distinction of chief scout for General Zach Retailer's army.
At the Battle of San Jacinto,
McCulloch commanded one of the famed twin sisters.
Two little six-pound canons made in Cincinnati
and donated by Ohioans to the Texans
to aid in their fight with Mexico.
These two little canons, known as six-pounders,
were the only artillery the Texans had.
And McCulloch's use of them won from Houston
a battlefield commission as first lieutenant.
On April 21st, 1836 during the Battle of San Jacinto,
remember the Alamo, near the banks of Buffalo Bayo,
the Texas Army struck at Santa Ana's unsuspecting troops.
The twins were near the center of the Texans line
of battle in 10 yards and advanced the infantry.
Their first shots were fired at a distance of 200 yards and their fire was credited with
helping to throw the Mexican forces into confusion and significantly aiding the infantry attack
of the Texans.
During this battle the twins fired handfuls of musket balls, broken glass when that ran
out, horseshoes when that ran out.
That was the only mission the Texans had access to.
Horseshoes and broken glass started out of a cannon that is some 19th century just Texas Ranger shit right there
I can hear Ben now just throw some more social that broken glass into the cannon
We've got no more broken glass, sir. Well cut the feet off that dead horse. We're gonna we're gonna shoot those horses feet now
Horses feet, sir. Well the cannon fire them? The cannon will fire anything
I tell it to fire. My name is in periwinkle, Von Twinkle toes. I mean, Ben McCulloch. Ben
ended the war with a rank of major. And I'm sure that they fired standalone horse used
by the way, not horse used still attached to the horse's feet. I'm probably sure of that.
McCulloch also distinguished himself the Battle of Plum Creek in 1840. Now the Battle of Plum Creek was fought in the aftermath of the Council House fight,
in which many of the Comanche Warriors chiefs and their women were killed.
This is a dark period, a dark little moment for the Texas Rangers for sure.
On March 19, 1840, a delegation of Comanche chiefs met with the officials of the Republic
of Texas in San Antonio.
The meeting took place under an observed truce with the purpose of negotiating the exchange
of captives, and ultimately facilitating peace after two years of war.
The Comanche sought to obtain recognition of the boundaries of their homeland while the
Texans wanted the release of Texan and Mexican citizens held prisoner by the Comanches.
One of these prisoners was Matilda Lockhart, a 16-year-old American settler who had been captured with her sister in 1838. She claimed that her
captors had physically and sexually abused her, burned scars, coupled with a mutilation
of her nose supported these stories. She also said that 15 other captives remained in
command cheese hands, and that the tribe's leader, leaders intended to ransom these
hostages one at a time.
Well, the council ended with 12 commanding leaders shot to death
inside the council house, 23 others shot
in the streets of San Antonio
and 30 taken captive after a big guns blaze an ambush.
The incident ended any chance for peace
and let the years of further hostility and war.
Man, war was so savage on both sides, on both sides.
I mean, in this incident, yeah, the fucking Texans ambushed them.
They ambushed a peace party.
It's fucked up.
Definitely fucked up.
Also fucked up to have a fucking captive teenage girl
that's the rapin'.
A lot of people were scalped on both sides.
I didn't realize that was on both sides.
You always hear about the tribes, scalping Americans,
others.
Well, a lot of frontiers men,
fucking took the scalping as well.
And we just, you know,
skyped the scalp, uh, the Native Americans.
Uh, what's insane about the scalping,
by the way, side on that,
is sometimes scalping victims survived.
Let me tell you a horrific tale of Robert McGee.
In 1864, 13 year old Robert McGee was headed west
on the Santa Fe Trail with his parents.
They died along the way, and the boy orphaned,
continued the journey with the wagon train,
bringing supplies to New Mexico. Somewhere in the western reaches the Kansas, orphan continued the journey with the wagon train bringing supplies to New Mexico
Somewhere in the western reaches the Kansas the soldiers tasked with guarding the wagon train got delayed and the civilians were set upon by a band of
Brunel sue Indians led by their chief little turtle the drivers and teamsters of the wagon train were no match for the native warriors
And they were all tortured and killed young McGee watched helplessly as blood was shed, and then he was taken before a little turtle.
The chief decided that he would not kill the boy himself
and he put a bullet, oh, I'm sorry,
that he would kill the boy himself
and he put a bullet and McGee's back.
The boy fell to the ground, still alive and conscious,
and little turtle put two arrows through him,
penning him down.
And then the chief took out his blade
and removed 64 square inches from McGee's head.
Fuck, starting just behind his ears.
All while the boy was awake, and somehow he survived that.
When the soldiers finally caught up with the wagon train,
they found a horrible massacre with everyone scalped,
but as the soldiers picked through the bodies,
they found McGee and another boy had survived.
They were rushed to Fort Larned,
where the other boy died.
Somehow, the scalpless McGee survived the experience
and many years beyond.
There was a picture taken of him years later in 1890, so 26 years later,
when McGee told his story to a local newspaper. I'm putting that picture up on the website.
That'll be at TimesuckPodcast.com in the episode description. It's fucking horrific.
I just bring these like, you know,
bring these things up back inside where I notice
on the internet when I'm researching stuff,
especially on YouTube videos,
there's a lot of like the fucking races, pieces of shit,
you know, Texas Rangers, you know,
Killin' Native Americans who are on their own land.
Yes, you have a valid argument with that.
But then also, there was a lot of like,
like horrific violence going back the other way.
And you know, the whole world has been settled
by various people. So, you know what the whole world has been settled by various people.
So, you know what, it's just kind of the way the fucking cookie crumbles.
I know that might come across as insensitive,
but I fucking hate it when people get so bogged down and like,
well, these are fucking evil assholes.
Are they evil assholes?
They won.
They won.
They took over some more territory.
That has happened throughout, is Alexander the Great?
I guess he was an evil asshole then.
You know, I guess, you know,
Napoleon was an evil asshole.
Just anybody who's conquered anything
was an evil asshole if you want to look at it that way.
You know, like, like, there's this is weird.
Some people get so attached to like,
like, in the Native American thing, for example,
like, how dare the Europeans, like,
what fucking monsters they were to take over?
And yeah, they did, they did do a lot of fucked up stuff.
But that's, that's like the history of the world.
That shit has just always happened.
And again, it doesn't make it right.
But also, there was never like this inherent thing of like,
oh, you happen to show up here first.
There was never like a finder's keepers kind of,
you know, policy that everyone agreed to
at the beginning of human civilization.
It's like, okay, whoever gets to your place first,
you get to live there however you want forever. That's just like, this is never how the
world worked. Okay, so I'm just trying to give a complete picture here of both sides. 1849,
McCulloch joined many of a bunch of other fortune seekers who headed to California during the gold
rush. By the time the Civil War broke out, he came back because the dude apparently liked to fight
and in May 16 May 1861 became a
Brigadier General in the Confederate Army. McCulloch commanded a wing of the army as it approached
a Union force led by General Samuel Curtis in northwestern Arkansas in March 1862.
Curtis took up a defensive position around Elkorn Tavern and waited for the Confederates to attack.
On the night of March 6, McCulloch marched his troops around Curtis' right flank had
prepared for an early morning assault on March 7th.
Curtis discovered the movement and blocked McCulloch's advance.
That day, at the Battle of P Ridge, Curtis held off a furious attack by McCulloch's force.
McCulloch rode forward to monitor his men's progress and emerged from some brush directly
in front of a Union regiment, identifiable by his trademark black velvet suit.
He didn't like uniforms.
McCulloch was killed instantly by a volley from the Yankees.
His successor, General James McIntosh, was killed minutes later, and the leader's Confederates
retreated.
McCulloch's death was a turning point in the battle and the Confederates to feed and
sherd union domination of Northern Arkansas for the rest of the war.
I love that he wore a black velvet suit into battle.
I mean, it is one thing to go into battle.
I cannot imagine riding a horse into a fucking field
of constant gunfire.
I truly can't, but I think it's like another thing
even beyond that to just be like,
you know what, put on the velvet fucking suit today.
Hey, wife, get ahead of me, the black velvet suit. I'm going to put that
on before I write it to battle. That's some eccentric frontiersmanship. Okay. So let's talk
about Sam Walker, the man who escaped from Mexico and helped develop one of the, uh, baddest
guns in the history of the wild west. Samuel Hamilton Walker was born in Maryland in 1815 and
came to Texas in 1842, joining a volunteer army soon thereafter.
He participated in the ill-fated Somerville expedition in 1842 and 1843.
The Somerville expedition was a punitive expedition against Mexico in retaliation for three predatory
raids made by Mexican armies upon Texas in 1842.
And again, I say predatory raids, yeah, we were making a predatory raid right back.
Remember, just like I mentioned
earlier, that the Native Americans didn't have some inherent right to keep North America
forever, you know, we Americans have no right to keep North America forever either. And
back at this point in history, you know, the detections have no inherent claim to that
land. It's just like everybody is fucking being assholes to everybody.
Well, October 3rd, 1842, President Sam Houston ordered Alexander Somerville to organize
the militia and volunteers in invade Mexico.
It has the strength, equipment, and discipline of the army indicated a reasonable hope
of success.
Volunteers poured into San Antonio, eager to pursue the enemy in invade Mexico for glory
and plunder.
Numbering approximately 700 men, the expedition left
San Antonio on November 25th at number 683 men by time at reach Laredo, because people died a lot
back then, and then the captured Laredo on December 8th, Joseph Elb Bennett, 185 men, then return a
home on December 10th. I guess they got what they wanted. Some revealed with a little over 500 men,
captured the Mexican town of Guarro Next, But he knew without reinforcements, it was a suicide mission to continue further on in
Mexico and try and march on Mexico City.
And on December 19th, Somerville recognized the failure of his expedition and fearing disaster
if he continued, orders his men to disband and return home by the way of Gonzalez.
Well, the Texans were so disappointed with the order to disband that only 189 men and
officers obeyed. The Texans were so disappointed with the order to disband that only 189 men and officers
obeyed.
Some 308 men, including Sam Walker, one of those fucking crazy Rangers, under five captains
and commanded by William S. Fisher, continued to Mexico on the mirror expedition.
Think about that, how crazy that is.
Like 300 dudes are like, no, no, we'll fucking do it, we'll just take it.
That really is kind of part of like the Texas Ranger kind of ethos when
you look into their history. There was all these battles where it just be like very small group of
Rangers, you know, very much outnumbered and just be like, no, fuck it, we're good, we're good.
Very like kind of the Spartans almost. The exhibition set out in December 20, 40 men under Thomas
J. Green floated downstream in four vessels captured near Guarro, a small group of Texas Rangers serving as a spy company under Ben McCulloch, operated along the
West Bank of the river, the main body of men under Fisher went down the east side.
On December 22nd, the 308 Texans reached a point on the east bank of the Rio Grande
opposite me air, and McCulloch spy company was sent to reconordered the town.
They found that Mexican troops were assembling along the river, advised Fisher against crossing and abandoned the expedition
when their advice was not heated.
Thereupon, John Arbaker, sheriff of Refugeal County,
succeeded to the command of the spy company,
leaving a camp guard of 45 men,
Fisher and the remainder of his men
crossed the river on December 23rd
and entered Meir without opposition.
A requisition for supplies levied against the town,
was fulfilled by late afternoon,
but there were no means for transporting the goods to the river and the Texans had no desire to
carry the goods on their backs. When the alkylate promised to have the supplies delivered the next day
to the Texas camp, the Texans withdrew from here, taking the alkyld, alkyld, with them to
guarantee delivery of the supplies.
All day, on December 24, the Texans waited in vain for delivery of the goods.
During the morning, A.S. Holderman, who had crossed the river to look for horses, was captured
by a small detachment of Mexican Calvary.
His journal revealed to the Mexicans the size, character, and organization of the Texan
force.
On December 25, Fisher learned from a captured Mexican that General Pedro de Ampidia had
arrived at Mir and prevented delivery of the supplies.
The Texans decided to go after their rations.
On the afternoon of December 25th, Christmas Day, a camp guard of 42 men under Oliver Buckman
was posted and 261 Texans crossed the Rio Grande once more attacked Mir and fought until the
afternoon of December 26th.
Outnumbered almost 10 to 1, Mexican losses were 600 killed and 200 wounded
against 30 Texans killed and wounded.
These guys were really good at fighting,
but the Texans were hungry, they're thirsty,
their powder is almost exhausted,
their disciplines began into crack,
and Puedi adopted a suggestion of standing a white flag
to the Texans and demanding their surrender,
and the rules were successful.
The captured Texans were sentenced to execution after being captured or after a surrendering.
But on December 27th, Ampli had the execution degree to Cree reversed.
The Abelbody prisoners were marched through the river towns to Antimoros where they were
held until ordered to Mexico City and route to the capital.
They planned their escape frequently. Finally, at Solado, on February 11th, 1843, a successful break was carried out.
For seven days, the Texans headed towards the real grand, but in trying to pursue a circuitous
route through the mountains during the dry season, they became separate and lost.
So that's fucking sucks, you know?
They get away, there you go.
Mountains and they're like, ah, shit, we don't have a map, we have no idea where we are.
After extreme suffering, they surrendered in small groups,
came back to Mexican troops who were looking for them.
In the end, only three members of the expedition
actually escaped to Texas.
The 176 recapture Texans, including Sam Walker,
were returned to Salado.
Upon learning of the escape, Antonio Lopez de Santa Ana
ordered that those who had fled be executed,
but governor Francisco
Mejia of the state of Coïde de Refuse to obey the order and the foreign ministers in Mexico were
able to get the decree modified. The government then ordered that every tenth man be executed.
The 17 men who were selected for execution in what is now known as the Black Bean episode were
blindfolded and shot. And this is how they decided who died.
That a jar of beans, and in this jar of brown beans, there were 17 Black beans.
And if you pick one of the Black beans, you got shot.
Oh man, I wonder if any of the guys who survived could handle beans after that.
I wonder if Black beans would be a trigger for you after that experience.
Would you like Pinto, Refried, or Black Beans on your Brito today?
I'll kill you! I'll kill you. You say Black
Bean again. I'll fucking kill you. Say it again. So Pinto or
Refried then? I don't care. It was three fried green beans.
Okay. Just as long as it's not Black Beans, you just son of a bitch.
During the months of June, July and August, 1843, the Texans who
didn't draw Black Bean did road work near Mexico City.
In September, they were transferred to the Perote prison where Antonio Prisoners, whom they had set out to liberate were being held.
A few of the mere men escaped, while stationed at the vicinity of Mexico City, others tunneled out
of Prote and succeeded in reaching home. A few of the wounded who had left the mere recovered,
bribed the guard, and they escaped. Many of the men died in captivity from wounds, disease,
and starvation. From time to time, a few of the prisoners would be released at the request of certain officials
in the U.S. and others at the request of foreign governments. The last of the mere men were released
by Santa Ana on September 16, 1844. All in all, Sam Walker, before he escaped, spent two years
as part of that captivity. And then Walker, Texas Ranger, not Chuck Norris, joined the Texas
Rangers, basically as soon as you got back
in 1844 and fell under the command of Captain John
Coffee Hays.
As soon as I promoted to Captain himself,
he let a Ranger company during the Mexican-American War
serving with General, Zach retailer, and General
Winfield, Scott's armies.
God, he's been wasting time.
That's always crazy too.
He could have came back and be like,
you know what, I'm gonna falcon farm,
I'm gonna have a nice little plot of land, I'm gonna calm, I'm gonna calm the fuck down. I'm gonna enjoy my life. But he's like, no, stuff's always crazy too. Like he could have came back and be like, you know what, I'm gonna falcon farm. I'm gonna have a nice little plot of land.
I'm gonna calm, I'm gonna calm the fuck down.
I'm gonna enjoy my life.
But he's like, no, let's get right back there and fight.
I just, they've held me for two years
and I wanna kill everyone who helped me.
Well, this guy, Walker Texas Ranger, not Chuck Norris.
I also had time right before he went back to fighting
to take a trip to New York City,
meet with gunmaker Sam Colt and create a new weapon based on the then popular five shot Colt Patterson revolver.
With many enhancements such as adding a six round and making it powerful enough to kill either a man or a horse with a single shot and making it quicker to reload.
The Colt Walker revolver would become one of the most feared, if not the most feared, handgun of the 19th century.
In striking power, it rivaled army muskets and even rifles at 100 yards as a pistol,
that's insane.
Up until this time, a lot of Rangers
used single shot revolvers.
And so, you know, Walker wasn't having that.
And this was a huge upgrade on that.
He wanted to be able to shoot six times
without having to stop to reload
and he wanted to be able to shoot fucking six horses
in a row if he needed to, I guess.
After arriving with his new company at Bear Cruise Mexico,
Walker was detailed on May 27,
1847 to the first Pennsylvania volunteers stationed at Castle San Carlos de Perote
to counter Mexican real activities between Perote and Yalapa.
On October 5, 1847, Walker left Perote with General Joseph P. Lane to escort a supply train
to Mexico City, according to JJ Osmwell, Oswondle, author of notes on the Mexican War
who wrote about the incident,
Walker grew increasingly embittered against the enemy.
Should Kasson Walker come across guerrillas,
God helped him for he seldom brings in prisoners.
The Captain and most, all of his men are very prejudiced
and embittered against every guerrilla in the country.
So apparently, his time as a prisoner of war
left him very angry,
inspired him to build a bigger gun,
and just made him, gave him an insatiable bloodlust
to just to fucking kill Mexican soldiers, I guess.
Well, in route to Mexico City,
Lane was informed of a sizable enemy force
at Womantla and ordered an attack.
With Walker's mounted rifles in the lead,
the assault force reached Womantla on October 9th
during the spirited contest that followed Walker
was either shot in the back or killed by a man on foot carrying a lance, dead at 30.
Following his death, his unit took revenge on the community of Omanjala, and Walker was
buried at Haseyenda, Tamaris.
In 1848, his remains were moved to San Antonio on April 21, 1856 as part of the Battle of San
Wasinto celebration.
He was re-barried in the odd fellow cemetery in San Antonio. Now let's
get ahead a bit into the late 1800s. Talk about John Harris Rodgers. John Harris Rodgers
captain in the Texas Rangers was born in Guadalupe County, Texas on October 19th 1863.
Join the Rangers in 1882 served as a sergeant under captain John A. Brooks, became a captain
himself in 1892. Rodgers was a modest and soft-spoken man with a stocky build and mustache.
He was wounded in a shootout with a Conor gang and the Pinyne Woods of East Texas at Laredo
where he was enforcing a quarantine regulation during the smallpox epidemic.
As a result of his wound in Laredo, his arm was shortened after which he used a specially
constructed Winchester rifle.
And he just kept on rangering.
Unbelievable. Like, yeah, fuck it, I got a smaller arm now.
Whatever, I can still pull the trigger, give me a gun.
As a head of a ranger company in the field,
Captain Rogers had to investigate crimes
and administrative tasks from recruiting and firing personnel
to organizing scouting parties
or filing detailed reports with his superiors in Austin.
And the rangers had transitioned from a paramilitary group
to the premier law enforcement agency around this time.
Rangers tracked a noted gunfighter John Wesley Hardin killer of almost 30 men
DeFlorida captured him in
1877 all right just before you know John Rogers time
Texas Ranger George herald tracked down and killed notorious bank and train robber Stan Bass in 1878 and round rock Texas
And many fugitively brought to justice as a century wound to a close under the guidance of Rangers like John Rogers
Yeah, the definitely like the last you know
30 40 years of the Rangers in 19th century
They definitely made that transition from kind of paramilitary to law enforcement in 1913
President Woodrow Wilson appointed John Rogers United States Marshal for the Western District of Texas. He held his position for eight years,
and then he served once again as a Ranger Captain from 1927 until he died in 1930 at the age of 67.
And then there's Frank Hamer from the Bonnie and Clyde episode. But before we check in with Frank,
let's find out what various geniuses have been saying about Rangers on the internet, was my new favorite segment, Idiots of the internet.
Idiots of the internet.
Holy racial anger, my god.
Read the comments on some YouTube Ranger videos and you get a lot of people who really hate
the Rangers.
For the atrocities they committed against the Mexican people and Native Americans and you get a lot of people who were just very racist against Mexicans and Native Americans
kind of coming back the other way. Yeah, a lot of craziness underneath these videos. And again,
the Rangers did commit atrocities, but again, also atrocities were committed on both sides.
So I'm going to try and skip over most of the racial back and forth
in today's segment, so much racial stuff on YouTube.
Clearly a hot topic in many people's minds.
I'll be honest, I don't actually think about it that much.
You know, I teach my kids to judge people on their character
and that race, gender, sexual orientation don't matter.
And I just try and focus on pushing things forward
where we don't even think until, you know,
we get to a place where we don't even think about it.
I try not to think about it, but again,
I'm also white and I'm living in Idaho.
So let's be fucking honest.
I can choose not to deal with it
because it's not my face.
I'm lucky enough not to encounter racism
and not to be the victim of racism.
And I wish no one had to be the victim
and no one had to deal with it.
Such a waste of energy to hate based on pigment.
So much nonsense.
Anywho, anywho, after reading a preposterous
amount of back and forth racism,
I decided to leave YouTube for a second.
I'll come back to it here at the end.
And head over to Amazon to see what people were saying in the book review section of some
Texas Ranger literature.
Well, Philip G. Coughfield gave Stephen L. Moore's book, Texas Rising,
the epic true story of the Lone Star Republic and the rise of the Texas Rangers, 1836 to 1846,
one star because he was quote, not looking for the book.
Thought I was getting the movie.
Oh, Phil.
You're giving a book.
You clearly didn't read one star because you wanted the movie, even though there couldn't
be more clues that you were looking at the book, like the option to buy an either hardcover
or kindle edition.
You fucking moron.
Remember the last hardcover movie you watched?
It's not the book's fault.
You're too stupid to buy things online.
I get being annoyed, we all make mistakes, but then giving the book a one-star review
after you know that you made the mistake.
Give yourself one star.
You fucking idiot.
You're the one who messed up.
Another Amazon user, David Sherman, seemed to take a page at a Phillips playbook.
He gave 12 years in the saddle for law and order
on the frontiers of Texas.
A book written by Sergeant William John L. Sullivan,
one star, saying, tried to download it.
Never could find it.
Probably a fault of my computer and not Amazon.
Probably my fault.
So he does think, you know, it's apparently probably a guy
who messes up a lot of this kind of stuff.
He's like, you know, I messed up.
But, uh, damn, I'm still gonna go lower the rating
of someone else's artistic work
to needlessly hurt their future sales
because that's kind of person I am.
God, there's a lot of fucking terrible people on the internet.
And then Mark Thompson, when I went back to YouTube,
after looking at a few Amazon things,
he made a rookie move on YouTube
where he asked for other commentators
to clean up their act on a YouTube video regarding the history of the Alamo.
My Thompson five months ago said 90% of the comments here have nothing to do with
a clip. Instead, it's a bunch of drunks, idiots, and drunken idiots spouting
insults and making a mockery of the Alamo and those glorious heroes who fell
there. Please respect them and remember the Alamo appropriately.
Oh, Mark, what are you fucking thinking?
No one responds to this kind of stuff on the web.
No one's like, you know what, he's right guys.
He's right.
That's only leave nice comments.
I guess Mark was tired of comments like,
forget the Alamo by Aldous Huxley,
or Yankee savages.
Doc, Doc, Doc, Doc, 9-11, Doc, Doc, Doc,
Jews, Doc, Doc, Doc dot new world order by Peter O
I don't even I don't even know what that's about
Maybe you're getting to take a comments by by people like Joseph Glasner who's who said
I know why too much know about the alamo
Again, no idea what that's about. But, you know, of course, Mark's please
follow in the deaf ears of the trolls because one of the very next comments,
after he leaves his comments, from Caesar Sanchez says,
Fuck all you putos! Texas belongs to Mexico and Mexicans made Texans.
Fucking out. Sorry, Mark, you appealed the reason, but the comment section of the
internet knows no reason for it is populated largely by idiots of the internet.
Okay, back to a little more ranger before we get out of here. We got Frank Hamer, Francis Augustus Hamer, born March 17, 1884 in Fairview, Texas, Wilson County,
in 1894 he worked in his father's blacksmith shop where he developed the nickname Frank
the fucking Hamer Hamer.
Now he didn't have that nickname but he should have, how did he not?
Last name's Hamer and he worked in the blacksmith shop.
After Frank Hamer helped capture a horse thief on the ranch where he began to work after
working for his dad's black miss shop.
Locke was sheriff recommended him to the Texas Rangers and he joined in eight, excuse me,
joined in 1906, became part of a company that patrolled the South Texas border.
Then left the Rangers periodically over the years to take different law enforcement jobs.
He served as the city marshal of Navasota, Texas as a special officer for the city of Houston, Texas and as a federal pro-ohibition officer here and there.
In the 1920s, Hammer was a key figure in preserving law and order in the Texas oil boom towns.
He ended up getting over 50 gun fights. That's a lot of gun fighting.
He was an expert with the gun practice long range handgun shooting because he said a man don't know when he might have to shoot at a distance and not have a rifle ready.
Favorite handgun was a single action cult 45
that he called old Lucky.
Seen graved four, three quarter inch barrel blue revolver,
revolver with carved pearl stocks, beautiful.
Throughout his life, he was a private man
with not discussed gun fights and refused to say
how many men he killed.
Just like Albert and Buds, he's one of those guys.
One of those guys could have been Frank Hamer.
He dealt with arms smugglers, bootleggers, bandits
throughout the area, throughout his career.
By 1922, he would become a senior ranger captain in Austin.
1920, 80 took on the Texas Bankers Association reward ring.
Hamer charts that some people were framing others
and also tracking down and killing small time outlaws
to collect the bankers' $5,000 reward for every dead bank robber.
Once the scam was made public, the bankers' association changed their policy to reward
for every legally killed bank robber.
That's probably a good call.
He retired over the whole Moff Ferguson political fiasco of 1933, but came out of retirement
in 1934.
As you know, if you've listened to the episode to take on a job as a special investigator
to track down Bonnie and Clyde, which he does track down and then he does kill them.
During the 1930s, Hammer worked for various oil companies
and shippers helping prevent strikes
and breaking up moms.
He was called again to Ranger Duty in 1948
by Governor Koch Stevenson to help check election returns
and Jim Wells and DeVolk County in the US Senate race
and check this shit out.
In 1939, he and 49 other retired Texas Rangers
offered their services to King George VI
to help protect the United Kingdom
in case of Nazi invasion.
He's 54 years old at this point,
and he's just like, you know what,
you want the Nazi stopped?
You want the stop?
We'll just bring 50 of us former Rangers,
50 of us middle-aged former Rangers over to Europe.
We'll fix that shit right now.
And that is doing stuff like that is why it was often said
that Frank had trouble walking because his balls were so big.
No one said that.
By the time this guy retired for good in 1949,
he'd been wounded 17 times and left for dead four times.
Again, can't imagine being that guy.
Can't imagine sitting on a recliner,
thinking about reflecting on all the times you were shot.
Oh, and I could go on and on about these tough guys.
I know I've gone on a while already.
We could tell hundreds of hours of tales about their battles.
Were they good guys?
Were they bad guys?
Are they both somewhere good, somewhere bad?
A lot were in the middle.
I think they were mostly good by far, and they were definitely brave.
That's a weird logic fallacy we get into sometimes with these historical figures.
We can say like, this person was this and that, these bad characteristics.
So they couldn't have had a positive attribute like bravery.
No, you could be like a brave racist, for example.
That's possible, you know?
You could fucking throw yourself out into battle with a lot of bravery
and still be like, fuck Mexicans.
Those two things aren't mutually exclusive,
you know, doesn't make being racist good at all,
but it doesn't make you less brave if you have the bravery.
Two separate things.
And yeah, did sometimes you know, did they mask innocent people? Yeah, they did. good at all, but it doesn't make you less brave if you have the bravery. Two separate things.
And yeah, did sometimes, you know,
did they mask innocent people?
Yeah, they did, but they also saved a lot of lives too.
A lot of saved protected innocent settlers
who were just trying to farm and get on with their lives.
You know, I think violence was just a product of that era.
It was really a killer, be killed time.
It's crazy to me how they came out of the beginnings of Texas
when Texans didn't have any consistent
protection from any government.
There's settlements of Americans who chose to live on Native American soil, whether
they're being attacked by various tribes.
There's constant tension between Spanish settlers, American settlers, Mexican government.
The settlers recruited the toughest men they could find to protect them.
And those men formed the core of what would become the Texas Rangers.
A bad-ass group of frontiers, men who play a large part in breaking Texas away from Mexico and leading it to become part of America. Pretty intense
history, man. Can't imagine being out there on those trails riding a horse and just shooting
and being shot at for your career. I hope you enjoy these tales. I hope you made you think
about what it must have been like to live during those times of turmoil. There's plenty
we can complain about today, but we've got it real good compared to the days
of yesterday year.
I can't imagine marching up against
command cheese or Apache,
so the Mexican army and horseback
with that rifle in my hand, pistol in my hip.
Hoping my aim is a little better than my enemy's aim.
Hoping I don't get caught by a stray bullet
I never saw coming, catch an arrow,
wake up to the beginnings of being scalped,
crazy fucking times.
Love reading about it in my nice air condition home and a quaint
neighborhood in Cordillin, Idaho, where my biggest problem at the moment is having to make
a bunch of calls later today to my bank and some other places and knowing that I'm going
to be put on hold. It's going to be super annoying, but I prefer being put on hold to being
shot at very much so. So hope you are enjoying your 21st century comfort as well. Now let's hit the old days one more
time with some top five takeaways.
Number one, the first leader of the official Rangers was 31-year-old major Robert McAlpen
Williamson, a man whose leg was permanently bent into a 90 degree angle in order to walk
a wooden leg had to be fastened to his knee, which led to the nickname three-legged Willie, and he still fought in battle.
All right, number two.
In the early 19th century, the Mexicans and Texans battled over land.
The Native Americans still considered their own.
Not long after the French, Spanish and Americans were also dividing up the land.
The tribe still thought was theirs.
And you thought your neighbor sucked.
At least they're not kicking your door in and fighting over which one of them gets to
take your shit.
Number three, Sam Walker.
The original Walker Texas Ranger joined the Rangers to fight Mexico immediately after escaping
two years of captivity in Mexico.
And right away, he had a bigger gun designed to shoot Mexicans with.
And then he died in a battle against Mexicans when one of them shot him a few months later.
What a good reminder that sometimes
when it comes to grudges,
it's best just to kind of let it go.
Number four, Texas was once an independent nation
after winning its independence from Mexico.
They even had their own embassy in London.
There was once a French embassy in Austin.
It's one of only three states
to have once been an independent nation
along with Hawaii and Vermont.
That's right, Vermont.
Seriously, the Republic of Vermont existed
from 1777 to 1791, had their own currency,
their own post office system.
Look it up.
And number five, new info, again, more new info.
The Rangers, though I didn't talk about their recent exploits,
are still kicking ass today.
In 1997, Texas Rangers commanded by Captain Barry Cava,
conducted successful
hostage negotiations with the Republic of Texas, a militant political organization that
claimed that Texas is still an independent nation. Texas Rangers are able to secure the
release of all hostages and negotiate this surrender of most of those involved. Then in 2010,
Texas Governor, then Texas Governor Rick Perry inducted Chuck Norris, Walker Texas Ranger, into the real Texas Rangers as an honorary member of the Rangers just as no tradamus once predicted.
Time suck, tough five takeaway.
Well, thanks, suck heads, for listening to some Texas size tales of heroism this week. Hope that wasn't too much info. And so much to cover, I kept going over it, going over it,
couldn't have got through it without Sir Lilly helping to research that one.
A lot of information.
So thanks again to her as her being the intern and member of the Bojangles research team.
If you want to check out some of my standup, I'll be the laughing school lounge in Atlanta.
July 27th to 30th, I'll be at the Tampa improv August 3 through the 6th
More dates at Dan Cummins.tv or you can just go and link to the tour dates at time suck podcast.com
Be sure to follow time suck on social media. It's back in business
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And you can spread the suck by sharing that Friday audio preview, giving people a little
bit of taste, little taste of the suck.
Next week we're sucking on the king.
Martin Luther King, Jr. is getting sucked.
Martin Luther King, Jr.
He of the I have a dream speech was an American Baptist minister
and activist who became the most visible spokesperson
and leader of the civil rights movement of the 1960s.
He led the 1955 Montgomery bus boycott,
helped to organize 1963 March on Washington
where he delivered his famous, I have a dream speech.
On October 14th, 1964,
King received a Nobel Peace Prize for combating racial inequality through non-violent resistance.
In 1965, he helped to organize the Selma to Montgomery marches.
He opposed the Vietnam War.
Alienating, many of his liberal allies with a 1967 speech titled Beyond Vietnam,
he also seemed to take a page at a JFK's book when it came to marriage fidelity.
He was a complex man. In a 1968, King was planning a national occupation in Washington, D.C. to be called the Poor People's
Campaign when he was assassinated by James Earl Ray on April 4th in Memphis, Tennessee.
And just like with JFK, there are many conspiracies about who really killed him, why he was really
killed, etc. Did James Earl Ray do it to someone else, more conspiracy fun coming down the
pipeline? Such a fascinating, important life can't wait to suck on it
So look forward to MLK keeps reddening suck
Thanks for picking up those sweet bow jangles teas made out of 213% important quality anus treated with gerbosaliva
I'll be replenishing the missing sizes of the first two teas very soon
Hit me up if you're an app developer and keep on sucking.