May 11, 2005

In Memoriam

Bob.jpg
1981- It was a day the Great Leader will remember forever.

Right after school classes, Our hero was walking toward the
bus stop when he heard the news. His scholmates were in tears.
When he got home he found his sisters in tears, in a sunny day.

Bob Marley will be remembered as a Great Leader of a Cultural
Movement, a voice of Freedom and a spiritual beacon.

Posted by Santino at 03:27 PM

Transparent Leaderonia

The Poetry Czar has dedicated this poem to Our Great Leader

We will die in transparent Leaderonia,
Where the Great Leader rules over us.
With each breath we taste death?s air,
Each hour celebrates our death.
Harsh Athena, goddess of the sea,
Cast off your helmet of stone.
We will die in transparent Leaderonia
Where the Great Ruler reigns, not you.

Posted by Santino at 03:11 PM

May 10, 2005

Intellectual Property

Today the GL is studying the Intellectual Property Meaning.

Posted by Santino at 03:35 PM

May 05, 2005

He was 3 years old...

...when the Great Emperor died in exile, but this little boy would
become 30 years the author of a new thinking that will inspire
our Great Leader into the Modern World and the Freedomization
of the World.

Karl-Marx.jpg

Karl Marx was born today in 1818, in Germany.

Posted by Santino at 03:52 PM

In Memoriam

tombeau.jpg

Today marks the 184th year of the death of the Graet Leader's
greatest inspiration, and ancestor, as the GL's Grand Father
George claimed and convinced him of the validity of the claim.
Napoleon Bonaparte died on the island of Saint Helene
in 1821, prisoner of the British Empire and its lack of vision.
May 5th always has been a day of mourning for the Great Leader,
and this year is no difference, however he will not attend the Mass
in memory of the death of Emperor Napoleon I and the soldiers
of the Grande Armée at the church of Saint-Louis des Invalides,
Paris, he invites the People of Leaderonia to visit this precious
collection of documents, Napoleon.org.

Le 5 mai 1821 Napoléon Ier s'éteint dans l'île de Sainte-Hélène où il était exilé depuis 1815. Il est inhumé aux abords d'une source, à l'ombre de quelques saules pleureurs, dans la "vallée du Géranium". Sa dépouille mortelle y demeure jusqu'au 15 octobre 1840. C'est en 1840 que fut décidé par le roi Louis-Philippe le transfert du corps de l'Empereur. Des marins français, placés sous le commandement du prince de Joinville, ramènent son cercueil en France à bord du navire la "Belle Poule".
Des funérailles nationales accompagnent le retour des cendres de l'Empereur Napoléon Ier, transférées aux Invalides le 15 décembre 1840 en attendant l'édification du tombeau. Celui-ci est commandé en 1842 par le roi Louis-Philippe à l'architecte Visconti (1791-1853), qui fait réaliser sous le Dôme d'importantes transformations en perçant une immense excavation pour accueillir le tombeau. Le corps de l'Empereur Napoléon Ier, y est déposé le 2 avril 1861.
Le tombeau, façonné dans des blocs de porphyre rouge de Russie, placé sur un socle de granit vert des Vosges, est cerné d'une couronne de lauriers et d'inscriptions rappelant les grandes victoires de l'Empire. Dans la galerie circulaire, une suite de bas-reliefs sculptés par Simart figurent les principales actions du règne. Au fond de la crypte, au-dessus de la dalle sous laquelle repose le Roi de Rome, est érigée une statue de l'Empereur portant les emblèmes impériaux.
 
L'Eglise du Dôme abrite aussi les sépultures de deux des frères de Napoléon, Jérôme et Joseph Bonaparte, de son fils, l'Aiglon, ainsi que celles, plus récentes, des maréchaux Foch et Lyautey. Le musée de l'Armée est responsable de ces espaces.

Posted by Santino at 03:25 PM

May 01, 2005

8 Hour Work Day

LEADERONIA- Today our Great Leader is on the way to Chicago, Il.
This city in the middle of the United States, was the center of
the great worker struggle that took place in 1886.

haymarket.jpg

In 1884 the Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions
demanded an eight-hour workday in the United States, to come
in effect as of May 1, 1886. This resulted in the general strike
and the U.S. Haymarket Riot of 1886, but eventually also in the
official sanction of the eight-hour workday.
[from Wiki]

Read more on the Haymarket Tragedy

Posted by Santino at 04:55 PM | Comments (1)