The importance of religion for Morse became apparent eight years later, on May 24, 1844, when he telegraphed the first Morse code message from Washington to Baltimore: What hath God wrought or “What God hath forged.” He referred to the Protestant god Morse. He was one of the leading leaders of the American Catholic and anti-immigrant movement in the middle of the 19th century and stood in the New York elections with Nativist Party or native party.
When referring to the natives, he did not refer to the inhabitants of North America, he referred to himself and his peers, to the heirs of the European immigrants who abandoned and massacred the true natives and, more specifically, the heirs of the Protestant immigrants. Their aim was to unite the Protestants against the Catholic institutions. Among his proposals was the ban on Catholics holding public office and the amendment of immigration laws to reduce the number of immigrants.
And when I was talking about immigrants, I wasn't talking about slaves. “Slavery is not sinned in itself,” he wrote, “it is a social, disciplined and benign condition that God has promised with good sense from the beginning of the world.” Morally, to be a slave owner was equivalent to being “parents, employers or leaders.”
The inventions that revolutionized the communications world that Samuel Mors was going to achieve with success and recognition, mainly thanks to the code and telegraph that bears his name. In addition to the Morse code, a lunar crater, an asteroid and an Argentine municipality are now called.
But, above all for the happiness of Catholics, immigrants and slaves, it did not achieve such a success in politics and its name did not enter the list of mayors of New York, where it obtained 1,496 votes in a city of about 300,000 inhabitants.
Tijarafe (Canary Islands), mid-14th century. When the first Catholic monks came to the area of the island of La Palma, the Awares, the local Aborigines, saw that they worshipped the sun, the moon and the stars.
And this has been confirmed by the archaeological campaigns carried... [+]
Paris 1845. The Labortan economist and politician Frédéric Bastiat (1801-1850) wrote the satire Pétition des fabricants de chandelles (The Request of the Sailing). Fiercely opposed to protectionism, he ironistically stated that the sailing boats asked for protection against... [+]
Auzoan Bizi Etxebizitza Sareak salatu du Berakah programa beste bi familia etxegabetzen saiatzen ari dela, iaz beste familia batekin egin zuen bezala. Dagoeneko salatutako hauetaz gain, Berakahko kasu gehiago ari dira heltzen etxebizitza sarera. Berakah programa Santa... [+]
The doubt among the teachers arose when Ramadana was about to finish: some Muslim family students had pointed out that, due to the celebration of the end of Ramadan, they did not go to the room. With this action – one teacher said – it is clear, at least that day, that... [+]