Friday, March 20, 2026

DR. M.F. KHAN: Though his ride did not count in the official standings, his achievement captured national attention and turned him into a folk hero in Sweden.

In 1951, a 66 year old Swedish farmer named Gustaf Håkansson decided he wanted to compete in Sweden’s toughest cycling race, the Sverigeloppet, a grueling 1,764 kilometer event that stretched across the country. Race organizers refused to let him join. They believed he was simply too old to handle the physical demands of such an exhausting competition. But Håkansson had no intention of turning back. Instead of giving up, he lined up anyway and rode the entire route unofficially. While the official racers stopped to rest and sleep along the way, Håkansson kept pedaling. He rode through the night with a small headlamp on his bicycle, often cycling for days with barely any sleep. His determination quickly turned him into a sensation among spectators, who began calling him “Stålfarfar,” meaning “Steel Grandpa.”

By the time the race ended, something remarkable had happened. The man who had been rejected for being too old had reached the finish line ahead of every single official competitor. Though his ride did not count in the official standings, his achievement captured national attention and turned him into a folk hero in Sweden. What began as a refusal ended as one of the most memorable endurance stories in cycling history. 

STEVE SAILER: Did Stalin ever unperson any Old Bolshevik like Bukharin or Trotsky faster than the American center-left establishment is unpersonning Cesar Chavez this week?

TOM LUONGO on CHUCK NORRIS: Dedication personified

Even Jean Claude Van Damme said he'd never fight Chuck Norris, despite being a kickboxing world champion himself. --Time Capsule Tales


Chuck Norris held a 183-10-2 record and was a 6x world champion in full contact bare-knuckle karate. On top of that, he beat heavyweight kickboxing world champion Joe Lewis 3 consecutive times and also had a brutal sparring match with undefeated kickboxing world champion, Bill Superfoot Wallace, that lasted an hour and a half. According to Wallace, they practically stalemated and "beat the crap out of each other". Chuck was trained in kickboxing/boxing by Benny "The Jet" Urquidez and was also trained in BJJ by the Gracies and Machados for 20 years. Even being able to submit Carlos Machado himself on occasion. Chuck had a 315 Ibs bench press at 180 lbs bodyweight and was said to have a grip back in the day that nobody could escape from because he was so strong. Even Jean Claude Van Damme said he'd never fight Chuck Norris, despite being a kickboxing world champion himself. Chuck held a 10th degree black belt in Chun Kuk Do, a 9th degree black belt in Tang Soo Do, an 8th degree black belt in Taekwondo, a 5th degree black belt in Karate, a 3rd degree black belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and a black belt in Judo.

Rest in peace, Chuck! 

USAFACTS: Nonmedical exemptions increased in all but three states in the last decade.

"More Kids Are Getting Vaccine Exemptions.  Here's Where," USAFacts Team, Health, September 3, 2025.

LEE KUAN YEW: Five decades ago, London was a grimy, sooty, bomb-scarred city with less food, fewer cars, and deprived of the conveniences of the consumer society. But the people were homogeneous, white Christians, admirable, self-confident, courteous.

Five decades ago, London was a grimy, sooty, bomb-scarred city with less food, fewer cars, and deprived of the conveniences of the consumer society.  But the people were homogeneous, white Christians, admirable, self-confident, courteous. From that well mannered Britain to the ________ football Hooligans of the 1990s took only 40 years.  I learned that civilized living does not come about naturally.  There have been other significant changes.  Britain is now multiracial, multilingual, multi-religious.  Churches are nearly empty on Sundays with many deconsecrated and converted into places of entertainment, while some 500 mosques are filled to  capacity on Fridays, the Muslim Sabbath, and so also are many Hindu temples and places of worship of other religions.  Well, part of the future . . .