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Jon Turk is an adventurer and historian who is presenting the next Cartography Comes Alive on May 15th. The KGVO Book Club with Michael and Mehrdad was "For Cause and Comrades: Why Men Fought in the Civil War".
There's nothing worse than being fired. Unless it's because you're "too sexy."
Two most noble arts for a man: war and husbandry (war and women) (soldiers/arms and residents/laborers) Achilles gave up the latter to pursue the former Odysseus gave up the former to pursue the latter Husband and Wife: Patriarchal Partnership Husband leads, earns, produces, commands, oversees Wife spends, provides, adorns, manages (Proverbs 31 exemplifies this. Feminists take it wrongly; she was managing what her husband acquired. cf.: Ruth gained status as the wife of Boaz.) Books referenced: Xenophon's Economics Homer's Odyssey and Iliad Apollonius' Voyage of the Argo The Goodman of Paris Tolstoy's Anna Karenina James M. McPherson's For Cause and Comrades Rebekah Merkle's Eve In Exile C.R. Wiley's The Household and the War for the Cosmos Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/arspolitica Checkout Thomas' new book: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08SH1CD7C/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o06_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
The ROADMAP: 1) 6:20— James Harden Blockbuster! Harden, Durant, and Kyrie are now together on the Brooklyn Nets but signs point to a possible circumvention of the NBA’s prohibition on tampering. 2) 19:38 — Tennessee Volunteers. Head Football Coach Jeremy Pruitt is fired as FOR CAUSE just four months after receiving a massive contract extension from the school. Lawyers are now circling. What happened? We break down the contract and the new “McDonald’s bags full of money” allegations. 3) 32:47 — The Mets GM Jared Porter lasted all but 37 days in office before he was undone by a sexting scandal. We break down the role of ESPN and journalistic ethics in sitting on a bombshell story and seemingly letting it brew for years. 4) 52:00 — What To Watch For: Tiger Woods Documentary, Cleveland Indians Arena Name, Yankees Negotiation Tactics. *** Have a question or something you want us to cover next episode? Drop us a DM on Instagram or Twitter: Dan Wallach (@WallachLegal) Dan Lust (@SportsLawLust) Mike Lawson (@Mike_sonof_Law) Tarun Sharma (@TKSharmaLaw) The Show (@ConDetrimental)
The ROADMAP: 1) 6:20— James Harden Blockbuster! Harden, Durant, and Kyrie are now together on the Brooklyn Nets but signs point to a possible circumvention of the NBA's prohibition on tampering. 2) 19:38 — Tennessee Volunteers. Head Football Coach Jeremy Pruitt is fired as FOR CAUSE just four months after receiving a massive contract extension from the school. Lawyers are now circling. What happened? We break down the contract and the new “McDonald's bags full of money” allegations. 3) 32:47 — The Mets GM Jared Porter lasted all but 37 days in office before he was undone by a sexting scandal. We break down the role of ESPN and journalistic ethics in sitting on a bombshell story and seemingly letting it brew for years. 4) 52:00 — What To Watch For: Tiger Woods Documentary, Cleveland Indians Arena Name, Yankees Negotiation Tactics. *** Have a question or something you want us to cover next episode? Drop us a DM on Instagram or Twitter: Dan Wallach (@WallachLegal) Dan Lust (@SportsLawLust) Mike Lawson (@Mike_sonof_Law) Tarun Sharma (@TKSharmaLaw) The Show (@ConDetrimental)
The War Between the States, the American Civil War - whichever description you prefer - this crucible on which our nation was re-formed has legion of books, movies, and rhetoric dedicated to it. Most of the history that people know involves the war on land, but what of the war at sea?What are details behind some of the major Naval leaders of both sides that are the least known, but are the most interesting? What challenges and accomplishments were made by the belligerents in their navies, and how do they inform and influence our Navy today?Our guest for the full hour to discuss this and more will be James M. McPherson, the George Henry Davis '86 Professor of History Emeritus at Princeton University. He has published numerous volumes on the Civil War, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning Battle Cry of Freedom, Crossroads of Freedom (which was a New York Times bestseller), Abraham Lincoln and the Second American Revolution, and For Cause and Comrades: Why Men Fought in the Civil War, which won the Lincoln Prize.As a starting off point for the show, we will be discussing his book, War on the Waters: The Union and Confederate Navies, 1861-1865.Show first aired in 2013.
ew other questions in American history have generated more controversy than “What Caused the Civil War?” That conflict preserved the United States as one nation, indivisible and abolished the institution of slavery that for more than four score years had made a mockery of American claims to stand as a republic of liberty, a beacon of freedom for oppressed peoples in the Old Word. But these achievements came at the great cost of more than 629,000 lives and vast destruction of property that left large parts of the South a wasteland. Could this terrible war have been avoided? Who was responsible for the events that led to war? Could the positive results of the war (Union and Freedom) have been achieved without war? How have participants in the war and historians answered these questions over the five generations since the war ended? James M. McPherson is the George Henry Davis ’86 Professor of History at Princeton University and 2003 president of the American Historical Association. Widely acclaimed as the leading historian of the Civil War, he is the author of Crossroads of Freedom: Antietam (a New York Times bestseller), For Cause and Comrades (winner of the Lincoln Prize), and many other books on Lincoln and the Civil War era. McPherson, a pre-eminent Civil War scholar, is widely known for his ability to take American history out of the confines of the academy and make it accessible to the general reading public. His best-selling book Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era won the Pulitzer Prize in history in 1989. He also has written and edited many other books about abolition, the war and Lincoln, and he has written essays and reviews for several national publications. McPherson is the George Henry Davis ’86 Professor of History at Princeton University. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Gustavus Adolphus College and his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University. Session Two Focus: Nearly four months elapsed from the secession of South Carolina to the firing on Fort Sumter that started the war. During this period there were many efforts to fashion a compromise to forestall the secession of Southern states, or to bring them back into the Union, or in the last resort to avoid an incident that would spark a shooting war. All failed, and the war came. Why? Why didn’t the Lincoln refuse to surrender the fort? Why did Jefferson Davis decide to fire on the fort? Why did both sides prefer war to compromise? Readings: McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom, 202-275 Charles B. Dew, “Apostles of Secession,” North and South, IV (April 2001), 24-38 Hans L. Trefousse, ed., The Causes of the Civil War, 91-125 (excerpts from Ramsdell, Potter, and Current) Perman, ed., Coming of the American Civil War, 300-314 (excerpt from Paludan) “Official Explanations of the Causes of the Civil War,” from the Causes of the Civil War, 28-47 (Messages of Davis and Lincoln) The post Summer Podcast: Causes of the Civil War pt.2 appeared first on Teaching American History.
Few other questions in American history have generated more controversy than “What Caused the Civil War?” That conflict preserved the United States as one nation, indivisible and abolished the institution of slavery that for more than four score years had made a mockery of American claims to stand as a republic of liberty, a beacon of freedom for oppressed peoples in the Old Word. But these achievements came at the great cost of more than 629,000 lives and vast destruction of property that left large parts of the South a wasteland. Could this terrible war have been avoided? Who was responsible for the events that led to war? Could the positive results of the war (Union and Freedom) have been achieved without war? How have participants in the war and historians answered these questions over the five generations since the war ended? James M. McPherson is the George Henry Davis ’86 Professor of History at Princeton University and 2003 president of the American Historical Association. Widely acclaimed as the leading historian of the Civil War, he is the author of Crossroads of Freedom: Antietam (a New York Times bestseller), For Cause and Comrades (winner of the Lincoln Prize), and many other books on Lincoln and the Civil War era. McPherson, a pre-eminent Civil War scholar, is widely known for his ability to take American history out of the confines of the academy and make it accessible to the general reading public. His best-selling book Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era won the Pulitzer Prize in history in 1989. He also has written and edited many other books about abolition, the war and Lincoln, and he has written essays and reviews for several national publications. McPherson is the George Henry Davis ’86 Professor of History at Princeton University. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Gustavus Adolphus College and his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University. This program was originally recorded at Princeton University on 12 February 2005. Part 2 of this two-part series will be published on 5 August 2017. Session One Focus: The question of what caused the Civil War is really two questions. The first is “Why did the South secede?” The second is “Why did secession lead to war?” This seminar will analyze the roots of secession. At the beginning of the American Revolution all thirteen of the states that formed the United States had slavery. By the first decade of the nineteenth century, however, states north of the Mason-Dixon line and Ohio River had abolished the institution while slavery flourished more than ever south of those lines. A definite “North” and “South” with increasingly disparate socioeconomic institutions and distinctive ideologies had begun to develop. Yet for a half century these contrasting sections coexisted politically in the same nation. Why and how did that national structure fall apart in the 1850s? Was this breakdown inevitable, or could wiser political leadership have prevented it? Why did the election of Abraham Lincoln as president precipitate the secession of seven lower-South states? Readings: James M. McPherson, “What Caused the Civil War?” North and South, IV (Nov. 2000), 12-22, and responses to this article in subsequent issues of North and South Michael Perman, ed., The Coming of the American Civil War, 23-53, 90-113, 169-88, (excerpts from writing by Beard, Owsley, Craven, Randall, Holt, and Foner) James M. McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom, 78-116, (or any other chapter of your choice among chaps. 2, 4, 5, or 6) “Premonitory Explanations of the Sectional Crisis,” from The Causes of the American Civil War, 1-27 (excerpts from Calhoun, Seward, Douglas, and Lincoln) The post Summer Podcast: Causes of the Civil War, pt.1 appeared first on Teaching American History.
The War Between the States, the American Civil War - whichever description you prefer - this crucible on which our nation was re-formed has legion of books, movies, and rhetoric dedicated to it. Most of the history that people know involves the war on land, but what of the war at sea? What are details behind some of the major Naval leaders of both sides that are the least known, but are the most interesting? What challenges and accomplishments were made by the belligerents in their navies, and how do they inform and influence our Navy today? Our guest for the full hour to discuss this and more will be James M. McPherson, the George Henry Davis '86 Professor of History Emeritus at Princeton University. He has published numerous volumes on the Civil War, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning Battle Cry of Freedom, Crossroads of Freedom (which was a New York Times bestseller), Abraham Lincoln and the Second American Revolution, and For Cause and Comrades: Why Men Fought in the Civil War, which won the Lincoln Prize. As a starting off point for the show, we will be discussing his book, War on the Waters: The Union and Confederate Navies, 1861-1865.