Wednesday, November 25, 2009

If Obama were a member of an organization that sought one party rule over the nation and, indeed the world...if Obama belonged to an organization that dealt with dictators and even promoted legislation in those dictators' countries that issued life sentences to political undesirables....if Obama belonged to an organization whose leaders routinely expressed admiration for Hitler, Mao, and Stalin...

Well, I don't know what would happen. But one can be sure that Republicans would call for impeachment, and worse.

Yet over ten percent of the Senate Republicans belong to just such an organization. Scary stuff.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=106115324

The dictatorship in question is Uganda, which recently declared homosexuality a crime which carries a sentence of life imprisonment. The law was promoted by the Family.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/ugandas-anti-gay-bill-causes-commonwealth-uproar/article1376503/

http://www.boxturtlebulletin.com/2009/11/14/16671

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Military History Field Trip, 11/04/2009

Our theme was the Battle of Germantown and the weeks after. After reading about the battle (and refighting it in a tabletop simulation), we retraced the steps of Washington's army from October 4 through December in 1777.

The first stop was Cliveden, the home of the Chew family in 1777. Here, British light infantry held off the main column of the Continental army, throwing a wrench into Washington's complex plan, which depended on the co-ordination of four divisions on the foggy morning of October 4. The troops here were also the ones who had perpetrated the Paoli Massacre, perhaps giving Washington added cause for reducing the Chew House before moving on.






Then, we headed to Rittenhousetown, near the site of where Washington had ordered his Pennsylvania militia to assault the Hessian positions on the other side of the Wissahickon Creek. Here, we got a sense of how terrain effects battlefield decisions. It's not surprising that the militia commander decided that an attack was not feasible.







Our next stop was St. Thomas' Church in Whitemarsh. Washington had decided to camp for the winter nearby (at a place known very well to our students) until a skirmish here convinced him that a site further away from Philadelphia would be more prudent. He chose, of course, Valley Forge.










Here, we once again surveyed the terrain to understand Washington's decisions to choose Valley Forge as a site and why he arranged the camp as he did. We inspected the winter quarters to get a sense of the ordeal the Continental Army had to endure at Valley Forge. We also chased deer, abandoned Voltaire, and goofed around on cannon.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Vive la revolution

Lynn Hunt, former president of the AHA, wrote this piece six years ago. A historian who often takes the Annalistes' approach to "small-ball" history, she offers her view of attempts to find meaning in the French Revolution.

I am posting this here because her emphasis--on the politics of fear, beliefs in conspiracies, and the clash between the ideologies of left of right for the right to define history--seems more relevant today than when this article was written.