French President Macron's advice to stop the riots tells parents to keep their children at home. This is like a certain French queen (allegedly) said, "let them eat cake!" Macron needs to stop attending Elton John concerts while the streets of major French cities are burning. Time for Macron's mother to keep him home.
Friday, June 30, 2023
Wednesday, May 24, 2023
History Looks Back
Toward the latter part of spring in 2023, people hovered around their smart devices trying to ascertain the progress of Congressional debt talks. President Biden had cut short his G-7 meeting to broker an end to the process but many observers thought Biden had procrastinated for months. His counterpart, Speaker Kevin McCarthy was no better. Each represented divergent priorities for the national budget, all of which impinged on the debt ceiling being raised.
At one point the budget had been balanced when President George W Bush was elected president in 2000. But Republican led wars in Afghanistan and Iraq raised the budget and national debt substantially. Then came the pandemic which cost America 16 trillions of dollars or 90% of the national GDP. (JAMA network, October 12, 2020)
During the 1929 Great Crash of the Stock Market men had flung themselves from buildings or shot themselves. It was that time no American ever wanted to repeat. Buy, in 2023. with no new debt ceiling and no movement of the budget, financial ruin was in the cards for everyone.
Seniors on Social Security; Veterans that expected checks; Disabled folks depending on monthly support - all will be part of the new Bonus Army, or perhaps an earlier, late 19th Century, Coxy's Army, marching on D.C. to right the wrongs and confront Congressional corruption. Has America's "little man" ever been treated as a citizen?
In 2023 it was gross corruption. A Congress that does not represent "we the people". A Congress that holds on to power and enriches itself.
The failure in 2023 to set a path toward financial recovery and to chart a plan to eliminate blatant spending by both parties would destroy the Republic. Is it any wonder certain politicians strove to eliminate history from the nation's curricula?
Saturday, May 20, 2023
In 1853 the Metternich
system, designed to control and mediate conflicts between the great powers of
Napoleon III of France and
Tsar Nicholas I of
The conflict began when
Napoleon III approached the
Historians offer additional,
perhaps more salient motives for Russian and French actions. MacKenzie [1]
cites the overconfidence of Nicholas I following Russian success in assisting
with the suppression of European popular revolts in 1848. Henry Kissinger [2]
refers to the long standing Russian aim of controlling Constantinople and the
Outbreak of the Crimean War
In October 1853,
Course of the War
With the Russian withdrawal
from the Principalities, the focus of the war shifted to the
The Russians were initially
defeated at the
Results of the Crimean War
The war highlighted the need
for Russian military and economic reform. No railroad track was available below
Old alliances were broken as
Sources:
Paul Kennedy, The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers:
Economic Change and Military Conflict From 1500 to 2000 (New York: Random
House, 1987).
[2] Henry Kissinger, Diplomacy (New York: Simon &
Schuster, 1994).
[1] David MacKenzie and
Michael W. Curran, A History of
Alan Palmer, The Decline and Fall of the
Tags
Crimea Light Brigade Piedmont Sardinia Napoleon III Tsar Nicholas II
Saturday, April 29, 2023
Khartoum in the 1880's: the Revolt of Muhammad Ahmad and the murder of General Charles Gordon
by Michael Streich
In the early 1880s, a Muslim
uprising began in the
Early Attempts to Restore
Peace
The liberal government of
Prime Minister William Gladstone was discussing down-sizing imperial military
commitments and rejected any initial appeals to significantly take on the
Sudanese uprising.
The Egyptian khedive hired a
British colonel and tasked him with leading an army into the
Chinese Gordon is sent to
Evacuate Khartoum
Charles Gordon was seen as a
“Christian soldier,” who, as previous Governor General of Equatoria and then
the full
Yet Gordon was also fiercely
independent and whose personal view of justice conflicted with political
prerogatives. Stubborn, insubordinate, and frequently arrogant, he traveled up
the Nile River to evacuate the Europeans and Egyptians despite having publicly
criticized this policy in the British press only weeks before the assignment was
given. Gordon had his own agenda. He would defend
The Relief of Gordon
By 1884 it became apparent
that Gordon was not leaving
Gordon was a living symbol of
all that Britons saw of their empire and their values. In death, he became,
according to Karl Meyer, “a devout martyr who died bravely while on an
impossible mission for an ingrate government.” In Parliament,
Ultimately, General, Sir Garnet
Wolseley was sent to
“Too Late”
The forces of the Mahdi
breached
Sources:
Byron Farwell, Queen Victoria’s Little Wars (
Karl E. Meyer and Shareen
Blair Brysac, Kingmakers: The Invention
of the Modern Middle East (
Lytton Strachey, Eminent Victorians
Lord Garnet Wolseley, In Relief of Gordon: Lord Wolseley’s
Campaign Journal of the
Thursday, April 27, 2023
How Social Security was Born: Not a Bonus, But a Guaranteed Retirement for all Americans Michael Streich
Formally known as the
Wagner-Lewis-Doughton social security bill, the Social Security Act was passed
by Congress June 19, 1935 and signed into law as immediate legislation by
President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Old age benefits were discussed by
The Social Security Act
Begins as an Unemployment Insurance Measure
During the heady days of
FDR’s first Hundred Days, New York Senator Robert Wagner and Rep. David J.
Lewis of
The 1935 bill was the product
of many lengthy committee hearings, unending hours of research, and continual
brainstorming by FDR’s brain-trust. The initial measure included a health care
plan, but this part of the bill was dropped as
Passing Social Security and
Unemployment Insurance
Combining Social Security and
unemployment benefits was the recommendation of Harry Hopkins, one of FDR’s key
advisers. Unlike other New Deal programs, it was to be a permanent program and
not deficit funded. Roosevelt stated, “We can’t sell the
As passed in 1935, Social
Security was limited. During Committee hearings, Treasury Secretary Henry
Morgenthau opposed a universal system, suggesting that rural farm workers be
exempted as well as small businesses that employed less than ten people. Frances
Perkins recounts in her memoirs, none of the provisions would completely solve
the nation’s poverty, but it was the first step in solving future
depression-condition problems.
Opposition to Social Security
during the New Deal and Beyond
No emergency legislation will
make an immediate difference without the necessary funding. Before Congress
adjourned in the summer of 1935, Louisiana Senator Huey Long, one of
Others, like Oklahoma Senator
Thomas Gore, asked Secretary Perkins during a hearing “isn’t this like
socialism?” The entire notion of “cradle to grave” federal entitlement reeked
of socialism for stalwart GOP lawmakers. These views were vocally resurrected
every time Congress expanded Social Security.
In 2010 and again in 2011,
Social Security recipients received no cost-of-living adjustments (COLAs) yet
their Medicare contribution costs rose. In the 2010 midterm election, most
seniors voted Republican.
Senator-elect Rand Paul of
National Health Care Tied to
the Social Security Bill
Although
Wagner’s 1939 Health Bill was
designed to expand unemployment benefits and Social Security. This was not a
universal, federally mandated health plan such as found in other nations.
Opting into the plan was not mandatory nor did his bill include forcing
Americans to purchase health insurance.
Nevertheless, it was severely
attacked, most notably by the American Medical Association and the
pharmaceutical industry. Universal health care had been attempted since 1915
and was deemed a progressive measure. Not until March 2009 would Congress enact
a health care bill that provided affordable coverage for all Americans.
The Role of Government during
Periods of Economic Hard Times
Conservative Republicans led
by President Herbert Hoover in the early years of the Great Depression abhorred
federal intervention that amounted to any hint of welfare. Even Franklin
Roosevelt rejected the government “dole.” But Roosevelt and the liberal
Democrats believed that the role of the federal government was to stimulate the
economy by putting people to work and providing safety mechanisms like
unemployment insurance.
Advisers like Frances Perkins
made the argument that even a minimal unemployment payout in the first weeks of
unemployment would stop evictions and enable breadwinners to provide for their
families.
Senator Wagner stated that,
“Industry can not run with the mechanical perfection of a gyroscope and out of
simple caution we must continue to devise methods of dealing with those who may
be severed from their normal work despite our best efforts.”
Social Security provided one
concrete method for ensuring the survival of American retirees. It continues to
do so today. For most, the monthly payout represents a fixed income that covers
the bare necessities. Any tampering with those benefits would be criminal to
the millions who paid into the system all of their lives.
Sources:
Lewis L. Gould, The Most Exclusive Club (Basic Books,
2005)
J. Joseph Huthmacher, Senator Robert F. Wagner and the Rise of
Urban Liberalism (Atheneum, 1968)
Frances Perkins, The Roosevelt I Knew (Viking Press, 1946
First Edition)
Friday, April 14, 2023
Earth Day: Make it a Reality - Michael Streich
Earth Day is April 22nd, 2023, a designation that should cause every civilized person to shiver. Germany is shutting down it's last three nuclear powered plants - Emsland , Neckarwestheim, and Isar II. Yet 49% of the Germany people, according to NDR, oppose this and want the plants kept open. Most in opposition were over the age of 35. Younger citizens who approve of the closings are members of the Greens, FDP, and Linke parties. To make up any future energy losses, the government plans to increase coal exploitation, which becaomes a major pollutant in and of itself.
The same arguments are heard in the U.S., especially as the Biden Administration seeks to force a new Executive Order auto featuring regulations vastly increasing the number of EVs. But where are the charge stations and how strong is the existing power grid? On Earth Day, inhabitants of East Palistine, Ohio will still breath toxic air and drink bottled water because tap water may still be contaminated. Across the United States, many water sources are contaminated for a variety of reasons, some affecting large population centers such as Philadelphia.
"...With purple mountain majesties above the fruited plain..." May be becoming a lovely history reference but hardly the everyday truth.
Climate change is on many world leaders public narratives but cities like Jakarta and Bangkok are still sinking into the ocean. And South Africa still suffers from an on-going water shortgage. What countries can claim they have no examples of climate change? Yet world leaders, prodded by corporate and other monied interests, act like Climate Change is just another Jules Verne novel.
In February 11-20th, 2021, the state of Texas underwent an unprecedented freeze, it's power grid almost completely failing, and twitter commentators reminding Senator Ted Cruz of a comment he once made that he would believe in climate change when, "Texas freezes over."
As this is written, Fort Lauderdale, Florida is under water after a so-called once in a thousand year rain event, nearly 26 inches within a 24 hour period. How many more records will be broken as the climate change narrative becomes more true?
Earth Day should be a funeral dirge for people that go about their lives dismissing all actions such as those mentioned above. Of course, older politicans who have always denied climate change like former president Donald Trump may not care since many drastic predictions will work themselves out after these politician have passed on.
In the Broadway musical "CoCo," (1969) Katherine Hepburn sings, "...the world belongs to the young..." This Earth Day, youth must take a stand and demand change. Thus far, at least in the U.S., no democrats and no anti-woke candidates even believe in the changes yet to come. That must not become a harbinger of the next two decades.
Thursday, April 6, 2023
The Protestant View of Heaven: Are the Streets Really Gold? M.Streich
In 1949, Ira F. Stanphill, a
preacher in the Assemblies of God denomination, wrote the hymn “Mansion Over
the Hilltop.” The chorus exemplifies the view of heaven as believed by most
Christians:
“I’ve got a mansion just over
the hilltop,
In that bright land where
we’ll never grow old;
And someday yonder we will
never more wander,
But walk the streets that are
purest gold.”
Stanphill’s verses are not
alone in depicting heaven as a city of gold full of mansions. A popular late 19th
Century Methodist hymn by Edgar Stites refers to “…Beulah Land…where mansions
are prepared for me…”
The Christian Belief of
Mansions in Heaven
This popular belief derives
from a mistranslation of the Gospel of John 14 2-3 that occurred during the
creation of the King James Version of the Bible. None of the original sources
of this passage refer to mansions. Scholars point to the use of the term
“chateau” in French translations used to help produce the King James Version.
Based on original sources,
the best translation seems to be, “In my father’s house are many resting places.” The German Reformer,
Martin Luther, translated the passage as “Wohnungen” or places to live. The
fact remains, however, that for Christians, heaven is a real place.
Human Models of Heaven
C. Austin Miles captured the
human model of heaven in his early 20th Century hymn, “Dwelling in
In John Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress, the journey of
“Christian” is chronicled through a series of obstacles and temptations. In the
end, however, he reaches the “
I Peter 3.22 speaks of Christ
as being in heaven, “at the right hand of God.” Although Christians believe
that God is omnipresent, they also refer to the “throne of God,” images taken
from allegorical literature like the Apocalypse
of
The Christian image of heaven
is frequently criticized by those that question an absolute and eternal state
of grace. Unlike C.S. Lewis’ Great
Divorce, which emphasizes repentance for the travelers from the “Grey Town”
to heaven, George Bernard Shaw’s Don Juan
in Hell derides heaven as “the most angelically dull place in all
creation.”
The Location of Heaven
Heaven was always thought to
be beyond the reaches of earth. After the resurrection of Jesus, he ascended into heaven (Mark 16.19) and “sat
down at the right hand of God.” In the Old Testament, the great prophet Elijah
was taken by a “whirlwind to heaven…” (II King 2.1).
Throughout the ancient world
the high place was the abode of God or the gods. The Psalmist writes, “I will
life up my eyes to the mountains; From whence shall my help come?” (121.1) In
Genesis 6, God prepares to blot out his creation when he “saw that the wickedness
of man was great on the earth.”
The promise of heaven has
served Christians for centuries as an eternal hope, especially when times are
desperate. Whether an actual “place,” a state of the mind, or some notion of a
parallel universe, heaven continues to reflect a worthy goal for many
questioning the afterlife.
Sources:
Favorite Hymns of Praise, (Tabernacle Publishing Company, 1967)
New American Standard Bible (Chicago: Moody Press, 1973)
They Walked With God, Michael Williams, editor (Fawcett Publications, 1957)
Luther and the Lawless One: A former presidential candidate view of Anti-Christ m.Streich
Republican presidential
candidate Michele Bachmann recently changed her church affiliation from
Lutheranism to an interdenominational faith institution. At issue, in part, was
the Lutheran position that the papacy was equated with the Biblical Antichrist.
Bachmann’s decision highlights the role religion plays in contemporary American
politics, especially among Evangelicals. Evangelicals tend to support
conservative candidates that are pro-life, reject homosexuality, and support
Should Lutherans “Backpedal”
the Notion of the Pope as Antichrist?
The historical “search” for
the Biblical Antichrist can be traced back to the first generation of
Christians. The Lutheran view is based on Martin Luther’s belief that his
generation would witness the prophetic end of times. Luther scholar Heiko
Oberman, for example, wrote that Luther perceived that, “shadow of the chaos of
the last days and the imminence of eternity.”
Luther’s view of a
satanically inspired papacy can also be corroborated by the 1545 Origins of the Pope. Historian R.W.
Scribner points out that Luther was very deliberate in associating his name
with the offending woodcuts, each of which equates the papacy and Church
hierarchy with demonic roots and influences. Reformation scholar Mark Edwards,
Jr. writes that, “At the heart of Luther’s Against
the Papacy at
Selectively Using Bible
Passages to fit Political Agendas
Both Michele Bachmann and
Sarah Palin identify with evangelical beliefs. Both tend to highlight Bible
passages in the same casual and erroneous way that they perceive American
History. Both of these observations are highly significant. There is little
consistency. Bachmann, for example, has been criticized for her recommendation
of a revisionist biography of Robert E. Lee that defends American slavery much
as Southern apologists John C. Calhoun and George Fitzhugh did over 150 years
ago (see Ryan Lizza’s New Yorker
article on Bachmann, August 15, 2011).
Slavery was condoned in the
Bible. Conservatives also extrapolate Old Testament Mosaic law to build a case
against homosexuality. Bachmann’s husband runs a clinic that, among other
things, “cures” homosexuals. Lizza identifies Bachmann, for example, with the
Christian evangelical belief known as Dominionism and writes about the
influence of Francis Schaeffer on Bachmann’s world view. But consistency is not
part of that Biblical foundation.
If politicians like Bachmann
and Palin applied the Bible consistently, they would have to account for Christ’s
many challenges regarding social justice, a phrase used by conservatives to
define so-called liberal “give-away” programs like Medicaid. Yet some of the
very conservatives identifying with this view have accepted federal funds like
Medicaid, including Rand Paul, a rising star among Tea Party activists and a
former medical doctor, as well as Bachmann’s husband.
Re-Interpreting History to
Promote Inconsistent Conclusions
The cavalier attitude toward
slavery is but one example of historical revisionism and misinformation.
Consider the following statement by the Family Value, a conservative group,
that was signed by presidential hopefuls Bachmann and Rick Santorum: “Slavery
had a disastrous impact on African-American families, yet sadly a child born
into slavery in 1860 was more likely to be raised by his mother and father in a
two-parent household than was an African-American baby born after the election
of the USA’s first African-American president.”
Nat Turner, Harriet Tubman,
and Frederick Douglass would disagree. In fact, Republicans in 1860 would
vehemently disagree. But times have changed. According to the Air Force Times (August 15, 2011), the
US Air Force has discontinued an “ethics” training course “for new nuclear
missile officers” after receiving objections to the content. Course content
used Christian saints like Augustine to defend the notion of a “just war” as
well as military leaders such as George Washington and “Stonewall”
The “just war” fits well with
the nebulous war on terror. It enables conservatives like Senator John McCain
to oppose the withdrawal of
Women in the New Testament
Female candidates gleaning
the Bible for “proof texts” to support conservative agendas like the Defense of
Marriage Act should turn to I Timothy 2:11: “Let a woman quietly receive
instruction with entire submissiveness.” Evangelicals will quickly point out
that such passages refer to women within a specific church hierarchy. The
entire passage, however, is indicative of how women were perceived in the first
century.
Only a small number of
American faith traditions deny women an equal role. Mitt Romney may have a
problem with that if Mormonism becomes an issue. It can also be argued that
Catholicism denies women an equal role. Most Americans accept the equal role of
women even as they accept homosexuality. Certainly most Americans view American
slavery as an evil, rejecting the idea that slave families in the pre-Civil War
South were well cared for by slave-masters.
Religion, Political Agendas,
and Truth
The Lutheran position regarding
the papacy and the Antichrist may be offensive, but it is true – which may be
why politicians would want to distance themselves from the denomination. The
truth is, however, that all faith traditions have a history and a set of
beliefs, some of which may be offensive to certain voting groups. The notion of
heaven and hell can be very selective and should have no part in political
debate. The
Sources:
Mark U. Edwards, Jr., Luther’s Last Battles: Politics and Polemics
1531-46 (Cornell University Press, 1983)
Toby Harnden, “Michele
Bachmann signs controversial slavery marriage pact,” The Telegraph, July 10, 2011
Ryan Lizza, “Leap of Faith:
The making of a Republican front-runner,” The
New Yorker, August 15, 2011
Eric Marrapodi, “Michele
Bachmann officially leaves her church,” CNN,
July 15, 2011
Markeshia Ricks, “Air Force
yanks nuke ethics course,” Air Force
Times, August 15, 2011
Parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins M.Streich
The parable of the ten
virgins, found in the Gospel of Matthew 25, 1-13, relates the story of a
wedding night to the “kingdom of heaven.” Told by Jesus, the parable uses
imagery recognizable in both Greek and Roman weddings. The action takes place
at night and highlights the plight of ten virgins, five foolish and five wise. The
parable lends itself to a number of so-called spiritual or meditative
applications by contemporary Christians, but at the time of Christ, the details
would have been more profound.
Preparation for the Coming of
the Bridegroom
Ancient Mediterranean
weddings, notably in
Roman wedding days also ended
with the groom escorting the bride to his house in the evening, followed by
festivities that could last for days. The reader is reminded of the wedding
feast of
Ancient Lamps Fueled by Oil
In the Matthew parable, ten
virgins “took their lamps and went out to meet the bridegroom.” Each of the
virgins had lamps. These small, hand-held lamps could hold enough oil for only
one night. Five of the virgins took flasks of oil with them; they are described
as “prudent.” The other five, however, brought no additional oil.
The Bridegroom is Delayed in
the Parable of the Ten Virgins
The actual passage in Matthew
25 states that the bridegroom “was delaying.” It was his choice to arrive late.
His delay was not caused by any unexpected actions. Was he testing the fidelity
of his brides? The ten virgins, however, “began to sleep,” waiting for the
bridegroom.
At “midnight” the word was
given that the bridegroom was arriving. But the five “foolish” virgins had no
oil and their lamps had extinguished. They asked the five prudent virgins to
share their oil, but were told to “go instead to the dealers and buy for yourselves.”
The sharing of precious oil was out of the question.
Unconditional Love and the
Blindness of the Foolish Virgins
Christians are often at a
loss for words by this advice. The five prudent virgins refused to share. They
must have known that the five foolish virgins would never make it to the
bridegroom’s house. The five prudent virgins persevered and planned ahead, but
there was no contingency plan to assist fellow virgins in need of oil.
The parable seems to address
the issue of unconditional love as well. Surely the bridegroom could have
provided for the foolish virgins if they were betrothed to him, but he did not.
He was betrothed to ten virgins, but only five were waiting for him.
The Wedding Feast Excludes
the Foolish Virgins
When the bridegroom arrived,
he took the five prudent virgins with him to his house. In the ancient world,
this procession would have included invited wedding guests, following the
wedding carriage aglow with torches of light. Once at the bridegroom’s house,
the bride would be ceremonially taken into the dwelling and the guests would
enter for a celebration.
Once the foolish virgins
replenished their oil, they made their way to the bridegroom’s house, but the
doors were closed. When they asked to be admitted, the bridegroom sent his
answer: “I do not know you.” They missed their opportunity. The parable does
not suggest what happened to them.
Message of the Parable of the
Ten Virgins
Verse 13 of Matthew 25
summarizes the intent of Jesus’ story: “Be on the alert then, for you do not
know the day not the hour.” This can be applied in many ways. Some Christians
apply it to the Second Coming of Christ. Others relate it to the everyday
spiritual faith journey.
Some readers question the use
of ten virgins for one bridegroom. Does this suggest plural marriage? Others
note the actions of the five prudent virgins that refused to share their oil,
knowing that sending out the foolish virgins to buy oil would decrease their
chances of seeing and being escorted by the bridegroom.
But Jesus began the parable
by comparing it to the
The final verse also
indicates the mental and spiritual state of those seeking the Kingdom of
heaven: since the time of the bridegroom is not known, it is important to be
“on alert.”
Source:
New American Standard Bible (Chicago: Moody Press, 1973)
Sunday, March 12, 2023
Europe in the 1930's was treated to the daily rants of Nazi propagandist Dr. Joseph Goebbels. It was against the law to listen to foreign broadcast news such as the BBC. Doing so could get an offender time in one of the many Concentration Camps in the greater Reich. This policy began long before the "Final Solution," begun at the Wannassee Conference outside of Berlin in 1942 in order to deal with the so-called Jewish Question."
Before the decision to enact Genocide, Europe had many camps, several built along the lines of Auschwitz, for political prisoners. Later, they would also hold Jehovas Witnessess, recalticent Catholic Priests, homosexuals, and gypsies. POWs were also held in these camps.
The camps were a maze of operations - transit camps, holding camps, and finally the work camps and death camps. \
Today in America we also have our Joseph Goebbels whose daily lies infect the thinking of honest Americans. Seeking to minimize the January 6th Insurrection, Fox News anchor Tucker Carson deliberately minimized the events. When called to accout for his obvious transgressions, he attempted to update the facts but failed.
Unless Americans demand that criminal Nazis like Carlson, Ingram, and Hannity are thrown out on the street, they will continue to spew their false woke narratives.
Tuesday, February 28, 2023
Soviet Security Concerns After World War II
In the aftermath of World War II and the allied agreements made at Yalta and Potsdam, half of Europe was occupied by the Red Army. Those nations would shortly be identified by the Iron Curtain, a phrase Winston Churchill used to describe the borders between the Soviet-controlled “East” and the free democracies of the “West.” Josef Stalin’s motives are usually explained by defining traditional Russian security concerns that paralleled Tsarist diplomacy before the October 1917 Revolution. Stalin’s motives, however, may have been more complex.
Soviet Goals Before the Nazi Invasion of 1941
The Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact of August 1939 contained secret protocols that allowed Stalin to occupy large areas of “Eastern Europe,” including parts of Poland, once the Germans began their advance into Polish territory. The lands subsequently occupied by Russia would never be freed, even after Hitler invaded Russia in 1941 and Stalin became, by default, an ally of Britain and the United States.
Soviet Claims to Eastern Europe During the War
According to historian and diplomat George F. Kennan [1], Churchill never challenged the Soviet position in the early years of the war while President Franklin D. Roosevelt by 1942 opted to relegate any such questions to post-war negotiations. The primary goal was to defeat Germany. But until the pivotal battle of Stalingrad, Stalin demanded that the allies open a second front in Western Europe.
The opening of a second front would draw German forces from Russia, where initially, spectacular military successes seriously threatened Stalin’s position. The Soviets long maintained that, “the defeat of fascism in the Second World War [occurred because of]…the decisive part…played by the Soviet Union.” [2] In many ways this was true. The war cost twenty million Russian lives.
Stalin’s Motives for Soviet Expansion and Occupation
Western Russian historians cite traditional Russian fears of encirclement and invasion from the West, notably Germany [3]. Imperial Germany invaded Russia during World War I, occupying large areas of “European Russia.” Russian history mythologizes Alexander Nevskii – a saint in the Orthodox Church, for defeating the Germanic Teutonic Knights in the 13th century. A 1938 Soviet film by Sergei Eisenstein about the event popularized anti-German sentiment in Russia.
The occupation and control of “buffer” states on Russia’s borders was partial assurance that the Soviet Union would not again be invaded from the West. Additionally, as Stalin himself stated at Yalta and Potsdam, Russia had suffered the greatest in the war and deserved these lands as reparations. Thus, Poland’s borders were moved west and Germany was kept weak, divided by the allied occupation.
Soviet apologists after the war, however, had other motives. A 1964 commentary on Soviet aims [4] states that, “The Soviets view their foreign policy as a means to spread proletarian revolution. The neo-Czarist interpretation sees it as a means to expand Russian power and influence and to enhance the national security.”
Exporting Revolution and Creating the Socialist Commonwealth
In 1964 Soviet Premier A. N. Kosygin gave a speech in which he said, “I can assure you, comrades, that our party and the Soviet government consider it their primary task to do everything to strengthen the unity and solidarity of the socialist commonwealth…”[5] This goal, as Kennan also addresses, goes back to 1945.
The Allies may have never fully understood the tenacity of Soviet goals and aims. These were played out in the Cold War and the numerous proxy wars fought between the Soviet Union and the Western democracies, led by the U.S. Capitalism was not only economic imperialism, but contributed to western decadence. Stalin knew this in 1945, maneuvering the best deal for Soviet Russia and, according to Kennan, playing a superb hand of cards.
Stalin’s Motives After the Defeat of Hitler
Encirclement may have been a dominant aspect of Stalin’s demands, yet he opposed a Chinese invasion of India, preferring a democratic state rather than one tied to Communist China. (See Kennan) Reparations were also on his agenda: the Soviets dismantled factories and carried them east to be reassembled in Russia; local populations in countries like Romania were forcibly deported to Siberia to work.
[1] George F.
[2] A. Sovetov, “Leninist
Foreign Policy and International Relations,” International Affairs, No. 4, April 1960
[3] David MacKenzie and
Michael W. Curran, A History of
[4] Current Digest of the Soviet Press, December 23, 1964,
[5] Pravda, December 10, 1964
Friday, February 3, 2023
After the end of World War II in 1945, Republicans and Democrats attempted to paint each other as being stronger when dealing with Communists. "Who lost China?" was one political balloon designed to show the nation and the world that Republicans (or Democrats) were stronger against the adversaries of the free world. America's "Cold Warriors" tried to out-do each other proving they could stand up to the USSR or Red China.
Today, a balloon floats over Montana and the same debate errupts in an almost totally inempt Congress. Even conspiracy theorist and QANON Queen Rep. Margorie Taylor Greene wants the balloon shot down while Secretary of State Blinken, who just returned from the Middle East after a blundering attempt at peace, has cancelled a trip to meet the Chinese President Xi Jinping. The Chinese, however, state that the balloon is non-government and non-military.
Republicans are quick to say Biden is weak. As in the Cold War, that kind of partisan nonsense got America hopelessly entangled in Vietnam, earlier, in Korea, and consistently fed the Eisenhower years with one potential conflict after another.
I can't get the Nena ditty, "99 Redballoons," out of my head. But this one balloon is white.
Thursday, February 2, 2023
Stalingrad Remembered - m.streich
The Battle of Stalingrad is
often referred to as the “Verdun of World War II.” Historian Martin Middlebrook
calls it the “decisive battle of the Second World War.”
The Russian Winter of
1942-1943
Adolf Hitler, having failed
to take
The attack on
Hitler’s Irrational Decisions
Sacrificed the Sixth Army
Adamantly refusing to accept
the recommendations of the most senior members of the German High Command,
Hitler replaced the dissenters with generals willing to accept his blundering
decisions. Among those dismissed was Colonel-General Franz Halder, a talented
officer who foresaw the coming German disaster in
Some historians question
Hitler’s choice of Friedrich Paulus as commander of the 6th Army, an
able “thinker” who had helped design and plan Operation Barbarossa, but had never held a major command post.
Paulus would follow Hitler’s orders to the letter, even after it became evident
that by not breaking out of the
Although the Battle of
Stalingrad took place in November 1942, the 6th Army continued to
defend their positions until February 2nd 1943 when Paulus, sickly
and worn, finally agreed to the Soviet surrender ultimatum. Hitler had promoted
him to Field Marshal during the final weeks of the battle, knowing that no
German Field Marshal had ever surrendered. Paulus was expected to commit
suicide, but instead lived for many years afterward as a Soviet prisoner.
Final Promises and Efforts
Fail to Relieve the 6th Army
There is some evidence that
Hitler was finally persuaded to allow Paulus to extricate himself from
When Paulus surrendered his
army, 90,000 surviving soldiers and officers were marched to Siberia; only
6,000 ever returned to
Sources:
Walter Goerlitz, History of the German General Staff (London:
Westview Press, 1985)
Martin Middlebrook, “Paulus,”
Hitler’s Generals, Correlli Barnett,
Ed. (New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1989)
Lynn Montross, War Through the Ages, 3rd Ed
(New York: Harper and Row, 1960)
Theodor Plievier,
Note: My grandfather, Karl Piehl, fought and was wounded at Stalingrad. He survived to return home to his family.
Black History Month Classroom Ideas
Celebrating Black History
Month should be a priority in every American school during February. Black
History Month 2009 will be even more significant due to the election of Barack
Obama to the Presidency. The 2009 theme for February should be “From Slavery
and Struggle to Freedom and Leadership.” There are many ways individual classes
and schools as a
community can vitalize this
theme.
From Classroom to Community
In History classrooms,
teachers can assign a “poster project” in conjunction with Black History Month.
To avoid duplication, each participating class can be given separate areas of
American history to draw from”
Colonial Period
Pre-Civil War South
Reconstruction
“Separate But Equal”
Brown v. Board of Education
Civil Rights Movement
Post Civil Rights Movement
Students should create
posters specific to the assigned period of history. For continuity, require a
specific size poster. As a caveat, limit the number of computer generated pictures students may use. Establish as criteria
a very specific focus or message to be contained in each poster and encourage
creativity.
Allow students to present
their posters in an oral presentation in which they share with the class why
they chose the topic and how it relates to Black History Month. After all students
have presented, allow them to display the posters as a narrative, chronological
collage in the common areas of the school (assuming the teacher has
administrative authority to do this). This activity should take place the last
week of January or the first week of February to ensure maximum impact.
Contact community leaders and
arrange for them to judge the collages. Reward the winning class with a special
privilege or a pizza party. These kinds of rewards, if part of the initial
instruction, go far in providing the kind of incentive students often need to
surpass expectations. Through parent-school communications (newsletters, web
pages) invite parents to visit the school and “tour the gallery.”
Using the Public Address
System
Each morning in February,
have a student read one significant achievement of African Americans in
American History over the school’s PA system. Preparing these factoids can be
turned into a January assignment or function as extra credit. Allow students to
submit facts from their own research and then select those that conform to a
pre-assignment criterion.
Other Black History Month
Suggestions
There are many creative ways
to emphasize the contributions of African Americans in our history. These
include:
Facilitating a school-wide
assembly program
Inviting guest speakers from
the local community
Hanging banners throughout
the school
Preparing classroom bulletin
boards with a Black History theme
Overall Student Emphasis
Celebrating African American achievements
should never end once February turns to March. Black History Month, like Native
American History Month (November) and Woman’s History Month (March), is a
unique opportunity to highlight the role played by African Americans in our
national history. As a people “out of many,” African American achievements were
too often glossed over or forgotten in history books and classroom lesson
plans. From Crispus Attucks to
Teddy Roosevelt in 1912: You Can't Put Down a Bull Moose! - Mike Streich MA
The presidential campaign of
1912 was drawing to a close as Theodore Roosevelt, the only living ex-president
and candidate of the Progressive Party, arrived in
John Schrank had stalked
During the ensuing
investigation and trial, Schrank claimed to have been influenced by a dream in
which the ghost of William McKinley prompted his actions. According to historian
James Chace [3], Schrank was also obsessed with
The Defiant Bull Moose
Schrank was tackled by
security men and brought before Roosevelt who asked him why he did it. Schrank,
however, was mute and taken away.
Teddy Roosevelt began his
address, telling the audience, “I don’t know whether you fully understand that
I have just been shot; but it takes more than that to kill a Bull Moose.”
Progressives Blame the Press
In an October 15, 1912 New York Times article, Montana Senator
Joseph Dixon blamed the press. “For months the enemies of Colonel Roosevelt…in
public speech have combined to assassinate the public and private character of
the greatest living American.” [5] The implication in
Impact on the Election of
1912
Although one physician at
Notes:
[1] Henry F. Cochems, Oliver
Ramey, and Wheeler P. Bloodgood, The
Attempted Assassination of the Ex-President Theodore
[2] “The Attack Upon the
President,” New York Times, October
16, 1912
[3] James Chace, 1912: Wilson,
[4] New York Times, October 16, 1912
[5] “Progressives Here Had
Great Fright,”
Other:
Theodore Roosevelt’s