Stay tuned - Meghan Markle, the new Lola Montez. But can she dance?
Tuesday, February 20, 2024
Monday, January 29, 2024
The Focus of History Teaching
"Don't turn my son into a lawyer," the woman scowled as she helped to empty her son's locker full of books. As a high school freshman he had won the regional Moot Court with a class buddy and almost went to the state competition. One of the judges, however, noted that as freshmen the two still had three years whereas their competitors were two senior girls.
In the next few years he participated in speech and debate competitions, a variety of sports, and was part of the Model Congress team that went to Boston every spring to compete in an event facilitated by Harvard University. In that, he won a blue ribbon.
But he didn't become a lawyer. Rather, he went to medical school.
We often forget that kids, as they get older, tend to focus on their own goals and not those others set for them. Some parents appreciate this while others threaten to sue not only the school but the teachers and counselors that they perceive weren't doing their jobs.
My part in this was two-fold: writing letters of recommendation that set the students apart from everyone else and being an unpaid faculty advisor to the many extra and co-curricular activities the school offered. Once, I was even asked to coach tennis, a task I was completely unprepared for.
The fact that I knew my subject area really well didn't matter. What mattered was the results of a stellar recommendation letter or blue ribbon awards that were attached to high school resumes in the hopes of getting the most attention from college admissions officers.
Grades mattered, of course, but if you had climbed Mt. Everest during a summer break, to offer an exaggerated skill, students were guaranteed a closer look. One dean of admissions at a prominent southern university told an applicant who was accepted that the recommendation letter written by his teacher which illustrated in detail how the student had overcome obstacles was the deal-breaker in terms of admission.
I loved teaching history and I think I was very good at it. But what mattered more to parents and school officials was the ability to help students get into their dream colleges. It even meant taking groups of students in the summer on "educational tours" of Europe or the Southern Pacific. There can't be that many students who can boast on their resume that they spent time in a Queensland rain forest or climbed to the top of Ayer's Rock in the Australian outback.
Of course it was fun for me as well and the other teacher chaperons. "Foreign exchanges" were integral to the college application process, adding another layer to a complex and already padded resume.
Ironically, history today is a subject relegated to the bottom of important subjects. One prominent university in my state doesn;t even require a single history course for graduation. I considered my primary vocation to be the indispensable aspect of future success and social survival. If the Civil War, for example, doesn't matter anymore in our history, than everything else is moot.
So we turned out doctors and lawyers. Hopefully successful human beings that know the history that provided for their success. Once that stops, teaching will have no more focus.
Sunday, December 17, 2023
Monday, November 20, 2023
BIDEN OLD? NO WAY
When I turned 70 a close friend I've known most of my life called me to offer congratulations on my "milestone." Because of health issues I can no longer teach. My supervisor was afraid I might "keel over" from a heart attack in the middle of a lecture. I would have hoped that if that happened, I would be discussing FDR's court packing scheme of 1937. At the time, there was a growing defense of elder people in history who accomplished great things. In my own time I think of Dr. Henry Kissinger whose advice is still sought after and who still travels internationally. Dr. Kissinger is 100.
That brings me to President Biden. Too old? Not by a long shot. If nothing else the House, much young, has been far more impetuous and childlike, kids in a sandbox fighting over marbles. The President is above that, dealing with immense international problems while presiding over a growing economy.
Biden is not too old. He may be, age-wise, just right to deal with the complicated issues of our democracy.
Monday, October 23, 2023
Gothic cathedrals Date: May 16, 2018 Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris. The rise of the Gothic form began in the mid 12th century. Gothic cathedrals, often taking decades to construct, began to appear in cities and towns throughout Europe, although French cathedrals like Amiens and Notre Dame in Paris are some of the finest and most spectacular of these great houses of worship. Gothic cathedrals served many purposes beyond their chief function as seats of local bishops and archbishops.
Gothic cathedrals were the visual representation of God’s kingdom and, as such, provided spiritual education to the illiterate masses. They also functioned as the hub of town commerce and characterized civic pride. Gothic cathedrals are still used as active churches today, allowing Christians to worship and celebrate their faith amidst the supreme expression of Medieval piety.
Gothic architecture changed during the three phases: early Gothic (late 12th and early 13th centuries in France (Notre-Dame in Paris and the Carthes Cathedral), classical Gothic peak around 1220 (Reims Cathedral and Cathedral in Amiens) late Gothic (14th and 1st decades of 15th century throughout Europe). Gothic architecture or style (lat: Gothicus: belonging to Goths) was originally concealed by the name Giorgio Vasari who wanted to say that, from the point of view of the Italian Renaissance, that style was barbaric.
Gothic Cathedrals as a Spiritual Story Book During the Middle Ages, most Europeans were illiterate peasants. Their daily lives revolved around the Church, from when they arose in the morning until sunset. Life on earth was merely a brief sojourn in the overall working of God’s plan. This message was constantly reinforced by the sculptures, stained glass windows, relics, and other adornments found in Gothic cathedrals.
Depictions of the saints and Apostles, Old and New Testament stories, and Church doctrine like the final judgment comprised the images on the stained glass windows as well as outdoor and indoor sculptures and carvings. Alfons Dierick, in his book on the windows at Chartres Cathedral, states that “the faithful ‘read’ the stained glass windows.” Additionally, the cathedral as a total structure was a microcosm of God’s universal kingdom and the cosmology of Medieval theology. Dierick comments that the Gothic cathedral was an “image of light, strength and repose, symbolic of the faith of the Middle Ages.”
In most cases, cathedrals were dedicated to “our lady,” the Virgin Mary depicted as both the Queen of Heaven as well as the most exalted of females, chosen to be the mother of Christ. The Cathedral as a Commercial Hub Still today European cathedrals serve as market areas, their squares frequently filled with vendors. This is most evident in November and December when Christmas markets appear in many cities and towns under the shadows of cathedral spires. The cathedral was tied to town and city revenue in many ways during the Middle Ages.
All great cathedrals displayed holy relics. Because pilgrimage was a key element of Medieval religious practices, churches that held important relics became key destinations, bringing in thousands of pilgrims that spent money in the town. In 1087, merchants from the Italian city of Bari forcibly stole the remains of St. Nicholas of Myra in Asia Minor. This action increased the popularity and prosperity of Bari. Cathedral chapters, charged with the cathedral revenues, often held financial stakes in local merchant enterprises. This was true at Amiens and Cologne as well as a number of other cathedral towns.
Other Benefits of Gothic Cathedrals Basilica of St Denis. Photo credited by Michael Streich Basilica of St Denis. The draw of Gothic cathedrals came from their immensity as well as their interior beauty, enhanced by the myriad of stained glass windows, an art that can be traced to St. Denis in Paris in 1146 and the brilliant planning and facilitation of the Abbot Suger. Beyond the spiritual education of peasants and towns folk, cathedrals, like Notre Dame de Paris, became associated with some of the earliest universities. Cathedral “schools” had been around as early as Charlemagne, who established a school run by English Benedictines at the Aachen Cathedral, Germany’s first cathedral.
But in the High Middle Ages, early universities often began as an extension of cathedral ministries, such as the University at Paris. Gothic cathedrals played a significant role in the urban, social, and economic development of European towns and cities. They still stand today and function as active churches.
Sources:
Rosalind and Christopher Brooke, Popular Religion in the Middle Ages: Western Europe 1000-1300 (Thames and Hudson, 1984)
Alfons Dierick, The Stained Glass at Chartres (Berne: Hallwag Ltd., 1960)
Andrew Martindale, Gothic Art From the Twelfth to the Fifteenth Century (New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1967)
By: Mike Streich
Read more at: https://www.shorthistory.org/middle-ages/church-in-the-middle-ages/gothic-cathedrals/
Monday, October 16, 2023
Joe Biden should not go to the Middle East. The world already knows we support Israel. Additionally, as the humanitarian crisis balloons into a nearly impossible problem, the world will judge Israel for permitting a greater human disaster while obliterating Hamas. And that is a good thing. Hamas is a terrorist organization and needs to be obliterated. Like ISIS and like El Quida. But, It is too dangerous for President Biden to shuttle between Arab leaders.
The question remains: what to do with an entire population who, according to history, were originally driven from their homeland two generations ago and funneled into Gaza City, an urban interpretation of a concentration camp. As the vernacular saying states: what goes around comes around. And that will be the long term historical trajedy.
Saturday, October 14, 2023
When my friend come from Charlotte to Winston Salem to take me to the Medical Center for a procedure, we always end by stopping at Cagney's restaurant on Stratford Road. Cagney's is one of those city legends with incarnations sprouted up in Winston Salem bording towns. It is comfort food done really well and the menu can only be described as all inclusive, enough to give any northern diner a run for the money.
Our meal of choice is, invariably, the perennial special, meatloaf, mashed potatoes and gravy with your choice of two sides, usually cold or hot vegetables. additionally, you can select corn broad, a regular roll, or toast.For us, this is a meal made in heaven and very seldom duplicated anywhere.
At one point Cagney's was competing with the Cloverdale Kitchen, also a legendary eatery steeped in tradition and engraved in the culinary memories of hundreds of patrons. Cloverdale particularly did vegetable soup right and sold it by the quarts. but the owners, sons of early Greek founders. saw business falling off in the later afternoon and evening and so decided to close after the noon lunch rush.
Cagney's which sits at the bottom of the sloping shopping center is always full. Across town, on Reynolda Road, Mamma Zoe's is another superb comfort food establishment, refurbished after the start of the pandemic to allow for more patron space. The wait times still see many folks, most elderly, patiently waiting for tables.
They wait because the food is excellent, affordable, and memorable. Desserts are large and plentiful and it is quite impossible to leave hungry from Mamma Zoe's.
And every establishment uses delivery services or encourages patron pick-up.
Every city had it's specially known fast food joints that leave you satisfied and clamoring for more. But few leave a lasting impressions based on the menu, the fast service and the down home welcoming atmosphere. It is part of southern history. Every town had at least one place, often doubling at a pharmacy or all-purpose store that had a lunch counter or tables to accommodate the hungry wanderers.
My friend wish, all the time, that Cagney's would open a restaurant in Charlotte. But is is not yet that regional. We hope that it will someday be so,
Saturday, October 7, 2023
It doesn't do any good to complain, even to oneself. History has ceased to be a major concern for most Americans and even our key leaders, like former President Trump, often get it wrong. But then, who cares that we didn't have airports in the Revolutionary War? Try fully explaining the Boston Tea Party to students whose ONLY reference to tea is southern style sweet ice tea! One wrote, on a quiz, the Indians poured buckets and buckets of tea into Boston Harbor.
History teaching has taken backseat to other disciplines that seem to make more sense like science, math, and even aviation. But, what happened a hundred years ago or five hundred years ago will come back to haunt us. Paul Kennedy, in his book The Rise and Fall of Great Powers,all but predicted that world powers rise and fall based on many different factors, including economic ones.
I was a history teacher, instructor and, according to my community college chairperson, an adjunct professor. Now I wonder why I entered education half way through a life career as an unsuccessful businessperson. Maybe I was living a life long dream that flowed from my history-loving father and a German family with deep ties to World War II.
There is much talk today about the decline of the American Republic, perhaps a parallel story to Ancient Rome. Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire was contemporary in it's publication to the precious documents that set up the American democratic experiment. President Abraham Lincoln, in his Gettysburg Address asked if this nation would endure.
I would have enjoyed teaching until my body fully gave out. But I was stopped by a former student who accused me of misconduct. It was his word against mine, even though I was out of the country when the so-called indiscretion took place. I took it all as a sign. The church school did not support me.
Then in 2011 I became incapacitated with a major heart attack, fatty liver disease, and a host of other ailments like COPD and kidney dysfunction. My saintly mother passed in September 2012. She had always been my support.
I wrote history. Over 1500 articles for an on-line Canadian group out of Vancouver. But by 2013 they too found themselves bankrupt and relegated to the pits of Internet limbo. But, I still think getting the message out is vitally important: History matters! Perhaps more now than ever before.
It is Saturday and I wake up to news about a major Hamas Strike against Israel. And, secondarily, a 6 point earthquake in Afghanistan. All over the globe conflicts loom and, of course, the Ukraine war is still in brutal swing. But now Israel. And, here on Saturday there is no news, just football games. I enjoy sports as much as anyone, but how can sports mask the reality of bloodshed all over the world.
President Biden promised solidarity. We support Israel. But there will never be lasting peace in the Middle East, at least not as long as we prefer football over tanks and missiles. And only last night I re-watched the 1977 film, Black Sunday with Robert Shaw and Bruce Dern.
Israel should remind us that history repeats. Whether it is the prophet Jeremiah lamenting the fall of Jerusalem or Titus destroying the city hundreds of years later, history repeats and we dare not forget it. I have been to the Forum Romanum and seen the arches, the trophies of long past wars. The monuments of the past, even our American relatively short past, stand around us and we debate their on going relevance and value.
Was Robert E Lee a brilliant general of a war criminal, a traitor? Debates about simple grey clad soldiers carved in stone or displayed in bronze, feed our frenzy to erase history. Everyone has a good reason. Regardless, history matters. One hundred years ago history will still matter, even if human beings live under domes to survive.
And we will never learn from history. As fascinating as the study can be, it is eventually buried like the civilizations of early Mesopotamia, covering the lie that somehow human beings have solved the questions of war and peace, good and evil.
Friday, July 28, 2023
For decades various Christian denominations have sent summer groups from their varied churches to the Caribbean Islands as well as to Mexico and Central American countries in order to spread the Word of God and demonstrate Christian action through the good works of church building. This is the ever on-going nature of American missions, started as a strong movement in the 19th Century.
Both before the Civil War, as a result of the Second Great Awakening, and after the Civil War Protestants sent missionaries to Asia, Africa, and South America. In some cases they established hospitals and schools while teaching the Gospel. This zeal continues until this day, even though imperialistic national motives are no longer in force.
The notion that Imperialism begat missions or the other way around has been debated for many years. Liberal academics point to examples of American and European missions working side by side with their respective governments civil servants and military cohorts. As nations declared their independence, they nationalized western businesses such as oil companies and mines producing precious stones as well as needed elements such as copper and zinc.
Additionally, missionaries were sent packing, in some areas violently. Nuns in the Congo, for example, were murdered because they identified, as a group, with the utter brutality of the Belgian overlords.
In China, missionaries were chased out of the country by the Communists and fledgling Christians started to operate underground. Large groups such as the Catholics wanted to protect their investments and assets and leaned to making deals with the Communists. The Vatican and Peking still trifle over who has ultimate say over the elevation of bishops.
But in the twenty-first century, churches seeking to spread the Gospel plan trips to build and/or repair churches, build new structures, and basically strengthen the infrastructure of a church in the Dominican Republic or Nicaragua, or Colombia, or a dozen other South American nations. Meanwhile, their citizens long to come to America.
It could be anywhere. I recently drove past a local church advertising such a project and, of course, requesting money. It was the downtown area. Although the city has greatly improved and upgraded these streets, there are still many homeless people encamped in parks and in remote parking areas. The city has safe places like Samaritan's Kitchen, but there iare limitations on numbers served.
Homelessness is a serious problem in the United States. In Greensboro, North Carolina, the state has bought the old, defunct Hebrew Academy and will turn it into a sanctuary for unaccompanied Mexican children up to the age of 18. So far, 800 will be housed there. But that doesn't address the indigenous homeless problem.
This points to the fact that we have people in our midst that need Jesus. We do not need to spend countless dollars to fly to another country when the need is great in our very backyard. It is a need for food, for shelter, for education, and for jobs that are skill training.
We need the old American Settlement Houses for our Rio Grande swimming fellow humans. I myself am an immigrant as were my parents. We all learned skills and my parents capitalized on their European skills. We made it. I'm not rich by any stretch of the imagination, but I'm alive and "making it."
Foreign missions must begin in our own back yard.Christians in other poorer countries must be taught how to alleviate poverty in their communities and live Jesus everyday as a living example.
Sunday, July 2, 2023
Early 19th Century Revolutionary Movements
Although unified by nationalistic goals, the various revolutionary movements in the wake of the 1815 Congress of Vienna were the products of various motives and ideals.
The years after the defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte and the reestablishment of legitimate rulers by the Congress of Vienna were marked by growing demands for political, social, and economic change among some Europeans. Napoleon, who once referred to himself as nothing more than an “upstart soldier” in a letter to Austria’s Prince Metternich, had unleashed powerful forces within the continental empires and kingdoms. Nationalism, frequently fueled by 19th century liberal values, challenged the reimposed power structures founded on strict principles of conservatism.
Post Congress Revolutions
Revolution and popular unrest broke out throughout Europe following the Congress of Vienna. Their causes were many: ethnic nationalism, reaction to unacceptable political institutions, the desire for independence, resistance to efforts at recolonization (Central and South America), and idealistic motivations.
Early 19th Century revolutions included
- Spain in 1820
- Naples in 1820
- Greece in 1821
- Russia in 1825
- France in 1830
Unrest in Poland, Hungary, Belgium, and Serbia can also be attributed to nationalistic movements while in Central and South America former Spanish colonies declared their independence.
The reaction of the great European powers was mixed. Britain was chiefly interested in its commercial empire and resisted direct intervention, particularly after the death of Lord Castlereagh. The Decembrist Revolt in Russia required no intervention. In St. Petersburg, the new Tsar, Nicholas I, easily suppressed the small group of elite officers behind the revolutionary plot.
Greece, however, was another matter. Greek independence from the archaic Ottoman Empire was supported by Britain, chiefly for strategic reasons that meshed with global economic policies. Additionally, European intellectuals and Romanticists like the poet Lord Byron idealistically identified Greece with its classical and democratic past.
Revolutionary Activity Crushed
Poland had struggled to regain independence ever since the final partition of its lands by Prussia, Austria, and Russia. Under Napoleon, the Duchy of Warsaw reappeared briefly, but lost any semblance of self-rule after a series of revolts were crushed by Tsar Nicholas I in 1832.
Student unrest within the thirty-nine states of the German Confederation resulted in harsh restrictions placed on universities by Austria’s Prince Metternich. Metternich’s Carlsbad Decrees dissolved student organizations and imposed censorship not only on written material, but on what was being taught. Many of these students championed a united Germany, a similar goal found among young Italians.
In Russia, Nicholas I, referred to as the “Iron Tsar,” issued restrictions that forbade Russians from attending European universities and strengthening censorship. Not until the end of the Crimean War when Alexander II became Tsar would these restrictions be lifted.
Revolutionary Activity Supported
The Haitian Revolt, led by Toussaint L’Ouverture, was one of the first “New World” successful endeavors. Taking place during the time of Napoleon’s reign, its success was clandestinely supported by Britain and ultimately resulted in the Louisiana Territory sale to the United States in 1803.
After the defeat of Napoleon, other Spanish colonies declared independence. Leaders like Simon Bolivar, the so-called “George Washington of South America,” led efforts to end Spanish hegemony. Spain was in no position to challenge these movements.
By the end of the Napoleonic Era, Britain had established lucrative trade agreements with many newly independent countries and in 1823 the United States issued the Monroe Doctrine, blocking Spain – or any European country, from attempting to recolonize the hemisphere.
Incremental Successes of Revolutionary Goals
Revolutionary activity continued in Europe throughout the 19th Century but only achieved modest success. Although Alexander II feed the Russian serfs in 1861, he was assassinated by revolutionaries before he could begin the process of granting Russians a constitution. In England, Parliamentary efforts like the Great Reform Bill addressed political inequities, but much remained to be done. Even in France, where revolutions in 1830 and 1848 began with promise, ruling elites soon turned back the tide of reform.
Sources:
- Charles Breunig, The Age of Revolution and Reaction, 1789-1850 (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1970)
- C. Edmund Maurice, The Revolutionary Movement of 1848-9 in Italy, Austria-Hungary, and Germany with some Examination of the Previous Thirty-Three Years (New York: Greenwood Press, 1969)
More Like This
Friday, June 30, 2023
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.
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)