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Post by moviefan2k4 on Apr 13, 2024 18:05:29 GMT -5
moviefan2k4 , thanks for posting this video. May I offer a couple of observations, since this is the history thread? While Jefferson is often credited as being the originator of this metaphor, most historians trace it as far back as Roger Williams, the who founded Rhode Island as a reaction to the theocratic government of the Massachusetts Bay Colony run by the Puritans. Williams was banished from Massachusetts for promoting ideas that were unpalatable to the Massachusetts government, which enforced the religious traditions and laws of the Puritans. Williams wound up in what is now Rhode Island, beyond the boundary of Plymouth Colony, aided by the Wampanoag people. Williams used the metaphor of a "high wall" as a division between the powers of the state and religion as a way to prevent the "wilderness" of government from infringing on one's right to worship as his or her conscience dictated. The charter of the colony he founded made Rhode Island and Providence Plantations the first explicitly secular government in history. People of all religions and no believers were encouraged and entitled to live there in absolute freedom to worship as they pleased or not to worship if that happened to be their wont. The charter proclaimed that the colony would “hold forth a lively experiment, that a most flourishing civil state may stand and best be maintained, and that among our English subjects, with a full liberty in religious concernments; …that no person within the said colony, at any time hereafter, shall be anyway molested, punished, disquieted, or called in question, for any differences in opinion in matters of religion, and does not actually disturb the civil peace of our said colony; but that all and every person and persons may, from time to time, and at all times hereafter, freely and fully have and enjoy his and their own judgments and consciences, in matters of religious concernments.” Until the founding of Rhode Island, all governments claimed to derive their authority from a deity, with some even claiming that their ruler was a god or ruling under the direction of a god or the Christian God (Remember the Divine Right of Kings?). Our Constitution followed suit, declaring that it was not from a deity that the United States derived its authority, but from the people: “We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, ensure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.” As for the First Amendment to the Constitution, it denies the government the right to create or establish a religion, thus preventing it from wielding authority in non-civil matters. And it also guarantees the right for Americans to worship as they damn well please, or not to worship at all. Thus, Jefferson and Williams use of a wall as a metaphor to prevent either side from encroaching on the other's territory is apropos. As for those Supreme Court decisions in the 1940s, (I believe you’re referring to Everson and McCollum, no?), the Court ruled for the religion side of the wall in the former, 5-4, with Hugo Black writing for the majority: “In the words of Jefferson, the [First amendment] clause against establishment of religion by law was intended to erect ‘a wall of separation between church and State’…. That wall must be kept high and impregnable. We could not approve the slightest breach.” That decision allowed public money to be used to transport children to parochial schools. In the latter, the Court ruled against religious education in public schools, saying that “the First amendment’s language, properly interpreted, had erected a wall of separation between Church and State." In neither case did the Court cite Jefferson’s metaphor as a precedent, instead offering it as an apt illustration of the First Amendment’s purpose. BTW, I'm not necessarily saying the the Court is often, frequently, always right, or that the wall is impenetrable. I think we're seeing with increasing and alarming frequency that it is being weakened by legislatures, the courts and the Supremes themselves. Rebuild that wall, say I. While I agree with the concept of "mutual freedom", I also think it has become seriously warped by many, particularly those on the political Left. They seem to want complete separation in every way, across the board...but the Founders didn't believe in that. They knew the Church of England had become tyrannical (which was their main reason for leaving), but they also recognized a core necessity, for absolute truth to be fundamental in establishing the strong foundation for a prosperous nation. While the Founders were still human, and some of them shifted in their opinions, several still said and wrote a lot about their respect and admiration for religion...Christianity in particular. Here's just a few select quotes, along those lines...
“We should begin by setting conscience free. When all men of all religions...shall enjoy equal liberty, property, and an equal chance for honors and power...we may expect that improvements will be made in the human character and the state of society.” (John Adams)
“Spiritual freedom is the root of political liberty...As the union between spiritual freedom and political liberty seems nearly inseparable, it is our duty to defend both.” (Thomas Paine)
“Equal and exact justice to all men...freedom of religion, freedom of the press, freedom of the person under the protection of the habeas corpus; and trial by juries impartially selected – these principles form the bright constellation that has gone before us.” (Thomas Jefferson)
“The liberty enjoyed by the people of these States of worshiping Almighty God, agreeable to their consciences, is not only among the choicest of their blessings, but also of their rights.” (George Washington)
“The Bible is the best of all books, for it is the word of God and teaches us the way to be happy in this world and in the next. Continue therefore to read it and to regulate your life by its precepts.” (John Jay)
So clearly, many of our first "national parents" valued spiritual matters very much. And while non-believers routinely tend to misquote the intent behind the 1st Amendment, I think two other facts are worth noting...
First, many early Americans were religious dissenters escaping such as the Baptists, Quakers and even Catholics. While the First Amendment does not, contrary to popular opinion, provide for “separation between church and state,” it does prevent the federal government from establishing a state church.
Secondly, Congregationalism was a popular choice for New England states. Massachusetts was last to disestablish the Congregationalist Church in 1833. Currently, 8 states prohibit atheists from holding public office (Arkansas, Maryland, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas). It is unclear if such laws would pass Constitutional muster, not due to the 1st Amendment, but the 14th, which prohibits depriving any American of their rights without due process of law.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Apr 14, 2024 3:05:35 GMT -5
Oh, geez. Gonna take a cue from Slam_Bradley in another thread. Not worth the aggravation...
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Post by Prince Hal on Apr 14, 2024 8:42:52 GMT -5
I gave discussion a shot, moviefan2k4, but if you're not going to argue specifics, it's not worth my time. And offering carefully mined quotations from various founders about their beliefs about religion, spirituality, God, etcetera is irrelevant. None of what these guys may have believed in their private lives is enshrined in the Constitution. But I will say it was a kick to see you quote Thomas Paine.
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Post by kirby101 on Apr 14, 2024 9:56:56 GMT -5
Picture me holding a ten foot pole.
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Post by driver1980 on May 3, 2024 6:13:54 GMT -5
I didn’t know this until now:
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Post by Confessor on May 3, 2024 18:32:47 GMT -5
I didn’t know this until now: Here's a bit of related trivia: the guy who invented them was inspired by the British sweets Smarties.
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Post by berkley on May 3, 2024 19:02:14 GMT -5
I didn’t know this until now: Here's a bit of related trivia: the guy who invented them was inspired by the British sweets Smarties.
He wasn't inspired enough, because I don't find M&Ms nearly as tasty as Smarties. But perhaps it's just down to which one you get used to as a kid.
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Post by Confessor on May 3, 2024 20:15:19 GMT -5
Here's a bit of related trivia: the guy who invented them was inspired by the British sweets Smarties. He wasn't inspired enough, because I don't find M&Ms nearly as tasty as Smarties. But perhaps it's just down to which one you get used to as a kid.
If we're talking just milk chocolate in a crispy shell, then yeah, Smarties are the go to. But I love peanut M&Ms.
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Post by codystarbuck on May 5, 2024 19:10:22 GMT -5
They didn't get you as many favors as a Hershey Bar, though.
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Post by Confessor on May 5, 2024 19:21:00 GMT -5
They didn't get you as many favors as a Hershey Bar, though. Which is weird because Hershey chocolate tastes like sh*t. No wonder a slang term for the arseh*le is the Hershey Highway!
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Post by codystarbuck on May 7, 2024 21:36:01 GMT -5
Just finished Antony Beevor's book about the Ardennes Offensive, aka The Battle of the Bulge. Just as comprehensive as his Normandy one (which covered from D-Day to the liberation of Paris), including much discussion of the political wrangling between allies, the civilian experience while caught in the war zone, the destruction caused by the Allies in liberating towns and villages (often liberated and obliterated), things like friendly fire incidents that were hushed up, at the time, the shooting of prisoners by Allied soldiers and the death of farm animals caught in the crossfire. A lot of the works I have read from past authors downplayed the number of casualties caused by the Allies, via the use of artillery and aerial bombing, which was extensive. They also cleaned up some of the detail about how soldiers in the field sometimes acted around civilians, like pilfering houses for food and wood to burn, to outright theft. Beevor doesn't pull punches and uses civilian history sources from the villages, about their experiences, as much as other historians and military records. Plus, as a former officer, he understands both strategy and battle tactics and better understands why some decisions were made, compared to other historians. One of the things he brings up was the use of white phosphorus munitions, by artillery untis, which burned German soldiers alive, in tanks and fortified positions and also set fire to civilian homes and buildings. It also poisoned water sources, which killed animals and some people or created water shortages, due to contamination.
Beevor really gets at the human cost of the war, both in terms of physical damage and mental damage, discussing battle fatigue/PTSD and long term effects on people who were in intense fighting, for extended periods of time. Soldiers haunted by seeing crewmen pushing out supply bundles from burning transport planes, as they go down, tank crews cooked alive inside burning tanks, or mowed down when they come out of the hatches. People frozen to death at their posts, like images of dead German machine gun crews, still holding belts of ammo.
No sanitized Hollywood stuff in his works.
Bradley doesn't come off well in it, nor did Montgomery, in his Normandy book. Monty gets some praise here, in helping to stabilize things in the North, but at the expense of Allied unity when he can't stop himself from bragging that he practically saved the US Army, when he is supposed to deliver a speech praising the fighting of the US Army formations in the battle. After that, Eisenhower basically cut him off and Bradley and Patton refused to have anything to do with him. Churchill lost a lot of bargaining power in conferences, as he lost any support from Eisenhower. Monty's ego was his own worst enemy, in Beevor's estimation.
Bradley comes off as out of touch, as the Germans break through and his staff can't seem to get things organized. Bradley withdraws to his bedroom and it seems was having or on the verge of a breakdown, which, in part, led to Montgomery taking over some American units to secure the Meuse River bridges, while the fighting around Bastogne and other villages and strongpoints were pretty much American, with USAAF and RAF air support, when planes could fly.
He also gets into Operation Boddenplatte, the Luftwaffe's last ditch attack on Allied airfields, which caused greater destruction of German forces, as they sent survivors back to attack again and were caught by pursuing Allied aircraft and also shot down by friendly forces. Hitler's pulling of forces from the Eastern Front to bolster the attack in the Ardennes and to try to support it when it ran into resistance paved the way for the Red Army's break out, from the Vistula, into East Prussia and Hungary, and aided in their relatively rapid progress across Poland, towards the German frontier.
I was reading that across lunch breaks, at work and am reading his overall history of WW2, at home, at night. Just got up to Pearl Harbor and the attacks in the South Pacific and Malaya. Less detailed in the specific battles, but nice overview of all sides of the conflict, including the fighting between the Chinese and Japanese, before 1941 and the Winter War between Finland and the Soviet Union, as well as the political maneuvering with the non-aggression pact between Germany and the Soviet Union and the splitting of Poland, a similar agreement between the USSR and Japan and Stalin withholding intel from the US about Japanese plans to attack the US (though the War Department had been prepping for war with Japan, but believed it would center around the Philippines).
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Post by Prince Hal on May 7, 2024 22:59:20 GMT -5
codystarbuck, I'm curious if Bevoors alludes to something I first read years ago in Manchester's The Glory and the Dream: Beginning in 1931, every Japanese naval academy graduate was required to describe how he would execute a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor.
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Post by codystarbuck on May 8, 2024 1:31:03 GMT -5
codystarbuck , I'm curious if Bevoors alludes to something I first read years ago in Manchester's The Glory and the Dream: Beginning in 1931, every Japanese naval academy graduate was required to describe how he would execute a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. Doesn't go into those kinds of specifics, since it is an overall history of WW2 and mostly just talks a bit about Tojo and the milatarists pushing for the attack to cripple the Pacific fleet, to leave things open for their attack on the Dutch East Indies, to gain the oil fields there and the raw materials in Malaya and China. Their intent was to build a security zone around those areas, to protect their empire and set up bases in the various island chains, to create a layered defense. He does mention the rather well known fact that Yamamoto had been a naval attache to the US and had toured factories and seen America's industrial power. He cautioned the Army bloc that he could run wild for about 6 months, before the US could then start to counter-attack. His hope was that they would catch the carrier fleet at Pear and destroy it or damage it sufficiently to buy them that time to establish their bases, then strengthen them, before America could respond. He was pretty accurate in his assessment, though they overextended themselves with the dual attack on the Aleutians and Midway. Had they sent that combined fleet to Midway, they would have had a carrier superiority and possibly changed the outcome of the battle of Midway and then been free to move on the Aleutians, to establish closer striking range to the West Coast. After the defeat at Midway, they immediately went into a defensive footing and they soon proved unable to adequately resupply their forces in the Aleutians. They were not in good shape even before the US launched its offensive there, to retake those islands. Midway represented both a midpoint to Hawaii and control of the sea lanes to Australia. Had they taken the island, the US would have had to sail further south to bring troops and supplies to Australia and New Zealand. By stopping the Japanese there, they kept that conduit to Australia open, to begin their counter offensive, beginning at Guadalcanal, to seize the airbase there and be able to begin attacking other Japanese installations with land based aircraft, rather than having to use carriers to bring in air power. When I was in high school, I never quite grasped the strategy of the island hopping campaign, as my textbook never really dwelt on the strategic importance, just the events. I got a better understanding by doing the historical background pieces for my All-Star Squadron thread, as I actually read summaries of the various landings and could see things on maps and follow it chronologically, seeing how they seized one island, built up an airbase and harbor facilities, to then supply further strikes towards the Philippines, on the southern end (securing the Solomons and New Guinea, to alleviate pressure on Australia and free the path to the Philippines) and the central, to move closer to aircraft striking range of the Japanese home islands. I got to look at more isolated maps and wider maps and got a better sense of the geography of the South Pacific, than my textbook maps ever had. we had a World Book set of encyclopedias, growing up, but even their maps were a bit limited. That is one of the advantages of the internet, to find more detail on things...or at least references to point you to that detail. The WW2 book gets more into the geo-political side of things, while also the wider strategies, showing how one affected the other, such as Stalin sing the treaties with Germany and Japan to secure his borders, for a time, then playing for time with the Allies, to keep a hand in Eastern Europe and prevent Churchill from getting his way of moving the Allies into Germany and to the borders of the USSR, to contain or destroy the government, eventually. Getting back to the Pearl Harbor exercise, the US Navy had similar exercises that revolved around fighting the Japanese in the Pacific. Ever since the Russo-Japanese War, they looked at Japan as a potential future enemy, as they had modernized quite rapidly and were the dominant non-US force in the region, as no other nation had the sea power, aside from the connections between the British and the empire and former colonies and even that was stretched thin, as the Navy was more concentrated in the Mediterranean and Atlantic, because of the rising political issues. In my time, the enemy was the USSR and our war games revolved around the Soviet Navy and their activities in the Baltic, the Med and the Pacific and Indian Oceans, plus their subs in the Atlantic. Since I was a midshipman and then a junior supply officer, I didn't get into that as much, since that is more of staff college activity, which would have been later in a career. Still, we did computer games and fleet exercises were built around those scenarios. Midshipman training built around recognizing Soviet military weapons and how they were employed, strengths and weaknesses. For us, it was mostly their sub fleet, as their surface navy lagged way behind and lacked the experience and professionalism of the sub force. Their best commanders and sailors were in it. Still, we closely watched things like the introduction of things like the Kirov and also their developments of Naval air power, from their jump jet carriers to the construction of a fleet carrier, which was still ongoing, when the coup and collapse went down. A lot of our scenarios revolved around Soviet activities with puppet states and spheres of influence, like the Middle East and control of the oil resources and their transport. Our main clashes were with Arab states armed with Soviet frigates and destroyers, such as our engagements with Iran and Libya, in the Reagan years. Similarly, in his Arnhem book, Beevor talked about how the capture of the bridges at Arnhem was a regular exercise at their staff colleges and Montgomery's strategy of the route from Belgium to Eindhoven and Arnhem was an immediate failure, in the exercise. The route was too narrow and there were too many bridges to control. The way to succeed was to establish a bridgehead across the Rhine and then capture the Arnhem bridge from both sides, after outflanking the German side. That was proposed, at one point and shot down by Monty's people. At no point did his staff consult with Dutch officers, who had conducted military exercises, including tank exercises, in that region and could have told them about the unsuitability of the terrain to support tank movements. What could the defeated Dutch teach the British Army? The US had similar problems with British command, early on, as the looked at them as rookies, ignoring that a good portion of our senior commanders were also WW1 vets, as well as other military adventures, not to mention pioneering air power, on land and sea, and manufacturing and technical capabilities. We were a bunch of colonial rubes, to people like Monty. Granted, some American commanders reinforced that view, with some of the mess in North Africa and Italy, especially. One of the things Beevor emphasizes in the Ardennes book is how many of the divisions involved were filled with replacements and lacked experience, after Normandy and Market Garden. Units like the 10st and 82nd Airborne had been brought in reserve, both due to casualties from Market Garden and because of the specialization. that is why they were available to deploy to Bastogne and along the path to the Meuse. The 106th was mostly replacements and green as grass and suffered the worst casualties, as they bore the brunt of the German attack. The 29th, under Norm Cota, had been fighting through the Hurtgen and had suffered heavy losses and hadn't been rotated out, when they should have been. You get a good feel for how troops were employed, then taken off the line to recover, re-equip and re-train, before rotating back into things. The Germans had similar problems, as they had to piece together Panzer formations with untis that had all but scrapped tanks in advance of replacements, then had to put them back together for the offensive, to get the numbers up. Fallschirmjager troops included a large number of recent trainees with no experience and the attempt to drop them in advance was a fiasco and they mostly hid out to wait for the armored forces to arrive, because they couldn't muster enough men to do more than reconnaissance, and lacked and Luftwaffe promises of resupply by air were worse than the attempts by the Allies, in Market Garden. It was interesting to read the story unfold as the Germans pore across the Ardennes and drive the US back; but, they are able to move their reserves into key crossroads (Bastogne) and fight stubbornly on enough small villages to throw the German timetable out of whack, letting the Allies marshal more forces into their defenses. Patton starts moving up from the South and the air cover stats hitting back just before Christmas and the US commanders fully expect the Germans to try an all-out attack on Bastogne, on Christmas, and are waiting for it and hit them with everything, including dwindling artillery ammo and stop it cold. Little bits here, little bits there, which grow into bigger events, until Patton's advance forces reach Bastogne and open a corridor there and they start pouring in trucks with supplies and prepare a counter-attack, while the air forces run wild on German supply lines. Through it all, he never makes it just about the soldiers and battles, but the politics at play that directs the Army and the strategies, as well as the innocents caught in the middle and the real cost of the victory, on all sides. For instance, with the fighting in the Ardennes and the heavy use of artillery, and the regular tactic of creating "treebursts," the trees in that region were heavily scarred with shrapnel and other components and it makes the timber unsuitable for industrial use, driving down the value of it and causing economic damage to the region, for decades. The other major industry is agriculture, and thousands of livestock were killed in the fighting, leaving farms without their animals and their fields filled with landmines and unexploded ordinance. Getting ready to start his book on the Spanish Civil War. I also have his book about the fighting in Crete. I still need to get his Stalingrad book, his book about the siege of Berlin and the one about Paris, after liberation. Ernest Hemingway doesn't come across well either, both in the Normandy book and the Ardennes, since he basically acts like a drunken cowboy, out for attention and glory, when he is supposed to be a correspondent. he also is romancing a mistress, while the missus turns up and is wined and dined by Allied generals. he may have been a fine writer, but he was a major pr!@k.
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Post by codystarbuck on May 8, 2024 1:44:33 GMT -5
ps the Ardennes book, in his conclusions, talks about how the support troops managed to move tens of thousands of gallons of fuel and tons of ammo and supplies out of range of the German advance, in time, to prevent their capture and use, causing the Germans to have critical fuel problems, that further slowed their advance. Early in the book, he remarks how Com Z, the Allied Supply command, had basically set up an empire and were dabbling in the black market and all kinds of corruption; but, when the defecation hit the oscillator, they did the job they are supposed to, with amazing efficiency. He talks about the African-American drivers who were transporting troops and supplies, and the artillery formations and the tank destroyer battalion that fought in the battle, winning the first Presidential Unit Citation for an African-American unit. He gives quick mentions of Kurt Vonnegut and how he was captured and the lot of the POWs, before their eventual liberation, including the inspiration for Billy Pilgrim. There is also a mention, in the section about the counter-attack and "flattening the Bulge," about the fighting in the Colmar and Audie Murphy winning his Medal of Honor (though it looks like Spring, in the film version of To Hell and Back, and not January, in the coldest winter of the war).
JD Salinger also gets a mention, early in the book, as he was serving then.
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Post by Confessor on May 16, 2024 18:21:26 GMT -5
I stumbled upon a great 1968 CBS News Special documentary on YouTube about the operation to take Hill 943 during the Battle of Dak To in the Vietnam War. It's called Hill 943 and is a fascinating slice of late 60s American TV news coverage showing the everyday life of GIs out on operations. Well worth a watch if you're at all interested in the Vietnam War.
It seems to be from two different sources because about half way through a watermark appears and the colour changes noticeably. There are TV ads for Buick cars and General Motors trucks among others in the documentary, but sadly they've been "scoped", so only the beginning and end of each advertisement is present.
Anyway, here's the link...
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