Category Archives: History

On the march with some old Romans

Here is the quote I was looking for on restoring a republic, from “Discourses on Livy” by Niccolo Machiavelli, Book III, Chapter 1:

“A republic may, likewise, be brought back to its original form, without recourse to ordinances for enforcing justice, by the mere virtues of a single citizen, by reason that these virtues are of such influence and authority that good men love to imitate them, and bad men are ashamed to depart from them.”

Machiavelli goes on to list some illustrious Romans of great virtue, who changed the course of the republic by virtue of their upstanding characters, so it’s not like he’s spouting idealistic theories.

For more inspiring Romans, I always turn to “The Meditations”  by Marcus Aurelis, which begins:

“From my grandfather Verus I learned good morals and the government of my temper.

From the reputation and remembrance of my father, modesty and a manly character.

From my mother, piety and beneficence, and abstinence, not only from evil deeds, but even from evil thoughts; and further, simplicity in my way of living, far removed from the habits of the rich.”

Now if that doesn’t demonstrate the timelessness of family values coming from the second century (161 AD or I guess CE is the preferred method now), I don’t know what does.

Now just when you think you’ve heard as much about the Romans as you might wish to know, here’s the Roman connection of my hero, George Washington to Cincinnatus, the Roman general called from his retirement as a simple farmer to once more lead the Romans to defeat the Aequians.  Right from the Mount Vernon website (here), “For Romans and Americans alike, Cincinnatus represented the ideal republican simplicity, an enlightened poverty that spurned luxury and cultivated a simple nobility of spirit.”  This comparison of George Washington to Cincinnatus led to the formation of the Society of the Cincinnati, composed of former Revolutionary War officers, with naturally, Washington being the first elected president of the society.  The Mount Vernon website states the society adopted the Latin motto, Omnia reliquit servare rem publicam (“He gave up everything to serve the republic”) alluding to the story of Cincinnatus.

If all these Roman names are a mystery to you, spend a few minutes googling, but as most of my readers seem to read more history than me, that probably won’t be necessary.  I have mentioned this book before, but since here’s another opportunity to wax on about a book that makes learning about the Romans fun.  Yes, really  this book is written tongue-in-cheek and it will bring a smile to your face and you’ll be anxiously wanting to sign up to be a legionary too.  The book is called, “Legionary; the Roman Soldier’s (Unofficial) Manual”.

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Filed under American History, Food for Thought, History, Military

‘It never rains when I can make it pour” by David Duff

It never rains when I can make it pour

Honestly, I really do try to be cheerful, I mean, every Monday I give you, free of charge, several jokes to cheer you up but the fact is it is impossible to avoid the really bad news. And ‘over there’ the news is getting ‘worserer and worserer’. You might reply something to the effect of who gives a damn? Well, I do! I love the place despite its manifold faults and vices. And, like it or loath it, it looms alarmingly large on the global landscape. So for me, reading Jeremy Warner in The Telegraph and then Jeffrey Lord in The American Spectator has made me even more miserable than the steady rainfall outside my garret window has already done.

Mr. Warner (such an appropriate name) warns of the imminent death of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency. In doing so he joins a growing chorus:

That this position – what Giscard d’Estaing referred to as America’s “exorbitant
privilege” – could so casually be put at risk by politicians on Capitol Hill is
an extraordinary spectacle that may be indicative of a great power already
seriously on the wane.

However, he suggests that it might be a slower decline and fall than some suppose not least because so much of the world’s trade is conducted in dollars. Nevertheless, he sums up the predicament, thus:

Serious alternatives to the dollar, such as a global reserve currency, are
still a long way off, but the latest shenanigans on Capitol Hill have given the
search for them renewed and added momentum. The US is recklessly throwing away its future.

All that, of course, is a symptom of a malignant disease at the heart of the American body-politic. Jeffrey Lord, in a long and detailed examination seeks to define the cause. In his opinion, and it is one I share, it is the incessant and semi-secret attack of surreptitious Marxism. If that makes me (and him) sound like born-again Joe McCarthys, so be it, but any detailed examination of the Democrat party, the higher reaches of the American academy, the civil service, the judiciary and now, according to Mr. Lord, the armed services, would convince anyone that whilst most of the participants are the usual “useful idiots” the controllers are Red in tooth and claw! Meanwhile, the stupid and stupified traditional leadership of the Republican party remain oblivious still believing that they live in the ‘good ol’ days’ of schmoozing and deal-making:

The difference — the central and critical difference — is that after decades of left-wing devotion to the hijacking of America, to the idea of transforming it [my emphasis], there are still Republicans and even some conservatives who don’t understand the nature of either their opponents or their opponents’ objectives.

They simply do not understand that the nature of the Democrat beast has changed irrevocably and thus, the war inside the Republican party between those who do and those who do not is infinitely more lethal than that between them and the Democrats. If indeed a catastrophe occurs then the benefits – oh yes, there are always benefits to someone! – will flow to the organisation that has planned it and instigated it.

The above post from October 16, 2013 has been reprinted with permission from the erudite David Duff at Duff and Nonsense, who writes about news, politics, lots of military history from a wonderfully refreshing British point of view  (pssst, and he posts a lot of jokes too).

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Filed under Culture Wars, Foreign Policy, History, Politics

George Washington finally gets a Presidential library

Today marks the opening of the brand new National Library for the Study of George Washington at Mount Vernon.  The short video clip  from the Washington Times explains that while the library is privately funded and appointments are necessary to access it, it’s mission will be a very public one.  The library includes, not only Washington’s writing’s, but also his copy of The Constitution from the Constitutional Convention.

Mount Vernon link to info on the library

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Filed under History, The Constitution

G. Murphy Donovan’s good hygiene primer:-)

G. Murphy Donovan writes frequently on intelligence matters and I often think of him as the George Will of the intelligence gurus – often way over my head, where I have to keep my dictionary nearby to look up some of the words, lol.  Well, who knew he could be funny as hell, but this August piece he wrote, The Legacy of Tribes in the New English Review had me laughing out loud.

You’re in store for gems like, “A serious Jew even bathes his chickens. Indeed, after a Kosher chicken gets naked, it is immersed in a salt bath; very hygienic and very tasty too. The mythic qualities of chicken soup are a function of salt, hygiene, and heat. Consider all those cultural contrasts with Arab neighbors. A real, as opposed to a ritual, bath is often the difference between winners and losers.”  Now, to set the tribal record straight, the Jews aren’t the only ones to subject their poultry to a salt bath, because PA Dutch farm women have been doing that for centuries too.  According to the female elders amongst my PA Dutch clan, it’s considered settled science that the salt draws all the impurities and blood out of the bird, resulting in better tasting poultry.  Who am I to question what obviously works based on successful PA Dutch cooking for centuries?  And now I learn this is a wise Jewish tribal practice too, who knew, it’s such a small world after all…

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Filed under Food for Thought, History

B.H. Liddell Hart echoes through time

Since I’m always yammering on about military history and military strategy (of which I am a novice-thinker truthfully), here’s my short take on some great places to start reading on war.  I am enamored at the crystal-clear wisdom on strategy and tactics found in Sun Tzu, “The Art of War”  the ancient Chinese classic on war.  It’s widely available online and in print and while it’s a little book, the ideas in it are enormously important and resonate through the ages, providing the best foundation in studying war that I have ever come across.  Western armies love their Clausewitz, but Sun Tzu won my heart on military strategy long, long ago.  (available free here and here).  I have several versions of “The Art of War”, but my favorite is a version translated by Samuel B. Griffith, an American WWII general, who studied Chinese and translated  Sun Tzu and Mao’s, “On Guerrilla Warfare”.  B.H. Liddell Hart, the renowned British historian and expert on military history and military strategy,  wrote the foreword for General Griffith’s Sun Tzu book and he stated that he found more wisdom on the fundamentals of military strategy and tactics in Sun Tzu than he had covered in more than 20 other books.  Hart stated that Sun Tzu was “the best short introduction to the study of warfare, and no less valuable for constant reference in extending study of the subject.”

I downloaded B.H. Liddell Hart’s short book, “Why We Don’t Learn From History” to my kindle ($1.99 for the kindle version here) recently and am about 2/3s of the way through it.  Here’s a quote that encapsulates the type of wisdom you’ll find within this slim volume:

“Civilization is built on the practice of keeping promises.  It may not sound a high attainment, but if trust in its observance be shaken the whole structure cracks and sinks.  Any constructive effort and all human relations – personal, political, and commercial – depend on being able to depend on promises.”

Coming from my Pop’s, “if you give your word, you keep it”, upbringing, it’s obvious why I greatly admire B.H. Liddell Hart’s writings:-)

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Filed under Foreign Policy, History, Military