Message from @Tron
Discord ID: 436015456936001548
The book is full length text and has no alterations to it. I checked.
Here's the condensed key points version from the original version.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=http://noirg.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/TSR.HighlightsKeyPoints1.pdf&ved=2ahUKEwiw1YyZ2JXZAhVHrFQKHXZADTMQFjAIegQICBAB&usg=AOvVaw0HuNmrlJ-aK7mllBGb5xwJ
This is an absolutely essential series written by Edward Ellis in 1895.
WANT
The collection probably cost more than everything I own.
@CarletonJ Actually, I believe this is a condensed version for only $5.71
The History Of Our Country: From The Discovery Of America To The Present Time (1905) https://www.amazon.com/dp/0548638004/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_iwnIAbAF2X04V
*heavy breathing*
Thank you!!
There are now 44 "MUST HAVE" books on my Amazon wish list. This is getting out of control.
@CarletonJ If you're adding books, get Uprising by David Irving. Accurate account of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956. (JQ included)
Bonus - if you email him, he'll send you an autographed copy of any of his works. Actually, he responds to any and all emails. Super epic.
Thank you so much. For real.
I made a note of your comment
Request - does anyone know a good book on Argentina and the La Plata region?
@Nemets Be careful when reading Alan Taylor, he’s a narrative manipulating subverter
How so?
@Nemets I’ve only read his book ~American Revolutions~ back in my senior year of undergrad. I dont remember specifics at this point but I remember putting down the book and just thinking “fuck this guy” multiple times. Take it from a guy who’s read a way more “scholarly” history than he’d prefer, any academic historian who’s widely respected by his colleagues is a narrative-pushing culture distorter
@Nemets If they don’t get shit talked by the academic establishment on a regular basis, they’re probably not worth reading. Unless you just want to get that deep in the mind of your ideological enemy
@Tron I'm 2/3rds of the way through "American Colonies" and it seems pretty reasonable. He does equivocate between the inquisition and iroquois cannibalism though.
Even though he clearly prefers the dutch/french way of dealing with indians, he pretty much admits that the english methods were very effective
@Nemets One thing Ive learned through reading all these sorts of books is that there’s good information you can glean from all of them as long as you understand what’s really going on. I just don’t think they have as much net value as a lot of other books. The best thing about them is the bibliographies. You can usually find great primary sources in those
I still like these sorts of books since they put a lot together. I wouldn't even know where to start looking for early colonial demographics, but he has it all there
What are the best broad strokes books on American history to augment and fill in the gaps of public school education?
@Gaius Mucius Scaevola I wish I had a good answer for you
@Gaius Mucius Scaevola Have some suggestions. Will send sources when home.
The Journals of Lewis and Clark edited by DeVoto - I **HIGHLY** recommend this book. Especially if you are feeling blackpilled and need to take a break from politics.
This i need to read,these are my ancestors, both Lewis & Clark. I have watched most things i can with them,and read some,looks good.
good forum thread on the early days of AIDS and general homosexual diseases
lots of sources from the 70s thorugh early 90s
Reading this work currently, incredibly inspiring to read directly from the journals of men who agitated for revolution. And revolution from a tyranny which was, I believe, far less serious than what we face today.
The Market Revolution is a history of the expansion of the consumer market into every facet of the American life from roughly 1815 to the Civil War. Charles Sellers is obviously a Marxist, but there are critical elements of truth to his writing. A couple critiques: there were certainly other integral factors at play in shaping the American and the Southern psyches during this time; Sellers probably gives a little too much power to this market revolution. Also, Sellers distinguishes between two groups that he calls the Arminians and the Antemonians, one being for and the other against the Market Revolution. However, he gets the groups backwards in this book.
That said, this book helps the reader grasp the power of the market over those within its hegemony and therefore has a wealth of information relevant to us.
I would follow the Market Revolution with Liberty and Power by Harry Watson. Where Sellers explains the nature of the Market Revolution, Watson describes and analyzes the results of it. He explains how the rise of market capitalism was not always equated with liberty, rather, many saw it as a vehicle of tyranny. There are elements of the Whig and Democrat platform here which I agree with. But that is with the benefit of hindsight. And, of course, this all takes place within an American democratic paradigm, but there is a wealth of information in this relatively short book (for an academic history) that will help shape the ideology and historiographical thinking of its readers
Any one have a robust and well-sourced critique of MLKjr ? His Communism, sexual degeneracy, rootless cosmopolitan handlers, etc.