Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Monday, May 19, 2014
Sunday, May 18, 2014
1870 to 1918 | From empire to cataclysm
I've been waiting for this blog to appear, and somehow failed to notice that it had!
Anyhow, the author of this blog has had some excellent posts on her other blog on historical topics, including the Second Boer War, and I'm glad to note that this blog has appeared!
Saturday, May 17, 2014
Old Man and the Plow
I'm not sure if some days I feel like this old timer, or wish I did.
Sunday, May 17, 1914. Trouble on Wrangel.
Geologist George Malloch of the Canadian Arctic Expedition, stranded on Wrangel Island, died from nephritis after eating bad pemmican. Bjarne Mamen was stricken with the same disease and was too ill to bury him.
This would not be addressed for several days, as Cpt. Robert Bartlett had ordered the men to spread their camps out to increase their hunting odds while stranded.
Albania recognized tiny Northern Epirus as a self-governing region under the Principality of Albania.
Meanwhile, rebels surrounded Shijak, Albania.
The Canadian Northern Railway acquired the Canadian Northern Ontario Railway.
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Saturday, May 16, 1914. Álvaro Obregón's takes Tepic.
Friday, May 16, 2014
Remembering the Great War
Okay, let's take a look at what we hear about the Great War that might need a little correction.
The War ended a long period of Peace in Europe
In reality, the entire Balkans had been engaged in one war after another in the years running up to World War One. Turkey and Greece also fought prior to World War One, in the 20th Century.
Russia, a major European power, fought a major war with Japan, a major rising power. Granted, that's not a European war, but it was a bit war. It could have caused a European war as the Imperial Russian Atlantic fleet actually sank a British fishing fleet in the North Sea under the panicky belief that the fishing boats were Japanese torpedo boats (a bizarre error), but the British wisely let cooler heads prevail.
And of course the British were fighting a transplanted European enemy in southern Africa at the start of the 20th Century.
Of course, none of these were general European wars, i.e., wars between the great European powers, in Europe. Some involved great European powers, but not against each other. The point is, however, that the often stated claim that Europeans had somehow grown bored with Peace is just wrong. Some of the European countries had been in major wars well within a generational experience.
The war pitted unqualified democracy against unqualified totalitarianism, and the rights of small nations.
I don't mean to be revisionist here, and launch of Noam Chomsky like on some deluded Marxist vision of the war, and it's already often noted that one of the major Allies, Imperial Russia, was not a democracy. Still, this claim should come with an asterisks.
The reason for that is that every major combatant in the war was part of an imperial system, and imperial systems, to varying degrees, are anti democratic themselves.
It is certainly the case that the Central Powers in the war, together with the Allied Power of Imperial Russia, were not democracies. Apologist for Germany sometimes note that it had a Reichstag with a broad theoretical franchise, but theoretical must be emphasized there. The real power in Germany was in the traditional, mostly Prussian, landed class of which the crown was part. The parliament was not governing the country in a complete sense. Likewise, the Russians had an assembly, but it certainly wasn't in control, nor was the Austro Hungarian political system democratic in any meaningful sense. As I'll probably note elsewhere, it was, in my view, the strenuous efforts to keep the lid on democratic expression in these Old Order countries that caused the fermentation of dissent, yielding in the poisonous brew of Communism and Fascism.
But something we should note is that even democratic countries were comfortable with having overseas empires at the time, and in some cases even local empires. And these aren't really democratic. So, while a country like France could fight for its self defense and democracy, it could still feel okay about running the show non democratically in Indochina or Algeria. Even the United States, which was an anti imperial power, was still fighting a guerrilla war in the Philippines running up to World War One, even though we'd stated our intent to ultimately free it.
Now, some of this must be balanced a bit. The British Empire was the largest in the world, and therefore is frequently one of the most criticized, but it did have an amazingly good record for developing democratic institutions and setting their former colonies out into the world as British Dominions. Canada, Australia and New Zealand were all domestically self governing leading up to World War One, although the British Parliament retained control of foreign affairs to some degree for each (including the right to declare war on their behalf.) This was also the case for South Africa. Indian was well on its way towards an anticipated dominion status, with the only real question being when, as opposed to if. As noted, the US declared itself set to follow suit after the Philippines were sufficiently schooled, in our opinion, on democracy, something that would take another 30 years and a second world war.
To make this story a bit odder, however, we should also realize that it wasn't the case that the Central Powers were universally for suppressing the national dreams of small European nations, and the Allies universally in favor of the right of self determination, no matter what people thought of Wilson's Fourteen Points. Indeed, while we hardly recall it today, Germany back independence for several nations during the war. Granted, it did so for its own reasons, but it did it.
A really confusing example of this is provided by Poland. In regard to Poland and Germany, we tend to think that Poland was carved out of the fallen German and Russian imperial regimes and restored to nationhood by the Allied victory in World War One, until Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union gobbled it back up in 1939. And that is partially true.
But forgotten is the fact that the Poles were proactive in seeking independence during the Great War and during the early stages of the Russian Revolution, and that the Germans backed them in part. Germany, which occupied part of the Polish national soil itself, did this as Imperial Russia occupied more of it. Perhaps it was being dangerously cynical, but Germany sponsored Polish nationalist in a German supplied, trained and controlled Polish revolutionary army. They weren't the only Polish rebels in the field, however, as a much more left wing socialist native revolutionary movement had its own rebels in the field, largely behind Russian lines. When Russia bowed out of the war, Polish soldiers in the Imperial Russian Army discharged themselves, sometimes asking their Russian officers to go along (who largely declined) and went home. Poland was effectively born, but there was a tense period, even lasting after the Versailles Treaty, in which conservative German trained Poles and left wing Polish rebels stared each other down. Eventually the divisions were worked out and Poland was born, even though the boundaries of Poland were not.
They were not in part because another new state that the Germans backed was getting up and running, and that was the Ukraine. Everyone agrees that Ukraine is a real nation, but often missed in that is that the Ukrainians and the Poles are so close ethnically that its very difficult to for anyone, including them, to tell where Poland starts and Ukraine stops. Generally, about the most convenient dividing line is religious, as Ukrainians are pretty universally members of one of the Eastern churches, with some being Ukrainian Catholics (a Church which actually goes by another name), some being Ukrainian Orthodox, and some being Russian Orthodox. Poles are almost all Roman Catholics. This divide, however, was not regarded as sufficiently so vast as to prevent Poland from making a very serious effort at taking the Ukraine from the Soviet Union during the Russo Polish War in the 1920s.
During the Great War, Germany backed Ukrainian independence, again for its own reasons. The Ukraine came out of the war weak, and hit teetered for some time on the verge of independence and falling to the USSR, before it ultimately did that. A German backed Ukrainian state re-emerged during World War Two, with the Germans reprising their World War One role in those regards, but it was reabsorbed by the advancing Red Army in the same war, with some underground independence movements holding on into the late 1940s. And it reemerged again with the fall of the USSR, and is int the news, nervously, again today.
Probably the most successful example of German backing the national aspirations of a small nations comes in the form of Finland. Finland's history is odd in any event, but it had become a Russian vassal many decades before. As such, it tended to have a fair degree of independence, up until the late 19th Century and early 20th Century, when the Russians, already sensing the problems that would ultimately drag the empire down, began to try to solidify the central authority of Moscow, which did not sit well with the Finns, who were really a foreign people. During World War One the Germans armed and equipped Finnish Jaegers who fought on the German side, seeking independence for their nation. When Imperial Russia fell, they got it, but went almost immediately into a civil war, not being able to avoid the situation that Poland ultimately did. In that war, the better armed and trained Jaeger elements became the backbone of the Finnish Whites, while urban Finnish socialist became the Reds. The war was a nasty miniature, uniquely Finnish, version of the Russian Civil War, and the bloodbath it created lingered on over the nation until the Soviet invasion of 1940 united the Finns against the Russians. Here too, however, Finland basically owed a debt of sorts to Germany as Germany had backed its independence against an imperial power.
While all of this was going on, the leading European democracy, the United Kingdom, ended up putting down a rebellion on its own soil, in the form of an Irish uprising in 1916, followed by the beginning of the terrorist campaign that would lead to the Anglo Irish War. This is a bit more complicated than might be imagined, as Ireland, by that time, did have the franchise on an equal basis with other citizens of the United Kingdom, and Irish support for the rebels was, at that time, much much weaker than generally imagined. Indeed, the best evidence is that the majority of the Irish opposed rebellion. It makes for an interesting complication of the story, however, and points out that some major European nations, while democratic, still contained areas within their own nations that had divided national loyalties.
This is not to suggest the entire Fourteen Points were baloney. The Allies, following the US entry into World War One, really did come to back the national aspirations of small or occupied European peoples. But the story is just somewhat more confused than that. Indeed, it's quite a bit more confused as not only did the Germans back some of the same peoples, for their own reasons, but the early USSR did as well, doing so under the belief that all nationhood was passing away rapidly anyhow, and soon the same nations would follow their Communist path. The USSR, however, got over that quickly.
And, as it can't help be noted, independence for small nations, really only meant small European nations, but that's a well known story.
It was the war that showed horse to be obsolete
Postscript I, The Guns Fell Silent on November 11, 1918
A really common myth about World War One is that the guns fell silent on the 11th hour, of the 11th day, of the 11th month of 1918. In actuality, November 11, 1911, at 11:00, saw the cessation of combat on the Western Front. That is, an armistice was entered into between the Central Powers and the Allies, but that didn't mean the end of all the fighting that was going on.
Indeed, an often missed aspect of the Armistice is that it required the Germans to retain German troops in the East in order to have them combat the Reds in the Russian Civil War. The Russian Civil War, of course, had already broken out by the end of World War One and the Allies had committed troops to Russia in an effort to support the Russian republicans against the Reds, a mission that was frustrated by a lack of Allied forces and by White disorganization. By the wars end, however, the Germans, who had backed Lenin against the Imperial government, found that they too were sliding into war against the Reds on the territory they occupied in the East. A requirement of the Armistice was that they remain committed in Russia against the Whites, which they did for a time until the revolution in Germany required German troops to be redeployed at home.
Which brings us to the next point, while German war fatigue had contributed to the collapse of the Imperial German war effort, the end of the war with the Allies didn't end the fighting for the Germans. German troops went right on fighting in the German Revolution, a bloody affair that is a bit bizarrely omitted from the story of World War one, perhaps because it's a mess. Basically, as the home front collapsed the German army realized that the country was going to follow Russia into revolution and it sought to save itself, tossing out the Kaiser and gathering up the Frontsoldaten for redeployment against radicalized rear area troops and sailors, and Socialist revolutionaries. As the new Social Democratic Party lead government negotiated the peace, the Germans fought out a war at home which went on until August 1919. In the meantime, the Germans saw the formation of a lot of unofficial right wing militias that were aligned with the German Army, known as Freikorps, which also saw service in the East against the Russian Reds. At least the British, however, took some actual military role in the German revolution themselves, committing some troops in aid of the Weimar government.
The war between the Allies and Turkey also went on. The Ottoman Turks were German allies, of course, but the war had the same impact on the Ottomans that it had on the Hapsburg's, Romanov's and Hohenzollern's. That is, it caused an imperial collapse. In Turkey's case, this lead the takeover of the country by the "Young Turks", that military faction made up of younger officers. They did not enter into peace with the Allies along with Germany (and technically were not at war with all of the Allied powers) and this lead to ongoing fighting. To add to it, seeing an opportunity, the Turks invaded the Turkic regions of the former Russian Empire in an effort to build a greater Turkey, but were beat back by the British. This ongoing fighting went on until 1922.
The point is that the common concept that everyone who was fighting in November 11, 1918 stopped fighting at 11:00 is simply wrong. The Germans kept on fighting in the East. The Russians were fighting each other, so were the Finns, so were the Germans. The Turks kept on fighting the British and French, and soon thereafter the Russians. The British, French, Japanese, and the United States had troops in Russia. The United States still saw sporadic fighting on the border with Mexico. The Great War might have ended, but wars certainly kept on uninterrupted.
Saturday, May 16, 1914. Álvaro Obregón's takes Tepic.
Álvaro Obregón's forces captured Tepic and thus the only railroad between the ports of Guadalajara and Colima.
Robert Bartlett arrived in Emma Harbour.
A day late, but the day prior, May 15, Colorado National Guardsman Sergeant Patrick N. Cullom testified that soldiers in his company shot and killed labor activist Louis Tikas and two other fellow strikers while they tried to escape during the Ludlow Massacre. Moreover, it was revealed that large numbers of strikebreakers were recent enlistees in the subject unit.
Last prior edition:
Thursday, May 14, 1914. The Life of General Villa
Thursday, May 15, 2014
Extremism and the Internet
To give an odd example, there's a video that's been on the news and which is uploaded to YouTube, which was compiled from a series of security cameras. It shows a little boy out riding a little bicycle. He gets attacked by a neighbor's mid sized dog. The remarkable thing about the video is that the family cat rushes out and attacks the dog, and chases it off. It's a neat video.
It'd be hard to imagine anyone exhibiting their extremism based on that, but if you read the comments, some sure do.
For one thing, one poster is opinionated about the homeowner having so many security cameras. Well, miffed person, stuff it. If a person wants security cameras, so be it.
Beyond that, however, one person comes in and voices an opinion that all dog ownership should be banned. All of it, save for working dogs.
Seriously? I've heard of people exhibit this extreme view about firearms, which is also way out there in my view, but ban dogs? Come on.
Another person pronounces cats as "evil" and then goes on about how they carry some disease. That's equally absurd. No doubt cats carry some diseases. Mammals carry disease. For that matter, reptiles and birds carry diseases. If this view meant anything, pretty much all things on land ought to be banned, assuming that we can't get diseases from fish (which I don't know if we can or not). This person needs to relax.
In a prior era, I suppose people with these types of views would have still held them. But they probably wouldn't have voiced them out of fear that they'd get eye rolling. In this fashion, the Internet has done us no favors.
Aging and ignition.
Recently I was in Denver and had to rent a car. I rented some sort of newer Toyota SUV.
For the second time in recent months, when I got in the car, I was baffled by how to start it. Really a sign, I suppose, that I've aged to a point where some new technologies through me. When I rented the car, they told me that the "keys are in the car." Indeed, the "key" was in the ignition. But it wasn't a key at all, it was really a fob that was inserted in a slot. No key. It didn't turn. And because it didn't turn, I had a moment where I couldn't figure out how to start the car.
I then noticed the on/off button depicted above, and pushed it.
Nothing happened.
It quickly became apparent, however, that what I needed to do was to push on the brake, and push on. Once I did that, it started just fine. I drove into Denver and found a spot in a parking lot. There was a moment of tension when I pushed off, but it turned off just fine.
This is all a little silly of course, but every car I've ever owned took a key. They all started when you turned the ignition switch clock wise. They didn't all work exactly the same way, however.
The 1954 Chevrolet Sedan I had actually didn't require a key to start it. The key only unlocked the ignition. Once the ignition switch was unlocked, you could remove the key. I had no idea this was the case until my uncle showed me, and I was frankly stunned that was the case.
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
Thursday, May 14, 1914. The Life of General Villa
The Life of General Villa was released as a film by D. W. Griffith. Villa was played by Villa.
Last prior edition:
Tuesday, May 12, 1914. A Marian Apparition.
Monday, May 12, 2014
No More Bromine: Coke, Pepsi Drop Controversial Ingredient : The Salt : NPR
In the "really. . . there was nothing else to worry about department. . . ."
Removes 99% of Makeup . . .
Here's a thought. Dispense entirely with makeup. That removes 100% of makeup.
A cranky opinion I know, but I'm operating on very little sleep today and cranky as a result. But makeup is largely a fraud on women.
Women do not need makeup. It's a huge industry that promotes the idea that people look better by not really looking natural, which is absurd. Indeed, at its most absurd, it promotes the idea that by using it you look natural, when obviously you look the most natural by not wearing it.
Nobody really looks better than they do in a state of nature by wearing makeup.
Tuesday, May 12, 1914. A Marian Apparition.
There will be a war. Russia will become a godless country. Ukraine, as a nation, will suffer terribly for eighty years – and will have to live through the world wars, but will be free afterwards.
Reported words of the Virgin Mary at Hrushiv, Ukraine, on this day in 1914.
On this day in 1914 twenty people reported the commencement of an apparition of the Virgin Mary in the Ukrainian village of Hrushiv.
Fatima is by far the most famous of the widely accepted Marian apparitions of the 20th Century, although there are others. There would be a lengthy series of them at the same site in 1987.
Showing that moronic destruction of art is not a new thing, Suffragist Gertrude Mary Angsell damaged a portrait of the Duke of Welling by Hubert von Herkomer while it was displayed at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition in London.
The Jacksonville Zoo and Gardens was opened in Jacksonville, Florida. A red deer fawn as the first exhibit
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