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This Blog Is Moving

Greetings. After this weekend, this Take Our Country Back Blog will be moving to the new web site. Too many conservatives are getting zapped by the intolerant dweebs of the Obama Goons and seeing that this editing platform is a free site, Blogger can do pretty much what it feels like doing. Hence, I now have a paid site and will be migrating the last 1400+ posts shortly.

So, one day, you just may click this page somewhere and it will show up as "private". It has been fun but the intolerant Czarbie Goon Squads are brain dead idiots. They can come play at the new site which I OWN outright.

Thursday, July 5, 2007

Go Fred!

Plugging for Fred Thompson

Plugging for Fred Thompson

Thursday, May 17, 2007 11:52 AM

Holy Cow! Could you imagine what it would be like if the “higher education facilities” actually taught our history as it happened instead of it being taught with the socialist agenda rewrite? Could you imagine what it would be like if our Constitution was studied and explained as it is written, in the intent in which it was written, instead of the socialist agenda “amending”? Fred is SPOT ON as usual.

“If you went to college in the sixties, like I did, you might not know how much higher education has changed since then. Universities today are different places. At Vanderbilt, where I got my law degree, I hear you can take courses in third wave feminism or colonial governmentality…” [I attended in the early 1970’s so I ain’t all that far behind ya Fred.]


Your guess is as good as mine.



West Point Cadets walk by the Combating Terrorism Center on Jan. 22, 2007, in West Point, N.Y. West Point Information War Research Center aims to teach the students know the enemy. (AP Photo/Daniel Morel )

On the other hand, some of the courses that we took for granted aren’t around at all. One area of study that’s almost disappeared from universities today is military history — the history of warfare.

I was reminded of this recently, reading a piece in The New Republic by historian David Bell. He’s certainly not the only person to mourn this change, though. One of my favorite historians, Victor Davis Hanson, wrote on the same subject several years ago in National Review.

There are a number of reasons that military history is no longer taught. Partly, it has to do with the ideological shift in university faculties over the past few decades. The post-Vietnam anti-war movement tends to see all wars as mutual mistakes — with both sides in a conflict equally wrong. Some of these folks think war can be avoided by refusing to have anything to do with it.

Hansen thinks it also has something to do with the spread of nuclear weapons during the Cold War. In an age with intercontinental ballistic missiles, the old subjects of strategy and tactics can seem obsolete. The importance of battles at Valley Forge or the Alamo might not be evident if you’re thinking of warfare in terms only of pushing big red buttons.

The enemies of civilization, though, have adapted — as they always do. Nuclear deterrence won’t protect you if the other side thinks they win if we all die together. Furthermore, they’ve learned to hide among the innocent. Iran’s missiles, nestled among civilian neighborhoods and UN outposts in Lebanon, were fired into Israel — but Iran was never hit back. The British and the Spanish have discovered, through terrorist attacks on bus and train lines, that the enemy is studying us daily. They learn our every weakness by living and working among us – but our schools have stopped offering courses that would help us meet their challenge.

All of this means that if there were ever a time to put our best minds to the study of warfare, it is now. I know that, for many people, it’s an unpleasant topic they would just as soon avoid — but history that ignores the importance of warfare is not history. There is a reason that both sides in the Civil War studied Sun Tzu’s “Art of War” – though it was written in the 5th or 6th Century BC.

Hansen writes, “The hundred years of talking about slavery was not as important as two days at Gettysburg. The success or failure of Normandy affected Hitler more in an hour than had years of pleading with him in the 1930s.”

If for no other reason than that we want to avoid war whenever we can, universities should at least offer the option of studying it. We know that students would sign up for the classes, because books on the subject are always reliable sellers. Television programmers have also responded to the sizable hunger for military history.

These alternate sources of information are important, but they don’t replace the need for serious scholarship in our universities. If you agree, I have a suggestion.

One thing we know for sure about colleges, they’re better than bill collectors at tracking you down. If you ever took a single class, you’ll be asked for contributions the rest of your life. Next time you get one of those calls, ask that student fundraiser to pass on the message that you’d probably give more money to the old alma mater if the school were offering more classes in military history. It’s worth a try, anyway.

Fred Thompson is an actor and former Senator. His radio commentary airs on the ABC Radio Network and be blogs on The Fred Thompson Report.

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