Chaucer - the Knight's Tale if I'm not mistaken?tattuchu wrote:two bellas naughty bits, click click click, hoit me wioth youer rythum stick

Chaucer - the Knight's Tale if I'm not mistaken?tattuchu wrote:two bellas naughty bits, click click click, hoit me wioth youer rythum stick
Except of course, that taxes "trickle down".Blind groper wrote:The thing is that history is very much a matter of interpretation. My interpretation of the American war of independence will be different to that of many Americans. I am aware, for example, that the trigger was not oppression of the people, but the increase in taxes, which really would only have much effect on the rich people. So the moneybags like George Washington, whose slaves made him a lot of money, would strongly resent the extra taxes. The thing is, though, that the not-so-rich would not go to war for that reason. So the wealthy then fire up the propaganda machine and start talking about 'liberty' and 'human rights', as if the British were actively taking those away.
Of course, not all the peoples of the time were vulnerable to such propaganda. Some would have been rational thinkers who reject that kind of illogic. Many of those rational thinkers would have remained British loyalists, which explains a lot of the sudden immigration into Canada at the time.
Now, I am sure some of the paragraphs above will annoy a few Americans who have been taught a different interpretation of the same history. However, I doubt you can provide convincing evidence that your interpretation is any more valid than mine.
See: Teapot, Russel's.Blind groper wrote:Now, I am sure some of the paragraphs above will annoy a few Americans who have been taught a different interpretation of the same history. However, I doubt you can provide convincing evidence that your interpretation is any more valid than mine.
In our history class at school we were told that one of the primary causes of the the war was taxation without representation. So hardly a secret that taxes played a role in starting it.Blind groper wrote:The thing is that history is very much a matter of interpretation. My interpretation of the American war of independence will be different to that of many Americans. I am aware, for example, that the trigger was not oppression of the people, but the increase in taxes, which really would only have much effect on the rich people. So the moneybags like George Washington, whose slaves made him a lot of money, would strongly resent the extra taxes. The thing is, though, that the not-so-rich would not go to war for that reason. So the wealthy then fire up the propaganda machine and start talking about 'liberty' and 'human rights', as if the British were actively taking those away.
Of course, not all the peoples of the time were vulnerable to such propaganda. Some would have been rational thinkers who reject that kind of illogic. Many of those rational thinkers would have remained British loyalists, which explains a lot of the sudden immigration into Canada at the time.
Now, I am sure some of the paragraphs above will annoy a few Americans who have been taught a different interpretation of the same history. However, I doubt you can provide convincing evidence that your interpretation is any more valid than mine.
Gawd wrote:»
And those Zumwalts are already useless, they can be taken out with an ICBM.
You're not wrong, you're just not right.Blind groper wrote:In what way specifically am I wrong?Gawdzilla Sama wrote:You have a very ... interesting view of American history.
Opportunists. The most powerful nation in the world (England) was at war with the other two superpowers of the era (France and Spain) so the heroic 'Merkins declared independence most bravely.amused wrote:Quite a few of the original Americans were one step ahead of the noose back home in Eurasiaville, so they tended to have a 'fuckall' attitude anyway.
All of which is almost irrelevant.Ian wrote:If you're just going to focus on taxes, you have to ignore a lot of other things. Trade restrictions, the presence of British soldiers, the colonies' lack of say-so in how they were treated, the British reaction to Congress' petition of grievances, etc. If the "liberty and human rights propaganda" really was just that, you'd also have to ignore the Republic they established in the wake of the revolt from the crown.
Opportunists? Hell yeah. I haven't done the research, but by the time America went rogue did they have an inkling of how really huge a place they were sitting on? It's evident from the size of some of the original 13 colonies that they were clueless early on. But if they eventually had a grasp of the enormity of the place at the time of telling England to fuck off, why not? They could just keep moving west, which is what they did anyway.PordFrefect wrote:Opportunists. The most powerful nation in the world (England) was at war with the other two superpowers of the era (France and Spain) so the heroic 'Merkins declared independence most bravely.amused wrote:Quite a few of the original Americans were one step ahead of the noose back home in Eurasiaville, so they tended to have a 'fuckall' attitude anyway.
Absolutely. This is a big part of what I am saying. History is all about interpretation. The interpretation that becomes most popular is generally that which is promoted as propaganda by whoever is the winner in a particular conflict. For Americans, that is the propaganda promulgated by those you call 'founding fathers'.Ian wrote: You can't prove your interpretation is any more valid than mine.
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