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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
2 yrs

IT IS BAD
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prepping.com

IT IS BAD

Join Me Here As A Member here on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdnplvvQqMShs9UUNaLel3A?sub_confirmation=1 ————————————————— TOPICS: economy, collapse, recession, prices, inflation, middle class, decline, ISRAEL, war, Palestine, Gaza, hostages ————————————————— The Modern Prepper book: https://www.amazon.com/Modern-Prepper-J-H-Zarate/dp/1617045535/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?crid=1RDPD3FGY4OWP&keywords=the+modern+prepper&qid=1689569407&s=books&sprefix=the+modern+prepper%2Caps%2C120&sr=1-1 https://m.youtube.com/sponsor_channel/UCBcyBXNCsbx8clN2KSqZlaw?noapp=1 Thank you for supporting me! TRANSCRIPT ON SUBSTACK http://www.preppernow.substack.com https://www.buymeacoffee.com/Preppernow1 JOIN ME ON LOCALS FOR $3 A MONTH https://preppernow.locals.com JOIN ME ON SUBSCRIBESTAR FOR $3 A MONTH https://www.subscribestar.com/preppernow (TIPS/Donations) Cash App: cash.app/$PrepperNow ————————————————— SPONSORS: JASE MEDICAL JASE CASE! Follow The Link! https://www.jasemedical.com/?rfsn=6390154.fa795e4 PREPPER NERD OFFLINE ASSET SYSTEM This is my affiliate link: https://signup.prepper-nerd.com/referral/home/Wz1AWj2DlhRsMbko There are other links available at https://prepper-nerd.com/affiliate-asset-center/ OFFLINE version launch and $20 discount ends Wed 8/3/22 ————————————————— Learn canning with Voodoo Queen cindisevy@gmail.com ————————————————— TELEGRAM Channel https://t.me/crisisreport ————————————————— PrepperNow is an educator, prepper, father, husband and patriot. Working in academia, I have a B.A. in political science and an M.Ed. in education. I use the PrepperNow sites to posit my thoughts and post trustworthy material. www.preppernow.net ————————————————— L. I. N. K. S. ————————————————— (ODYSEE) https://odysee.com/@preppernow:61 ————————————————- (Truth Social): @preppernow ———————————————— (Twitter): https://www.Twitter.com/prepper_ now ———————————————— (GAB) https://gab.com/preppernow ————————————————— (RUMBLE) https://rumble.com/user/PrepperNow ————————————————— (MINDS) https://minds.com/preppernow ————————————————— (CRISIS REPORT ON ODYSEE): https://odysee.com/@preparednessnow:9 ————————————————— (CRISIS REPORT) https://YouTube.com/@crisisreport ————————————————— (EMAIL/INTEL) preppernow@protonmail.com ———————————————— (PREPPERNOW YT) https://youtube.com/channel/preppernow ————————————————— (Legal) FAIR USE NOTICE This video may contain copyrighted material; the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available for the purposes of criticism, comment, review and news reporting which constitute the fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. Not withstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work for purposes such as criticism, comment, review and news reporting is not an infringement of copywright. #preppernow #prepping #news
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Beyond Bizarre
Beyond Bizarre
2 yrs ·Youtube Wild & Crazy

YouTube
100 People Who Are at Another Level. Most Amazing Skills and Talent of 2024
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
2 yrs

2 TV STARS & 1 DAUGHTER DESTROYED BY VAX POISON INJECTIONS
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api.bitchute.com

2 TV STARS & 1 DAUGHTER DESTROYED BY VAX POISON INJECTIONS

JAMIE-LYNN SIGLER, CHRISTINA APPLEGATE AND SADIE APPLEGATE. UTL COMMENT:- Sad.....sad to know that 4 years later and most of the sheep still haven't figured it out yet...despite us relentlessly telling them, at no benefit for ourselves only ridicule. And the rare ones that have now finally figured it out don't like us because the unvaxd aren't dead and/or imprisoned. You can't win with them. But we knew this years ago. They're showing their true colors just like we knew they would.... ......and all we really wanted to do was just help.....
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
2 yrs

The History of Democrats Hiding Presidential Disabilities
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spectator.org

The History of Democrats Hiding Presidential Disabilities

According to journalist Carl Bernstein, several people “very close” to President Biden have related that the president has had 15-to-20 episodes of cognitive decline — similar to what happened during the presidential debate the other evening — during the past year and a half. Bernstein told CNN that these Biden supporters said, “There have been numerous instances where the president has lost his train of thought, can’t pick it up again.” The New York Post editorialized that Democrats and their “media enablers” have attempted to hide Biden’s cognitive decline. The Daily Mail reports that “current and former aides” to the president are saying that Biden’s cognitive decline has been known for months. National Review calls the “cover-up of Biden’s mental decline” a scandal. And recall that the special counsel’s report about the mishandling of classified documents by the president described Biden’s memory as “hazy,” “fuzzy,” “faulty,” and “poor.” Axios reports that top aides to the president have “carefully shielded him from people inside and outside the White House since the beginning of his presidency,” noting that first Lady Jill Biden was especially “protective” of the president. Fox News reports that there is growing anger among some Democrats at Jill Biden and White House staffers who they claim have “concealed” the president’s mental decline. History shows that on at least three other occasions, top White House staffers and family members have engaged in massive cover-ups of Democratic Presidents’ disabilities. Those three disabled and/or very ill presidents were Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt, and John F. Kennedy. On Sept. 25, 1919, during Wilson’s campaign for ratification of the Versailles Treaty and America’s participation in the League of Nations, the president suffered a “mini-stroke” in Pueblo, Colorado. This caused the White House to cancel the rest of Wilson’s speaking tour, but the president’s private secretary told the press that Wilson was suffering from “digestive problems.” The “mini-stroke,” which caused partial facial paralysis, was hidden from the press and the public. About a week later, Wilson suffered a major stroke which caused greater paralysis. Edith Wilson, the president’s wife, embarked on what Dr. Howard Markel called a “bedside government,” where in essence the unelected Mrs. Wilson “became de-facto president.” Paul Johnson in Modern Times claimed that Wilson suffered his first stroke in April 1919 in Paris, and this was concealed. After the two later strokes in September and October 1919, Wilson’s physician said, “He is permanently ill physically, is gradually weakening mentally, and can’t recover.” Johnson wrote that Joseph Tumulty, the president’s private secretary, and Wilson and his wife Edith “conspired” to effectively make Edith Wilson the nation’s chief executive. Mrs. Wilson even stage-managed very brief meetings with Wilson and senators to conceal the extent of his disability. And all of this was hidden from the American people. There were times, Johnson wrote, when the president “could concentrate for [only] five or ten minutes at a time.” Thus at a crucial time in international affairs when the postwar structure of power was emerging from the ashes of the First World War, a seriously disabled president was unable and unfit to discharge his duties.  During the latter years of the Second World War, President Franklin Roosevelt was declining physically and mentally. As early as March 1944, physicians concluded that FDR was suffering from hypertension, heart disease, cardiac failure, and acute bronchitis. As the postwar international structure of power was being decided by the “big three” (FDR, Churchill, and Stalin), one of the big three’s health “was deteriorating rapidly.” First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, according to biographer Doris Kearns Goodwin, “was reluctant to admit even to herself that Franklin was really sick.” In reality, writes one scholar, “Roosevelt had been gravely ill for the final five years of his presidency.” But, “with the cooperation of [personal physician Dr. Ross] McIntire and his other advisers, Roosevelt was able to conceal from the American people the truth about his health.” FDR’s ailments “weakened him mentally as well as physically and affected his ability to make decisions.” By the time of the 1944 presidential election, FDR was dying. Very few close to him thought he would be able to complete a fourth term in office, which is why Democratic Party leaders replaced the pro-Soviet Henry Wallace with Harry Truman on the Democratic ticket that year. FDR’s health problems were concealed from the public and he won election to a fourth term. He would live for four more months. These were four crucial months that included the infamous Yalta Conference, where FDR made concessions to the Soviet Union that set the stage for the Cold War.  Others who were at Yalta dubbed FDR the “sick old man of Yalta.” The British Foreign Office’s Alexander Cadogan later said that FDR was “unaware of what was going on most of the time.” Assistant to the president James Byrnes scolded Roosevelt for making “little preparation” for the important meetings. Newsreel footage after Roosevelt returned to the U.S. from Yalta show him appearing ghost-like. Winston Churchill’s physician noted that FDR “looked old and thin and drawn … he sat looking straight ahead with his mouth open, as if he were not taking things in.” Vice-President elect Harry Truman, when he saw FDR after Yalta, remarked that “he seemed a spent man.” FDR’s serious health problems, including melanoma that eventually spread to the brain and killed him, and the cover-up that accompanied them are discussed at length, in FDR’s Dealdy Secret by Eric Fettmann and Steeven Lomazow. These health problems included “frequent episodic lapses of consciousness,” possibly caused by brain hemorrhages. As with Wilson’s debilitating illness, the American public knew nothing of this. Nearly 20 years later, a young, supposedly vibrant John F. Kennedy entered the White House with serious ailments that would eventually have him taking 12 different medications at once. Kennedy suffered from spinal problems, osteoporosis, and Addison’s disease, which caused “fatigue, digestive difficulties and low blood pressure.” He used demoral, methadone, barbituates, amphetamines, thyroid hormones, anti-anxiety medications, and gamma globulins. The physician who secretly supplied Kennedy with these drugs was Max Jacobson, who the Kennedys called “Dr. Feelgood.” Kennedy and his aides and family went to great lengths to conceal all of this from the American public. Kennedy was told by his orthopedic surgeon in 1962 that “No president with his finger on the red button has any business taking stuff like that.”  So much for the “public’s right to know.”   READ MORE: The Worst Week in Memory for Democrats Who Can Remember 25A All Of A Sudden Becomes Very Good Politics Biden Slouches Toward November The post The History of Democrats Hiding Presidential Disabilities appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
2 yrs

The Spectacle Ep. 125: Americans Celebrate America With American Flags, Not Pride Flags
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The Spectacle Ep. 125: Americans Celebrate America With American Flags, Not Pride Flags

Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry signed an executive order last month that excludes pride flags from flying over federally operated buildings. In today’s episode of The Spectacle podcast, hosts Melissa Mackenzie and Scott McKay discuss Landry’s order and the precedent it sets to push back against leftist ideology. As we celebrate the Fourth of July, Melissa and Scott remind us that we can still be proud to be Americans. (READ MORE: The American Righteous Cause — Then and Now) READ Scott and Melissa’s writing here and here. Listen to The Spectacle with Melissa Mackenzie and Scott McKay on Spotify. Watch The Spectacle with Melissa Mackenzie and Scott McKay on Rumble.  The post <i>The Spectacle</i> Ep. 125: Americans Celebrate America With American Flags, Not Pride Flags appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
2 yrs

Don’t Let Calm Seas in Uncharted Fiscal Waters Fool You
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spectator.org

Don’t Let Calm Seas in Uncharted Fiscal Waters Fool You

The United States is full steam ahead into uncharted fiscal waters, with rapidly growing federal debt promising a choppy economic future. Candidates Joe Biden and Donald Trump have added trillions to the national debt during their recent presidential administrations, leaving America at a critical juncture that demands urgent, bipartisan action. If you read this column, you know the numbers are stark: U.S. government debt is projected to reach a staggering 122 percent of GDP by 2034, far surpassing levels seen even during World War II. Not only is that a sharp rise from the current 99 percent, but it’s based on rosy assumptions about interest rates, inflation and economic growth. The date to watch is 2038, when this ratio is poised to surpass the previous record from the pandemic year of 2020. The end of the pandemic, unfortunately, hasn’t quelled the pandemonium of spending. So far, fortunately, the U.S. hasn’t paid much price for its leaders’ irresponsibility. This has prompted economists to come up with all sorts of dreamy theories about why debt doesn’t matter and why deficit hawks like me are mere scaremongers. But the cooing of the deficit doves has quieted a little bit recently as America experienced its largest bout of inflation in 50 years and interest rates — which we were assured would never again rise drastically — kept rising. Unfortunately, a slightly better understanding of the dangers of fiscal irresponsibility doesn’t translate into the political courage to change course and act responsibly. So let me make the case, once again, that fiscal stability should be at the top of everyone’s priority list. History does, in fact, offer sobering lessons on the consequences of unchecked government debt. Noted historian Niall Ferguson remarked in a recent Bloomberg column that his studies have led him to conclude that all great powers that spend more on debt service than on defense soon lose their great power. Whether it’s the British Empire or France’s Ancien Regime, excessive borrowing and spending lead to economic weakness, loss of global influence, and eventual downfall. The U.S. is already crossing this ominous line. This year alone, interest payments on the national debt will reach $892 billion, which is larger than defense base funding. Annual interest payments will reach $1.71 trillion by 2034, widening the gap into an abyss. I hope legislators won’t think that to fix it, all they need to do is jack up defense spending. The real issue is interest payments consuming a large share of the budget. That makes austerity the answer. For one thing, high interest payments are likely responsible for some of the Federal Reserve’s difficulty in bringing inflation back to its target of a mild 2 percent. The more the Treasury borrows from the Fed, the stronger the inflation pressures. Interest payments that are paid for with debt mean further slowing economic activity. As the Peterson Foundation nicely summarizes, a higher debt burden affects everyone: “If high levels of debt crowd out private investments in capital goods, workers would have less to use in their jobs, which would translate to lower productivity and, therefore, lower wages.” Yet the American political landscape is eerily calm in the face of heavy fiscal weather. Politicians don’t seem worried that slower economic growth or a debt crisis will get in the way of financing their priorities, whether tax cuts, climate initiatives, or poverty programs. They should worry. Instead, both sides refuse to tackle the root causes of the debt crisis, a perfect storm of higher interest payments and the looming insolvency of Social Security and Medicare. They avoid substantive discussion and action. That brings us to what’s so odd today: This is a solvable problem. The U.S. has successfully navigated past debt challenges, notably in the 1990s, and the potential political rewards are enormous. So is the risk of being blamed for a crisis triggered by a credit rating downgrade or loss of confidence among international lenders, which looms large and can happen with surprising speed. Moreover, the specter of major debt holders like China dumping U.S. Treasuries adds another layer of geopolitical vulnerability. As we stand at this crossroads, will America heed the warnings of history and take decisive action to address its debt crisis? Hanging in the balance is the future of the nation’s economic strength and global leadership. If we citizens recognize the gravity of the situation and insist upon action, policymakers will have little choice but to work toward a sustainable fiscal future. The alternative — following the path of fallen empires — is a fate that a great nation like America must avoid at all costs. Veronique de Rugy is the George Gibbs Chair in Political Economy and a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. To find out more about Veronique de Rugy and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2024 CREATORS.COM The post Don’t Let Calm Seas in Uncharted Fiscal Waters Fool You appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
2 yrs

Here are the alarming signals that World War III is fast approaching
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expose-news.com

Here are the alarming signals that World War III is fast approaching

Alarming warning signals are flashing all around us that preparations for a global war are being made.  Yet, most of the population of the Western world seems absolutely clueless about what is […]
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
2 yrs

The Emperor has no mind: The scripted “overthrow” of Biden
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www.sgtreport.com

The Emperor has no mind: The scripted “overthrow” of Biden

by Joaquin Flores, Strategic Culture: The first 2024 U.S. Presidential debate between incumbent Joe Biden and challenger Donald Trump was, in itself, somewhat uneventful. It was the aftermath which gave us the big surprise which now dominates headlines across the country – Democrats want Joe Biden to drop out. The uneventfulness of the debate itself […]
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History Traveler
History Traveler
2 yrs

What’s the Historical Background of Tristan and Isolde’s Legend?
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www.thecollector.com

What’s the Historical Background of Tristan and Isolde’s Legend?

  The Arthurian legends contain many accurate pieces of information from the historical era in which they are set. One of the most fascinating things about investigating this corpus of literature is to try to discern myth from fact, especially regarding the most famous stories.   The legend of Tristan and Isolde is a particularly famous part of the Arthurian legends. This story, about which many modern films have been made, portrays the love between the two titular characters. Tristan is a Brythonic prince, and Isolde is an Irish princess. Isolde was originally meant to marry King Mark, the evil uncle of Tristan. However, a magic potion causes Tristan and Isolde to fall in love with each other. This leads to considerable conflict with King Mark. But is this story based in fact?   The Pictish Tristan of Welsh Tradition Red Book of Hergest, folio 1, c. 1400, Source: University of Oxford   To start with, it is worth looking at how Tristan appears in Welsh tradition. His portrayal there is very different to how he appears in the tale of his romance with Isolde, which primarily comes from French sources. Tristan appears in a collection of Welsh traditions known as the Welsh Triads. This contains numerous references to traditions concerning King Arthur and his associates, although it is not exclusively about that. In this record, Tristan appears a number of times as a powerful battle leader and lover of Essyllt (Isolde) in the time of Arthur.   However, this record spells Tristan’s name as “Drystan,” as do other Welsh records which mention him. Additionally, the name of his father is given as “Tallwch.” This is very useful information. Rachel Bromwich, the renowned scholar of medieval Welsh literature, wrote the following:   “I find it impossible not to associate the names of both Drystan and of Tallwch with the Pictish names Drust, Drest, Drostan… and Talorc, Talorcan, Talargan.”   A depiction of the Pictish King Bridei I, second successor of Drest V, by William Hole, c. 1899, Source: Wikimedia Commons   As Rachel Bromwich noted, these names appear in Pictish regnal lists. Therefore, this raises the strong possibility that Tristan, or “Drystan” to the Welsh, was actually a historical Pictish king or prince of the era. There was a historical Drest who was the son of a certain Talorgan. However, he lived in the eighth century. While the Drystan son of Tallwch of Welsh tradition could have been anachronistically pulled from the eighth century, such a conclusion is unnecessary.   Medieval Welsh records show the descent from father to son by using the word “ap.” In the case of Drystan, for example, he appears as “Drystan ap Tallwch.” However, this word is sometimes used with the meaning of “successor of” rather than “son of.” Some examples of this are seen in the early Harleian MS 3859. Notably, there was a Drest who succeeded a Talorc in the sixth century. This was Drest V, the son of Munait but successor of Talorc II. He can most likely be identified as the Drystan of Welsh tradition. He ruled for just one year in 549-550.   The Tristan of French Romance Map of Brittany, Paul Vidal de La Blache, 19th century, Source: Wikimedia Commons   However, the Tristan of Welsh tradition is not necessarily entirely the same as the Tristan of French romance. Of course, it is clear that they are meant to be the same figure. As already noted, the Welsh Triads specifically link Drystan son of Tallwch with Essyllt, that is, Isolde. Nonetheless, the information about Tristan from the legend of Tristan and Isolde makes it clear that it has nothing to do with a Pictish king. It is very probable that two different figures have been combined in Welsh tradition. Notably, the non-Welsh sources never call Tristan’s father “Tallwch.”   The earliest version of the legend of Tristan and Isolde, written by Thomas of Britain in the twelfth century, presents the name of Tristan’s kingdom as “Armenie.” The capital of the kingdom is specifically said to be on the English Channel. Thus, it is evident that “Armenie” is a corruption of “Armorica,” another name for Brittany. This Tristan is thus a Breton prince, not a Pictish one.   Illustration of Tristan and Isolde drinking the love potion, From Évrard d’Espinques, 15th century, Source: The National Library of France   Originally, it appears that Tristan’s father was named Riwalin. We see this, for example, in the account by Thomas of Britain, writing in the middle of the twelfth century. We also see it in the version by Gottfried von Strassburg, who was writing right at the beginning of the thirteenth century. This version calls Riwalin the lord of “Parmenie,” which is evidently a corruption of the earlier “Armenie.” Was there a historical king of Brittany by this name? A variety of medieval historical records attest to the fact that there was a king of Brittany in the early sixth century by the name of Riwal. Therefore, he is undoubtedly the Riwalin of the Tristan tale.   However, subsequent tellings of the tale, written just a few decades later, give Tristan’s father a different name. They call him “Meliadus,” with “Meliodas” being a common form of the name used in modern sources. He appears in the Prose Tristan of the thirteenth century and subsequent versions. What can we conclude based on this?   The Identity of Tristan’s Father Church of Saint Mary and Saint Melor, Wiltshire, Source: National Church Trust   Interestingly, it appears that we can identify a historical Meliadus just like we identified a historical Riwalin. One detail that helps is the fact that Meliadus was said to have had a son by the same name as him, known as Meliadus the Younger. In the Life of St Melor, found in at least one fourteenth-century manuscript, the titular saint is called the son of a certain Meliavus, a prince of Brittany. It is very tempting to conclude that this Meliavus prince of Brittany was the Meliadus of Brittany from the legend of Tristan and Isolde. Meliavus’ son Melor (spelled “Melaire” in one record) is also tantalizingly similar to Meliadus the Younger from the Tristan legend.   Even more interestingly, Meliavus is recorded as being the brother of a king named Rivold. It seems very likely that this Rivold was identical to the King Riwal of Brittany from other sources. This would mean that both legendary fathers of Tristan in the romance tales were historical brothers.   Tristan and Isolde, by Herbert James Draper, 1901, Source: Wikimedia Commons   With this in mind, it is likely that the Prose Tristan’s account of Meliadus (which is the earliest one) describes the death of Meliadus when Tristan is about eight years old. Thus, Tristan must have subsequently had a guardian, a stepfather of some kind. Although the Prose Tristan does not name him as such, if this was Riwalin, that would explain the discrepancy between the two different fathers given to Tristan in the legends. Historically, the Life of St Melor tells us that Meliavus was killed while Melor was young. This is likely related to the origin of the legend of Meliadus dying while Tristan and Meliadus the Younger were children. Furthermore, it would be perfectly expected for the historical Meliavus’ brother, Rivold (or Riwal), to have taken over guardianship of the boys. This would thus explain why, in the legend of Tristan and Isolde, Tristan is sometimes made the son of Riwalin and sometimes made the son of Meliadus.   The Historical Tristan Tristan Stone, sixth century, Cornwall, Source: Cornwall.co.uk   Nonetheless, none of the records about the historical Riwal or Meliavus ever mention a child called Tristan. Does this mean that Tristan was not a historical figure? Not necessarily. Something that virtually all the versions of the legend of Tristan and Isolde agree on is the fact that Tristan was closely associated with his uncle, King Mark. He was said to have gone to King Mark’s court fairly early on in his life, and his father Riwalin also dies early on in the tale. Perhaps, then, he was actually adopted by King Mark. This brings us to a very striking discovery.   In Cornwall, there is a large stone monument called the Tristan Stone. It is a memorial stone, and its size attests to the importance of the person it commemorates. The reading is difficult, but the most recent scholarship on the subject agrees that it preserves the name “Tristan.” It calls the Tristan in question the son of “Cunomorus.” Significantly, the stone dates back to the sixth century, the time of the legendary Tristan.   Illustration of King Mark of Cornwall from The Champions of the Round Table, Howard Pyle, 1905, Source: Rochester University   The name “Cunomorus” instantly connects this stone to Conomor, a historical ruler of Brittany in the mid sixth century. The ninth-century Life of St Paul Aurelian refers to a sixth-century king named Quonomorus and refers to the fact that his domain included people of four different languages. This supports the idea that this king ruled over parts of Brittany and Britain (such as Cornwall). What is even more significant is the fact that the Life of St Paul Aurelian specifically says that this king was also named Mark.   Putting all this information together, we have a situation where there was a historical, sixth century Tristan recorded as the son of Conomor. This Conomor, in turn, appears to be identical to King Mark. Confirming these connections is the fact that King Mark was supposedly Tristan’s uncle by marriage, according to the legend. The historical Conomor, meanwhile, is recorded as being married to the sister of Meliavus, the historical origin behind Tristan’s legendary father Meliadus.   The History Behind the Legend of Tristan and Isolde Tristan and Isolde, by John Duncan, 1912, Source: Artuk.org   In conclusion, the legend of Tristan and Isolde is set in sixth-century Britain; not many historical records survive from that period, but we do have some information with which to assess the legends. It appears that a variety of characters from the legend of Tristan and Isolde can be identified as historical people. Some versions of the tale call Tristan’s father Meliadus, while others call him Riwalin. It appears that they can be identified as the historical Breton figures Meliavus and Riwal, respectively. Tristan’s uncle by marriage, King Mark, can be identified as the historical brother-in-law of Meliavus and Riwal, the tyrant named Conomor. Tristan himself appears to be identified as the son of Conomor on a sixth-century memorial stone. There is reason to believe that he was actually the adopted son of Conomor, although we cannot confirm this. Furthermore, the Tristan of Welsh tradition was partially drawn from another historical figure, the Pictish king Drest V.
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History Traveler
History Traveler
2 yrs

Who Was Rosa Luxemburg and Why Was She Important?
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Who Was Rosa Luxemburg and Why Was She Important?

  Despite her small stature Rosa Luxemburg stands as a towering figure in the history of international socialism. She passionately advocated social reform, believing that only revolutionary transformation could make it permanent. A staunch anti-war activist she asserted that the world faced a stark choice: socialism or barbarism. A revolutionary to the end she died a martyr’s death in 1919. Rosa Luxemburg was a brilliant and original revolutionary humanist in the Marxist tradition, celebrated for her theoretical work as well as her unwavering commitment to revolutionary socialism.   A Fiercely Independent Thinker Rosa Luxemburg, age 12, Source: Wikimedia Commons   Rosa Luxemburg was born in 1871 to a Jewish family in Russian-occupied Poland. After developing a serious hip problem at age 5 she was left with a lifelong limp. As a female, disabled, Polish Jew, Rosa Luxemburg faced serious challenges. Against the odds, she excelled at school and became one of the first women in Europe to earn a doctorate in economics and law. Dr. Luxemburg was a fiercely independent thinker who gained enemies on the left and the right and criticized her comrades (including Lenin) as much as she did her political enemies. She joined the Polish Marxist Party in 1887 and after moving to Germany was active in the politics of the Second International, German Socialist Party (SPD), and Spartacus League (Spartakusbund) – which became the German Communist Party (KPD).    Since childhood, she wielded a formidable intellect and strong political opinions. Later in life, she was jailed many times for her ideas. In 1904 for criticizing the German Keizer, and multiple times between 1915 and 1918 for her anti-war activism and polemics.    Critical Theorist Rosa Luxemburg pictured in 1905, Source: Wikimedia Commons   In 1913, Rosa Luxemburg completed The Accumulation of Capital. While she argued with Karl Marx that capitalism was fundamentally unstable and prone to crises, she rejected the cut and thrust of his Capital Vol. 2 which implied that capitalism was a closed system of accumulation, to argue that it was instead dependent on relentless expansion. Luxemburg’s analysis that “capitalism tends to engulf the entire globe and to stamp out all other economies, tolerating no rival at its side” led to the conclusion that “it is unable to exist by itself, it needs other economic mediums as its soil.”   The political import of her work was a critique of imperialism that highlighted how the necessary expansion of capital into non-capitalist areas of the world was intertwined with trade, but above all, imperial conquest and war. Imperialism was not external to capitalism but a core component of its survival.    Socialist Revolutionary Members of the Freikorps and their armored vehicles during the Berlin uprising, 1919, Source: Wikimedia Commons   Germany’s imminent defeat in the Great War sparked chaos. On 3 November 1918 German sailors, ordered into a near-suicidal battle for the glory of the Kaiser, mutinied. News of the revolt spread quickly and within days a series of mass political strikes against the war and growing state repression ultimately led to the abdication of Willhelm II.   On 9 November Friedrich Ebert of the SPD declared the Weimar Republic, and Karl Liebknecht declared a Free German Socialist Republic from the royal balcony in Berlin. That same day Rosa Luxemburg was released from prison. Luxemburg, who had written the Sparticist anti-war Junius Pamphlet (1915) from prison, was seen as a dangerous revolutionary voice. The SPD soon launched a violent counter-revolution spearheaded by the Frikorps, a protofascist paramilitary loyal to Ebert.    After the uprising was crushed, on 15 January 1919 Luxemburg and Liebknecht were apprehended, interrogated, and executed. Liebknecht was shot in the back and handed to the police as an “unknown corpse” while Luxemburg was shot in the temple and thrown into the Berlin Landwehr Canal.    Revolutionary Humanist Rosa Luxemburg pictured in 1907, Source: Wikimedia Commons   Rosa Luxemburg might above all be remembered as a revolutionary humanist. While she was proud of her identity as a woman and of her Jewish heritage, she distinctly chose not to draw general ideas from the fact of her identity. Instead, her concern was universal solidarity with the oppressed.    Sent a book about the persecution of Spinoza by a friend while in prison, she responded with characteristic verve: “what do you want with this theme of the ‘special suffering of the Jews’? I am just as much concerned with the poor victims on the rubber plantations of Putumayo, the black people in Africa with whose corpses the Europeans play catch… I have no special place in my heart for the [Jewish] ghetto. I feel at home in the entire world wherever there are clouds and birds and human tears.”   In the face of impending climate catastrophe, economic crisis, and ongoing war, many believe that Rosa Luxemburg’s calls for socialism and democracy remain profoundly relevant.
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