The Fleming Foundation Cultural Commentary

7

Tune Out

FB friend Patrick Mulvey posted a great comment on my previous scribbling:

“It may a small sample size but many of my babyboomer contemporaries and younger extended family members who suffer from ‘real’ mental illness…manic depression, bipolar disorder and worse…….all used illegal drugs regularly in their teens, 20’s and 30’s. I’m not saying this is the only cause of mental illness but one only has to look at our homeless problem and know that lack of housing is not the major reason.”

1

Herodotus, Book I

 What is important to note in this first bit of history is his willingness to give different accounts and explanations and to allow readers to make up their own minds.  It is not that he does not have opinions that he freely expresses, and he certainly, by an artful narrative style, leads us in one direction or another, but the final judgment is left up to the reader.  Would we had such a writer to day.

16

Hemingway, Stinker and Writer

Some people on FB are gassing on about what a stinker Hemingway was, and concluding therefore that he couldn’t write. Treating novelists as either heroes or demons, ideologues or intellectuals, is a grave mistake that is generally made by people who do not read, much less understand literature.

2

Cambodia, Again

I came to agree not only with the conclusion, that it was time to get out of the warm but also with the premise, which seemed to echo Forrest’s statement that war means fighting, and fighting means killing.  Americans should not get involved in a war, so I thought then and now, unless they will be defending their vital interests, and, if something is important enough to fight for, the only restraints should be moral and not political considerations.  

2

Herodotus, 0: Introduction

Since the Persian Wars—like the Punic Wars, the Crusades, and the West’s ongoing struggle with Islam—serve to define who we are, it will  be useful to reread Herodotus, particularly the books that are directly relevant to the cultural struggle between the West and its enemies.  For those who are picking it up for the first time, I must warn you that reading Herodotus, the most entertaining of historians, may become a habit.