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Thursday, June 23, 2005

Changes


I've made some minor changes to the format of the site, now that I feel more comfortable manipulating the template. I'd like to add some more links and blogs. So if you know of a blog that I should link to or if you have any general suggestions, let me know.

Friday, June 17, 2005

It really is quite a feat that this country has survived as long as it has with what it has been through. I'd chalk a great deal of that success up to the men (and one woman) who created it. Their genius is absolutely stunning, yet it is rarely discussed or mentioned. Right now I'm reading two books: Founding Brothers by Joseph Ellis and The Federalist Papers by John Jay, James Madison, and Alexander Hamilton.

Founding Brothers takes on the Founding Fathers from a different perspective than most of the histories out there. Although, Ellis' personal and professional reputation was (understandbly) smeared the same year this book was published (2001), he has nontheless weaved a far more personal account of the relationship between the men who founded this country. Each chapter is devoted to an episode that featured two or more of these people. For instance, the famous duel between Hamilton and Aaron Burr. Each of these episodes attempts to cast a different light on these legendary figures.

The Federalist Papers, the famous collection of essays written in support of constitutional ratification, are indeed dense and rather difficult material. Now, the Constitution (as originally ratified) is about 13 book-length pages long. The Federalist Papers (keeping in mind that they were written for no other reason to explain the ins and outs of the Constitution and why it should be ratified) runs about 570 pages. Granted, a constitution shouldn't have to explain itself in the text; but the fact that the explication of the document runs more than 40 times its length certainly shows just how much thought went into it.

We are all living in the shadows of intellectual giants and couragous soldiers.

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