Discussions
Lady Death: Lyudmila Pavlichenko, the Greatest Female Sniper of All Time
Via: dave-2693993
•
History & Sociology
•
3 Comments
•
5 years ago
Today, the region is called Ukraine and many historians will say the Rus has clear Ukrainian origin, nonetheless it was part of the Soviet Union at the time. I saw a movies last night titled...
Is Prison Necessary? Ruth Wilson Gilmore Might Change Your Mind
Via: bob-nelson
•
History & Sociology
•
10 Comments
•
5 years ago
There’s an anecdote that Ruth Wilson Gilmore likes to share about being at an environmental-justice conference in Fresno in 2003. People from all over California’s Central Valley had...
Whooping Cough Killed 6,000 Kids a Year Before These Ex-Teachers Created a Vaccine
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
13 Comments
•
5 years ago
After a long day in the laboratory in 1932, Pearl Kendrick and Grace Eldering walked out into the chilly Michigan evening with specially prepared petri dishes, called cough plates, in tow. The...
'A Woman Of No Importance' Finally Gets Her Due
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
16 Comments
•
5 years ago
Virginia Hall is one of the most important American spies most people have never heard of. Her story is on display at the CIA Museum inside the spy agency headquarters in Langley, Va. —...
Why Ancient Rome Needed Immigrants to Become Powerful
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
30 Comments
•
5 years ago
The Caesars embraced newcomers, less out of idealism than out of self-interest. BARRY STRAUSS How “Roman” was the Roman Empire ? Well, by some measures: not very. As the Roman emperors...
Why Facts Don’t Change Our Minds
Via: bob-nelson
•
History & Sociology
•
4 Comments
•
5 years ago
In 1975, researchers at Stanford invited a group of undergraduates to take part in a study about suicide. They were presented with pairs of suicide notes. In each pair, one note had been...
When does US news ignore a terror plot? When the target is called Islamberg
Via: bob-nelson
•
History & Sociology
•
4 Comments
•
5 years ago
(I'm having a lot of trouble embedding the Vimeo video. You'll find it here .) Situated 130 miles north of New York City on the Pennsylvania border, the town was formed in the early...
Researchers interpret Cherokee inscriptions in Alabama cave
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
19 Comments
•
5 years ago
For the first time, a team of scholars and archaeologists has recorded and interpreted Cherokee inscriptions in Manitou Cave, Alabama. (Spirit Cave). These inscriptions reveal evidence of secluded...
The Deadliest Tornado in U.S. History
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
9 Comments
•
5 years ago
Overturned trains. Timber found miles away from where it had been stored. Trees felled. Fires and close calls. A letter that flew almost 100 miles. On a normal day in the Midwest in 1925, any one...
Confronting racism is not about the needs and feelings of white people
Via: bob-nelson
•
History & Sociology
•
42 Comments
•
5 years ago
I was leaving a corporate office building after a full day of leading workshops on how to talk about race thoughtfully and deliberately. The audience for each session had been similar...
Nobody knew who this USAF academy janitor was until the President came to see him
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
9 Comments
•
5 years ago
William Crawford poses with his statue in Pueblo, Colorado -just an hour away from the USAF Academy. Growing up, many of us were told not to judge people we didn’t know due to the fact...
How the Three Mile Island Accident Was Made Even Worse By a Chaotic Response
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
1 Comments
•
5 years ago
For tellers at a Shrewsbury, Pennsylvania bank, the final days of March 1979 should have felt like business as usual. Instead, they were sheer chaos: customers piled up, trying to withdraw money...
The reason Army helicopters are named after native tribes will make you smile - Navy to name a new class of ships after the Navajo Nation
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
39 Comments
•
5 years ago
Dec. 03, 2017 08:02PM EST The reason Army helicopters are named after native tribes will make you smile The Army's helicopters have a number of names you recognize...
How the Vietnam War Ratcheted Up Under 5 U.S. Presidents
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
21 Comments
•
5 years ago
At the end of World War II , the United States was broadly popular in Vietnam for having repelled the Japanese occupiers. Even Ho Chi Minh , the nationalist and communist revolutionary,...
WWII aircraft carrier USS Wasp found in Coral Sea
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
5 Comments
•
5 years ago
The wreck of another historic WWII aircraft carrier has been found by the expedition crew aboard research vessel (R/V) Petrel who discovered wreckage of USS Wasp (CV 7) on January 14. The...
The Bible and Christianity were used to justify African slavery
By: john-russell
•
History & Sociology
•
435 Comments
•
5 years ago
Shall we go to the horses mouth? George Mc Duffie was the sitting governor of South Carolina when he wrote this message to the state legislature in 1835. (excerpts) For the institution of...
The Cuban Missile Crisis Myth You Probably Believe
Via: vic-eldred
•
History & Sociology
•
2 Comments
•
5 years ago
Several months after the publication of Averting ‘The Final Failure’: John F. Kennedy and the Secret Cuban Missile Crisis Meetings (Stanford University Press, 2003), my narrative history of...
K-9 Veterans Day, March 13th...The Dogs of War.
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
20 Comments
•
5 years ago
Today is K-9 Veterans day. A day to honor the dogs of war used by the US Military. They are on the front lines facing the same dangers as our troops. They protect/guard/search and as always, they...
Stalingrad: For 59 Days 30 Soviet Soldiers Were Under Siege In Pavlov’s House, They Never Surrendered
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
13 Comments
•
5 years ago
For six months one of the bloodiest battle is history took place in Russia. Stalingrad, the name alone conjures up sacrifice, courage and the never quit of the Russian army. Millions died in this...
Night Witches: The Female Fighter Pilots of World War II
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
36 Comments
•
5 years ago
Members of the 588th Night Bomber Regiment decorated their planes with flowers ... and dropped 23,000 tons of bombs. MEGAN GARBER JUL 15, 2013 TASS / GETTY It was the spring of 1943, at...
Remembering the Alamo Scouts - Secret Warriors of World War II
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
26 Comments
•
5 years ago
By now, most of the world knows what the U.S. Navy SEAL unit can do. The recent covert operation that went down in Abbottabad, Pakistan—Team 6 swooping down on a compound in four stealth...
Katherine Johnson: The Girl Who Loved to Count
Via: jasper2529
•
History & Sociology
•
22 Comments
•
5 years ago
“I counted everything. I counted the steps to the road, the steps up to church, the number of dishes and silverware I washed … anything that could be counted, I did.” So said Katherine Johnson,...
The Tin Can Sailors Of Taffy 3 - The Battle Of Samar - The Epic Naval Battle Of WWII
Via: kavika
•
History & Sociology
•
36 Comments
•
5 years ago
This is a repost of an article from 4 years ago. Naval experts call it the greatest mismatch in U.S. Naval history. The small fleet of Taffy 3 made up of destroyers, destroyer escorts and baby...
He took a DNA test in search of his birth father — and found a daughter instead
Via: perrie-halpern
•
History & Sociology
•
19 Comments
•
5 years ago
By Elizabeth Chuck and Shako Liu IRVINE, Calif. — Ted Wood, a Sacramento, California, attorney, signed up for Ancestry in 2013, hoping to find his father. Wood, 50, had met his birth mother...
Who is online
329 visitors