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#62
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On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 13:30:13 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote: On 12/28/16 12:54 PM, wrote: On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 11:54:29 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/28/16 11:35 AM, wrote: On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 10:13:07 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 9:52 PM, wrote: On Tue, 27 Dec 2016 19:00:35 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 4:19 PM, wrote: Did you actually read the post you are responding to? I certainly bet I know more about US history than a GW graduate who did not have to take a single US history course to get his BA. Where did he get all of this knowledge? Smoking dope and watching the History channel in his dorm room? He could have saved the fifty grand and just bought a basic cable package at home in his mom's basement. I doubt at 22 you knew as much about history as a college grad in history at the same age. And as for whether he/she studied U.S. history, well that would have depended upon the cycle and sequence taken for the major. If your major was medieval history of Europe, you wouldn't have spent a lot of time taking courses about the United States. Or maybe any time. Reading random books and papers, as you apparently did, ain't the same as following a course of study taught by professors and discussed by students discussing similar material in a classroom setting and producing college-level papers. You may think it is the same, and results in the same, but...it doesn't. Dance Mr Bojangles. You don't seem to give me any credit for 50 years of life experience so the bet stands as is. If this kid does not take American history at GW, I will sit for the test and he can sit for the same one. Give me $100 a point and I will make at least five grand. Make it easy, just use two of those 50 question Face book quizzes. I'd love to see your test results after a senior level exam on medieval european history, what the "kid" was studying. Having exactly NOTHING to do with American history other than perhaps the desire to get the **** out of Europe.. And perhaps you might enlighten us as to how the Frontier Thesis could have been used by blacks to more fully integrate this country. That was just Turner's opinion and widely criticized as being far to narrow of an opinion by many, including his contemporaries. I gave you my opinion about the integration of blacks and you roundly rejected it without actually dealing with any of the points. Why would I hypothesize about someone else's theory when that was not even the main thrust of the piece? It is true that blacks had more opportunity in the west but that may have just been that they had the common enemy of the natives to fight along side the whites. If you were a settler in Kansas, under attack by indians, you certainly were happy to see a troop of Buffalo Soldiers coming across the plain. Once again, I doubt at 22 you knew as much history as a college grad of the same age who was a history major. There's no way to prove that at 70 you have the rigorous education in history as a current graduate history major of 22. That you may have read a pile of books is not proof of knowledge. Where are your papers? Where are your presentations? Where are your academic discussions? You certainly put a lot of credence on the pontificating of a few bloviating academics who have never done anything but go to school at 5 and never left. Also, I didn't ask you for a critique of the Frontier Thesis. I asked you how it could have been used by blacks to more fully integrate this country. The question is a modern one and really has little to do with the expansion of the west, per se, or the Buffalo Soldiers. I wasn't sure where you were going with that brain fart but I assumed you thought I would be impressed by something I read and reported on in high school. 1. In college in subjects such as political science, history, English, literature, et cetera, you demonstrate command of subject matter by writing papers, preparing and presenting presentations, and participating in discussions, and by taking various kinds of examinations. This is what the students do. You may think it is nothing more than the "pontificating of a few bloviating academics," but you would be wrong. Again. Before my wife could get her doctorate, she had to pass a three day written exam in her field - three days in a row -and then after that she had to take an all-day oral exam given to her by four or maybe five faculty members, including two from other universities, to defend her dissertation. You have to show what you know. That's a bit more work than typing up a list of books you may have read. It sounds more like she had to write papers that agreed with what "4 maybe 5" faculty members believed. In a trade that is as ambiguous as psychology, nobody is that right or wrong. It may be an issue of when you were trained more than what is true. 40-50 years ago homosexuality was a disorder that therapy could treat. 2. No, I'm not. I asked you - twice - a fairly specific question that had nothing to do with something you read and reported on in high school. The question had more to do with your understanding of the Frontier Thesis and whether you knew enough history in regard to that Thesis and to its application in modern times to societal integration. This is the sort of question a contemporary student of U.S. history might be asked on a final exam, to see if he/she really understood the study materials and could apply them. You don't get that ability, usually, by reading a helter-skelter list of books that sound interesting to you. You asked me to make a point based on something I may not believe is totally accurate and it just makes me happy that I do not need to please you to get a good grade. Reading a helter-skelter lost of books is better than just reading the list that reinforces your professor's views. You may well be a "student of history," as you claim, but that doesn't mean you have completed the academic requirements to be anything more than a guy who has read some books, or that you have the background to show you know more than someone with a B.A. and M.A. in history and a lifetime of study and writing in the field. You seem to forget how we got here. The discussion was not about someone who has years of study in American history, it is about how someone can get a liberal arts degree without a single credit hour in American history. So much for that broadly based academic education. I do understand that this is just the rejection of America by the people who depend on America to make a living but that is typical among the liberal left. They don't just bite the hand that feeds them they make a meal out of it and then write a paper that says it wasn't satisfying enough. |
#63
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posted to rec.boats
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Keyser Soze wrote:
On 12/28/16 10:37 AM, Califbill wrote: Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 11:09 PM, Califbill wrote: Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 4:19 PM, wrote: On Tue, 27 Dec 2016 15:14:04 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 2:56 PM, Tim wrote: I'm sure there is a good reason for this. Like, removing history class for the history majors. The students probably know it all anyhow, so why waste man power and tuition expenses . Pass em anyhow. Sounds logical to me. After all a sheepskin proves your knowledge, right? So, you and FlaJim the Moron know as much "history" as someone with a B.A. in it, eh? Doubtful. And of course you know as much about the design and manufacture of electric motors as, say, degreed mechanical or electrical engineers, eh? Doubtful. And FlaJim knows as much about chipping paint on a navy vessel as, oh, a guy who chips paint on a navy vessel... Did you actually read the post you are responding to? I certainly bet I know more about US history than a GW graduate who did not have to take a single US history course to get his BA. Where did he get all of this knowledge? Smoking dope and watching the History channel in his dorm room? He could have saved the fifty grand and just bought a basic cable package at home in his mom's basement. I doubt at 22 you knew as much about history as a college grad in history at the same age. And as for whether he/she studied U.S. history, well that would have depended upon the cycle and sequence taken for the major. If your major was medieval history of Europe, you wouldn't have spent a lot of time taking courses about the United States. Or maybe any time. Reading random books and papers, as you apparently did, ain't the same as following a course of study taught by professors and discussed by students discussing similar material in a classroom setting and producing college-level papers. You may think it is the same, and results in the same, but...it doesn't. If you have a degree in history, you should have general knowledge of all history. Not just what you specialized in! So, you're now on the California board of regents, eh? Closer than you. I grew up with Clark Kerr Jr. Seems to be if you know someone, their knowledge is your knowledge. Plus I pay taxes to support the California school system. So why should a history major, not have at least a knowledge of his country's history? Wow. You knew the son of Clark Kerr. I know the nephew of Gore Vidal. BFD. BFD to you. You claim to have known every POTUS since Truman, and that makes you a brilliant POLYSCI wannabe. |
#64
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posted to rec.boats
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Keyser Soze wrote:
On 12/28/16 12:54 PM, wrote: On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 11:54:29 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/28/16 11:35 AM, wrote: On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 10:13:07 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 9:52 PM, wrote: On Tue, 27 Dec 2016 19:00:35 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 4:19 PM, wrote: Did you actually read the post you are responding to? I certainly bet I know more about US history than a GW graduate who did not have to take a single US history course to get his BA. Where did he get all of this knowledge? Smoking dope and watching the History channel in his dorm room? He could have saved the fifty grand and just bought a basic cable package at home in his mom's basement. I doubt at 22 you knew as much about history as a college grad in history at the same age. And as for whether he/she studied U.S. history, well that would have depended upon the cycle and sequence taken for the major. If your major was medieval history of Europe, you wouldn't have spent a lot of time taking courses about the United States. Or maybe any time. Reading random books and papers, as you apparently did, ain't the same as following a course of study taught by professors and discussed by students discussing similar material in a classroom setting and producing college-level papers. You may think it is the same, and results in the same, but...it doesn't. Dance Mr Bojangles. You don't seem to give me any credit for 50 years of life experience so the bet stands as is. If this kid does not take American history at GW, I will sit for the test and he can sit for the same one. Give me $100 a point and I will make at least five grand. Make it easy, just use two of those 50 question Face book quizzes. I'd love to see your test results after a senior level exam on medieval european history, what the "kid" was studying. Having exactly NOTHING to do with American history other than perhaps the desire to get the **** out of Europe.. And perhaps you might enlighten us as to how the Frontier Thesis could have been used by blacks to more fully integrate this country. That was just Turner's opinion and widely criticized as being far to narrow of an opinion by many, including his contemporaries. I gave you my opinion about the integration of blacks and you roundly rejected it without actually dealing with any of the points. Why would I hypothesize about someone else's theory when that was not even the main thrust of the piece? It is true that blacks had more opportunity in the west but that may have just been that they had the common enemy of the natives to fight along side the whites. If you were a settler in Kansas, under attack by indians, you certainly were happy to see a troop of Buffalo Soldiers coming across the plain. Once again, I doubt at 22 you knew as much history as a college grad of the same age who was a history major. There's no way to prove that at 70 you have the rigorous education in history as a current graduate history major of 22. That you may have read a pile of books is not proof of knowledge. Where are your papers? Where are your presentations? Where are your academic discussions? You certainly put a lot of credence on the pontificating of a few bloviating academics who have never done anything but go to school at 5 and never left. Also, I didn't ask you for a critique of the Frontier Thesis. I asked you how it could have been used by blacks to more fully integrate this country. The question is a modern one and really has little to do with the expansion of the west, per se, or the Buffalo Soldiers. I wasn't sure where you were going with that brain fart but I assumed you thought I would be impressed by something I read and reported on in high school. 1. In college in subjects such as political science, history, English, literature, et cetera, you demonstrate command of subject matter by writing papers, preparing and presenting presentations, and participating in discussions, and by taking various kinds of examinations. This is what the students do. You may think it is nothing more than the "pontificating of a few bloviating academics," but you would be wrong. Again. Before my wife could get her doctorate, she had to pass a three day written exam in her field - three days in a row -and then after that she had to take an all-day oral exam given to her by four or maybe five faculty members, including two from other universities, to defend her dissertation. You have to show what you know. That's a bit more work than typing up a list of books you may have read. 2. No, I'm not. I asked you - twice - a fairly specific question that had nothing to do with something you read and reported on in high school. The question had more to do with your understanding of the Frontier Thesis and whether you knew enough history in regard to that Thesis and to its application in modern times to societal integration. This is the sort of question a contemporary student of U.S. history might be asked on a final exam, to see if he/she really understood the study materials and could apply them. You don't get that ability, usually, by reading a helter-skelter list of books that sound interesting to you. You may well be a "student of history," as you claim, but that doesn't mean you have completed the academic requirements to be anything more than a guy who has read some books, or that you have the background to show you know more than someone with a B.A. and M.A. in history and a lifetime of study and writing in the field. In college, especially these days, you get a pass if you agree with the bloviating professor. Especially liberal arts profs. |
#65
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posted to rec.boats
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1:14 PMIts Me
- show quoted text - You obviously don't understand that you aren't in charge here, and can't demand answers that you seek. ...... Oh that's ok. The double standard wad pretty evident when he wouldn't give me a legitimate reason for why I should vote for Hillary or support the DNC. He acted like I was really stupid for asking... |
#66
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posted to rec.boats
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On 12/28/16 2:14 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Wednesday, December 28, 2016 at 1:30:17 PM UTC-5, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/28/16 12:54 PM, wrote: On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 11:54:29 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/28/16 11:35 AM, wrote: On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 10:13:07 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 9:52 PM, wrote: On Tue, 27 Dec 2016 19:00:35 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 4:19 PM, wrote: Did you actually read the post you are responding to? I certainly bet I know more about US history than a GW graduate who did not have to take a single US history course to get his BA. Where did he get all of this knowledge? Smoking dope and watching the History channel in his dorm room? He could have saved the fifty grand and just bought a basic cable package at home in his mom's basement. I doubt at 22 you knew as much about history as a college grad in history at the same age. And as for whether he/she studied U.S. history, well that would have depended upon the cycle and sequence taken for the major. If your major was medieval history of Europe, you wouldn't have spent a lot of time taking courses about the United States. Or maybe any time. Reading random books and papers, as you apparently did, ain't the same as following a course of study taught by professors and discussed by students discussing similar material in a classroom setting and producing college-level papers. You may think it is the same, and results in the same, but...it doesn't. Dance Mr Bojangles. You don't seem to give me any credit for 50 years of life experience so the bet stands as is. If this kid does not take American history at GW, I will sit for the test and he can sit for the same one. Give me $100 a point and I will make at least five grand. Make it easy, just use two of those 50 question Face book quizzes. I'd love to see your test results after a senior level exam on medieval european history, what the "kid" was studying. Having exactly NOTHING to do with American history other than perhaps the desire to get the **** out of Europe.. And perhaps you might enlighten us as to how the Frontier Thesis could have been used by blacks to more fully integrate this country. That was just Turner's opinion and widely criticized as being far to narrow of an opinion by many, including his contemporaries. I gave you my opinion about the integration of blacks and you roundly rejected it without actually dealing with any of the points. Why would I hypothesize about someone else's theory when that was not even the main thrust of the piece? It is true that blacks had more opportunity in the west but that may have just been that they had the common enemy of the natives to fight along side the whites. If you were a settler in Kansas, under attack by indians, you certainly were happy to see a troop of Buffalo Soldiers coming across the plain. Once again, I doubt at 22 you knew as much history as a college grad of the same age who was a history major. There's no way to prove that at 70 you have the rigorous education in history as a current graduate history major of 22. That you may have read a pile of books is not proof of knowledge. Where are your papers? Where are your presentations? Where are your academic discussions? You certainly put a lot of credence on the pontificating of a few bloviating academics who have never done anything but go to school at 5 and never left. Also, I didn't ask you for a critique of the Frontier Thesis. I asked you how it could have been used by blacks to more fully integrate this country. The question is a modern one and really has little to do with the expansion of the west, per se, or the Buffalo Soldiers. I wasn't sure where you were going with that brain fart but I assumed you thought I would be impressed by something I read and reported on in high school. 1. In college in subjects such as political science, history, English, literature, et cetera, you demonstrate command of subject matter by writing papers, preparing and presenting presentations, and participating in discussions, and by taking various kinds of examinations. This is what the students do. You may think it is nothing more than the "pontificating of a few bloviating academics," but you would be wrong. Again. Before my wife could get her doctorate, she had to pass a three day written exam in her field - three days in a row -and then after that she had to take an all-day oral exam given to her by four or maybe five faculty members, including two from other universities, to defend her dissertation. You have to show what you know. That's a bit more work than typing up a list of books you may have read. 2. No, I'm not. I asked you - twice - a fairly specific question that had nothing to do with something you read and reported on in high school. You obviously don't understand that you aren't in charge here, and can't demand answers that you seek. I asked, asshole, I didn't demand. |
#67
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posted to rec.boats
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On 12/28/16 2:19 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 13:30:13 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/28/16 12:54 PM, wrote: On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 11:54:29 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/28/16 11:35 AM, wrote: On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 10:13:07 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 9:52 PM, wrote: On Tue, 27 Dec 2016 19:00:35 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 4:19 PM, wrote: Did you actually read the post you are responding to? I certainly bet I know more about US history than a GW graduate who did not have to take a single US history course to get his BA. Where did he get all of this knowledge? Smoking dope and watching the History channel in his dorm room? He could have saved the fifty grand and just bought a basic cable package at home in his mom's basement. I doubt at 22 you knew as much about history as a college grad in history at the same age. And as for whether he/she studied U.S. history, well that would have depended upon the cycle and sequence taken for the major. If your major was medieval history of Europe, you wouldn't have spent a lot of time taking courses about the United States. Or maybe any time. Reading random books and papers, as you apparently did, ain't the same as following a course of study taught by professors and discussed by students discussing similar material in a classroom setting and producing college-level papers. You may think it is the same, and results in the same, but...it doesn't. Dance Mr Bojangles. You don't seem to give me any credit for 50 years of life experience so the bet stands as is. If this kid does not take American history at GW, I will sit for the test and he can sit for the same one. Give me $100 a point and I will make at least five grand. Make it easy, just use two of those 50 question Face book quizzes. I'd love to see your test results after a senior level exam on medieval european history, what the "kid" was studying. Having exactly NOTHING to do with American history other than perhaps the desire to get the **** out of Europe.. And perhaps you might enlighten us as to how the Frontier Thesis could have been used by blacks to more fully integrate this country. That was just Turner's opinion and widely criticized as being far to narrow of an opinion by many, including his contemporaries. I gave you my opinion about the integration of blacks and you roundly rejected it without actually dealing with any of the points. Why would I hypothesize about someone else's theory when that was not even the main thrust of the piece? It is true that blacks had more opportunity in the west but that may have just been that they had the common enemy of the natives to fight along side the whites. If you were a settler in Kansas, under attack by indians, you certainly were happy to see a troop of Buffalo Soldiers coming across the plain. Once again, I doubt at 22 you knew as much history as a college grad of the same age who was a history major. There's no way to prove that at 70 you have the rigorous education in history as a current graduate history major of 22. That you may have read a pile of books is not proof of knowledge. Where are your papers? Where are your presentations? Where are your academic discussions? You certainly put a lot of credence on the pontificating of a few bloviating academics who have never done anything but go to school at 5 and never left. Also, I didn't ask you for a critique of the Frontier Thesis. I asked you how it could have been used by blacks to more fully integrate this country. The question is a modern one and really has little to do with the expansion of the west, per se, or the Buffalo Soldiers. I wasn't sure where you were going with that brain fart but I assumed you thought I would be impressed by something I read and reported on in high school. 1. In college in subjects such as political science, history, English, literature, et cetera, you demonstrate command of subject matter by writing papers, preparing and presenting presentations, and participating in discussions, and by taking various kinds of examinations. This is what the students do. You may think it is nothing more than the "pontificating of a few bloviating academics," but you would be wrong. Again. Before my wife could get her doctorate, she had to pass a three day written exam in her field - three days in a row -and then after that she had to take an all-day oral exam given to her by four or maybe five faculty members, including two from other universities, to defend her dissertation. You have to show what you know. That's a bit more work than typing up a list of books you may have read. It sounds more like she had to write papers that agreed with what "4 maybe 5" faculty members believed. In a trade that is as ambiguous as psychology, nobody is that right or wrong. It may be an issue of when you were trained more than what is true. 40-50 years ago homosexuality was a disorder that therapy could treat. 2. No, I'm not. I asked you - twice - a fairly specific question that had nothing to do with something you read and reported on in high school. The question had more to do with your understanding of the Frontier Thesis and whether you knew enough history in regard to that Thesis and to its application in modern times to societal integration. This is the sort of question a contemporary student of U.S. history might be asked on a final exam, to see if he/she really understood the study materials and could apply them. You don't get that ability, usually, by reading a helter-skelter list of books that sound interesting to you. You asked me to make a point based on something I may not believe is totally accurate and it just makes me happy that I do not need to please you to get a good grade. Reading a helter-skelter lost of books is better than just reading the list that reinforces your professor's views. You may well be a "student of history," as you claim, but that doesn't mean you have completed the academic requirements to be anything more than a guy who has read some books, or that you have the background to show you know more than someone with a B.A. and M.A. in history and a lifetime of study and writing in the field. You seem to forget how we got here. The discussion was not about someone who has years of study in American history, it is about how someone can get a liberal arts degree without a single credit hour in American history. So much for that broadly based academic education. I do understand that this is just the rejection of America by the people who depend on America to make a living but that is typical among the liberal left. They don't just bite the hand that feeds them they make a meal out of it and then write a paper that says it wasn't satisfying enough. Uh, no. She didn't have to write papers that "agreed" with anything. Her dissertation was original research. Further, she didn't know who the four or five would be until just before the oral exams. So, once again, you are taking a stab in the dark. And I don't recall a requirement to take a single credit hour in American history way back in the dark ages when I was pursuing a B.A. in Kansas, and it had nothing to do with broadly based academic education or the rejection of America. What it is is something you don't know because you never experienced it. I think at the core of your anti-academic belief system is compensation for the fact that you never really experienced college. I don't know why...it certainly couldn't have been $$$, because any bright kid could have combined scholarships and student jobs to make it through without student debt. |
#68
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posted to rec.boats
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On 12/28/16 2:29 PM, Califbill wrote:
Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/28/16 10:37 AM, Califbill wrote: Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 11:09 PM, Califbill wrote: Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 4:19 PM, wrote: On Tue, 27 Dec 2016 15:14:04 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 2:56 PM, Tim wrote: I'm sure there is a good reason for this. Like, removing history class for the history majors. The students probably know it all anyhow, so why waste man power and tuition expenses . Pass em anyhow. Sounds logical to me. After all a sheepskin proves your knowledge, right? So, you and FlaJim the Moron know as much "history" as someone with a B.A. in it, eh? Doubtful. And of course you know as much about the design and manufacture of electric motors as, say, degreed mechanical or electrical engineers, eh? Doubtful. And FlaJim knows as much about chipping paint on a navy vessel as, oh, a guy who chips paint on a navy vessel... Did you actually read the post you are responding to? I certainly bet I know more about US history than a GW graduate who did not have to take a single US history course to get his BA. Where did he get all of this knowledge? Smoking dope and watching the History channel in his dorm room? He could have saved the fifty grand and just bought a basic cable package at home in his mom's basement. I doubt at 22 you knew as much about history as a college grad in history at the same age. And as for whether he/she studied U.S. history, well that would have depended upon the cycle and sequence taken for the major. If your major was medieval history of Europe, you wouldn't have spent a lot of time taking courses about the United States. Or maybe any time. Reading random books and papers, as you apparently did, ain't the same as following a course of study taught by professors and discussed by students discussing similar material in a classroom setting and producing college-level papers. You may think it is the same, and results in the same, but...it doesn't. If you have a degree in history, you should have general knowledge of all history. Not just what you specialized in! So, you're now on the California board of regents, eh? Closer than you. I grew up with Clark Kerr Jr. Seems to be if you know someone, their knowledge is your knowledge. Plus I pay taxes to support the California school system. So why should a history major, not have at least a knowledge of his country's history? Wow. You knew the son of Clark Kerr. I know the nephew of Gore Vidal. BFD. BFD to you. You claim to have known every POTUS since Truman, and that makes you a brilliant POLYSCI wannabe. No, I didn't *know* them all but I met many of them. Meeting and knowing aren't the same thing. I knew Truman best of all, though, and I spoke with him frequently when I was working at the paper in KC, and saw him personally several times a year in Independence. He was quite approachable, especially to his neighbors and friends. |
#69
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posted to rec.boats
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On Wednesday, December 28, 2016 at 2:55:00 PM UTC-5, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 12/28/16 2:14 PM, Its Me wrote: On Wednesday, December 28, 2016 at 1:30:17 PM UTC-5, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/28/16 12:54 PM, wrote: On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 11:54:29 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/28/16 11:35 AM, wrote: On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 10:13:07 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 9:52 PM, wrote: On Tue, 27 Dec 2016 19:00:35 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 4:19 PM, wrote: Did you actually read the post you are responding to? I certainly bet I know more about US history than a GW graduate who did not have to take a single US history course to get his BA. Where did he get all of this knowledge? Smoking dope and watching the History channel in his dorm room? He could have saved the fifty grand and just bought a basic cable package at home in his mom's basement. I doubt at 22 you knew as much about history as a college grad in history at the same age. And as for whether he/she studied U.S. history, well that would have depended upon the cycle and sequence taken for the major. If your major was medieval history of Europe, you wouldn't have spent a lot of time taking courses about the United States. Or maybe any time. Reading random books and papers, as you apparently did, ain't the same as following a course of study taught by professors and discussed by students discussing similar material in a classroom setting and producing college-level papers. You may think it is the same, and results in the same, but...it doesn't. Dance Mr Bojangles. You don't seem to give me any credit for 50 years of life experience so the bet stands as is. If this kid does not take American history at GW, I will sit for the test and he can sit for the same one. Give me $100 a point and I will make at least five grand. Make it easy, just use two of those 50 question Face book quizzes. I'd love to see your test results after a senior level exam on medieval european history, what the "kid" was studying. Having exactly NOTHING to do with American history other than perhaps the desire to get the **** out of Europe.. And perhaps you might enlighten us as to how the Frontier Thesis could have been used by blacks to more fully integrate this country. That was just Turner's opinion and widely criticized as being far to narrow of an opinion by many, including his contemporaries. I gave you my opinion about the integration of blacks and you roundly rejected it without actually dealing with any of the points. Why would I hypothesize about someone else's theory when that was not even the main thrust of the piece? It is true that blacks had more opportunity in the west but that may have just been that they had the common enemy of the natives to fight along side the whites. If you were a settler in Kansas, under attack by indians, you certainly were happy to see a troop of Buffalo Soldiers coming across the plain. Once again, I doubt at 22 you knew as much history as a college grad of the same age who was a history major. There's no way to prove that at 70 you have the rigorous education in history as a current graduate history major of 22. That you may have read a pile of books is not proof of knowledge. Where are your papers? Where are your presentations? Where are your academic discussions? You certainly put a lot of credence on the pontificating of a few bloviating academics who have never done anything but go to school at 5 and never left. Also, I didn't ask you for a critique of the Frontier Thesis. I asked you how it could have been used by blacks to more fully integrate this country. The question is a modern one and really has little to do with the expansion of the west, per se, or the Buffalo Soldiers. I wasn't sure where you were going with that brain fart but I assumed you thought I would be impressed by something I read and reported on in high school. 1. In college in subjects such as political science, history, English, literature, et cetera, you demonstrate command of subject matter by writing papers, preparing and presenting presentations, and participating in discussions, and by taking various kinds of examinations. This is what the students do. You may think it is nothing more than the "pontificating of a few bloviating academics," but you would be wrong. Again. Before my wife could get her doctorate, she had to pass a three day written exam in her field - three days in a row -and then after that she had to take an all-day oral exam given to her by four or maybe five faculty members, including two from other universities, to defend her dissertation. You have to show what you know. That's a bit more work than typing up a list of books you may have read. 2. No, I'm not. I asked you - twice - a fairly specific question that had nothing to do with something you read and reported on in high school. You obviously don't understand that you aren't in charge here, and can't demand answers that you seek. I asked, asshole, I didn't demand. Heh. When John does the same as you, you accuse him of demanding answers and you tell him he's not in charge. Same shoe, different foot. |
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On 12/28/16 2:45 PM, Califbill wrote:
Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/28/16 12:54 PM, wrote: On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 11:54:29 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/28/16 11:35 AM, wrote: On Wed, 28 Dec 2016 10:13:07 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 9:52 PM, wrote: On Tue, 27 Dec 2016 19:00:35 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 12/27/16 4:19 PM, wrote: Did you actually read the post you are responding to? I certainly bet I know more about US history than a GW graduate who did not have to take a single US history course to get his BA. Where did he get all of this knowledge? Smoking dope and watching the History channel in his dorm room? He could have saved the fifty grand and just bought a basic cable package at home in his mom's basement. I doubt at 22 you knew as much about history as a college grad in history at the same age. And as for whether he/she studied U.S. history, well that would have depended upon the cycle and sequence taken for the major. If your major was medieval history of Europe, you wouldn't have spent a lot of time taking courses about the United States. Or maybe any time. Reading random books and papers, as you apparently did, ain't the same as following a course of study taught by professors and discussed by students discussing similar material in a classroom setting and producing college-level papers. You may think it is the same, and results in the same, but...it doesn't. Dance Mr Bojangles. You don't seem to give me any credit for 50 years of life experience so the bet stands as is. If this kid does not take American history at GW, I will sit for the test and he can sit for the same one. Give me $100 a point and I will make at least five grand. Make it easy, just use two of those 50 question Face book quizzes. I'd love to see your test results after a senior level exam on medieval european history, what the "kid" was studying. Having exactly NOTHING to do with American history other than perhaps the desire to get the **** out of Europe.. And perhaps you might enlighten us as to how the Frontier Thesis could have been used by blacks to more fully integrate this country. That was just Turner's opinion and widely criticized as being far to narrow of an opinion by many, including his contemporaries. I gave you my opinion about the integration of blacks and you roundly rejected it without actually dealing with any of the points. Why would I hypothesize about someone else's theory when that was not even the main thrust of the piece? It is true that blacks had more opportunity in the west but that may have just been that they had the common enemy of the natives to fight along side the whites. If you were a settler in Kansas, under attack by indians, you certainly were happy to see a troop of Buffalo Soldiers coming across the plain. Once again, I doubt at 22 you knew as much history as a college grad of the same age who was a history major. There's no way to prove that at 70 you have the rigorous education in history as a current graduate history major of 22. That you may have read a pile of books is not proof of knowledge. Where are your papers? Where are your presentations? Where are your academic discussions? You certainly put a lot of credence on the pontificating of a few bloviating academics who have never done anything but go to school at 5 and never left. Also, I didn't ask you for a critique of the Frontier Thesis. I asked you how it could have been used by blacks to more fully integrate this country. The question is a modern one and really has little to do with the expansion of the west, per se, or the Buffalo Soldiers. I wasn't sure where you were going with that brain fart but I assumed you thought I would be impressed by something I read and reported on in high school. 1. In college in subjects such as political science, history, English, literature, et cetera, you demonstrate command of subject matter by writing papers, preparing and presenting presentations, and participating in discussions, and by taking various kinds of examinations. This is what the students do. You may think it is nothing more than the "pontificating of a few bloviating academics," but you would be wrong. Again. Before my wife could get her doctorate, she had to pass a three day written exam in her field - three days in a row -and then after that she had to take an all-day oral exam given to her by four or maybe five faculty members, including two from other universities, to defend her dissertation. You have to show what you know. That's a bit more work than typing up a list of books you may have read. 2. No, I'm not. I asked you - twice - a fairly specific question that had nothing to do with something you read and reported on in high school. The question had more to do with your understanding of the Frontier Thesis and whether you knew enough history in regard to that Thesis and to its application in modern times to societal integration. This is the sort of question a contemporary student of U.S. history might be asked on a final exam, to see if he/she really understood the study materials and could apply them. You don't get that ability, usually, by reading a helter-skelter list of books that sound interesting to you. You may well be a "student of history," as you claim, but that doesn't mean you have completed the academic requirements to be anything more than a guy who has read some books, or that you have the background to show you know more than someone with a B.A. and M.A. in history and a lifetime of study and writing in the field. In college, especially these days, you get a pass if you agree with the bloviating professor. Especially liberal arts profs. Frankly, Bilious, there is no serious subject on which I would accept your opinion as reality. |
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