Blogs > Cliopatria > Week of January 5, 2009

Jan 8, 2009

Week of January 5, 2009




  • News Story (Slate)

    USA Today leads with the Congressional Budget Office predicting that the budget deficit would reach a record $1.2 trillion, and that's without counting the stimulus package currently under discussion and wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

  • David Remnick

    Slaves—men of West African origin branded with Christian monikers like Tom, Peter, Ben, Harry, and Daniel—helped build the White House. Three were on loan from its chief architect, James Hoban. Construction began in 1792, and slaves worked as sawyers, quarrymen, carpenters, stonemasons, brickmakers. Such was the fabric of the new republic: twelve American Presidents owned slaves, eight of them while in office.

    After emancipation and the Civil War, a handful of black men won seats in Congress, but, as the spirit of Jim Crow overwhelmed the promise of Reconstruction, white supremacy regained its hold. On January 29, 1901, the last of those black congressmen, George H. White, of North Carolina, stood in the well of the House and prophesied the miracle of reconciliation and justice:

    "This, Mr. Chairman, is perhaps the Negroes’ temporary farewell to the American Congress but let me say Phoenix-like he will rise up some day and come again. These parting words are on behalf of an outraged, heart-broken, bruised and bleeding, but God-fearing people. . . . The only apology I have for the earnestness with which I have spoken is that I am pleading for the life, the liberty, the future happiness, and manhood suffrage for one-eighth of the entire population of the United States."

  • Chronicle of Higher Ed News Story

    There were more signs at the [AHA's] meeting that the job market in history—as in other fields—is being affected by the economic downturn. The number of job openings that universities were interviewing for at the meeting was off 29 percent from last year. The jobs were listed on a large screen set up in the association's job center in the Hilton New York Hotel. David Darlington, a manager of the job center, said the association knew of 186 job openings that search committees were interviewing for at this year's meeting, down from 261 openings last year.

  • NYT Editorial

    Historians and archivists are suing the administration [to gain access to its records]. We should be grateful for their efforts. Entire days of e-mail records have turned up conveniently blank at the offices of President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney. Mr. Cheney, of course, retreats from sunshine with the wariness of Alucard; he is fighting to the last the transfer of his records to the National Archives, as required by law. He recently argued in court that he “alone may determine what constitutes vice presidential records or personal records.” As in: L’etat c’est Dick.

  • Avrum Burg

    The Holocaust is a very real trauma for many people in Israel, and nobody can argue with that. But ... when I hear someone like Benjamin Netanyahu, who is a very intelligent person, say of [Iran's President Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad,"It's 1938 all over again," I say, is it?! Is this the reality? Did we have such an omnipotent army in 1938? Did we have an independent state in 1938? Did we have the unequivocal support in 1938 of all the important superpowers in the world? No, we did not. And when you compare Ahmadinejad to Hitler, don't you diminish Hitler's significance?

  • Matthew DeBord

    Detroit's goal has never been to sell the cars that consumers want to buy; it's been to sell the cars that will yield the highest profits.



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