May 21

Ep. 0182: Cathal Nolan on the Allure of Battle

In this DHP episode, CJ talks with Cathal J. Nolan, associate professor of history at Boston University and author of the book The Allure of Battle: A History of How Wars Have Been Won and Lost.

Join CJ & Professor Nolan as they discuss:

  • How leaders & nations are often seduced by ‘the allure of battle’ and a ‘short war delusion’
  • The ways in which much existing historiography on warfare since ancient times have contributed to the glorification of the ideas of decisive battle and military genius, and how The Allure of Battle challenges these tendencies
  • How wars are actually won most of the time — namely, through things like logistics, attrition and endurance over relatively long time spans — in contrast to the concept of decisive battle
  • Some historical examples of alleged military geniuses who succumbed to the allure of battle, including the Duke of Marlborough, Frederick the Great, Napoleon Bonaparte, and the various German leaders of the late-nineteenth century and the first half of the twentieth century
  • Some of the ways in which warfare has changed (and, perhaps more importantly, not changed) since the Second World War
  • Whether or not world leaders have learned any of the important lessons about the dangers of falling for the allure of battle and the short war delusion

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May 13

Ep. 0181: Place of the Slaughter

This Dangerous History Podcast episode covers a dramatic but very little-known conflict in the early history of colonial North America, which culminated in multiple mass murders of European colonists by other, rival European colonists.

Join CJ as he discusses:

  • An overview of early Spanish attempts at colonizing La Florida, which were a series of major failures running from Ponce de Leon in 1519 to Tristan de Luna in 1559, after which the Spanish Crown ended all attempts at colonizing the region
  • The beginning of French Huguenot involvement in Florida, which renewed Spanish interest in the area
  • Spain’s decision to make one last attempt to colonize Florida, to be led by Pedro Menendez de Aviles
  • The race to Florida between Menendez’ expedition and that of Huguenot leader Jean Ribault
  • The conflict in Florida between the Spanish Catholics and French Huguenots, culminating in multiple cold-blooded massacres
  • The legacy of all this not only for the history of Florida, but the subsequent colonial history of North America

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April 19

Ep. 0180: A Tale of Two Shilohs (w/Chris Calton)

This episode is a tag-team collaboration with Chris Calton, host of the Historical Controversies podcast, which is published by the Mises Institute.

Join Chris & CJ as they tell the story of the Battle of Shiloh as experienced by Henry Stanley (a young Confederate soldier) and John Cockerill (a young Union soldier.)

(This episode is a crossover episode with Historical Controversies season 3 episode 53.)

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March 18

Ep. 0179: Exploring the Inward Empire with Sam Davis


This episode of the Dangerous History Podcast features CJ’s recent conversation with Sam Davis, host of the Inward Empire podcast.

Join Sam & CJ as they discuss:

  • Some thoughts on history podcasts in general, and the divide between “indie/DIY” podcasters, and “institutional” ones
  • How Sam came to be doing the Inward Empire podcast
  • The fact that the United States is, and always has been, an empire, what this means, and why so many refuse to see it
  • The role of the frontier experience (and the mythology of it) in shaping American history, even long after the ear of the Old West ended
  • The divergence between scholarly understandings of history and popular depictions and understandings of it
  • Ways in which one’s own ideology influences one’s take on history
  • The obvious-but-oft-overlooked continuity in American history between the Indian wars and the later wars of overseas empire
  • The ways in which Anglo-Saxonism and xenophobia have influenced American empire-building
  • The trickiness of trying to draw parallels between current events and historical topics
  • Some of Sam’s experiences teaching history at the high school level over the past year

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January 31

Ep. 0176: The Great Alibi & the Treasury of Virtue: The Not-So-Civil War Part 15

More than 2 years in the making, based on reading dozens (I never wanted to count) of books & dozens more articles, over 300 pages of typed notes, 15 episodes long, 28 hours total run-time…..

Boom – here it is, the end of the DHP’s Not-So-Civil War series! What started over 2 years ago is finally done with — took almost half as long to make as the war took to actually happen, it’s done, here we are, one last big push to the finish line!

(Now you can binge the series all the way through, from the beginning, Netflix-style, if you want, starting all the way back with DHP Ep. 131: Opening Gambits, which came out on the last day of 2016.)

Join CJ as he discusses:

  • The “Lost Cause” Mythology of the Confederacy
  • One last look at the two sides of why the war happened: First, why did the South secede (including an extensive examination of primary sources on this), and second, why was the North willing to use war to prevent them from doing so successfully?
  • An examination of why the war turned out as it did, and a potential alternative scenario in which it might well have turned out differently
  • And some perspectives on this war that CJ finds interesting & persuasive, from several writers & historians, none of whom are simplistic apologists for either side of the conflict

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December 16

Ep. 0175: The Real George H.W. Bush, with Russ Baker

 

In light of the recent death of former President George Herbert Walker “Poppy” Bush (1924-2018), CJ was very happy to speak to investigative journalist and author Russ Baker (author of Family of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, America’s Invisible Government, and the Hidden History of the Last Fifty Years, and head honcho of WhoWhatWhy) about the reality of Poppy Bush, which is quite a contrast to the media hagiography that’s been ongoing since his death.

Join CJ & Russ as they discuss:

  • How Russ got into the investigations that eventually became Family of Secrets
  • A bit of the backstory on the Bush family
  • The ways in which the mainstream portrayal & perception of Poppy Bush are wildly different from the truth, including his involvement with American intelligence going back decades before his tenure as CIA director in the 1970s
  • Poppy Bush’s interesting connections to many major events of 20th century American history, including the JFK assassination and the Watergate scandal
  • What this sort of history (and the degree to which it is deliberately ignored) says about the political system and mainstream media in the United States

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November 16

Ep. 0173: DHP Heroes: John Taylor Gatto (w/Richard Grove & Brett Veinotte)

John Taylor Gatto (1935-2018) was an award-winning public school teacher before leaving that career to become an outspoken critic of conventional schooling.

In this episode, CJ is very pleased to be joined by Richard Grove of Tragedy & Hope and Brett Veinotte of School Sucks to discuss Gatto’s life, legacy, and influence.

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October 31

Ep. 0171: DHP Heroes: John Carpenter, Part 1

Tis the season for some Halloween-related DHP — specifically, part 1 of a 2-part DHP Heroes feature on filmmaker John Carpenter, perhaps best known for his work in the horror genre.

Join CJ as he discusses:

  • The concepts of ‘auteur’ and ‘cult classic’ or ‘cult film,’ and how they apply to Carpenter and his work
  • A bit about Carpenter’s early life, upbringing, and time at USC film school
  • Coverage and commentary on most of Carpenter’s early films, from Dark Star (1974) through The Thing (1982)

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October 24

Ep. 0170: Johnny Comes Marching Home: The Not-So-Civil War Part 14

This was originally going to be one giant episode to finish off the series, but then it grew into TOO giant of an episode, so I decided to divide it in order to conquer it.

Here’s the beginning of the end of the Not-So-Civil War series.

Join CJ as he discusses:

  • The costs of the war in death & destruction
  • Changes wrought by the war
  • The fate of the veterans in the decades following the war

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August 27

Ep. 0168: Mark Thornton on Red Tide & Skyscrapers


In this DHP episode, CJ talks to economist Mark Thornton. Mark is Senior Fellow at the Mises Institute. He serves as the Book Review Editor of the Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics. His publications include The Economics of Prohibition (1991), Tariffs, Blockades, and Inflation: The Economics of the Civil War (2004), The Quotable Mises (2005), The Bastiat Collection (2007), An Essay on Economic Theory (2010), The Bastiat Reader (2014), and his latest, The Skyscraper Curse and How Austrian Economists Predicted Every Major Crisis of the Last Century (2018).

Join CJ & Mark as they discuss:

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