U.S. Political Parties

By Professor Buzzkill / August 20, 2018 /

I got so sick of idiots posting completely ahistorical things about American Political Parties on Twitter and Facebook, that I called Professor Nash in for an emergency episode. We were able to diagnose the interpretative problems, stop the bleeding, and heal the wound. We explain why political parties have had the same name, but totally…

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Slavery, Race, and the Confederate Army

By Professor Buzzkill / August 14, 2018 /

Professor Colin Woodward joins us to discuss the importance of slavery in the minds of Confederate soldiers, as well as its effects on military policy and decision making. He tells us about the Rebels’ persistent belief in the need to defend slavery and deploy it militarily as the war raged on. Slavery proved essential to…

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“May You Live in Interesting Times” – Quote or No Quote?

By Professor Buzzkill / August 7, 2018 /

Are we cursed to be living in interesting times? Would a boring era be easier on the Buzzkill blood pressure? And is “may you live in interesting times” actually an old Chinese curse, or is the history of the saying more complicated? We take you from Chinese folks tales in 1627 to 20th century British…

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Why Was World Was II So Bad?

By Professor Buzzkill / July 31, 2018 /

All wars are bad. But why was World War II so extreme? Coming less than 20 years after World War I (the most extreme war up until that time), the Second World War’s death toll is _conservatively_ calculated at 60 million people. And some estimates are higher than that. Professor Phil Nash joins us to…

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Coming Close to Nuclear War

By Professor Buzzkill / July 17, 2018 /

How close has the world come to nuclear war in the past several decades? How many accidents, miscommunications, and misunderstandings have brought us to the brink of annihilation? Professor Phil Nash joins us to explain how many times we’ve been on the brink of nuclear war, what happened in these incidents, and what mistakes were…

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Melvin Purvis – Man Crush Monday!

By Professor Buzzkill / July 9, 2018 /

Melvin Purvis, head of the Chicago Division of the young FBI, is usually overshadowed by the character of J. Edgar Hoover. But who did the real work of capturing or killing Pretty Boy Floyd and John Dillinger. Professor Nash joins us to discuss G-Man Melvin Purvis and where he belongs in the history of American…

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Canadians Burning the White House, 1814

By Professor Buzzkill / July 1, 2018 /

Canadians Burning the White House Oh Canada,you ransacked through the townsearching for a Timmy’syou burned the White House down Yes indeedy, it’s July 1st — Canada Day! The day that celebrates that glorious time in 1867, when the various provinces of Canada became a confederation in the British Empire. It was later called Dominion Day,…

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WWII Internment in the United States

By Professor Buzzkill / June 29, 2018 /

Government internment of “enemy aliens” during World War II has been a controversial topic ever since the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Not only is the history much more complicated than is popularly known, the various policies applied at the time were very complicated, and often contradictory. In this episode we talk…

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Immigration to the United States

By Professor Buzzkill / June 19, 2018 /

The history of immigration to the United States is very complicated, Buzzkillers! Millions of people came from all over the world to the United States, and there are almost as many myths about immigration as there were immigrants. What did it mean to come to the United States “legally” during the high points of the…

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Albert Einstein: “A Little Knowledge is a Dangerous Thing.” Quote or No Quote?

By Professor Buzzkill / June 12, 2018 /

Ah yes, Albert Einstein. Perhaps number 3 or number 4 on the all time mis-quoted list. No, he didn’t say that thing about the disappearance of bees, and the disappearance of bee pollination being the sign that animal life on the planet, especially humans, was doomed within four years. No, he didn’t say “if the…

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