- Posts: 557
- Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2016 2:33 am
As for podcasts, love them. Definitely a plus side to the technological dystopia we are all trapped in (that and online stratomatic).
I'm a reader first and foremost (looking forward to a certain biography of Hack Wilson to arrive in the mail any day now). I wake up at 4:45 and read on my porch until my kids wake up every morning (well, most mornings), and if I can keep my eyes open, I read after the kids go to bed.
But I go to sleep to podcasts every night, and listen to podcasts on my commute. The commute is for escapist stuff (sports and pop culture) and bedtime is intellectual stuff.
As for The War of 1812, turns out the invasion of Canada was the first thing that happened. America was responding to a British blockade of trade to Europe (as well as other indignities), declared War on Britain, and the closest British thing they could attack was Canada. They halfway expected to be "greeted as liberators" (sound familiar?), but they weren't, and had poor organization, morale, and leadership, and Canada had this badass British General named Brock.
One of the crazy things was, this being 1812, it took weeks to communicate back-and-forth across the Atlantic. So 5 days after America declared war, Britain actually lifted the trade blockade. At this point Britain didn't know America had declared war, and America didn't know Britain had addressed the major grievance that motivated them to do so. But the die was cast so the war played out anyway. Similarly, after the peace treaty was signed, there was another whole battle due to the fact that the combatants hadn't got the memo.
I'm a reader first and foremost (looking forward to a certain biography of Hack Wilson to arrive in the mail any day now). I wake up at 4:45 and read on my porch until my kids wake up every morning (well, most mornings), and if I can keep my eyes open, I read after the kids go to bed.
But I go to sleep to podcasts every night, and listen to podcasts on my commute. The commute is for escapist stuff (sports and pop culture) and bedtime is intellectual stuff.
As for The War of 1812, turns out the invasion of Canada was the first thing that happened. America was responding to a British blockade of trade to Europe (as well as other indignities), declared War on Britain, and the closest British thing they could attack was Canada. They halfway expected to be "greeted as liberators" (sound familiar?), but they weren't, and had poor organization, morale, and leadership, and Canada had this badass British General named Brock.
One of the crazy things was, this being 1812, it took weeks to communicate back-and-forth across the Atlantic. So 5 days after America declared war, Britain actually lifted the trade blockade. At this point Britain didn't know America had declared war, and America didn't know Britain had addressed the major grievance that motivated them to do so. But the die was cast so the war played out anyway. Similarly, after the peace treaty was signed, there was another whole battle due to the fact that the combatants hadn't got the memo.