To discuss your weekly readings of books, textbooks and papers.
I finished Entangled Life , great book to give an introduction to the lay man about fungus. I particularly enjoyed the chapters about mycorrhizal networks and amateur mycologists (many of them were these huge fungus neurodivergents whose enthusiasm was quite contagious).
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
The Crusades - Thomas Asbridge
1 - the crusades were a perpetual shitshow, only the 1st one was ever truly successful, the rest on a macro scale was a 200 year long series of losing wars for the Franks/Latins/Crusaders
During the 3rd and 5th crusade was deceisive in favor of the crusaders with exceptional commaners like Henry the Lion, who won a myriad of battles, but both the 3rd and 5th crusades were a microcosm of the problems with the entire crusader states.
2 - Problem! The crusaders were always overhwelmingly outnumbered, in the levant and on the battlefield. The fricking christians would always boast about assembling a never before christian host of TWELF HUNDRED KNIGHTS, and 10 000 Men-at-arms, for a total of 15000 fighting men in total or something, and then in an offhand comment mention they would be ATTACKING an Islamic/Cumid/Saracen host of 60 fricking thousand men
This would happen over and over and over, often the crusaders would win out of sheer luck and r-sluration, not any actual martial fiiness or tactical genious - the Islamic forces of the local district would outnumber the paltry crusader army usually by a factor of fricking 3-5, and thus grow complacent and arrogant and post no sentries ect.
The crusader leaders, realizing how utter fricked they were, opted for the bold strategy, AKA the one in which they would pre-emptively attack the Saracens or Cumins before they could gather their forces, and choose their battleground, and somehow succeed in routing disorganized enemies, they would do this shit 20 fricking times in 150 years lmoa
Since the crusaders would pilgramige far from home, they always had a manpower disadvantage, while Sunni and Shia forces had homebase advantage, with their cultural strongholds, just being below at Egypy, Arabia or mesopotamia, meanwhile the crusaders had to cross the meddirterreanean, and many hostile nations sometimes.
3 - the biggest frickup of the crusades was that they were dependant on powerful monarchs like Louis of the 7th Crusade, and Henry the Lion of the 3rd to swell their ranks with the really good tier troops and not just hobo pilgrims who were armed with sticks, these pwoerful monarchs who took the cross had the best field armies europe could offer, but their attention was always fricking divided between the Crusader front and their home kingdoms, and they rightfully were concerned that their neighbours would have a dig at their lands while they were 2000 miles away, which did fricking invariably occur, and the crusader kings would then frick off back home, usually after a string of glorious victories over islamic forces, and in their absence all the progress they gained would revert back into the caliphate's favor lol
4- Islam did not give a shit about the crusades, during their occurence and for almost 700 years since. The crusades were ocurring in the frontiers of Sunni and Shia strongholds, and only Jerusalem mattered to them, and even then it was only their 3rd most holy City after Mecca and Medina, and usually muslim pilgrims were never barred as long as they brought commerce and taxes/
Men like Saladin were remarkable, but have been lionized beyond reality like Rommel has. Saladin utilized propaganda to make him the supposed unitor of Islam, but that was only his pretext to conquer fellow muslims. By the time he had taken Jerusalem from the crusader states, he had waged 22 months of war on Christians, but like a combined 40 fricking months of war on his fellow muslims in the levant to consolidate power.
He was however a master of the Ayupids, and his mercy did have basis in fame, he would let many christian towns and garisons leave the crusader states unmolested, which aided his strategy of capturing hundreds of towns and dozens of castles each within quick succession - contemporary edidence show this was practically minded, as garisons were more willing to surrender with the past proof of his clemency, and thus Saladin was not bogged down into perpetual grinding sieges, something he could not afford as his coalition of Sunni and Shia muslims were held together with only the force of his personality, and the combined victory he gave them, it was likely his forces would splinter if he didn't obain quick victories before the crucual siege of Jerusalem.
5 - Yet inspite of this, the crusades were still an afterthought for the Islamic continent, they had much bigger happenings in that time, the protracted Sunni and Shia midievan cold wars, the rise of the Mamlukes slave soldiers killing their entire master class in egypt, and the obliteration of the Kwarismians, by the mongols and other precursor tartar groups, the looting of Baghdad and slaughter of its entire half mill population.
The full might of islam did not converge since inter religious and ethnic rivalries kept them at each other's throats, allowing the Franks/crusaders to come and easily siege their palestine cities.
6 - Jihad and religious extremism as we know it today was not at all common in the crusader days, religious fervour took many populations to commit atrocities, but these were no different from the usual midieval wars.
The crusades did not in fact leave upon the Islamic world some massive scar, which affected muslims till the modern age, they simply didn't give a shit, the crusades would only become a propaganda tool for Islamic extremists during the colonial period in which the westerb Europeans would loot the corpse of the Ottoman empire, and cause intense friction upon the local religious populations. Where places like India would develop a Human Rights movement under Ghandi to oppose the Brits, places like Iraq, Iran, Arabia, Yemen would develop a religious undertone in their colonial opposition thinking.
The talk of Christianity and Islam being in this unending struggle for dominancy is a very recent think, it has not been a festering wound for 800 years, but has been developed in the past 150.
Shit like committing suicide bombings to send infidels to death was not at all a common practice during the age of Saladin and the Saracens, whom had similar ideals regarding the sin of suicide, and throwing away the life the Divine gave you. This was a recent extremism within the confines of modern Islam. And while Islan in Saladin's time prided itself in expanding to all corners of the world , in practice few Islamic warlords cared about their own fiefdoms, and the expansionism of Arabs in 600-700s was a thing long in the past for people like Saladin by the time the 3rd Crusade occured, and was only a propaganda weapon to throw the Franks and crusaders back into the sea.
It is debatable whether Islam today is actually MORE extreme than fricking 800 years ago, because of the intensity of self destruction being acceptible to obliterate the enemy and ritual suicide bombings that are so famous today. This of course needs to be taken with several hands of salt, but scholars which study contemporary sources during the time of the Mamlukes or the Cumins and crusader states, show that Islam as an organized religion was not as suffocating as it is currently under the modern concept of Shaira laws are known to be; it is also impossible to compare the life circumstances between the everyman in modern Iran, and back in Saladin's time.
However the point remains the shocking recency in which Islamic extrmism has existed in the past 150 years
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
More options
Context
Trans lives matter @Sasanka_of_Lauda love sucking peepee
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
I'm reading Lord of the World because all the Dominican nerds I know rave about it. Catholic dystopian scifi that has been positively reviewed by a few Popes. I'll give my thoughts when I'm finished next week. @carpathianfriendly let me in the group pls
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
Good Catholic fiction also includes Tobit, Baruch and Judith. There's a lot of good Catholic fiction out there.
Democracy is the art and science of running the circus from the monkey cage.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
More options
Context
More options
Context
Finished Killers of the Flower Moon. Really good book and honestly pretty sad. Even the main “villain” wasn't responsible for most of the deaths by himself, that's how lucrative the oil rights were. And then they pretty much all ran out in the end.
The last quarter of the book was a bit of a drag though, basically the author interviewing modern day Osage with generational trauma about the events. I do have to at some of the research he put into figuring out a few cold cases though
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
Would you recommend it? It has been on the best seller list forever.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
Yes! It was a pretty breezy read. I got it as a surprise gift and still enjoyed it
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
More options
Context
More options
Context
I've been reading a lot about foreign policy, but to be honest nothing has been compelling enough to impart here. Mostly it's been literature on populism, but frankly a lot of it is written by communists so they all think you're huffing paint as a fascist if you say "Maybe populism keeps getting more popular because political elites aren't beholden or accountable to the people anymore." I'm trying to find out what area in foreign policy I'll take up during my PhD, which usually you decide before you get in but I'm special.
That and the Bible. Again I struggle through the density, but I enjoy reading something as culturally iconic.
Democracy is the art and science of running the circus from the monkey cage.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
I finished The Screwtape Letters by CS Lewis. Really enjoyed it, the worst advice book I've read.
Started Paradise Lost, I'm on book 3. Milton is really dense, but very rewarding.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
Check out the Space Trilogy by Lewis. It starts with Out of the Silent Planet. Basically his attempt at sci-fi.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
More options
Context
Someone here recommended The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers by Paul Kennedy, so I've started reading that. Good so far.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
Finally finished Dark Tower 5 - Wolves of the Callah.
700 pages of backstory, followed by five pages of "and then we killed the wolves"
Onto book 6 - Song of Suzzanah. Probably won't like it because i don't really care for King's "three personalities all talking to each other" nonsense, each with their own dumb slang.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
Lumian has called in just about every acquaintance he has to stop "The April's fools" from pulling their epic prank. It just feels unfair.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
Devils. Amazing
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
I have a giant peepee. This is a fact no matter how you look at it. My peepee is massive, by any definition, traditional or modern. Really it's fricking huge bro. Now what does this have to do with your argument? Nothing, I have a big peepee, really really big.
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context
Started Jade City, idk if I like it. It feels very anime to me but that might just be the jap names
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context