This episode is off the timeline. We look at the various crimes against humanity to be found on "History Twitter," the idea of pursuing a "useable" history and the perils therein, whether we should reduce the Constitution to Twitter-friendly labels such as "pro-slavery" or "anti-slavery," and the disrespect many younger professors and graduate students show for the greatest historian of the American Revolution and the founding period, Brown University's Gordon Wood, who is still pumping out sharply written books in his late eighties and standing up for history as a discipline. I also talk about some other podcasts that I like.
Oh, and it sounds slightly different because I have a new microphone in Austin and forgot to buy a foam cover for it. That will be fixed next time.
Enjoy!
References for this episode
Gordon Wood, Power and Liberty: Constitutionalism in the American Revolution
Good Will Hunting (Bar Scene)
The University of Austin
Podcasts mentioned
History of England Podcast
Ben Franklin's World
American Revolution Podcast
The American Story
[Abridged] Presidential Histories
Civics and Coffee
The History of North America
Age of Jackson Podcast
A New History of Old Texas
Nudie Reads
The Reason Roundtable
The Fifth Column Podcast
Making Sense by Sam Harris
The Dishcast with Andrew Sullivan
Walk-Ins Welcome with Bridget Phetasy
The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway
Honestly with Bari Weiss