Early
Days
Families
have always been the foundation of human groupings and they still are. If our families were large enough and
existential threats small enough, our families became the Clans we belonged
too. We were subject to “house
rules”. We were “hunter-gatherers or
farmers or fishermen. Tribes of family
Clans formed when more protection from threats was needed. The parents were in charge in family Clans
and a Tribal Leader was chosen from among them in Tribes with more than one
family. They established “house rules”. Tribal life required military service to
protect the Tribe from aggressors or to act as aggressors.
Religion
Religion
consisted of Pagans and Jews. We know
the Old Testament of the Bible from Genesis on and that codified Jewish
history. Pagan history was varied and
colorful, with some similarities between Greek, Germanic, Celtic and Roman
gods. These Pagan gods were thought to
affect our well-being and survival through weather, crops, livestock fertility,
health and success, but had few “house rules” regarding our morals.
The Judeo-Christian
culture began to spread after 33AD with the death and resurrection of Jesus
Christ. Christians embraced the Old
Testament, but preached the New Testament that included the promise of
“paradise”. Some house rules changed and
the moral code got tougher. Sex was
restricted to monogamous man-women marital relations and everybody else got
celibacy.
Civilizations
Egypt,
Greece & Rome formed civilizations that grew much larger than Tribes. Greece invented democracy and the “voters”
decided their laws. Pharos, Kings and
Emperors appeared to begin the Feudal System of succession by birth. The Rulers made the laws with and without
advice.
Laws
Property
laws were established to allow trade to progress without murder and theft, but
laws weren’t always followed. Rulers
eventually enforced laws if they wanted the trade. Property ownership was often the wealth
acquired as a reward from a ruler or was taken by conquest. Roman law was well known, but taxes were
oppressive. Pax Romana, the Roman Peace lasted
from 27 BC to 180 AD gave subjugated people protection from invasion.
Wars
Wars were
common world-wide as Tribes and Civilizations sought out “safe” places to be
and other Tribes and Civilizations sought to replace them. The necessity to survive made it critical
that everybody learn how to fight. That
perpetuated a “War Culture” for centuries.
During times of peace, large Civilizations survived by employing
“professional armies”. Smaller groupings
of tribes relied on the farmers and livestock herders who had forgotten how to
shoot an arrow and they had problems.
Slaves
Slaves
were the logical result of winning wars and having captives; they became slaves
if they behaved. They gave the winners a free labor source to build their
infrastructure and buildings. Slaves
built the first water aqueducts, sanitary sewers, pyramids, coliseums, bridges
and roads. They served households as cooks, maids, laborers and sex slaves.
Catholicism
Roman
Emperor Constantine established Christianity for the Roman Empire with the
Council of Nicaea in 325 AD. This was a
blessing for the Catholic Church, because it made the Church wealthy and large
but that brought its own problems. The
Emperor was the boss until about 500 AD and then the Kings took over. The Pope was expected to be a King at times
and even had to rule Italy for a time.
The Pope was the pipeline to God, so they got the Pope to invent the
“divine right of kings”. The Pope could
use “excommunication” as a weapon, but was always dependent on getting money
and help from the Kings. The Pope crowned Charlemagne Holy Roman Emperor in 800
AD. The Pope served as the exclusive
head of the Christian Church until the early 1500s
Europe
By 700
AD, Europe included the current European countries plus Russia, occupied by the
Slavs and joined by the Vikings who migrated to Russia and began to expand in
the 800s.
The
European culture developed under Christianity in Europe and included Russia.
Feudalism
The
Catholic Pope was used like a football by the Roman Emperors and the Kings of
Germany, France, Spain, Portugal England and other European countries
throughout the Feudal period. For a
time, Prince- Bishops ruled large chunks of European countries, a job usually
filled by a friend or relative of the King.
Protestant
Reformation
The
printing press was invented in 1448 and the protestant reformation was kicked
off by Martin Luther in 1517. In 1537
England formed its own church. The next 100 years saw a plethora of Christian
denominations who fled to America in the 1600s.
Western
Culture vs Islam
Islam
began in the 700s in Mecca and spread north through other Arab countries using
the “convert or die” method. Islam
attempted to invade Europe from the 800s to the 1400s, but were defeated. Now they are using migration to expand into
Europe.
Multiculturalism
by force won’t work in Europe or the US.
Sharia law is incompatible with Western law and culture. 70% of Muslims prefer Sharia and should
return to Muslim countries.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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