Written by
Jon Latimer on May 01, 2001
In the West, deception is usually regarded as immoral, akin to lying. This contrasts sharply with the Marxist view which, believing in inevitable dialectic change, accepts that anything which promotes that change is desirable if not essential...
Written by
Carl Smith on July 01, 2000
For the Union, 1 July 1863 had been a bad day. General Robert E. Lee's Confederates had shoved the Army of the Potomac east and south from McPherson's Ridge and Oak Ridge out of Gettysburg and back to their 'fishhook' position on the high ground formed by the Round Tops, Cemetery Ridge and Hill, and Culp's Hill...
Written by
on October 01, 1999
Both General Robert E. Lee, commanding the Army of Northern Virginia on the high ground to the west, and General Ambrose Burnside, whose Federal forces occupied Fredericksburg on the lower ground along the...