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GLD 387.88+1.2%Nov 28 4:00 PM EST

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To: TobagoJack who wrote (53779)8/20/2009 9:28:12 PM
From: Snowshoe  Read Replies (4) of 218108
 
>>so, busybody and crazy, interfering and busybodying, much about nothing, and a throwaway line<<

He was just being Scots-Irish. They're the proud, boastful, pugilistic, rebellious folk of our southeastern mountains, who contributed many revolutionary, political, and military leaders to USA history. Sort of like your Hakka people in China! :0)

He wrote a book about it...

Born Fighting: How the Scots-Irish Shaped America (Paperback)
by James Webb
amazon.com

Former navy secretary Webb (Fields of Fire; etc.) wants not only to offer a history of the Scots-Irish but to redeem them from their redneck, hillbilly stereotype and place them at the center of American history and culture. As Webb relates, the Scots-Irish first emigrated to the U.S., 200,000 to 400,000 strong, in four waves during the 18th century, settling primarily in Appalachia before spreading west and south. Webb's thesis is that the Scots-Irish, with their rugged individualism, warrior culture built on extended familial groups (the "kind of people who would die in place rather than retreat") and an instinctive mistrust of authority, created an American culture that mirrors these traits.

Webb has a genuine flair for describing the battles the Scots-Irish fought during their history, but his analysis of their role in America's social and political history is, ironically for someone trying to crush stereotypes, fixated on what he sees, in almost Manichaean terms, as a class conflict between the Scots-Irish and America's "paternalistic Ivy League-centered, media-connected, politically correct power centers." He even excuses resistance to the "Northern-dominated" Civil Rights movement. Another glaring weakness is the virtual absence of women from the sociological narrative. Webb interweaves his own Scots-Irish family history throughout the book with some success, but by and large his writing and analysis are overwhelmed by romanticism.
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