raydawg wrote on 12/05/15 at 08:03:34:Anybody wanna try to help out bot?
YYYUP !
raydawg wrote on 12/05/15 at 07:40:44:One other thought, if I may.....
Wasn't this type of attitude, and action, by state sanctioned religion, on the European continent, one of the main reasons folks left only to discover America?In the early drafts of our founding fathers, it seemed they knew the importance of setting up a system of govern that would not allow this type of power to influence and rule over an open and free society from a
centralized point of power, not the freedom of individuals to express their own beliefs, open, and freely, however.
Which seems to be trampled on by opposing views nowadays.....
Like in I get butthurt if I hear someone say
Merry Christmas or
God Bless You
No, Sir, it wasn't.By the tone and contents of your question I assume you are:
a. white,
b. anglosaxon or germanic (or polish or scandinavian or slavic)
c. have only studied History of the World as described in High School history books.
During the 16th century the only ones to explore the new ContinentS (there were two, you know) were the military and the clergy.
The first successfull settlements were garrisons.
To call the Pilgrim Fathers' settlement "successful" is a mistake, it should be classed in the same way as shipwrecked castaways saved by a passing ship,. i.e. a fluke of fortune and nothing else.
OR
the story of Thanksgiving has changed since 1998.
In the 17th century the first "civilians" to populate North America were criminals sentenced to the gallows and proposed to "colonize the Colonies" as an alternative - quite often the entire family followed suit.
Others, from Germany, the Netherlands and France emigrated to flee from war, famine and desease.
Precious few, if any at all, emigrated because of religious intolerance; this includes the Pilgrim Fathers, if you take the time to read their entire story.
As for the Crusades, yes, they were, by today's standards,
not what you would call "holy wars".
Quite possibly 100 years from now Hiroshima and Nagasaki will be called
a crime against humanity and all that.
But, just like "the Bomb" seemed a bright idea to Pres. Truman in 1945... the Crusades seemed a good idea way back then.
Who knows... maybe King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella shouldn't have allowed that crazy Genoese Captain to sail at all...