Carnage and Culture Quotes
Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of Western Power
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Victor Davis Hanson2,841 ratings, 4.07 average rating, 198 reviews
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Carnage and Culture Quotes
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“The great hatred of capitalism in the hearts of the oppressed, ancient and modern, I think, stems not merely from the ensuing vast inequality in wealth, and the often unfair and arbitrary nature of who profits and who suffers, but from the silent acknowledgement that under a free market economy the many victims of the greed of the few are still better off than those under the utopian socialism of the well-intended. It is a hard thing for the poor to acknowledge benefits from their rich moral inferiors who never so intended it. (p.272)”
― Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of Western Power
― Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of Western Power
“This revolutionary idea of Western citizenship—replete with ever more rights and responsibilities—would provide superb manpower for growing legions and a legal framework that would guarantee that the men who fought felt that they themselves in a formal and contractual sense had ratified the conditions of their own battle service. The ancient Western world would soon come to define itself by culture rather than by race, skin color, or language. That idea alone would eventually bring enormous advantages to its armies on the battlefield. (p. 122)”
― Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of Western Power
― Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of Western Power
“For a capitalist system to work, the state had to protect, not regulate or interfere with, free markets. Both for political and religious reasons, this the sultan could not do: The Ottomans had then no idea of the balance of trade. . . . Originated from an age-old tradition in the Middle East, the Ottoman trade policy was that the state had to be concerned above all that the people and craftsmen in the cities in particular would not suffer a shortage of necessities and raw material. Consequently, the imports were always welcomed and encouraged, and exports discouraged.”
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
“Given the Western ability to produce deadly weapons, its propensity to create cheap, plentiful goods, and its tradition of seeing war in pragmatic rather than ritual terms as a mechanism to advance political ends, it is no surprise that Mesoamericans, African tribes, and native North Americans all joined European forces to help kill off Aztecs, Zulus, and Lakotas.”
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
“Mexica warriors were predicated on birth and status. In a cyclical pattern of cause and effect, such greater innate advantages gave aristocrats predominance on the battlefield in taking captives, which in turn provided proof of their martial excellence—and”
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
“Japan would live and die by the race card—defining (and demonizing) America as “white” and thus Japan as a kindred but clearly superior “yellow” people.”
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
“Martin Luther was excommunicated in the year Cortés first occupied Tenochtitlán, yet nascent Protestantism and its accompanying debate about religious doctrine would find no receptive audience back in contemporary Castile.”
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
“After Salamis an imperial democratic culture arose at Athens that ruled the Aegean and gave us Aeschylus, Sophocles, the Parthenon, Pericles, Socrates, and Thucydides. Salamis proved that free peoples fought better than unfree, and that the most free of the free—the Athenians—fought the best of all.”
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
“Over the long haul, men fight better when they know that they have had the freedom to choose the occasion of their own deaths.”
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
― Carnage & Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power
