One thing I like to focus on in teaching about World War One is just how little the public understood the danger. Here is the NY Times front page on June 27, 1914, day before Archduke Franz Ferdinand's assassination. Top story? Columbia University wins an intercollegiate regatta.
Two days later the news from Sarajevo hit the front pages in America. The other top story was the ongoing Mexican Revolution.
After another day of top coverage from Europe, the story was off the top line of the front page by July 1.
Three weeks later - July 21, 1914 - still nothing. A story about the Kaiser...being insulted by an American diplomat for knocking his hat off. And a looming baseball strike.
On July 25 the story finally returns to the front, with the prospect of a European war "in the balance," thanks to Russian support for Serbia.
From then onward, the war was the top story.
Just one week later...
The point here is not that Americans *should* have seen anything coming. Rather, the point is that history often turns on events largely unforeseen. This is a great example of "contingency" in history - largely unexpected incidents that occur at a particular place and time.
We often use hindsight in evaluating the past, as if people in an earlier time knew how their stories would unfold. But they didn't know what their futures held. For example, there had been two recent Balkan wars already. Was this one going to snowball into a massive war?
We can look back and find the strategic blunders and miscalculations from various European autocrats, or to the deeper sets of alliances, military buildups and imperial rivalries. Or to cultural tides of chauvinistic nationalism. Or to European class conflict. All are important.
But none of those deeper structural explanations will capture the lived experience of those who encountered these events of 1914 as they happened. What matters is what people *didn't* know and what they *thought* they knew at the time, and how they acted upon all of it.
The job of the historian and history educator is to grab that moment of uncertainty with all its sideshows, media squabbles, personal peculiarities and public predictions of doom, glory or status quo. They knew as little of their own futures as we know of ours.

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More from @AstorAaron

18 Feb
That slavery existed in the North through the 18th century is hardly a surprise to most people today. That ~33% of the people in Brooklyn were enslaved in 1790 is pretty remarkable. Also, Queens County (which included modern Nassau County) was 14% enslaved.
Here is the source of the map. You can adjust it by decade. lincolnmullen.com/projects/slave…
Note that the State of New York passed a gradual abolition law in 1799. The last remaining enslaved people were freed in 1827.
Read 5 tweets
17 Feb
Texas’s power woes are bc of failure in energy transmission/grid/storage, not production. Energy source - whether thermal, wind, nuclear - is not the issue here. Maintaining (and weatherizing) the grid is the issue.
The energy source issue is a huge, but it’s not the proximate cause of Texas’s mass power outage right now. Investments in power grid maintenance are needed, regardless of what source is used to produce electricity.
Is a huge "one" - (pre-coffee missing word). Anyway, Texas famously uses its own power grid. That's fine if the state is going to invest in maintaining that grid properly. Power transmission is not a sexy political topic like fossil v. renewable energy source, but it's critical.
Read 4 tweets
10 Feb
What happened at the Capitol on January 6 was not like what happened last summer. Nor was it like what happened in Charlottesville. It was a different kind of violence, designed to obstruct the Constitutional process of counting Electoral votes. And it was egged on by Trump.
The bad faith comparisons do nothing to absolve either Trump or the mobbers. The Capitol incident was worse than Portland/Kenosha, etc. or Charlottesville, not because of the intensity or length of the violence, but because of what was attacked. It was treasonous.
This is why Trump's culpability begins well before his speech on January 6. It began when he primed his most intense supporters to believe that he had actually won a landslide victory, but that some bizarre conspiracy involving voting machines and God knows who else "stole" it.
Read 7 tweets
10 Feb
We're at a point where people are setting up bizarre straw expectations and batting them down - and others in the Administration are setting up absurdly low expectations easy to surpass. Here's a thought: Vaccines work. Get them out fast and SARS-Cov-2 will be a minor nuisance.
There will be the need for boosters for years, I'm sure. We'll need to vaccinate kids soon. But the continued existence of SARS-Cov-2 does not mean it is still a "pandemic" as long as serious complications/symptoms go away. And so far all the vaccines prevent serious symptoms.
Speed of production, distribution and administration of vaccines is the most critical component right now. The only thing I really worry about is B.1.1.7's wide circulation among children (as is happening in Israel). Hopefully children's vax will be approved soon.
Read 5 tweets
30 Jan
Pretty important when reporting on Israel's vaccination program that people mention the two-dose regimen. Saying "50% of Israelis are vaccinated!" isn't true. 32.3% got a first dose and 18.4% got a second dose. This is still hugely impressive but it should be reported accurately.
What's really impressive is that 80% of those over 70 years old have received BOTH doses already. And that ~50% of those ages 40-49 have gotten their first dose. As result, new infections among older people have almost disappeared.
As Israel vaccinates more and more people under 40, the number of overall infections will start to decline rapidly. And that should be in the next few weeks. Israel has a fairly young population.
Read 7 tweets
30 Jan
I'm starting to view 2020 as a GOP version of what 1968 was for Dems. The Capitol insurrection mob resembles the Chicago DNC, where an extremist base revolts against its own leaders for selling out. Lots of differences obviously - Cap police didn't beat protestors like in '68.
And Vietnam is not Trumpism. But the political revolt against its own putative leaders and resultant horror at the chaos began self-marginalization of the Democratic Party at the national level that took a long time to reverse.
A few cautionary notes if this parallel holds true. First, the Dems moved further toward the fringe in 1972 before swinging back in 1976. Also, Dems didn't exactly disappear after 1968. Old, local habits persisted for a LONG time. So if there is a shift it will take time.
Read 4 tweets

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