Couverture de Strife! History's Conflicts

Strife! History's Conflicts

Strife! History's Conflicts

De : John R. Huber
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Strife! History’s Conflicts immerses you in the chain reactions that shape nations, fuel wars, and ignite revolutions. Each episode kicks off with a gripping narrative, breathing life into the past through the eyes of those who experience it—beyond the cold dates and battlefield stats. Blending sharp historical insight, decision-making analysis, and deeply human stories, it provides a richer, more empathetic view of how history shapes lives.John R. Huber
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    Épisodes
    • Charlottesville: Between Heritage and Hate (2017–Today)
      Dec 24 2025
      Strife! History’s Conflicts. Charlottesville, 2017, becomes the stage for a national debate over memory, morality, and history itself. A statue of Robert E. Lee, a figure of moral complexity, ignites protests, torchlight marches, and violent confrontation, exposing a nation still grappling with the legacy of its past. The events force a reckoning with how monuments shape identity, transmit values, and carry contested meanings across generations. They reveal the tension between remembering and erasing, between honoring heritage and acknowledging oppression. Beyond the headlines and hashtags, the story asks deeper questions about how Americans confront moral ambiguity, contextualize historical figures, and engage with uncomfortable truths. This episode explores the human experiences behind the controversy—the teachers, students, protesters, and bystanders caught in the storm. It examines how history, when misrepresented or misunderstood, becomes a battlefield in itself. By the end, listeners are invited to reflect on the role memory plays in shaping society and the importance of facing history honestly, without simplification or censorship.
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      50 min
    • Between Two Fires: Jerry Potts and the Crisis of the Canadian West (1840–1896)
      Dec 17 2025
      STRIFE! History’s Conflicts Podcast. What is the cost of a world? The plains of the Canadian West are not empty—they are a living map of stories, kinship, and spirit, a world that is about to be erased. As bison herds vanish into robes and whiskey floods the land, a single man stands on the fracture line: Jerry Potts, born of a Kainai mother and a Scottish trader. He is the translator, the guide, the rope in a tug-of-war between two fires—one of ancient reciprocity, the other of cold, encroaching empire. Every decision he makes—to guide the red-coated Mounties, to soften a treaty’s cruel terms, to whisper an escape—ripples through a collapsing world. This is not just the conquest of land, but the unraveling of a cosmology, where survival becomes a desperate, contradictory art. Listen, and walk the impossible line between loyalty and betrayal, where a man’s soul becomes the battlefield for the future of a continent.
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      1 h et 3 min
    • The Silk Road War: Tang China vs. The Arab Empire (751 CE)
      Dec 10 2025

      STRIFE! History's Conflicts Podcast: In the year 751 CE, on a remote frontier in Central Asia, the armies of two global superpowers—the expansionist Tang Dynasty of China and the ascendant Abbasid Caliphate—clashed near the Talas River. This fierce but little-known battle was a brutal stalemate decided by the shocking betrayal of a nomadic ally, resulting in a catastrophic defeat for the Chinese. Yet, its true significance lies not in the immediate military outcome, but in its profound and unintended consequences. The battle inadvertently triggered the westward transmission of papermaking technology, a development that would fuel the Islamic Golden Age and later the European Renaissance. Simultaneously, it halted Chinese westward expansion, clearing the way for the gradual Islamization of Central Asia and permanently altering the cultural and intellectual map of Eurasia. The Battle of Talas stands as a powerful reminder that history’s most pivotal moments are often not planned, but emerge from the chaotic interplay of ambition, accident, and the choices of those forgotten by time.


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      40 min
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