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Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 314 of 880 of FDR
This seems like a very sane proposal: reduce federal pay 15%. After all, the cost of living had been reduced significantly since 1928. So my question is, "Why not extend this to the rest of the economy?" After all, reducing pay to the level that would allow businesses to make money would have eliminated unemployment in short order. If it was good for the federal government, why not for everyone else?
Feb 08, 2026 02:56PM Add a comment
FDR

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is 40% done with Bunker Hill: A City, a Siege, a Revolution
The build-up to actual shooting was a very dramatic time. There is a spy in the Amercan camp - one that was not exposed for a century! There are moves and counter moves. Our hero, Joseph Warren, works to lower the rhetoric because the British had to be seen as the initiators of hostilities, all while pushing the "country folk" to be ready for any attack by the British regulars. A very intense time!
Feb 07, 2026 04:11AM Add a comment
Bunker Hill: A City, a Siege, a Revolution

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 290 of 880 of FDR
"Hoover's doctrinaire attachment to the free market..." What??? This book isn't history; it's propaganda. They don't call it Hoover Dam because it was built by the free market!!!
Feb 03, 2026 05:18PM Add a comment
FDR

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is 10% done with Bunker Hill: A City, a Siege, a Revolution
I'm frustrated when writers downplay the amount of taxation the colonists were paying during the run-up to the Revolution. There were about 150 years of precedent on taxation. Plus, the colonists were REQUIRED to buy exclusively from Britain. Thus, it was not unreasonable for Britain to pay for the defense of the colonies. The mercantilist economic policy is only hinted at by this author. Frustrating.
Jan 31, 2026 05:03AM Add a comment
Bunker Hill: A City, a Siege, a Revolution

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 278 of 880 of FDR
The hard part about reading this book: words I recently heard keep echoing in my head: if the British had not decided to enter WWI, Woodrow Wilson would have lost the 2016 election, and no one would have ever heard of the assistant secretary of the Navy in his administration: FDR.
Jan 18, 2026 12:42PM 2 comments
FDR

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 330 of 746 of The War of the World
I am really enjoying this book. But I also disagree with it. Britian was economically prostrate after WWII. Mr. Ferguson's argument is that they should have just gone broke SOONER by abandoning appeasement and rearming as a deterrent to Hitler. How about fixing an economy with 14% unemployment instead? Growing the economy faster so that they could afford a military build-up???
Jan 03, 2026 03:27AM Add a comment
The War of the World

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 159 of 746 of The War of the World
"...the empire established by Lenin and his confederates was the first to be based on terror itself since the short-lived tyranny of the Jacobins in revolutionary France." I don't think anything more needs to be said about communism.
Dec 19, 2025 05:10PM Add a comment
The War of the World

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is 43% done with The Long Shadow of Default: Britain’s Unpaid War Debts to the United States, 1917-2020
As a kid, I always wondered why "Lend/Lease" got so much attention when discussing WWII. It was held in awe, which didn't make much sense to me. Now I think I know why it is so well regarded: because unpaid WWI allied war debts were so politically unpopular in the US. Avoiding that raw nerve with the Lend/Lease program was a great political achievement for FDR.
Dec 10, 2025 06:51PM Add a comment
The Long Shadow of Default: Britain’s Unpaid War Debts to the United States, 1917-2020

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is 17% done with The Long Shadow of Default: Britain’s Unpaid War Debts to the United States, 1917-2020
Shares a couple of key points that the OTHER book in war debts chose to ignore: even with the debt that Britain owed the US, she was still a net CREDITOR. The book also points out that Britain insisted on payment terms that made the debts unmarketable to retail buyers. Britain wanted to deal with the US because she expected to be able to negotiate the terms down in the future. IMO she was negotiating in bad faith.
Dec 01, 2025 04:09PM Add a comment
The Long Shadow of Default: Britain’s Unpaid War Debts to the United States, 1917-2020

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is 12% done with The Long Shadow of Default: Britain’s Unpaid War Debts to the United States, 1917-2020
ANOTHER book on Britain's failure to pay its WWI debt to the US? Well, I find the debate very relevant. After all, what people really mean when they believe we should fight Russia in Ukraine is that the US taxpayer should pay for it. It was the same for WWI. When Europeans got mad at the US for expecting repayment, what they really meant was that the US taxpayer should pay for Europe's foolish decisions.
Nov 30, 2025 03:56PM Add a comment
The Long Shadow of Default: Britain’s Unpaid War Debts to the United States, 1917-2020

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 228 of 544 of The Road to Jonestown: Jim Jones and Peoples Temple
In socialism, everyone is equal. But some are always more equal than others.
Oct 25, 2025 04:00AM Add a comment
The Road to Jonestown: Jim Jones and Peoples Temple

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is 67% done with Mellon vs. Churchill: The Untold Story of Treasury Titans at War
Only now, the author directly states that the US taxpayer was told that the Allies' debts to the US were commercial loans and would be repaid But the Wilson admin must have known all along that they WEREN'T commercial loans: they weren't backed by any assets AND weren't spent on capital projects to generate income to repay the loans with interest. Churchill states the truth: the loans were literally shot away!
Oct 24, 2025 02:44AM Add a comment
Mellon vs. Churchill: The Untold Story of Treasury Titans at War

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is 59% done with Mellon vs. Churchill: The Untold Story of Treasury Titans at War
Awesome book, but there is a huge hole in the narrative. The book starts AFTER the war. After the US gov't had loaned money to the Allies. So the US looks like a meany. After all, why not forgive the broke Allies' debts? I suspect the reason is that the US public was repeatedly assured that the money would be repaid. Meanwhile, the Wilson administration signaled the Allies that they WOULDN'T have to repay it.
Oct 22, 2025 06:21PM Add a comment
Mellon vs. Churchill: The Untold Story of Treasury Titans at War

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 391 of 430 of Introduction to the Bible (The Open Yale Courses Series)
A stunning summary of the book of Job, which "provides no answer in the sense of an explanation or a justification of suffering and injustice. What it does offer is a stern warning to avoid the Scylla of blaspheming against the victims by assuming their wickedness and the Charybdis of blaspheming against Yahweh by assuming his (Greenberg, “Job,” 301)."
Aug 23, 2025 12:22PM Add a comment
Introduction to the Bible (The Open Yale Courses Series)

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 346 of 430 of Introduction to the Bible (The Open Yale Courses Series)
"This insistence that the faithful person’s relationship with Yahweh was not broken even in an idolatrous land, when added to Jeremiah’s hope for a newcovenant and future restoration, provided the exiles with the ideas that would transform the nation of Israel into the religion of Judaism."
Aug 09, 2025 12:58PM Add a comment
Introduction to the Bible (The Open Yale Courses Series)

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 345 of 496 of The Last Folk Hero: The Life and Myth of Bo Jackson
On page 345, the author FINALLY states the obvious: Bo Jackson was a difficult man to like.
Jul 27, 2025 01:02PM Add a comment
The Last Folk Hero: The Life and Myth of Bo Jackson

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 180 of 430 of Introduction to the Bible (The Open Yale Courses Series)
On page 180, Professor Hays shares how scholars of the last century or so have considered the purity laws (of the Torah) as "primitive and irrational taboos." It made me wonder what rituals we have today that future scholars will think of as irrational. What immediately jumped to mind was recycling, which serves no purpose except maybe to signal our devotion to the deity Mother Earth.
Jul 26, 2025 05:44AM Add a comment
Introduction to the Bible (The Open Yale Courses Series)

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 226 of 496 of The Last Folk Hero: The Life and Myth of Bo Jackson
Reading about Hugh Culverhouse ticking off Bo Jackson in every way possible is making me think about Jerry Jones, who's now 3 for the last 3 training camps with a ticked off superstar who wants a new contract. I'm starting to think Jerry's too old for this business.
Jul 25, 2025 07:05AM Add a comment
The Last Folk Hero: The Life and Myth of Bo Jackson

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 4 of 540 of Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here: The United States, Central America, and the Making of a Crisis
What I'm really hoping for is an explanation of WHY so many people want to immigrate to the US. I doubt I'll get that. Books that advertise themselves as being on Obama's reading list will most likely just whine about how terrible Americans are and how awful US immigration is.
Mar 15, 2025 10:49AM Add a comment
Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here: The United States, Central America, and the Making of a Crisis

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 214 of 697 of The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914
The review of the Austro-Hungarian empire was fascinating. The fact that Woodrow Wilson was so focused on dismembering an empire that had stood for a millennium while leaving intact a Germany that had existed less 50 years strikes me as monumentally stupid. Possibly the stupidest act in world history.
Nov 16, 2024 04:48AM Add a comment
The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 349 of 592 of The Money Kings: The Epic Story of the Jewish Immigrants Who Transformed Wall Street and Shaped Modern America
I'm beginning to believe that the author deliberately made the book boring, so perhaps readers would miss the really important points that are made. OK, maybe that doesn't make much sense. But there is a lot of important history here that you'll miss if you're not alert.
Apr 09, 2024 05:39PM Add a comment
The Money Kings: The Epic Story of the Jewish Immigrants Who Transformed Wall Street and Shaped Modern America

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is 6% done with Churchill and Orwell: The Fight for Freedom
Churchill and Orwell defended individual freedom, including the right to be persistently wrong? The right to criticize government leaders, especially when those leaders are completely convinced that they are right? What crazy ideas!
Nov 11, 2023 08:12AM Add a comment
Churchill and Orwell: The Fight for Freedom

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is 50% done with The Pioneers: The Heroic Story of the Settlers Who Brought the American Ideal West
Most audiobooks, after a bit, you just want them to be done. Well, I'm 50% of the way into this one, and still utterly fascinated!
Nov 03, 2023 03:49PM Add a comment
The Pioneers: The Heroic Story of the Settlers Who Brought the American Ideal West

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 218 of 816 of Morgan: American Financier
Of course, JP Morgan could straddle both worlds - the Old Guard elites and the new wealthy industrialists. But in business, he was "drawn to talent, energy, and competence, he had rejected partners whose qualifications were only dynastic." So Morgan was the TRUE traitor to his class.
Jan 14, 2023 10:35AM Add a comment
Morgan: American Financier

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 216 of 816 of Morgan: American Financier
Ah, we come to the real source of antipathy to the "robber barons" - the Knickerbockers and Brahmins - the Old Guard elite who could trace their social status back generations - who were replaced by the fabulously wealthy arrivistes. Men who made millions in railroads and finance in the last few decades of the 1800s.
Jan 14, 2023 10:31AM Add a comment
Morgan: American Financier

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 249 of 496 of To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918 – A New York Times Bestselling History of WWI Critics and Heroes
Hard to tell if this is actually a history of the efforts of the British government to keep WWI going (propaganda, suppression of any dissent, curtailing of civil liberties), or a commentary on the tactics of our own government today.
Nov 23, 2022 02:51PM Add a comment
To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918 – A New York Times Bestselling History of WWI Critics and Heroes

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 406 of 944 of Napoleon Bonaparte
I didn't used to read biographies, because I felt like the authors would give undue praise to the subjects of their books. After all, if the subject wasn't a "great" person, why read the book? But have no fear, Alan Schom wastes no opportunity to criticize Napoleon. Maybe the sad thing is how much there is to be critical of.
Sep 03, 2022 04:49PM Add a comment
Napoleon Bonaparte

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 148 of 944 of Napoleon Bonaparte
Well so far Napoleon won in Northern Italy because he was aggressive and motivated his poor troops by, uh, promising them lots of loot and women. Meanwhile the invasion of Egypt quickly turned into a catastrophe when Nelson unhelpfully destroyed the French fleet. Interesting about Nelson: as soon as he found the French fleet, he attacked, sailing into a harbor he didn't know and fighting well into the night.
Aug 03, 2022 05:06PM Add a comment
Napoleon Bonaparte

Dan Walker
Dan Walker is on page 54 of 960 of Lonesome Dove (Lonesome Dove, #1)
If you have a problem with being too optimistic, and you need something to settle you down a little, surely the denizens of Lonesome Dove will do so, if not push you into downright depression! :)
Jul 22, 2022 09:29AM Add a comment
Lonesome Dove (Lonesome Dove, #1)

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