On 3/7/07, Rob Smith nobs03@gmail.com wrote:
On 3/6/07, Puppy puppy@killerchihuahua.com wrote:
It formerly stated he was president of the Christian United States. And oh my, it was a Wikipedian who fixed it.
Rob Smith wrote:
On 3/6/07, Puppy puppy@killerchihuahua.com wrote:
See http://www.conservapedia.com/Cold_War for an example of the
"quality"
or Richard Nixon, unless its been fixed.
Hate to disappoint y'all, but diplomatic historians name eras after the architects of alliances that keep the peace between major wars. For example, 1792-1812 Age of Napoleon; 1815-1848 Age of Metternich; 1862-1914 Age of Bismarck; 1919-1939 Age of Wilson; 1945-1972 Age of Churchill; and since 1972 the US has become at peace and a trading partner with our former enemies, so you guessed it, you are today living in the Age of Nixon. How many US Presidents have the honor of an historic Age named after them?
Perhaps the failure of so many to recognize that is the root of so much misunderstanding.
I've never heard of any of these terms, except maybe the Age of Napoleon. Then again, I'm not exactly an expert in the field of diplomatic history - but still, if these are common terms, I'm wondering why pages like [[Age of Wilson]] are redlinks.
Johnleemk