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How the South Won the Civil War   https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/04/08/how-the-south-won-the-civil-war Not so long ago, the Civil War was taken to be this country’s central moral drama. Now we think that the aftermath—the confrontation not of blue and gray but of white and black, and the reimposition of apartheid through terror—is what has left the deepest mark on American history. Instead of arguing about whether the war could have turned out any other way, we argue about whether the postwar could have turned out any other way. Was there ever a fighting chance for full black citizenship, equality before the law, agrarian reform? Or did the combination of hostility and indifference among white Americans make the disaster inevitable? Henry Louis Gates, Jr., in his new book, “ Stony the Road: Reconstruction, White Supremacy, and the Rise of Jim Crow ” (Penguin Press), rightly believes that this argument has special currency in the post-Obama, or mid-Trump, era. He com
The Road to Unfreedom :  Russia, Europe, America Timothy Snyder      https://books.google.com/books?id=l9KMDwAAQBAJ&source=gbs_book_other_versions Americans and Europeans were guided through the new century by a tale about “the end of history,” by what I will call the politics of inevitability, a sense that the future is just more of the present, that the laws of progress are known, that there are no alternatives, and therefore nothing really to be done. In the American capitalist version of this story, nature brought the market, which brought democracy, which brought happiness. In the European version, history brought the nation, which learned from war that peace was good, and hence chose integration and prosperity. Before the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, communism had its own politics of inevitability: nature permits technology; technology brings social change; social change causes revolution; revolution enacts utopia. When this turned out not to be true