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Civil Intercourse
Tony B. Civilcast Productions
45 episodes
6 days ago
What was meant to be music "Radio without the radio" has morphed into a mostly commentary yet fun but serious talk show. Commentary, music, popular culture and lots of random babbling is always on the menu. Tony B, speaking into the void trying to engage and interact in civil discourse to advance the conversations of the day. All ideas are open for discussion within reason. Please interact via sound files, comments, or just participating in quizzes.
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News Commentary
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All content for Civil Intercourse is the property of Tony B. Civilcast Productions and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
What was meant to be music "Radio without the radio" has morphed into a mostly commentary yet fun but serious talk show. Commentary, music, popular culture and lots of random babbling is always on the menu. Tony B, speaking into the void trying to engage and interact in civil discourse to advance the conversations of the day. All ideas are open for discussion within reason. Please interact via sound files, comments, or just participating in quizzes.
Show more...
News Commentary
News
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A Tale of Two Feasts - Thanksgiving and Prayer
Civil Intercourse
35 minutes 45 seconds
1 month ago
A Tale of Two Feasts - Thanksgiving and Prayer

A tribute to El Rushbo and his annual take on the Thanksgiving story with our own twist an flare. A look at how America rejected Socialism.


This podcast was so fun to make and research.


SOURCES:

  • Primary Source: "Mourt's Relation" (1622) – Eyewitness account of the Mayflower voyage and early Plymouth settlement, including the Separatists' motivations. Full text available via Internet Archive. Essential for verifying the "motley crew" of Puritans and "strangers."
    • Historical Database: Pilgrim Hall Museum Digital Library – Archives letters, journals, and artifacts on the Separatists' flight from England to Holland. Free access at Pilgrim Hall Museum. Great for primary docs on King James I's persecution.
    • Novel: "The Frontiersmen" by Allan W. Eckert (1967) – First in Eckert's "Winning of America" series; narrative non-fiction blending history with Native perspectives on early colonists. Available on Amazon or libraries; footnotes cite sources like Bradford.
    • Analysis: "Pilgrims (Plymouth Colony)" on Wikipedia – Well-sourced overview with citations to primary texts; cross-reference with Plimoth Patuxet Museums for verified bios.
    • Primary Source: Full Text of the Mayflower Compact (1620) – As transcribed by William Bradford. Read the original wording at Avalon Project, Yale Law School. Verifies the "civil body politic" pledge.
    • Historical Database: Founders Online (National Archives) – Digitized manuscripts, including the Compact and related letters. Free at Founders Online. Includes analysis of its democratic roots.
    • Scholarly: "The Mayflower Compact" by the General Society of Mayflower Descendants – Detailed analysis with replicas. At Mayflower Society.
    • Primary Source: "Of Plymouth Plantation" by William Bradford (1630–1651) – Governor's journal detailing the unmarked graves and survival struggles. Full text at Project Gutenberg. Core evidence for the 51 deaths.
    • Historical Database: Plymouth Colony Archive Project – University of Virginia's collection of 17th-century docs, including Bradford's excerpts on the winter. Free at Plymouth Archive.
    • Analysis: "Plymouth Colony" on History.com – Concise timeline with sources; links to primary accounts. history.com
    • Primary Source: "Mourt's Relation" (1622) – First mention of Squanto's arrival and teachings. Excerpts at Plimoth Patuxet.
    • Historical Database: Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian – Bios and artifacts on Tisquantum; free digital exhibits at NMAI.
    • Novel: "Squanto: A Warrior's Tale" (film adaptation, 1994) – Based on historical research; script draws from Winslow's accounts. Stream on Disney+ or read novelization.
    • Scholarly: "Squanto" on Britannica – Concise bio with sources like Bradford. britannica.com Deeper: "Bound for the Promised Land" by Jason E. Jewell (2017) – Focuses on Squanto's enslavement and return.
    • Primary Source: "Good Newes from New England" by Edward Winslow (1624) – Describes the 1623 rain/thanksgiving: "We held a day of thanksgiving for the rain." At Internet Archive.
    • Historical Database: Plimoth Patuxet – "A Day of Thanksgiving, Summer 1623" – Curated exhibit with Winslow excerpts; at Plimoth.org. plimoth.org
    • Primary: Bradford's "Of Plymouth Plantation," Ch. 11 – "The vanity of that conceit of Plato's... bringing community into a commonwealth."
    • Scholarly: "The Pilgrims Tried Socialism and It Failed" on Mises.org – Economic analysis with quotes. mises.org
    • Novel: Eckert's "Wilderness Empire" (1969) – Broader colonial economics in "Winning of America."
    • Washington 1789 Full Text: Founders Online – At National Archives. founders.archives.gov
    • Lincoln 1863 Full Text: AbrahamLincolnOnline.org – At Link. abrahamlincolnonline.org
    • Database: Library of Congress – Thanksgiving Proclamations – Scans and analysis at LOC.gov.
    • Database: Plimoth Patuxet Museums – Ultimate Plymouth archive; interactive timelines, artifacts. Plimoth.org.
    Civil Intercourse
    What was meant to be music "Radio without the radio" has morphed into a mostly commentary yet fun but serious talk show. Commentary, music, popular culture and lots of random babbling is always on the menu. Tony B, speaking into the void trying to engage and interact in civil discourse to advance the conversations of the day. All ideas are open for discussion within reason. Please interact via sound files, comments, or just participating in quizzes.