*** Updated and Clarified
Out here along the Picketwire, we were mighty surprised ten years ago when we heard about an historian back east who’d proved that nobody to speak of had actually owned guns back in early America. This came as a big surprise, because it wasn’t what we’d heard from our daddies and granddaddies. But this historian, Michael Bellesiles by name, had all the facts and figures to prove it. This was pretty cheering to the New York Times’ reviewer (Garry Wills, “Spiking the Gun Myth,”), who said Professor Bellesiles had “dispersed the darkness that covered the gun’s early history in America” and provided “overwhelming evidence that our view of the gun is as deep a superstition as any that affected Native Americans in the 17th century.” Apparently a lot of people agreed, because Arming America: The Origins of a National Gun Culture was given the Bancroft Prize.

Well, you probably know what happened. Some gun nuts and spoilsports started looking into Professor Bellesiles’ research, and it turned out that the evidence Garry Wills was so happy about didn’t actually exist. Professor Bellesiles had made it up, and the press had eaten it up. “Now many of Mr. Bellesiles’s defenders have gone silent,” the Times had to report a year later (Robert Worth, “Historian’s Prizewinning Book on Guns is Embroiled in a Scandal“):
Over the past year a number of scholars who have examined his sources say he has seriously misused historical records and possibly fabricated them. They say the outcome, when all the evidence is in, could be one of the worst academic scandals in years.
And in the end, they took his Bancroft Prize away, and he lost his job at Emory University in Atlanta.
But never say die. Mr. Bellesiles shows up in the June 27th Chronicle of Higher Education with an article called “Teaching Military History in a Time of War.”
The teaching he speaks of is at Central Connecticut State University, where he’s an adjunct lecturer in history. He has a new book coming out this month (though not from the same publisher as before), called 1877: America’s Year of Living Violently, and if you hadn’t known about his last one — the Chronicle of Higher Education is too discreet to mention it — you might look forward to Mr. Bellesiles’ account of (to quote Publishers Weekly) “lynchings, racism, homicides, army attacks on Indians, labor violence (including a near national general strike), quack theories to explain it all, and a political crisis whose resolution on the backs of African-Americans scarred the nation,” in short all the things Mr. Bellesiles seems to think characterize America.
In his Chronicle of Higher Education article he reports teaching a course in U.S. military history “this last semester,” 18th century to the present, and the disturbing traumatic suffering of a student he calls Ernesto. Ernesto’s brother, Javier, had recently enlisted in the Army, and as the semester progressed was sent to Iraq, saw combat, was shot in the head by a sniper (too seriously to be evacuated to the Army’s medical facilities in Germany), and after some weeks died. Ernesto, after authoring an amazing paper showing “don’t ask, don’t tell” to be an example of military discrimination, had taken his brother’s being shot very hard: while he awaited the outcome, he:
never spoke in class, cut his hair short, and began wearing military boots and fatigue-style clothes. His identification with his brother was obvious, and he appeared to age several years in those few weeks,” Mr. Bellesiles tells us: “And then, just as we were coming to the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which allowed President Lyndon Johnson to send combat troops to Vietnam, I received an e-mail from Ernesto letting me know that his brother had died. Not surprisingly, Ernesto’s attendance became erratic, and he skipped entirely the discussion of our current wars. Every time I saw him, his grief was palpable. It pained me to witness his loss and to imagine what his family must be going through, yet all I could do as a teacher was to be present, listen, and give every consideration to the circumstances.
Pretty tough, something many American families of service members have gone through, and only a cold-hearted person could fail to grieve along with Ernesto.

Central Connecticut State confirms that Bellesiles has taught a course called American Military Experience, although not this spring semester as his article suggests (it was published June 27), but last autumn; perhaps his article was held over by the Chronicle in order to appear shortly before his new book comes out this month. Buried in the Central Connecticut State University website is a listing for him as an adjunct lecturer, although not on the history faculty webpage, where he doesn’t appear, and not found by means of the website’s search engine, which produces no results when you search his name. Websites aren’t always absolutely up to date, but Mr. Bellesiles has taught there at least a semester, according to his article, and it sounds like longer. You’d almost think the school wasn’t proud of him — but you can get a sense of what his students think of him here. Samples:
Lectures are long and boring. He grades his essays like he is an english teacher. Lowered my GPA because of the quizzes and the essays. Not alot of work but this means you have to do all of the work to get a decent grade. Very weird personality.
Took his American Military class. Love the subject, but he was sort of obnoxious. He’s quite pompous, and loves to let you know you’re wrong. Lectures are mostly enjoyable/engaging, outside work is minimal, which is good because once class is over, don’t expect him to be helpful or friendly. He wants nothing to do with you outside of the classroom.
Useless. The man tries to re-write history so that it agrees with his views. I like history; I don’t like revisionism. I heard he was forced out of his previous institution for some sort of academic fraud.

A friend who used to be in the Army is also a mite suspicious about the account of Javier’s service. The Hartford Courant keeps careful track of Connecticut casualties: three Connecticut men died from battle during the autumn semester when Bellesiles was teaching the course: one was a sergeant, which Javier, a recent enlistee, was not; one was a captain, which Javier was even less. The third was not Army, but a Marine, and, like the other two men, died (from an IED, not a sniper round like Javier) in Afghanistan, not Iraq. He did, though, have an infant son back in Connecticut named Javier.
Just for the sake of argument, and positing that “this past semester” is the recently ended spring semester, there has been only one fatality so far this year, reported on April 4th as recently killed. Lance Corporal Tyler Griffin was a Marine, not Army. And killed by an IED, not a shot to the head. And in Afghanistan, not Iraq. Nor was he an immigrant, as Javier is described. (“We discussed [his] reasons for enlisting, which mostly focused on a sense of gratitude to a country that had given their family refuge.”) And there is no sign of a brother in the Courant obituary.
Ten years ago, Mr. Bellesiles’ woes over his Arming America were triggered partly by another article of his, “Exploding the Myth of an Armed America” — in the Sept. 29, 2000, issue of the Chronicle of Higher Education.
Is it too much to ask if the Chronicle did any due diligence about this new one by Mr. Bellesiles? Reckon not!






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Standard tactic of the liberals, if facts and data contradict your theory, ignore the facts, fabricate new facts, and massage the data until it fits your theory. Then print your finding as gosple.
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Vince Humphreys, thehotjoints. thehotjoints said: Disgraced Historian Michael Bellesiles Fishy War Story http://bit.ly/ckXOzc #TCOT [...]
Sounds a lot like the "phony soldier " Jesse Macbeth or the "60 minutes 2" fraud perpetuated by Mary Mapes and Bill Burkett down in Travis county Texas with the fraudulent National guard memos against GW Bush. In the meantime, our slimstink media has no time to investigate connection s between Blago and the pukey commie moslem , no time to tell the truth about Sheetface Byrd or the swimmer Kennedy, no time to quit kissing Mooselimb ass whenever necessary and no time to measure ther fact the combined IQs of Mattspews,Uberdork, Madcow and Sgt Schultz doesnt match the number of Super Bowls the Cleveland Browns have played in.
The mainsteam media's habit of not bothering to factcheck stories it likes is pathetic (another case that springs to my mind is that of Rigoberta Menchu).
Liberals always try to get you emotionally involved in an issue, manipulating the discussion (similar to a salesman) in a way that makes it look like you have to agree with them. They don't care if what they use to get you is the truth. The ends justify the means to them. If you were to look at their issues logically, without the tearjerker manipulation, you will always see though the sham and find that they usually don't have a real argument and truth is not on their side.
You would think that liberals who were fooled by a liar once…
Wait, I'm putting think and liberal in the same sentence: Format fail.
And we care about a progressive/liberal/socialist idiot professor we have never heard of and will never hear of again, why?
You say "he is not listed among the history faculty there." But he is: http://www.ccsu.edu/page.cfm?p=312
Just enter the History Department in the drop down box, and there is his name.
I am sympathetic to the thrust of this article, which is why I regard it as doubly unfortunate that its author, in criticizing the Chronicle for lack of due diligence, failed to do his own.
The reason proven fabricators and dissemblers like Mr. Bellesiles continue to find employment and to find publishing opportunities for their lies and distortions is because they reinforce the preferred media/liberal narrative.
The entire landsape of the left is overrun with confirmation bias. Leftist policies are so at odds with common sense and history that those who follow Leftist ideology are desperate for any scrap of "factual" support for their theories. It doesn't matter what the subject is, as long as someone provides some support for liberal ideology, the overwhelming majority of leftist ideologues will desperately grab that "proof" and spread it as far and as wide as they can to give them some personal vindication of their otherwise obviously at odds with reality views.
Everything about the Leftist ideology is a fantasy, and as such it should be no surprise that fantasies are the primary public "proof" of their ideaology's value.
Except in the most unusual circumstances, I cannot see the US Army NOT medevac'ing the wounded soldier to LMRC (Landstuhl Regional Medical Center) in Germany. The Army has a triage and stabilization process that they follow and after that, the aim is to get the soldier to Germany where there are better facilities to deal with serious wounds. The US Air Force uses cargo aircraft specially rigged to transport the wounded in as much comfort as possible. So many GIs have been saved due to timely evac to the proper medical treatment and for this "historian" to suggest that the US Army and US Air Force wouldn't be able to do the same for this guy and let him linger in pain for extended time is simply a load of horse manure. This little mouth of an "academician" should shut his yap unless he wants to spout off to the fine men and women doing the tough job in the sandbox everyday. But, of course, he gets to talk all the trash he wants and get away with it because he's so educated, right? I'm sure he thinks he's so much better than "those peasants" in the military. However, its only due to the men and women in the US Armed Forces that he has the freedom to get away with what he does. That ANYONE would take this POS seriously stretches belief and makes decent Americans feel sick, I'm certain of it. Any veterans or active members who think I said something wrong here are free to disagree, of course.
Why should we care? Because this POS is getting a pass on telling "mis-speakings" to young folks who take what he says as the real deal, by dint of him being an academician. SO, he gets a pass to perpetrate this horse manure slander against this country and our military services if no one calls him on it. So many times, that is all it takes; please, if you see something that is not right, WAVE THE BS FLAG!
Are you able to discern the date the page was last updated?
You can tell when Bellesiles is lying — he publishes.
Well, they seem to have twigged to something at Chronicle.
The link above still works but the article has been pulled from the hunt at The Chronicle Review page.
In addition, if you try to comment on the article you're comment not only doesn't post but it sends you to a 404 page.
If that question is being directed to me, rather than to the journalist writing this story, my answer is that I cannot. I suppose it is theoretically possible that someone at the University updated the directory in the space of three hours, but I for one like to deal in probabilities greater than the purely theoretical. The directory does still yield "no result" if you search for "Bellesiles," as the author of this piece did. However, it appears that that is all he did. Perhaps he'll tell us if he updates this story.
What's irritating about this is that we are in a contest of ideas, and sloppiness on our own side does us no good.
Were evacuations last spring to Germany tough during the volcano last spring? So that is one fact in his favor. I think the most seriously wounded were sent via Globemaster to USA. Some could not be moved.
So, find a list of soldiers that could not be evacuated during the volcan, then we might have this guy, if he existed.
And now it has been placed back in the hunt. Hummmm… shoulda taken a screen shot.
Perhaps they are watching this thread and proceeding accordingly. Wonder if anything has been changed.
It is interesting, though, that the link to the History Department provided in the story above has 41 faculty listed, while the link in my first post above has 42 — Bellesiles being the 42nd name that makes the difference.
I should send in my article to the Chronicle of Higher Education on how future oil spills led the American Native population to resist the European colonists.
Funny how these guys always trip themselves up. It's not like there is an easily search-able database of all the deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Oh wai…
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/indepth_coverage/midd...
Mr. Peabody: The website StolenValor.com ought to be able to help you verify whether or not this Javier actually exists.
Obviously, Bellesiles is a fraud. That said, there's a lot more fact-checking that needs to be done before calling him out on this.
1) His name is in the factory directory at CCSU, at least in one spot.
2) Obviously, looking for "Javier" isn't going to produce anything, as he (very appropriately) changed the names.
3) Looking for Connecticut fatalities proves nothing, as he never states that "Ernesto" is a CT native.
Is the story real? Who knows? It certainly reads like a fiction from someone supporting a point, and there are details about which I have great skepticism, but this "debunking" article doesn't come close to actually debunking it…
If you look at icasualties.org, you will find exactly two KIAs with the first name of Javier. Neither was a US Army soldier.
Javier Olvera was a 20-year old Lance Corporalin 2nd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force when he was killed in Helmand Province, Afghanistan on August 20, 2009. The other Javier was a Captain in the Spanish Army. RIP.
However, the Chron story now says, and perhaps it always said, the Bellesiles changed names "out of respect for privacy." Given what we know of Bellesiles and his character, the privacy in question is probably his own.
I can't believe that (1) Central Connecticut gave this notorious fraud a job and (2) that he returns to the scene of the crime, the Chronicle. On the other hand, I have no problem believing the Chronicle editors gave him the floor. For them, it's all about advancing the narrative, and who does that better than someone who's so committed he'll make his facts up?
And I have no problem believing that people trained at Emory or UC Irvine for that matter will defend him on the grounds that "everybody does it." In their milieu, probably true.
When someone dies of wounds in theater, the Defenselink.mil press release, which is the raw material icasualties.org uses for US and Coalition deaths, reports "Corporal xxx died on July 6 of wounds suffered July 3." Most usually, the delta is only one day if the victim did expire in-theater. I did not find an example of more than three days, but I did not search exhaustively. I recommend that anyone wanting to identify Bellesiles's fallen soldier look through the two sites mention, the official press releases at defenselink.mil and the unofficial (and generally antiwar) icasualties.org.
As others have noted, it is most irregular for a soldier to linger on in theater. If anybody's stabilized enough, they can fly him or her to Landstuhl and then the USA (WRAMC or Brooke AMC in Texas for burns), even maintaining ICU conditions on the theater medevac aircraft. It's not impossible that Bellesiles is telling a true story here, but it's — as the author says — fishy. The story is too beautiful a little short story arc, and the author is the Clifford Irving of historians.
"Soldier's brother takes pride, but is crushed and destroyed when soldier's life is thrown away on Bush's wars of imperialism, and learns only too late that all glory is moonshine." — the sort of idea you have about the military and military families if your hiney has sat forever in a comfy chair, and Hollywood is your instructor.
I did some looking at the course offerings, going from Spring 2009 to the upcoming semester. Bellesisles is listed once, In the Spring Semester (last semester) teaching Early American History, not 18th-20th Century Military History. https://ssb.ccsu.edu/pls/ssb_cPROD/bwckschd.p_dis....
The closest I could find was HIST 328, History of American Foreign Relations, which wasn't offered last semester according to the catalog. It still may have been a last minute addition and Bellesisles took it on. Maybe the other course didn't fill and they offered that instead? They're both upper level courses.
And the kid? He may have come from out of state, and his brother resided there as well. We don't know from the article (names changed and all that) where they came from.
I'm not trying to make excuses for the guy, but you're right. Sloppiness on our part is unacceptable. Mr. Peabody, did you call the college to verify the listed catalog vs. the actual courses offered?
Re-read who he was. He used to be a real big name in the anti-gun crowd.
Fail to pay attention -> discover manacles on your ankles some day.
To be fair, if he calls Grant's strategy was attrition, he got at least that point he's right.
In my opinion Lincoln tried to find a fighting general who would end it before it turned into that, but couldn't. The Confederate officer corp. was too good for that. The war had to drag on till the full weight of the north's industrial might could be brought to bear.
And then move on to the next before they figure out the lies.
That is a bed rock of modern liberal debate tactics. It comes under the general heading of changing the debate.
It works something like this. The left makes an outrageous statement, obviously wrong. While we point out what's wrong with it, they move on to another subject. By the time we've finished debunking the first, and get ready to move on to the next, they're done with that, and have moved on to the third.
Bill Whittle refers to its a moving the goal posts and whack-a-mole.
Isn't it amazing how many liberals would rather change the facts than change their minds?
I looked at RateMyProfessors.com to see if any students had commented on a military history course he taught in early 2010, and then went to the CCSU catalog to check those course numbers.
I cannot see that he taught any "military history" course at all. The courses he taught just seem to be standard American history courses; in fact I couldn't find any military history course in the catalog of course offerings.
It's also odd that he referred to "last semester" because CCSU seems to be on a quarter system. My university (Ohio State) is on a quarter system and I would never refer to any course I taught as having been in such-and-such a "semester".
The comment thread at the Chronicle is pretty interesting – there are quite a few comments along the line of "Good God, Chronicle editors, what were you thinking?".
By the way, there were some students at ratemyprofessors saying that his personality is rather strange.
"…but then Mr. Bellesiles is sometimes imprecise with figures."
Hey. If you want somebody who worries about little things like DATES, go find a historian instead.
But what else can we expect in a country where Bill Clinton is considered a revered elder statesman? You really can fool some of the people all of the time.
This story was the final nail for me in any belief I had in gun control. Once, I thought it was a good idea (I am ashamed to say). Now, I know better (difference between thought and knowledge became apparent).
Thankfully, that's about the only liberal leaning I ever had.
Wel liars are strange look at the deomcrat party.
Isn't this the same school (it is–I looked it up) that called the police on a student for writing a paper advocating legalization of campus carry? Isn't it precious that this character would run there for a position?
There's already a university in central Connecticut. I say we can do without this one. Let the hearings commence.
If this has already been posted — sorry.
To check on war dead:
Honor the Fallen – The Military Times
http://militarytimes.com/valor/search.php
Go to Operation Irai Freedom.
I just looked at 2010. Maybe he meant 2009?
There is no such soldier (Javier — or variation — or history) listed that I could find.
The DSM-IV has names for people like this, under the Personality Disorder section.
Love the internets.
Well, the CCSU catalog for the Spring 2010 term shows Bellesiles teaching 2 classes. Here is the description of them:
American History:1877-Present – 40464 – HIST 162 – 06: American History from 1877 to Present Study Area II Political, economic, social, and cultural development since 1877.
HIST 497 – Topics in History: Historical focus on a facet of history in order to help clarify current domestic and/or world developments.
Neither sounds like "military history", though HIST 497 could be about anything.
http://www.ratemyprofessors.com/ShowRatings.jsp?t...
Poor ratings, but HIST395 seems to match the bill. From a student rating that course: "Took his American Military class. Love the subject, but he was sort of obnoxious. He's quite pompous, and loves to let you know you're wrong. Lectures are mostly enjoyable/engaging, outside work is minimal, which is good because once class is over, don't expect him to be helpful or friendly. He wants nothing to do with you outside of the classroom."
"“lynchings, racism, homicides…"
So, he's talking about Democrats?
"To be fair, if he calls Grant's strategy was attrition, he got at least that point he's right."
Ummmm,,,,,
Wrong.
I am convinced that Grant was one of the great military geniuses in history.
What was he doing?
Pining down Gen'l Lee while Sherman came up on his rear.
Frikkin genius, I tell you.
"Hold by the nose, kick 'em in the ass"
That's EXACTLY what Grant did.
Unfortunately, young people are exposed to teachers like Bellesiles all day, every day, year in and year out, and have been for the past couple of generations. The left was brilliant in taking over American education. I taught at a Los Angeles-area community college and felt like the conservative-in-the-closet. Visit a college bookstore some time and see what the publishers are telling young people about our military. One book of "multi-cultural" essays that a publisher sent me on spec for a writing course stated in the intro that most military veterans only know people from other cultures from being sent overseas to kill them! I'm 65, and when I went to school we were taught to love and revere and be grateful for this blessed country. Every morning we saluted the flag, sang "The Star Spangled Banner," said the Lord's prayer and had a reading from Psalms. ( And we learned to honor our wonderful military, too.) I pray we can take back our schools.
Could be. HIST395 is listed as a special topics course. In Spring 2010 he was listed as teaching HIST497 – which is also a special topics course. Maybe the student was in that course. According to the course listing 497 that term was on Early America, which might by an expansive definition cover U. S. military history up to the present. Unfortunately the course syllabus does not seem to be on line.
The catalog listed courses for fall-winter-spring-summer which led me to think they had a quarter system, but I looked at the academic calndar and found that the winter term was only a couple of weeks long: they are indeed on a semester system.
In my review of several sites, but chiefly ICasualties, I find no Connecticut military killed in Iraq in 2009 or 2010 (and only one in 2008, a Marine who died from a non-hostile cause). If one expands the search to all US military deaths in Iraq from all US states and territories from the beginning of the Fall 2009 semester through the end of classes in the May 2010 semester, I could find no deaths from any state that fit Bellesiles's account (Iraq War, recent Army enlistee, hostile fire from a rifle or similar weapon, lingering death). Nor did my quick review of all US military deaths in Afghanistan during the last two CCSU semesters turn up any likely prospects (though I would need a closer review to be certain), if one changed the theater from Iraq to Afghanistan.
Thus it appears that Bellesiles's account is false in at least some trivial respect–probably in the term he taught the course and in the circumstances of "Javier's" service or death.
Further, without personal knowledge of Army procedures, I found it strange that a critically injured US soldier would not be brought to Germany for treatment over a period of several weeks. Further, while not suspicious in itself, at this stage of the Iraqi War almost all US deaths occur on the same day as the attack or on the following day. Indeed, this detail alone can be used to exclude most deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan in the last year.
If I had to guess, I would suspect that the story Bellesiles told in the Chronicle is mostly true; after all, it would be too easy for the Chronicle or Bellesiles's department chair to check the facts with "Ernesto" and with Joe, Bellesiles's teaching assistant. Yet some things reported by Bellesiles in the Chronicle appear to be false: the term he says he taught Military History is inconsistent with CCSU's website, and the facts of "Javier's" Army service and death in Iraq do not match any deaths reported by the Department of Defense for soldiers from any US state or territory.
And note that Bellesiles opens his Chronicle article with a warning that many military stories can't be trusted, even eyewitness ones. Is this his sly way of warning us that he doesn't fully trust "Ernesto's" account himself or that Bellesiles is telling us a tall tale? For his sake, I hope not.
[more at VOLOKH.COM]
James Lindgren, JD, Ph.D.
Professor of Law
Northwestern University
A few mistakes I see people making (and this from someone who believes that the misconduct in Arming America should have precluded Bellesiles from ever working in academia again):
1. Bellesiles never said that the student or his brother were from CT. That's an assumption the author of this post makes.
2. Bellesiles taught Military History in Fall 2009. Given the lead time for dead tree publications, he may well have written and submitted this article during the Spring semester that ended in mid-May, making Fall 2009 "last semester."
3. Searching ICasualties for late 2009 shows a U.S. Army "Specialist" (entry level if you have a college degree or certain civilian job experience) with a hispanic surname who died due to small arms fire in Nov. 2009
[...] [...]
I for one am enjoying the comments here. They are respectful, yet critical; with the object of making sure that the author is correct in his assumptions and research. I for one never see this on the more popular lefty sites, and shame on them. Much of it is factually incorrect, yet everyone there tends to take what is said as received wisdom, since it reinforces their biases, supports "epistemic closure", if you will.
Bravo to you, fellow commenters. Keep up the good work, and keep keeping us honest!
Angus:
Your third point doesn't help Bellesiles because the person you refer to died on the same day he was attacked. I have read scores of accounts from fall 2009 and so far I don't think there are any Iraqi or Afghan deaths that are even remotely close matches to Bellesiles's story.
James Lindgren
Of course it's also possible that Bellesiles is just an idiot who got played by a college student who didn't want to show up in class, so invented the excuse of a brother who got killed in Iraq. Indeed, were it not for his previous fraud, that's where I would lean. But certain things happen when you cry wolf….
[...] » Disgraced ‘Historian’ Michael Bellesiles’ Fishy War Story – Big Jour… [...]
Name? Date? I am looking at November 2009 and do not see anything like that.
To have novelettes published by the Chronicle of Higher Education is appalling.
Is there a reason to mask the soldier's identity? Really? Ask the "student's" permission if it violates your teaching ethics to use their story — their REAL story. On the other hand, if one is *using* a person and abusing them in the process of "making your point" then find an honest, compassionate way to Make Your Point.
Bellesiles is a coward. Changing so much information allows one "plausible deniability" and gives him a platform to promote the Howard Zinn version of American history. It reminds me of the definition of "is." Facts seems to be irrelevant to The Narrative if you're Michael Bellesiles.
If the person doesn't exist as described, the point doesn't wash, and Chronicle has become the 2010 educational version of "TrueRomance Stories."
It's pretty pathetic that this guy is so in love with his ideology that he, as a "military history" instructor, can't be bothered with the real war.
[...] today’s Big Journalism, Dutton Peabody calls Bellesiles’s story “fishy” and asks whether the Chronicle bothered to check the story: [...]
[...] the Original article Tags: ‘Historian’, Bellesiles’, Disgraced, Fishy, Michael, Story Comment (RSS) [...]
When I was wounded in Vietnam in what was referred to as I Corp up near the Laotian border they got me out of country faster than that and on my way to Japan and that was in 1971. On the flight there was very seriously wounded people I know the man across from me that was on the top rack did not make it. His story sounds fishy to me. God bless the nurses and on those flights and the doctors. They will always be angels to me.
It sounds like the teacher is a plain liar. I served in war and peace and if you are an infantryman and serve in a combat unit you depend on the truth of your fellow soldiers in reporting an what intel or information you can get your life depends on it in many cases. He should not be using the unreliable babbling of a PX warrior to teach a class. Yes his whole teaching yarn sounds simply like he lied to prove his already formed opinion no they do not keeo the wounded in country that long.
[...] happened to hack and fraudster Michael Bellisiles, well he’s a teacher and his students notice a trend: Useless. The man tries to re-write history so that it agrees with his views. I like history; I [...]
Angus
An Army Specialist is an enlisted grade that starts at what is refered to as Spec4 an infantryman woud be a corpral both are E-4 for pay grade purposes it does not require a college degree or civilian job experience. Many people are premoted to that grade with just a GED or even with out. I would wager the good professor is lying again.
This is an outstanding comment.
Sad that news consumers still think that due diligence is the rule and not the exception. Doubly sad that it is the exception and not the rule.
Because this idiot professor, and thousands like him, are educating our children.
[...] » Disgraced ‘Historian’ Michael Bellesiles’ Fishy War Story – Big Jour… [...]
Libtard mantra; "Don't confuse me with the facts". Also; "The end justify the means".
Absolutely correct.
[...] » Disgraced ‘Historian’ Michael Bellesiles’ Fishy War Story – Big Jour… [...]
He's indoctrinating students and doing it with fabrications. That's why.
Interesting how the "university" has no issues with the content of the course. Almost as though it's a theatrical performance consisting of personal opinion rather than facts. And that sounds like that's the same view taken by the 'proctor' (he's certainly no 'professor'). Typical of the socialist indoctrination format of the vast majority of "schools" today.
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Theory- he needed the money so someone over at the publication threw him a bone. That aside, I believe the cat is a chronic liar, but that's OK because he's really really smart and lies for the right reasons.
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[...] few days ago, questions were raised first by Big Journalism and then by me about a story that Michael Bellesiles published in the June 27th issue of the [...]
[...] » Disgraced ‘Historian’ Michael Bellesiles’ Fishy War Story – Big Jour… [...]
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[...] or at least accuracy of this latest article’s story and setting. The first comes from Dutton Peabody at Big Journalism, dated July 6. The second, and in my opinion somewhat weightier critique, comes [...]
[...] Chronicle of Higher Education confirms my research and Big Journalism’s initial doubts that Michael Bellesiles’s story published in the Chronicle Review is false. There was indeed no [...]
[...] no one suspect a problem with the story? Big Journalism did, and actually searched the records to find a casualty or death that fit the time line, and did [...]
[...] no one suspect a problem with the story?Big Journalism did, and actually searched the records to find a casualty or death that fit the time line, and did [...]
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I didn’t quite follow this to begin with. But when I read it a third time, it all added up in my mind. Thanks for the insight. Definitely something to think about. Thanks for sharing…
[...] course of a long profile about disgraced professor Michael Bellesiles, has this to say about his latest whopper: Then, after I interviewed him, Mr. Bellesiles published an essay in The Chronicle Review. In the [...]
[...] course of a long profile about disgraced professor Michael Bellesiles, has this to say about his latest whopper: Then, after I interviewed him, Mr. Bellesiles published an essay in The Chronicle Review. In the [...]
[...] Disgraced ‘Historian’ Michael Bellesiles’ Fishy War Story – Big Journalism [...]
[...] happened to hack and fraudster Michael Bellisiles, well he’s a teacher and his students notice a trend: Useless. The man tries to re-write history so that it agrees with his views. I like history; I [...]
[...] Agriculture for Beginners by Burkett, Hill, and Stevens Anybody growing white sapote? – Bananas.org Disgraced ‘Historian’ Michael Bellesiles’ Fishy War Story – Big Journalism Sandra-Lee-Induced Seizure – My Food Looks Funny – Funny Food Photos Mini-Mello Bamboo Stool by [...]
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