Tim Sheehan

236 posts

Tim Sheehan

Tim Sheehan

@tim_sheehan

Atlanta, GA Katılım Ocak 2010
147 Takip Edilen288 Takipçiler
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Henrik Zeberg
Henrik Zeberg@HenrikZeberg·
I love History! And I have studied it A LOT. The SA (Sturmabteilung): A Short Historical Lesson The Sturmabteilung (SA), commonly known as the Brownshirts, emerged in early-1930s Germany as a paramilitary auxiliary force tied to a political movement rather than to the state’s traditional institutions. Officially, their role was framed as maintaining “order,” protecting rallies, and countering alleged threats to public stability. In practice, the SA operated through provocation, intimidation, and public spectacle. Their core activities included: - Street presence and patrols designed to project authority rather than enforce law in a neutral sense. - Targeted harassment of political opponents, journalists, and civilians deemed “undesirable.” - Deliberate provocation, often escalating tensions so that forceful responses could later be justified as “necessary.” - Public actions meant to normalize fear, such as boycotts, raids, and arrests conducted with theatrical visibility. - Blurring the line between law enforcement and political loyalty, with allegiance to ideology overriding legal restraint. Crucially, the SA did not begin as an openly violent terror force. It evolved. Early actions were framed as temporary, defensive, and exceptional. Each escalation was justified by the claim that “extraordinary times” required “extraordinary measures.” Over time, the presence of armed men enforcing political priorities in public spaces became routine — and resistance to it increasingly dangerous. The result was not immediate dictatorship, but something more subtle and more powerful: The gradual erosion of legal norms, the conditioning of the public to accept intimidation as governance, and the replacement of institutional law with performative authority. By the time the consequences were fully visible, the mechanisms were already embedded. The damage was no longer just political - it was societal. Trust collapsed, dissent vanished, and fear became a tool of administration. History’s lesson is not that such forces announce their end goals clearly. It is that they present themselves as protectors of order - while quietly redefining what “order” means, and who it is meant to serve. "Study history or you are doomed to repeat it"
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Henrik Zeberg
Henrik Zeberg@HenrikZeberg·
I love History - and have studied it intensely: The Reichstag Fire (1933): Background and Consequences Background On the night of February 27, 1933, the German parliament building—the Reichstag—was set ablaze. Germany was already in deep political and economic turmoil, with violent street clashes and a fragile democratic system under the Weimar Republic. The new chancellor, Adolf Hitler, and his party, the Nazi Party, had not yet secured full control of the state. Elections were scheduled within days, and opposition parties -especially communists- still commanded significant support. A Dutch communist, Marinus van der Lubbe, was arrested inside the building and blamed for the fire. Whether he acted alone or was part of a broader plot has been debated ever since, but the political use of the event was immediate and decisive. Immediate Response Within hours, the government declared the fire evidence of a vast revolutionary conspiracy. The incident was framed as an existential threat to public order and national security. The next day, Hitler persuaded President Paul von Hindenburg to sign the Reichstag Fire Decree. This emergency measure suspended key civil liberties guaranteed under the Weimar Constitution, including freedom of speech, press, assembly, privacy of communications, and protection from arbitrary arrest. What It Led To Mass repression: Thousands of political opponents-especially communists and social democrats -were arrested, detained, or driven underground. Elimination of opposition: With rivals silenced and intimidated, the Nazis dominated the March 1933 elections and parliamentary proceedings. Legal consolidation of power: Weeks later, the Enabling Act was passed, allowing the government to legislate without parliamentary consent, effectively ending democratic governance. Permanent authoritarian rule: Emergency powers introduced as “temporary” became the legal foundation for a one-party dictatorship and the rapid dismantling of all remaining democratic institutions. Historical Significance The Reichstag Fire stands as a pivotal moment in modern history: a single dramatic event, framed as a national emergency, was used to justify sweeping suspensions of rights and the irreversible transfer of power. What followed was not a restoration of order, but the formal end of democracy in Germany and the beginning of totalitarian rule. "Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it"
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Wes Sheehan
Wes Sheehan@Sheehanwes·
One of my pregame kicks at the rising senior GA all-star game
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Ray Dalio
Ray Dalio@RayDalio·
Contribute to the whole and you will likely be rewarded. Natural selection leads to better qualities being retained and passed along (e.g., in better genes, better abilities to nurture others, better products, etc.). The result is a constant cycle of improvement for the whole. #principleoftheday
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ITG Next - Georgia
ITG Next - Georgia@itgnext_georgia·
Week 10 ITG Next Coaches Show: Inside McEachern Football with Coach Kareem Reid. Coach Reid joins us for a 20-minute conversation to discuss how the Indians are closing out the regular season, highlight key contributors who have led the way on offense and defense, and preview what fans can expect as McEachern makes its final push toward the postseason. Presented By: @CochranFirm_ATL @McEachernSports @McEachernFtball @CoachReid99
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