Welcome to my first blog. I started this blog like most other folks who start blogs--to put forth my views. The Main Adversary will focus on politics and history. However, I will have content on sports and entertainment.
A little about me and this Blog:
My name is Mark Newgent. I live in Baltimore, MD with my lovely wife and beautiful daughter. I work for The Johns Hopkins University. My first love is history, My academic training is in history, but I work in the publishing field. My passion for history fueled my interest in politics. My base of knowledge is modern American history especially World War II, the Cold War and American Communism.
My politics:
My political views have matured over the last decade from liberal to conservative.
My political maturation process began with the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal and accelerated after 9/11. My political maturation was directly proportional to increasing my historical knowledge. In short, I started thinking instead of feeling. That is, my liberalism was based on how I felt about political issues or historical events, not on any rational thought about them. I was able to shed the childish liberal=good/conservative=bad mindset. Once I started thinking I was able to see that conservatives and Republicans were not the greedy racist, puppy killers that the Left and the media make them out to be.
I love this country. I believe like Abraham Lincoln that America represents the “the last best hope.” I have always thought that even when I was a liberal. What bothered me was why so many other liberals and leftists did not share this view. Like Ronald Reagan I wondered why I voted for people who did not believe in the same things I do. Reagan said the Democratic Party left him. In my case I was never a part of it, only I did not know it yet.
Ronald Regan is one of three people who had a strong impact on my political maturation. The other two are Whitaker Chambers and David Horowitz. Chambers a former CPUSA courier who assisted Soviet espionage, and Horowitz an intellectual founder of the New Left that nearly destroyed this country, both underwent political conversions to the Right. I do not put myself in the same category as Chambers and Horowitz—not many can—but their stories had a major impact on my thinking.
So there you have it. If you are reading this blog and wondering where I am coming from, well there it is.
Why “The Main Adversary”:
The title of this blog comes from my interest in history, especially Communist history and the Cold War. The Main Adversary was the code name assigned to the United States by Felix Dzerzhinsky, chief of the Cheka, (the first Soviet secret police and the folks who brought you the Great Terror), in the early days of the Bolshevik rule after the revolution. Early on Lenin and Dzerzhinsky understood that the United States would be the main enemy against world-wide communist revolution. Today, the threat is different, but to the Islamo-fascists America is The Main Adversary.
Sports:
I am a passionate fan of three teams, the Washington Redskins, Maryland Terrapins, and the Boston Red Sox. I have my own personal Axis-of-Evil: the Dallas Cowboys, Duke Blue Devils (I despise UVA as well) and the New York Yankees. I grew up in College Park, Maryland home of the Terps and a stone’s throw from old RFK stadium. I was very fortunate that during formative years the Redskins won three Super Bowls and were one of the premier teams in the NFL. Sadly, Joe Gibbs has not been able to resurrect those winning ways…yet! As a teenager I spent a lot of time hanging around the Maryland campus, I got to meet famous Terps like Boomer Esiason and Len Bias. I can still remember watching Lefty Driesell walking on to the court at Cole Field House as the band played “Hail to the Chief.” The death of Len Bias still makes me sad, to think of what could have been. When Maryland won it all in 2002 Lenny was on all our minds as Juan Dixon tossed the ball into the air in victory. Growing up near DC in the 1980s and early 90s we did not have a baseball team, sure the Orioles were up the road in Baltimore, but outside of Cal Ripken the O’s did not offer much. As a kid I loved Roger Clemens so I loved the Red Sox. People look at me funny when they ask if I’m from New England when they learn I’m not from New England. Look 1986 still bothers me, and I was literally depressed in 2003 when Arron #@%^*^% Boone hit that homer in Game 7. On the other hand 2004 and the Yanks delivering up the greatest choke in sports history still brings a smile to my face.
In my politics I moved away from emotionalism, I can’t say the same for the teams I love. When it comes to the Skins, Terps, and Sox my emotions run high.
Entertainment:
I watch too much TV and way too many movies. The fetching Mrs. Newgent looked dimly on my subscription to Direct TV. But I’m a child of the 80s and pop culture I can’t help it. My two favorite shows are Battlestar Galactica and The Wire.
Friday, February 16, 2007
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