Sunday with Charles – Delaware Joe and the Kingdom of the Empty Skull
Charles joins me to marvel at the EPIC stupidity of the empty headed Joe Biden administration as we explore some new territory.
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Love Charles's stories about college parties. Reminds me of Bertie Wooster and the Drones Club.
The whole family enjoyed your tour today! Thank you, Jason and Charles, for letting us escape the madness for a couple hours. (P.S. Loved Charles' stories of the past. Like your ancestors in Yale's history, my 10th great grandfather, Dr. Comfort Starr, was a founder of Harvard College. He's buried at King's Chapel on the Freedom Trail, Boston.)
the beautiful crisp weather makes us watching the video feel more like we are there with you. Loved the shots of architecture detail, especially w/the stories. only you and Chas. could do such a grand film tour of Yale.
Where's YOUR Emmy!? ..this was great.. thanks!
That was a funny & an interesting tour. Thx guys. Always wondered what Yale was like. (Princeton too.). The meat ball battle story reminded me of the movie, Animal House. Which came first, Charles? When i left college in New England in the late '60s, students were still required to act like adult. For a ton less, you'd be expelled on the spot & your things shipped to your home. Just missing 3 curfews by 1 min. would probably do the trick. And it sounds like my Massachusetts Colony ancestors probably knew of Charles's ancestors in the early/mid 17th C. bc he keeps mentioning some of the same things I've research (Boston, Harvard presidency, and now even founding Rhode Island). Probably 10 + million others could say the same. I've got a few minister ancestors who had to flee England, including the Mathers. (Yikes). Apparently, many towns between New Hampshire & Newark, NJ (New Ark) were founded by a minister & his flock leaders after disagreements, being punished/fined or being outright banished by the purest of Puritans in the Boston area, and then even those settlements splintered after disagreements within their founding church. The congregation would split & the group loyal to the ousted minister would start over, founding another settlement, and becoming even more vulnerable to Indian attacks until their numbers grew. Or, like individuals who disagreed, a group would leave that minister & move to another church's settlement. (Most settlements were called plantations.in the 1600s.). It appears this is how we got quick hopscotching of settlements around New England, as well as many new Protestant denominations with Puritan roots ( with mergers since). If I remember correctly, the first church founded in Providence turned out to be the first Baptist church in America. My founding ancestors there didn't stay there long, taking off yet again to help found Oyster Bay, L.I. where they stayed & married into the Quaker denomination of the sparsely populated nearby Dutch settlers. The strictly enforced rules of the Puritans were surely due to their belief that the world had entered Revelations. The social history born of the 1630 + Great Migration period in New England is real interesting.
I love it when you and Charles go to other locations like Yale, DC, Philadelphia, etc. And I really enjoyed your trip with John to Vegas. Since I live in Oklahoma I can’t get to those places very easily and it’s interesting actually seeing and learning about other parts of the country. You should try Williamsburg sometime. I bet that would be an interesting trip. Thank you for all the great shows.