Yeah his performance during that time was not great. You can listen to this podcast here where the first part of it covers that part of his career if you want to hear a little about it. He still deserves a lot of props for being able to field an army when all the chips were down. He was a master of tactical retreats and snatching a not so bad defeat from the jaws of a terrible, campaighn ending, defeat. Mike Duncan covered him very well in his Revolutions series.heydaralon wrote: Mon Jan 28, 2019 3:23 pmWashington had some balls, and he was putting his neck out, so he has to be somewhere near the top of any list. I remember a thread awhile back where someone was discussing his overall record, and brought up his mediocre performance during the French and Indian war. I don't know much about that conflict, but I don't think he shone during it. I think this was the (possibly troll) thread where it was insinuated that he was gay. This might have been a Smitty one.brewster wrote: Mon Jan 28, 2019 2:41 pm
I'll vote for Washington. Unlike most subsequent American generals he didn't have a huge MIC behind him, and plenty of tax dollars (excepting those of the South of course). He didn't even have nation to use nationalism to rally the troops. He had to scramble the whole time just to keep his army together, in the field, and supplied, never mind get them to a battlefield at the right place and time. And unlike most General officers, his neck was on the line if he lost, he'd have been hung as a traitor.
This whole podcast is very good though. I recommend anyone interested in history and politics listen to it. Like I said it has a spicy take on Washington at the very beginning.
http://fashthenation.com/2018/07/ftn-fo ... oup-detat/
McFeels and Ethnarch survey the events which led up to the 13 Colonies making the difficult decision to break away from the mother country, and the one man who did more than anyone else to precipitate the War of American independence; the original form of the independent government of the United States, along with its strengths and weaknesses; how the Philadelphia Constitution we’re operating under today came to be, its strengths and weaknesses, and who was in favor of it, and who was against it; and about their motivations, and who benefited the most from the adoption of the Philadelphia Convention, and how.