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The Phygrian and Hittite invasions which never happened

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A key difference between historians and archaeologists is that one will look to the record on the ground and the other looks to the written records.  In the case of historians this means relying on ancient texts of the ancient Greeks and in some cases translations of tablets.  The lack of information leads to speculation and two such speculations, which don’t stand up to archaeological scrutiny, but are still advocated today are the invasion of the Hittites over the Hattian and the Phygrians conquest of the Hittites .

The Hittites, an Indo-European people supposedly invaded from the east or west and conquered the non Indo-European Hattians.  Steadman & McMahon point out that the Hittites never migrated as indicated in the map below.  The original view that this map was based upon has been discredited and now it is viewed that the Hittites did not migrate from either the Armenian plateau or from the Balkans, but were always there.   The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Anatolia is an excellent read.

 

The above map would be approximately 1900 BC and the below map, by Ian Mladjov, is around 1250 to 1150.  These two timescales mark the beginning and the end of the Hittite Empire, separated by two dark ages.

Image result for bronze age collapse

After the fall of the Hittites the Phryrians, according to Herodotus,  invaded from Thrace into the Hittite Empire all the way to Armenia.  This account has been promoted by historians for a very long time.  However, as Robert Drews notes on P.  65 of  The End of the Bronze Age

“Although many historians continue to believe in a Phrygian  migration from Europe c.a. 1200 B.C., the idea has been abandoned by Anatolian archaeologists.   …None of the Hittite sites was there evidence for newcomers after the destruction.”

Work on the Haplgroup R1b, and the The Armenian hypothesis of the Proto-Indo-European Urheimat, proposed by Georgian (T. Gamkrelidze) and Russian linguist V. V. Ivanov in 1985, suggests that the Proto-Indo-European language was spoken during the 4th millennium BC in the Armenian Highlands.

Distribution of haplogroup R1b in Europe

The map above shows the connection with the R1b as Armenia and Ossetia remain dark pockets in the Indo-European homeland.  Also of note is San Marino is clearly identifed in Italy.

Following this argument in Gamkrelidze & Ivanov’s 1990 article in Scientific American and Grey & Atkinson 2003 article as well as the recognition by Drew’s 1994 book, at the least the ancient people who would become the Armenians, were also the Hittites, and the Phygrians and their invention of key technologies, the wheel, metallurgy, viticulture and weapons of war such as the compound bow, halberd axe and chariot impacted human civilization on a broader scale than we recognize and much more than historians such as Richard Hovannisian give credit for.

In the end the disconnect between historians, archaeologists, linguists and geneticists operate more like the blind men and the elephant than piecing together a much more interesting story of the origins and expansion of the Indo-European peoples.

About me: Sean McClure is a former Senior Advisor at the White House.  Sean is currently the Suspension and Debarment Advisor to the Department of the Treasury and with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State. He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.  

Hamilton and the Saga of the $10 dollar bill

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Last year the move to replace Jackson on the $20 with a woman was replaced with the decision to replace Hamilton on the $10 with a woman.  Now, because of the success of the Broadway musical “Hamilton”  Lin-Manuel Miranda, the creator and star of the hit Broadway musical“Hamilton,” said on Wednesday that he had received assurances from Jacob J. Lew, secretary of the Treasury, that admirers of Alexander Hamilton would not be disappointed by a forthcoming redesign of the $10 bill.   The New York times discusses this in detail on in an article by Michael Paulson on March 16, 2006.

Of equal interest, and the source of the picture of Hamilton on this page, is this interesting biography of Hamilton from Chris Weller, Gus Lubin and Skye Gould on TechInsider.

Hamilton is important in many ways and has his finger on the pulse of the future economy of America.  This is seen in his Report on Manufactures.

About me: Sean McClure is a former Senior Advisor at the White House.  Sean is currently the Suspension and Debarment Advisor to the Department of the Treasury and with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State. He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.  

Non-Profit Promoting Youth Lifting

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I recently stumbled across an interesting article written by Jodi Mohrmanm for Jacksonville’s News Channel 4 discussing the benefits of  youth weight lifting.  The article discusses a St. Louis gym called Lift for Life and mentions an article in a pediatrics journal.

I looked for the article and came upon a recent article discussing the need to change exercise regimes for overweight youth.  The article,   A New Direction in Psychology and Health: Resistance Exercise for Obese Children and Adolescents  by Gill A. Ten Hoorab*, Guy Plasquia, Robert A.C. Ruiterb, Stef P.J. Kremersc, Geert M. Ruttenc, Annemie M.W.J. Scholsd & Gerjo Kokb  in the 18, Aug, 2015 edition of Psychology & Health discuss the potential positive psychological benefits of overweight youth doing resistance exercises rather than aerobic exercises.

If the youth are focused into an area of success that creates a positive self image, they are likely to do it more often and successfully, leading to an healthier youth.   The authors list getting over perceptions/misconceptions that weight training is not healthy for youth is a larger challenge.  A 2009 article in Sports Health notes that children as young as 7 and 8 are old enough to begin a weight lifting regimen with proper supervision.

One example of the success of youth lifting is Lift for Life in St Louis.   from the News 4 article (above) and their video it seems like a great program for at risk youth.   The cost is only $500K per year to provide a healthy and safe place for youth.  The organization operates on donations.  I  wonder if this model is sustainable and if it can be replicated beyond one gym in St Louis to other at risk youth across the country.

Not all of us can be like Armenia’s Simon Martirosyan who lifted 182kg (401 lb) see above) for the Snatch & Total Youth World Record, but it inspires the youth to lift to stay healthy.    If you start lifting at a young age the health benefits last a lifetime.

About me: Sean McClure is a former Senior Advisor at the White House.  Sean is currently the Suspension and Debarment Advisor to the Department of the Treasury and with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State. He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.  

Treasury Proposes New Rules for Investment Advisors

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On 8-25-15, Joel Schectman wrote in the Wall Street Journal’s Risk and Compliance Journal about Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FINCen) proposed rule which would require advisers with assets of more than $100 million to adopt many of the requirements in force for banks.

“Investment advisers are on the front lines of a multi-trillion-dollar sector of our financial system,” said FinCEN Director Jennifer Shasky Calvery in a statement. “If a client is trying to move or stash dirty money, we need investment advisers to be vigilant in protecting the integrity of their sector.”

Seetha Ramachandran, an attorney with Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP, says while many hedge funds already follow AML best practices, the new reporting requirements will be costly.

The comment period is for 60 days.

 

http://blogs.wsj.com/riskandcompliance/2015/08/25/treasury-proposes-money-laundering-controls-for-investment-advisers/

About me: Sean McClure is a former Senior Advisor at the White House.  Sean is currently the Suspension and Debarment Advisor to the Department of the Treasury and with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State. He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.  

Discovery News Great Title: Black Holes Slug it Out in Quasar Deathmatch

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Ian O’Neil has a very interesting article in Discovery News from 8-28-15.  I really like the title.  Black Holes Slug it Out in Quasar Deathmatch.    His article is full of information has has a good video too.

“As they orbit one another inside the quasar’s core, the smaller black hole carves out a region at the inner edge, also creating its own, smaller accretion disk. Calculations show that the pair complete one orbit every 1.2 years. The larger black hole is approximately 150 million times the mass of our sun and its smaller partner is 4 million times the mass of our sun.”

http://news.discovery.com/space/galaxies/black-holes-slug-it-out-in-quasar-deathmatch-150828.htm

About me: Sean McClure is currently a Federal Employee with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State.  He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.

Scientists Replicated 100 Psychology Studies, and Fewer Than Half Got the Same Results

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On 8-27-15 Smithsonian Magazine highlighted an article from Science  which showed that fewer than half of the studies published in 2008 in the top three psychology journals were reproducible.    This is a serious problem for psychology and challenges the methods they are using in collecting their data.

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/scientists-replicated-100-psychology-studies-and-fewer-half-got-same-results-180956426/?no-ist

http://www.sciencemag.org/content/349/6251/aac4716

About me: Sean McClure is currently a Federal Employee with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State.  He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.

The Fallen of WWII

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Neil Halloran has done some very interesting statistical work.  I particularly like how he tells the story of WWII using data in images and charts.

 

http://fallen.io/

About me: Sean McClure is currently a Federal Employee with over 15 years of experience working at the White House, Department of the Treasury, USAID, and Department of State.  He has traveled extensively to 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe.

 

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