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Generational Dynamics World View
*** 23-Mar-21 World View -- Book Announcement: World View: Vietnam, Buddhism, and the Vietnam War

This morning's key headlines from GenerationalDynamics.com
  • Book Announcement: World View: Vietnam, Buddhism, and the Vietnam War
  • Description
  • Generational Theory Book Series
  • Table of Contents - World View: Vietnam, Buddhism, and the Vietnam War

****
**** Book Announcement: World View: Vietnam, Buddhism, and the Vietnam War
****


Announcing a new book on Vietnam and Buddhism by John J. Xenakis

Book Announcement: World View: Vietnam, Buddhism, and the Vietnam War

Subtitle: How Vietnam became an economic powerhouse after the Vietnam War

[Image: vnbk300.jpg]
Book Announcement: World View: Vietnam, Buddhism, and the Vietnam War, by John J. Xenakis

<center>
$13.99 -- Buy the paperback on Amazon

Click here for description and Complete Table of Contents

If you buy it, please write a 5-star amazon review. Thanks.
</center>

****
**** Description
****


Most people know nothing about Vietnam except that their grandfathers
fought in something called "the Vietnam War." And yet, as guardian of
the maritime routes from Europe to India, Malaya and China, Vietnam
has for millennia been a dominant player in world trade.

And now, with China illegally annexing the South China Sea, which
controls $1.3 trillion in trade, Vietnam's historic role as guardian
of the South China Sea could bring the two countries to full war, for
the first time in thirty years.

This book describes Vietnam's history since ancient times, through
rule by China, through independence, through multiple dynasties,
through colonization by France, and through the Indochina wars since
World War II, before becoming an economic powerhouse. Those seriously
interested in living in or doing business in Vietnam should understand
that historically it's not a country in the European sense, but is
composed of "Vietnam Villages" that define its culture and business
dealings, and should understand the interaction between Buddhism,
Confucianism, and Christianity in the villages and guilds.

The book has extensive coverage of the history and theology of
Buddhism, and how it spread from India to Vietnam and China, in one of
the most sigificant events in the history of religion. The book
explains how this was possible because of the specific interactions of
Buddhism, Daoism and Confucianism, and how Chinese and Vietnamese
leaders played one religion off of one another as needed to control
the population. In today's Vietnam, these tensions still exist,
especially between North and South.

The author's previous book on the history of Iran has extensive
coverage of the history and theology of Islam and Christianity, while
his book on China does the same for Confucianism and Daoism. Putting
the three books together provides a comprehensive understanding of the
world's religions.

The book also has extensive coverage of what "really happened" in the
Vietnam war. Most people, even those who fought in the war, or who
had family and friends who fought in the war, nonetheless have no idea
what the Vietnam War was about. Even Vietnamese people under age 50
don't know what it was about. This book will tell you what actually
happened -- not what the politicians and ideologues say happened, but
what actually did happen, and why it happened.

****
**** Generational Theory Book Series
****


I set up the GenerationalDynamics.com web site in 2003 as an
experiment, as I stated at the time. I would analyze current and
historical events through generational theory and Generational
Dynamics. I would make forecasts and predictions, and the articles
would remain on my web site for review at any time.

Now, almost 20 years later, there are over 6,000 articles on my web
site, containing thousands of analyses and predictions on hundreds of
countries, all of which are either true or trending true. None has
been shown to be wrong. There is no web site in the world with a
better successful forecasting and analysis record than mine, and there
is no politician, analyst or journalist with a better forecasting and
analysis record than mine.

There are now four books in the Generational Theory Book Series.

[Image: vnbk620.jpg]
Vietnam-Buddhism Book

"World View: Vietnam, Buddhism, and the Vietnam War:
How Vietnam became an economic powerhouse after the Vietnam War"
(Generational Theory Book Series, Book 4), March 2021
Paperback: 325 pages, over 200 source references, $13.99
https://www.amazon.com/dp/1732738645/

[Image: scbk620.jpg]
China-Japan Book

"World View: War Between China and Japan: Why America Must Be Prepared"
(Generational Theory Book Series, Book 2), June 2019
Paperback: 331 pages, over 200 source references, $13.99
https://www.amazon.com/World-View-Betwee...732738637/

[Image: irbk620.jpg]
Iran Book

"World View: Iran's Struggle for Supremacy -- Tehran's
Obsession to Redraw the Map of the Middle East"
(Generational Theory Book Series, Book 1), September 2018
Paperback: 153 pages, over 100 source references, $7.00
https://www.amazon.com/World-View-Suprem...732738610/

[Image: gdbk620.jpg]
Anniversary Edition Book

"Generational Dynamics Anniversary Edition - Forecasting
America's Destiny",
(Generational Theory Book Series, Book 3), January 2020,
Paperback: 359 pages, $14.99,
https://www.amazon.com/Generational-Dyna...732738629/

****
**** Table of Contents - World View: Vietnam, Buddhism, and the Vietnam War
****




Table of Contents - World View: Vietnam, Buddhism, and the Vietnam War

Part I. Vietnam, Buddhism and the Vietnam War -- Vietnam today
Chapter 1. Importance of Vietnam
Chapter 2. Overview of Contents
Chapter 3. Objectives of this book
Chapter 4. Description of Buddhist theology
Chapter 5. Getting a 'feel' for Vietnam
5.1. Vietnam country names
Chapter 6. Brief summary of generational eras

Part II. Vietnam's Doi Moi economic reforms (1986-present)
Chapter 7. Vietnam's legal and economic history
7.1. Nations, kingdoms, empires, leaders, kings, emperors, dynasties
7.2. Economic influences in historical Vietnam
7.3. Vietnam's economy after French colonization (1858)
7.4. Social etiquette
Chapter 8. The collapse of Communism, Socialism, Marxism in Asia
8.1. China -- Mao Zedong's Great Leap Forward
8.2. Russia -- Perestroika and Glasnost
8.3. South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, and Hong Kong -- the 'Asian Tigers'
8.4. The Doi Moi economic reforms
Chapter 9. Details of Doi Moi reforms
9.1. Reforming centrally-planned to market oriented economy
9.2. Land reform
9.3. Abolishing the dual-pricing system
9.4. Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)
9.5. Financial crisis in 2009-12
Chapter 10. Vietnam's economic crisis during Wuhan Coronavirus pandemic (2020)
10.1. Vietnam focuses on foreign investment and trade
10.2. Government heightened focus on high tech and artificial intelligence
10.3. Human Rights

Part III. Overview of Asian religions and theology
Chapter 11. Evolution of great religions
11.1. Evolutionary framework of great religions
11.2. Documentation -- written law of the great religions
11.3. Written law in Hinduism and Buddhism
11.4. Etiquette in engaging with Buddhists
Chapter 12. Overview of Buddhist theology
12.1. Achieving Nirvana
12.2. Theravada Buddhism ('Path of the Elders')
12.3. Mahayana Buddhism ('The Great Vehicle')
12.4. Hinayana Buddhism ('Modest Vehicle')
Chapter 13. The school of meditation: Ch'an / Zen Buddhism
13.1. Rise of Ch'an/Zen Buddhism in China
13.2. Philosophy of Daoism
13.3. Ch'an / Zen Buddhism and sudden enlightenment
13.4. Zen Buddhism in the West
Chapter 14. Other schools of Buddhism
14.1. The evolution and simplification of Buddhism
14.2. Pure Land Buddhism
14.3. Tantric (Vajrayana, Tibetan) Buddhism
14.4. Bodhisattvas in Mahayana Buddhism
14.5. The Maitreya in Buddhism

Part IV. How Hinduism and Buddhism spread from India to southern Vietnam
Chapter 15. Aryan invasion, and rise of Hinduism in India
15.1. Life of The Buddha (563-483 BC)
15.2. The Middle Way and Enlightenment
15.3. Hinduism and Buddhism
15.4. Popularity of Buddhism
Chapter 16. Legacy of Emperor Ashoka (304-232 BC, Ruled 273-232 BC)
16.1. Ashoka commits genocide and ethnic cleansing
16.2. Ashoka repents and converts to Buddhism
16.3. Spread of Buddhism north and south -- overview
16.4. Ashoka's influence on Buddhism
Chapter 17. Spread of Theravada Buddhism to southeast Asia and southern Vietnam
17.1. Spread of Buddhism to Ceylon (Sri Lanka)
17.2. Spread of Buddhism to Burma (Myanmar) and Siam (Thailand)
17.3. Spread of Buddhism to Malay Peninsula and Indonesia
17.4. Spread of Buddhism to Cambodia and southern Vietnam (Mekong Delta)

Part V. How Buddhism spread through China to northern Vietnam
Chapter 18. Spread of Mahayana Buddhism along the Great Silk Road
Chapter 19. Collapse of China's glorious Han Dynasty (206 BC – 220 AD)
19.1. Significance of China's Han Dynasty (206 BC – 220 AD)
19.2. Decline of the Han Dynasty in the 100s
19.3. Collapse of the Han Dynasty -- Yellow Turban Rebellion - 184 AD
Chapter 20. Changes to Daoism and Buddhism during and after Han Dynasty
20.1. Daoism during and after the declining Han Dynasty
20.2. Buddhism during and after the declining Han Dynasty
20.3. Differences between Chinese and Indian languages and culture
20.4. Role of Daoism in linking Indian and Chinese cultures
Chapter 21. Sacking by the Huns (311) -- China splits into North and South
Chapter 22. Spread of Buddhism south of the Yangtze River
22.1. Buddhism vs Confucianism and Daoism
Chapter 23. Spread of Buddhism north of the Yangtze River
23.1. Northern rulers' adoption of Buddhism
23.2. Northern rulers' misgivings about Buddhism
23.3. Emancipation of Buddhist ideas from Daoism in the North
Chapter 24. Spread of Buddhism in Sui and Tang dynasties (589-906)
24.1. Divergence of North and South during period of disunion
24.2. Regulation of religions during Sui-Tang dynasties
24.3. Great Buddhist movements during Sui-Tang dynasties
24.4. The school of meditation: Ch'an or Zen Buddhism
24.5. The catastrophic An Lu-shan Rebellion (755-763)
24.6. Union of Uighurs and Tibetans (765)
24.7. The Great Suppression of Buddhism (842-845)
24.8. Revival of Confucianism
Chapter 25. Zen Buddhism in Japan
25.1. The Zen Koan: What is the sound of one hand clapping?
Chapter 26. Buddhism in Vietnam
26.1. Adulteration / Syncretism of Buddhism in Vietnam
26.2. Vietnam Communist Party hostility to religion

Part VI. South Vietnam's ancient history
Chapter 27. Background: Archaeological ages and Geography
27.1. Archaeological ages
27.2. Stone age
27.3. Bronze age
27.4. Iron age
27.5. Vietnam's fusion of races, languages and cultures
27.6. Vietnam's Geography
Chapter 28. South Vietnam's ancient civilizations -- Sa Huynh, Dong Son
28.1. Sa Huynh culture (10000 BC - 200 AD)
28.2. Dong Son (Dong Son) culture
28.3. Growth of Dong Son culture
28.4. China-Vietnam disputes over Dong Son cultures

Part VII. The millennium of Chinese rule (111 BC to 938 AD) -- Viets, Funan, Champa, Khmers
Chapter 29. North Vietnam: Confucian Viet culture, following conquest by China
29.1. Chinese invasion and conquest (111 BC)
29.2. Confucianism in Vietnam and role of women
29.3. Trung Sisters Rebellion (40-43 AD) and reconquest by China
29.4. The Sinicization of North Vietnam
29.5. Ly Bi overthrows Chinese rule, creates Van Xuan empire (544-603)
29.6. Chinese rule by China's Tang dynasty (618-906)
Chapter 30. Chinese rule ends with spectacular Battle of Bach Dang River (938)
30.1. Ngo Quyen defeats Chinese in the spectacular Battle of Bach Dang River (938)
30.2. Dinh Bo Linh's tributary mission to China (968)
Chapter 31. Far Southern Vietnam: Rise of Hinduized Funan culture, centered in Cambodia
31.1. Funan Culture and Oc-Eo port city
Chapter 32. Central Vietnam: Rise of Champa culture
32.1. Champa culture
32.2. Cham people today

Part VIII. Nine centuries of Vietnam independence -- 938 - 1862
Chapter 33. Reference list of Vietnamese dynasties after independence
Chapter 34. Vietnam villages
34.1. Vietnam's guilds and villages
34.2. Village organization
Chapter 35. Brief history of Laos
Chapter 36. Early Le Dynasty (980-1005)
36.1. Generational summary
36.2. Defeating another Chinese invasion
Chapter 37. The First Great Dynasty: The Later Ly Dynasty (1009–1225)
37.1. Generational summary
37.2. Development of agriculture in Red River Delta -- and southward move
37.3. Development of written law
37.4. Growth of Buddhism in Nam Viet
37.5. Buddhism in central and south Vietnam
37.6. Champa Kingdom conquest by Angkor Khmers (Cambodia) (1203-20)
37.7. Cultural differences: Nam Viet vs Champa
Chapter 38. The Second Great Dynasty -- The Tran Dynasty (1225-1400)
38.1. Generational summary
38.2. Mobilizing eunuchs and slaves - preparing for war
38.3. Sacking of Champa capital Vijaya (1252)
38.4. First Mongol War (1257)
38.5. The Tran vs the Mongols [1284-1287]
38.6. Tran Dynasty defeats the Mongols (1284, 1287)
38.7. Mongols face Vietnamese war elephants (1284)
38.8. Tran soldiers defeat Mongols in Battle of Bach Dang (1287)
38.9. Tran war with Champa (1312)
38.10. Buddhism vs Confucianism during the Tran dynasty
38.11. Growth of Confucianism to modern times
Chapter 39. Ho Dynasty (1400-1407) -- Vietnam's most hated dynasty
39.1. Ho general usurps the throne
39.2. China invades Vietnam in brutal period of governance
39.3. Ho Dynasty echoes through Vietnam's history
39.4. War with the Chinese (1417-1427)
Chapter 40. Later Le Dynasty Part 1: destruction of Champa Kingdom (1428-1527)
40.1. Generational summary
40.2. Destruction of Champa Kingdom (1471)
40.3. Southern expansion (nam-tien) and land settlement (don dien)
40.4. Aftermath of the destruction of Champa kingdom
40.5. Decline of the Le Dynasty (1497-1527)
Chapter 41. Later Le Dynasty Part 2: The warring warlords (1527-1787)
41.1. Generational summary
41.2. The Mac family and Nguyen family split Vietnam in two (1527-45)
41.3. Trinh family joins the struggle (1545-1592)
41.4. Arrival of the Europeans - 1600s
41.5. The inevitable war between Nguyen and Trinh begins (1620-1672)
Chapter 42. The cataclysmic Tay-Son Rebellion (1771-1790, defeated 1802)
42.1. Background to Tay-Son Rebellion
42.2. The Ho (Nguyen) brothers begin the Tay-Son rebellion
42.3. Marxist Socialism before Marx -- Tay-Son rebellion
42.4. Tay-Son rebels align themselves with Chinese pirates
42.5. Socialism in the 21st century -- Memories of the Tay-Son rebellion
Chapter 43. Nguyen Phuc Anh (Gia Long) launches a harsh new Nguyen Dynasty
43.1. List of kings of the Nguyen Dynasty
43.2. Generational summary
43.3. Nguyen Phuc Anh defeats the Tay-Son rebels (1776-1802)
43.4. Vietnam finally adopts the name Viet Nam
43.5. The Nguyen Dynasty (1802-1945)
43.6. Nguyen Dynasty and persecution of Christians

Part IX. The Treaty of Saigon and French colonization (1862-1954)
Chapter 44. Treaty of Saigon, June 1862
44.1. France completes conquest of French Indochina (1887)
Chapter 45. Conflicts during French colonization
45.1. Vietnam Villages during French colonization
45.2. Vietnam government after the Treaty of Saigon (1862-1954)
45.3. Truong Dinh -- anti-French guerrilla movement (1858-64)
45.4. Anti-Catholic violence
45.5. Vietnamese modernization movements opposing French colonialism
Chapter 46. Rise of Vietnam nationalism up to World War II
46.1. Phan Boi Chau and the Rise of Nationalism (1904)
46.2. Did Ho Chi Minh betray Phan Boi Chau?
46.3. Rise of Ho Chi Minh and fight for independence from the French
46.4. European migration to French Indochina until 1945

Part X. Understanding the context of America's 'Vietnam War'
Chapter 47. Summary of America's Vietnam War
Chapter 48. Major findings about America's Vietnam War
48.1. Disastrous decisions by President Kennedy
48.2. The question of insanity
48.3. The question of sophistry
48.4. Facts and events vs Context
48.5. Was the Vietnam War worth the cost?
Chapter 49. Major world events as context of Vietnam War
49.1. March of Communism
49.2. North Vietnam's toxic relationships with China and Soviet Russia
49.3. Vietcong insurgency in South Vietnam
49.4. Laos coup and the 'Ho Chi Minh Trail'
Chapter 50. Insanity and Greek Tragedy
50.1. Understanding Greek Tragedy
50.2. Insanity
50.3. Aeschylus and Prometheus
50.4. The relevance of Greek Tragedy
50.5. The Vietnam War and Greek Tragedy
50.6. Setting the scene in 1959-60 -- the seeds of future defeat
50.7. The main characters
Chapter 51. Generational issues
51.1. The Vietnam War and American generations
51.2. Public moods in Vietnam, France and America after WW II
51.3. Hannah Arendt -- 'the calm that settles after all hopes have died'
51.4. Communism on the march -- and the 'Iron Curtain'
51.5. The Truman Doctrine makes America Policeman of the World (1947)
51.6. Truman receives NSC-68 report calling for Soviet Communist 'containment' (April 14, 1950)
51.7. Communist North Korea invades South Korea (June 25, 1950)
51.8. President Eisenhower explains the Domino Theory (1954)
51.9. President Kennedy's 'ask not' inauguration speech (1961)
Chapter 52. From trauma in World War II to a Generation Gap in the 1960s
52.1. The traumatic World War II
52.2. Lessons learned: New laws and institutions after WW II
52.3. Definition of the 'Generation Gap'
52.4. The Summer of Love (1967)
52.5. America's generational Awakening era -- 1960s-1970s
52.6. Generation Gap resolution -- Awakening Climax
Chapter 53. Examples of generational Recovery and Awakening Eras
53.1. America after World War II (1945)
53.2. Iran after Great Islamic Revolution (1979)
53.3. Zimbabwe after war of independence (1980)
53.4. China after the Communist Revolution (1949)
53.5. American Civil War (1865)
53.6. America's Revolutionary War (1782)
53.7. Japan after the Meiji Restoration (1868)
53.8. Japan after World War II (1945)
53.9. The generational 'Democide Pattern'
Chapter 54. The political debate over America's 'Vietnam War'
54.1. The left-wing antiwar view of the Vietnam war
54.2. The Vietnamese view of the Vietnam war
54.3. America allies with Ho Chi Minh in World War II
Chapter 55. Overview of the Vietnam War

Part XI. French Indochina War (First Indochina War, Nov 1946 to Aug 1954)
Chapter 56. Beginnings of the war
Chapter 57. Vietminh strategy
Chapter 58. Battle of Dien Bien Phu

Part XII. Interwar period -- 1954-1959 -- Republic of Vietnam
Chapter 59. Disagreements between China and Vietnam over who gets the credit
Chapter 60. History of persecution of Catholics
Chapter 61. North-South migration after First Indochina war
Chapter 62. Land reform program
Chapter 63. Beginnings of American military involvement
Chapter 64. Le Duan replaces Ho Chi Minh as de facto North Vietnam leader
64.1. Legacy of Le Duan (1908-1986)
64.2. Rise of Le Duan
Chapter 65. North Vietnam ratifies Resolution 16, authorizing war with the South (May 1959)

Part XIII. Second Indochina War 1959-1975 (America's "Vietnam War")
Chapter 66. Conflicts between Washington and Saigon
66.1. Core issues - John Kennedy and William Averell Harriman
66.2. Kennedy's youth and inexperience
66.3. Two peoples, quite apart in culture, thrown together against a common enemy
66.4. Ngo Dinh Diem and South Vietnam's imperfect democracy
66.5. America's conflicting values and policies
66.6. America's conflicting policies in Vietnam under Eisenhower
66.7. Kennedy's disastrous international agreement on Laos
66.8. The Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba (April, 1961)
Chapter 67. Conflicting counterinsurgency (COIN) strategies
67.1. Summary of conflicting counterinsurgency (COIN) strategies
67.2. Counterinsurgency (COIN) military doctrine
67.3. Clear-hold-build counterinsurgency framework
Chapter 68. Antecedents of Vietnam's Strategic Hamlet program
68.1. Description of the resettlement strategy for COIN operations
68.2. Boer War (1899-1902) resettlement operations for counterinsurgency
68.3. The Malayan Emergency (1948-55) counterinsurgency (COIN) program
Chapter 69. Vietnam's Strategic Hamlet counterinsurgency (COIN) program
69.1. Mixed success of strategic hamlet program
Chapter 70. Military coup and assassination of Ngo Dinh Diem
70.1. Eruption of Buddhist-Catholic conflict (summer 1963)
70.2. Rise of antiwar activism and assassination of Diem (1963)
70.3. Summary: Kennedy's two acts of sabotage of the Vietnam War effort
70.4. Sabotage of the Strategic Hamlet program by Hanoi
Chapter 71. Why did the Strategic Hamlets program fail?
71.1. Ethnic and linguistic purity in Malaya and Vietnam
71.2. Ethnic and linguistic purity in Boer War
71.3. Counterinsurgency operations in Iraq War and Afghanistan War
71.4. Ethnic and linguistic purity issue in Afghanistan
Chapter 72. Lyndon Johnson's war (1964-1967)
72.1. Battle of Ia Drang (November 14-18, 1965)
72.2. Chaos in Saigon -- Buddhists vs Catholics
72.3. Was the war already lost in 1964?
72.4. Lyndon Johnson's 'limited war' escalation
72.5. Tet Offensive, January 1968
72.6. The My Lai Massacre (March 16, 1968)
72.7. Korean soldiers in Vietnam war
Chapter 73. Nguyen Van Thieu and the Second Republic of Vietnam (1967-1975)
73.1. Creation of the Second Republic (1967)
73.2. American policy mistakes in Vietnam
73.3. Problems facing Richard Nixon
73.4. Nixon's 'Vietnamization' policy
73.5. The Cambodia incursion
73.6. The Paris Peace Agreement - October 1972
73.7. The collapse of South Vietnam
73.8. Le Duan's victory speech (May 15, 1975)

Part XIV. Vietnam - Cambodia - China war (Third Indochina War, 1975-1989)
Chapter 74. Overview of the so-called 'Vietnam War'
Chapter 75. Richard Nixon's 'decent interval' policy
Chapter 76. North Vietnamese post-war massacres and boat people (1975-85)
Chapter 77. Pol Pot and the Cambodian 'Killing Fields' by the Khmer Rouge
77.1. Rise of Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia
77.2. Pol Pot's Killing Fields -- one of the worst genocides of the 20th century
77.3. War between Vietnamese and Khmer Rouge (supported by the Chinese Communists)
77.4. Cambodia invades Vietnam (1977)
77.5. Hanoi attacks the Chinese population in Vietnam (1978)
77.6. Collapse of Vietnam's economy (1978)
77.7. History of China and Russia wars and border conflicts
77.8. Vietnam invades Cambodia
77.9. China invades Vietnam (1979-89)
77.10. Le Duan dies and Vietnam opens its markets - Doi Moi (1986)

Part XV. References lists
Chapter 78. Reference list of names for Vietnam
Chapter 79. Reference list of Vietnam's dynasties
Chapter 80. Reference list of 54 Vietnamese Ethnic Groups
80.1. Eight categories of Vietnamese ethnic groups
80.2. Alphabetical list of Vietnam's 54 ethnic groups
Chapter 81. Reference list of China's dynasties

Part XVI. Histories of Vietnam's neighbors
Chapter 82. History of Philippines
82.1. China's history with the Philippines
82.2. Ancient history of the Philippines
82.3. Philippines Spanish colonial period (1521-1898)
82.4. Philippines under American control (1898-1946) and Japanese occupation (1941-45)
82.5. Modern generational history of the Philippines republic
Chapter 83. Brief generational history of Cambodia
Chapter 84. Brief generational history of Thailand
Chapter 85. Brief generational history of Myanmar (Burma)

Part XVII. The End
Chapter 86. About John J. Xenakis
86.1. Acknowledgments

Part XVIII. Footnotes / References





KEYS: Generational Dynamics, Vietnam, Buddhism, Vietnam War,
India, Hinduism, Cambodia, Laos, China,
Confucianism, Daoism, France, French Indochina,
Vietnam Villages, Doi Moi, Le Duan, Ho Chi Minh,
Boer War, Malaya Emergency, Strategic Hamlets,
John Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon

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RE: Generational Dynamics World View - by John J. Xenakis - 03-22-2021, 09:39 PM
RE: Generational Dynamics World View - by galaxy - 08-19-2021, 03:03 AM
RE: Generational Dynamics World View - by galaxy - 08-21-2021, 01:41 PM
RE: Generational Dynamics World View - by galaxy - 02-27-2022, 06:06 PM
RE: Generational Dynamics World View - by galaxy - 02-27-2022, 10:42 PM
RE: Generational Dynamics World View - by galaxy - 02-28-2022, 12:26 AM
RE: Generational Dynamics World View - by galaxy - 02-28-2022, 04:08 PM

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