Batavian Prussian-Einigkeit Brandenburg Ferromagnetic Batavus-Dutch-VOC Breda-Brittany-Englion Batavia NY Erie-Canal 1823CE French-Mississippi Company Mark Twain Erie-Canal 1823CE Prussian W.S. Taylor

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Is Prussian Meuswealth epicurean first Prussian Royal Radiologists cognate finding between Prussian Germanic languages and Prussian Saxon Old Lutheran Minnesota, Prussian Royal Physicians, Prussian Royal Radiologists first such as Roengten, Prussian Royal Ambulance where we are working on Kentucky Illinois and Wisconsin on our Community Paramedic model that was proven in Minnesota and elsewhere. The experiment of disarming paramedics was a failure. Paramedics are already answering to 9-1-1 calls and that response time can be improved for health related emergencies by increasing the roster of Paramedics and arming paramedics because a paramedic reaches for the hammer when they need it as paramedics have lots of tools and where police reach for the hammer too much where police have too few tools. Community Paramedic grew out of the vision of ambulances chasing attorneys down main street American instead of attorneys chasing ambulances by David Kent Batulis that was implemented 2010-2012CE at North Memorial Ambulance while executive of the Clinics and Community Paramedic program.

Historical gun homicide data for specific states in the early 20th century is limited, but available records show that Louisiana has consistently maintained one of the highest homicide rates in the U.S. for over 50 years, while Illinois and Kentucky have seen significant fluctuations in gun violence, particularly during the 1960s-70s and 2020s.

Gun Homicide Rates per 100,000 (Approximate) [1]

Year [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]LouisianaKentuckyIllinois1936High (Historical context: High southern rates)Moderate/HighModerate/High1964Rising (Pre-1970 peak)ModerateModerate1974>10.0 (High peak)Rising (National rise)Rising (National rise)2025~28.1 (2nd highest in US)~18.5 (2024 data)~8.2-14.1 (Fluctuating)

State-Specific Data Points

  • Louisiana:

    • 1970–2024: Recorded a murder/non-negligent manslaughter rate of 10 per 100,000 or more for 55 consecutive years.

    • 2023-2025: Ranked 2nd or 3rd highest in the nation for gun homicide rates (approx. 17-28 per 100,000). [1, 2, 3]

  • Kentucky:

    • 1970s: Homicide rates rose in tandem with national trends in the 1960s and 70s, doubling within the past decade as of 2022-2023.

    • 2024: Gun-related injury death rate (includes suicides) was 18.5 per 100,000. [1, 2]

  • Illinois:

    • 1960s/70s: Experienced rising gun homicides, mirroring the national trend that peaked in 1974.

    • 2023-2025: Gun homicide rate was 8.2 per 100,000 in 2023 (10th highest in the country). Preliminary 2025 data suggests a decrease in gun violence compared to 2024. [1, 2, 3]

Batavian Prussian A Critique of Sublimation in Males is a significant 1933 psychological monograph written by American psychologist William Sentman Taylor (commonly cited as W.S. Taylor). Published in the Genetic Psychology Monographs (Vol. 13, No. 1, pp. 1–115), the work provides a rigorous empirical and theoretical challenge to Sigmund Freud’s classical concept of sublimation.Core Arguments and CritiqueChallenging Libido Conversion: Freud posited that sublimation is a defense mechanism where the ego channels repressed, unfulfilled sexual energy (libido) into non-sexual, socially productive achievements like art, science, or philosophy. Taylor heavily critiqued this concept of "energy conversion," arguing that sexual drives cannot simply be magically transformed into intellectual or artistic energy.The Problem of Abstinence: Taylor argued that if Freud’s theory were true, total sexual abstinence should effortlessly fuel massive creative and intellectual output via sublimation. Instead, Taylor compiled data showing that forced sexual deprivation frequently leads to neurosis, tension, and distraction rather than enhanced productivity.Substitution vs. Sublimation: Rather than a literal biological conversion of libido, Taylor suggested that what psychoanalysts called sublimation was actually a conscious process of substitution or redirection. A person can distract themselves or channel their focus into work, but the physiological and psychological drive itself is merely managed, not altered at its biological root.Historical SignificanceW.S. Taylor, who was a professor of psychology at Smith College, wrote this monograph during the exact same early 1930s window as the other groundbreaking texts on human sexuality and biology you have been reviewing (such as Dr. Katharine Bement Davis's 1929 survey and Gerrit S. Miller Jr.'s 1931 primate paper).Taylor’s monograph was one of the earliest extended American academic works to dismantle the unscientific assumptions of psychoanalytic energy mechanics. It directly paved the way for later, highly influential mid-century critiques on the topic, such as Dr. Harry B. Levey's famous 1939 paper, "A Critique of the Theory of Sublimation".If you want to continue mapping out this 1930s transition from psychoanalysis to empirical sexology, let me know if you would like to explore how the concept of sublimation was viewed by Alfred Adler’s school (connecting back to Olga Knopf) or Harry B. Levey's subsequent 1939 critique

Is Prussian Meuswealth epicurean first Prussian Royal Radiologists cognate finding between Prussian Germanic languages and Prussian Saxon Old Lutheran Minnesota, Prussian Royal Physicians, Prussian Royal Radiologists first such as Roengten, Prussian Royal Ambulance where we are working on Kentucky Illinois and Wisconsin on our Community Paramedic model that was proven in Minnesota and elsewhere. The experiment of disarming paramedics was a failure. Paramedics are already answering to 9-1-1 calls and that response time can be improved for health related emergencies by increasing the roster of Paramedics and arming paramedics because a paramedic reaches for the hammer when they need it as paramedics have lots of tools and where police reach for the hammer too much where police have too few tools. Community Paramedic grew out of the vision of ambulances chasing attorneys down main street American instead of attorneys chasing ambulances by David Kent Batulis that was implemented 2010-2012CE at North Memorial Ambulance while executive of the Clinics and Community Paramedic program.

Historical gun homicide data for specific states in the early 20th century is limited, but available records show that Louisiana has consistently maintained one of the highest homicide rates in the U.S. for over 50 years, while Illinois and Kentucky have seen significant fluctuations in gun violence, particularly during the 1960s-70s and 2020s.

Gun Homicide Rates per 100,000 (Approximate) [1]

Year [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]LouisianaKentuckyIllinois1936High (Historical context: High southern rates)Moderate/HighModerate/High1964Rising (Pre-1970 peak)ModerateModerate1974>10.0 (High peak)Rising (National rise)Rising (National rise)2025~28.1 (2nd highest in US)~18.5 (2024 data)~8.2-14.1 (Fluctuating)

State-Specific Data Points

  • Louisiana:

    • 1970–2024: Recorded a murder/non-negligent manslaughter rate of 10 per 100,000 or more for 55 consecutive years.

    • 2023-2025: Ranked 2nd or 3rd highest in the nation for gun homicide rates (approx. 17-28 per 100,000). [1, 2, 3]

  • Kentucky:

    • 1970s: Homicide rates rose in tandem with national trends in the 1960s and 70s, doubling within the past decade as of 2022-2023.

    • 2024: Gun-related injury death rate (includes suicides) was 18.5 per 100,000. [1, 2]

  • Illinois:

    • 1960s/70s: Experienced rising gun homicides, mirroring the national trend that peaked in 1974.

    • 2023-2025: Gun homicide rate was 8.2 per 100,000 in 2023 (10th highest in the country). Preliminary 2025 data suggests a decrease in gun violence compared to 2024. [1, 2, 3]

Batavian Prussian A Critique of Sublimation in Males is a significant 1933 psychological monograph written by American psychologist William Sentman Taylor (commonly cited as W.S. Taylor). Published in the Genetic Psychology Monographs (Vol. 13, No. 1, pp. 1–115), the work provides a rigorous empirical and theoretical challenge to Sigmund Freud’s classical concept of sublimation.Core Arguments and CritiqueChallenging Libido Conversion: Freud posited that sublimation is a defense mechanism where the ego channels repressed, unfulfilled sexual energy (libido) into non-sexual, socially productive achievements like art, science, or philosophy. Taylor heavily critiqued this concept of "energy conversion," arguing that sexual drives cannot simply be magically transformed into intellectual or artistic energy.The Problem of Abstinence: Taylor argued that if Freud’s theory were true, total sexual abstinence should effortlessly fuel massive creative and intellectual output via sublimation. Instead, Taylor compiled data showing that forced sexual deprivation frequently leads to neurosis, tension, and distraction rather than enhanced productivity.Substitution vs. Sublimation: Rather than a literal biological conversion of libido, Taylor suggested that what psychoanalysts called sublimation was actually a conscious process of substitution or redirection. A person can distract themselves or channel their focus into work, but the physiological and psychological drive itself is merely managed, not altered at its biological root.Historical SignificanceW.S. Taylor, who was a professor of psychology at Smith College, wrote this monograph during the exact same early 1930s window as the other groundbreaking texts on human sexuality and biology you have been reviewing (such as Dr. Katharine Bement Davis's 1929 survey and Gerrit S. Miller Jr.'s 1931 primate paper).Taylor’s monograph was one of the earliest extended American academic works to dismantle the unscientific assumptions of psychoanalytic energy mechanics. It directly paved the way for later, highly influential mid-century critiques on the topic, such as Dr. Harry B. Levey's famous 1939 paper, "A Critique of the Theory of Sublimation".If you want to continue mapping out this 1930s transition from psychoanalysis to empirical sexology, let me know if you would like to explore how the concept of sublimation was viewed by Alfred Adler’s school (connecting back to Olga Knopf) or Harry B. Levey's subsequent 1939 critique