Over the years I
have gone back and forth on the issue of whether there are “rules” that apply to all of us or not. Or are there people
for whom the rules do not apply, a privileged elite for whom special accommodation is made?
It seems to me that
every time I come across a rule that is supposedly applied
evenhandedly, for example, taxes, that no such thing is true. That
in fact, there are one set of taxes for the rich, one for the
remnants of the middle class and one for the poor with most of the tax burden falling on the middle and lower classes. Or consider the
laws against stealing. A poor man steals $500 from a 7-11 and goes
to jail. The mortgage industry destroys the world economy, is gifted
2.5 trillion dollars by our government, and the only people who go to jail are the very poorest who defaulted on their pathetic mortgage and are imprisoned in debtors prison in Michigan while the rich go free and laugh.
But I thought that
at least in the area of submarines, submarines, for goodness
sake, I thought that our country had some integrity. But sadly I was
mistaken.
As a student of the
cold war and as a strong believer in the role of vast, expensive,
over-complicated technological solutions to impose our will on the
world and bring the benefits of our culture to other nations whether they want
it or not, I am of course a supporter and student of submarines.
And who could not
be? The dream of traveling under the water to explore the unknown
lands to be found there, filled with strange and wonderful creatures
which we can now eat and drive extinct, the ability to visit
mysterious underwater phenomena as described by our science fiction
authors, to sponsor cooperation between nations by tapping their most
secret communication cables, all of these are compelling
justifications of our devotion to submarines.
Surely as time passes, more and more will be revealed about the activities of our submarines during the Cold War.
For years I had been told that it was impossible to take a tour of one of our nation's active duty nuclear powered submarines. Since one would not want to get close to a nuclear missile submarine, this would be one of the Los Angeles Class (three different types), Seawolf or Virginia class attack submarines. Tours of every other class of ship of the US Navy were possible, but not nuclear submarines, I was told, on one occasion by a former captain of an attack submarine.
Surely as time passes, more and more will be revealed about the activities of our submarines during the Cold War.
Layout of Japanese WW2 Mini Submarine
For years I had been told that it was impossible to take a tour of one of our nation's active duty nuclear powered submarines. Since one would not want to get close to a nuclear missile submarine, this would be one of the Los Angeles Class (three different types), Seawolf or Virginia class attack submarines. Tours of every other class of ship of the US Navy were possible, but not nuclear submarines, I was told, on one occasion by a former captain of an attack submarine.
So I was told.
Its all bullshit.
The rules are for
the little people and do not apply to those who secretly run things. Such as a limited
number of Stanford Alumni.
See the evidence for
yourself, below.
This damning document can be found at the following url:.
http://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/events/details?event_id=8594
For those of you not
up on your subs, the “Los Angeles” class is the class portrayed
in the movie Hunt for Red October (1990)
I plan to be calling
the San Diego Naval Station and asking for my tour soon and I
encourage all of you to do the same. Lets smash this egregious elitism and restore the right to visit nuclear submarines to all our people.
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Notes
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Notes
Chief of Naval Operations Description of the Fast Attack Submarine
http://www.navy.mil/navydata/cno/n87/today/ssn.html
Hunt for Red October (1990) on IMDB
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