First animated film
that I have seen in years that I loved. A story of very appealing characters drawn from Greek mythology in daily life.
Monday, September 7, 2015
Enola Gay Smithsonian Exhibit Disaster Part 2
In
this post, I review the book that historians wrote about the issues
involved in the disaster of the Enola Gay exhibition at the
Smithsonian Air & Space Museum, a disaster that was very public
and very embarrassing for the historians involved. You can find
this book here. You can read a synopsis I wrote about some of the issues here.
This post is likely to be only interesting to those of you who are interested in museums, or historiography, or possibly how the history of the cold war is interpreted for the public. The rest of you should skip this and move on to more entertaining posts.
This post is likely to be only interesting to those of you who are interested in museums, or historiography, or possibly how the history of the cold war is interpreted for the public. The rest of you should skip this and move on to more entertaining posts.
There
are four questions I had in mind when I read this book. The first was
whether the accusations that veterans made about the historians
during this encounter were in any way validated by this book. The
second was whether the historians were disingenuous in how they
presented the issues here. The third was about whether the historians
gave any serious credence to what people who had been involved in the
event told them. And the fourth was whether the historians involved
should have realized that they were about to cause a major
controversy and whether they took reasonable steps to prevent it.
1.
During and after the Enola Gay exhibit controversy, which you
had to be deaf not to have heard about at the time it occurred, two
accusations were made by the veteran associations about the
historians writing the exhibit. The first was that the historians
were adamant that they were going to present revisionist conclusions
about this event whatever the veterans thought and the second was
that the historians involved were incredibly, unbelievably arrogant.
After reading this book from the historians point of view, I can
tell you that without doubt the historians involved were adamant that
they were going to present their revisionist point of view and that
furthermore as far as they were concerned that was the only
legitimate point of view, period. And the second impression I got,
dripping from every page, was exactly how superior the historians
thought they were to anyone else involved. Exactly like the veterans said. No
misunderstanding there, whatsoever.
2.
One of the things I look for in reading arguments from one side or
another of a debate, is how well they present issues that I happen to
know something about. If, let us say, there are 20 issues discussed
and it just so happens that I know very well what is involved in two
of them, I look with special interest at those two. It lets me judge
to what extent those other 18 issues are presented in good faith.
This is especially useful in the situation where one side admits
honestly to something that does not help their argument, but they do
so anyway in the interests of fairness. This may be a lot to ask,
but I do it anyway.
At
one point, the argument is made that the B-29 was an uninteresting
airplane technically or aeronautically (is that a word?) and in and of itself had no
particular justification for being in the Air & Space Museum.
They even trot out an Air Force Officer to make that comment and then
leave it there in the book as being decided. The B-29 was
uninteresting.
This
is an astonishing misrepresentation of the facts. It is so
outrageous as to call into doubt anything else the authors of the
book say. The B-29 was not only an incredible technological
achievement, it was an achievement that had to be reached in order
for the Army Air Corps to make their argument that they deserved to
be a separate service and this is all intertwined with the history of
aviation and the theory of strategic bombing. The B-29 was the
technology that was going to prove this principle and it was the
second most expensive R&D project of the war. In other words, it was not only technologically interesting, it was of tremendous importance to the history of how we fought the war and how we planned the future of aviation. Without doubt, this plane and the effort to create it, deserves a place in the history of aviation. The B-29 deserves to be at the Air
& Space Museum.
It makes me wonder just who they thought was going to read this book that they would make such an outrageous misstatement. But this behavior fits the model that says that the historians of this period live in their own world and believe what they want to believe.
It makes me wonder just who they thought was going to read this book that they would make such an outrageous misstatement. But this behavior fits the model that says that the historians of this period live in their own world and believe what they want to believe.
Years after this disaster, the Smithsonian restored the Enola Gay, presumably over their dead body, and exhibited it at their secondary location outside Washington. They still have not told the amazing story of the 509th Composite Group to the best of my knowledge.
The
second issue is a bit more subtle but without doubt demonstrates bad
faith on the part of the historians. At one point, they talk about
how much money was spent to restore the Enola Gay with the
implication of “there, are you happy now” referring to, in their
opinion, the childish wishes of the veterans. What the book fails
to tell you, but I happened to know, is that the Enola Gay had
been treated like garbage by the Smithsonian, and left to rot and
rust for decades in spite of the complaints of the veterans and the Air Force. The
reason it cost so much to restore was because the Smithsonian had
treated this artifact with contempt. But this was not mentioned.
In
other words, the historians who wrote this book were completely ok
with misrepresenting the facts to try and win their argument. Lying
was not a problem for them. This is a bad way to get credibility, it
seems to me.
3.
If there is one thing that this book makes clear, the historians involved did not give a fuck what the veterans thought. As far as the historians were
concerned, the veterans were unintelligent, ignorant children relative
to a brilliant academic historian. They were given no credible voice
in the dialog until the veterans and the Air Force forced the issue..
4.
Should the historians have realized they were walking into a touchy
situation and somehow avoided it? I think that they did know that
what they were saying was controversial but they thought they would
come out OK for one very good reason. They assumed that everyone
understood going in that there was one truth, and only one truth.
And that truth is what the historians said it was. Period. There
could be no other truth, no other truth had any credibility. The
veterans were just children, immature children who did not want to
admit, naturally, that they had murdered all those innocent Japanese for no reason. That was the only conclusion, a historian conclusion,
and that was that.
So,
to ask the question, were the historians involved in this disaster
arrogant?
No,
not arrogant. Not merely arrogant. Unbelievably arrogant.
The
book was a fabulous eye opener for me. It brought doubt on the
credibility of the academic field of history and of historians, at
least historians of the modern period. In that sense, the book was
very successful beyond its goals. It not only explained the disaster
of the Smithsonian Enola Gay exhibit, it lowered the credibility of
the field of academic history in general.
Good
work, guys.
Sunday, September 6, 2015
Enola Gay Smithsonian Exhibit Disaster Part 1
draft being rewritten
I can not imagine why anyone would care what. I think about anything related to the issues discussed in this post, unless they had some interest in the "popular understanding of history by a citizen" or something of that nature. I recommend you skip this post unless you happen to be specifically interested in the issues discussed here.
I read a book about the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum Enola Gay exhibit, a disaster of monumental scale, a nuclear explosion if you will, in which the veterans, the Air Force, the US Congress compelled the Smithsonian to back off from an exhibit which they were far along in creating. The book is called "History Wars" and it presents the historians point of view on the subject and the larger issues of the interpretation of history.
I expected the book to be a balanced discussion of the issues that also showed that the situation had spun out of control and that the Smithsonian certainly was not planning to do an exhibit that would have presented the veterans or this country guilty of all sorts of nasty things. But in fact the book did not do that, the book instead presented the very clear point of view that there was one way to interpret history, it was the historians way, and any other opinion was wrong.
So I wanted to write about this book and the exhibit but to do so I felt I had to explain something about the situation that the book describes and to do that is a Vietnam-like morass of complicated issues. Issues that do not lend themselves to simple sound bites.
And so this post is the attempt to get a basic synopsis of the issues behind the incident. I am sorry. Feel free to ignore it and don't think worse of me because of it. I don't know whether we should have dropped the bomb on Hiroshima or what would have happened if we had invaded the home islands of Japan, or whether the Japanese would have surrendered immediately anyway, or any of dozens of other fascinating and unanswerable questions. I know that the dropping of the bomb was not a casual decision and I know what the veterans thought about what the sudden ending of the war meant to them and their lives because they were very clear about that topic both at the time and now.
So forgive me, here is the background, and then there will be post on what my impression of the historian side of the story.
The book discussed here can be found on Amazon.com at "History Wars"
I read a book about the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum Enola Gay exhibit, a disaster of monumental scale, a nuclear explosion if you will, in which the veterans, the Air Force, the US Congress compelled the Smithsonian to back off from an exhibit which they were far along in creating. The book is called "History Wars" and it presents the historians point of view on the subject and the larger issues of the interpretation of history.
I expected the book to be a balanced discussion of the issues that also showed that the situation had spun out of control and that the Smithsonian certainly was not planning to do an exhibit that would have presented the veterans or this country guilty of all sorts of nasty things. But in fact the book did not do that, the book instead presented the very clear point of view that there was one way to interpret history, it was the historians way, and any other opinion was wrong.
So I wanted to write about this book and the exhibit but to do so I felt I had to explain something about the situation that the book describes and to do that is a Vietnam-like morass of complicated issues. Issues that do not lend themselves to simple sound bites.
And so this post is the attempt to get a basic synopsis of the issues behind the incident. I am sorry. Feel free to ignore it and don't think worse of me because of it. I don't know whether we should have dropped the bomb on Hiroshima or what would have happened if we had invaded the home islands of Japan, or whether the Japanese would have surrendered immediately anyway, or any of dozens of other fascinating and unanswerable questions. I know that the dropping of the bomb was not a casual decision and I know what the veterans thought about what the sudden ending of the war meant to them and their lives because they were very clear about that topic both at the time and now.
So forgive me, here is the background, and then there will be post on what my impression of the historian side of the story.
The book discussed here can be found on Amazon.com at "History Wars"
To
recap, the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum planned an exhibit
about the mission on August 6, 1945 to drop the atomic bomb on
Hiroshima. The centerpiece of that exhibit would be the Enola Gay,
the highly modified B-29 that actually dropped the bomb (there were 7
B-29s on that mission that day, but the Enola Gay carried the bomb
itself). It might sound straightforward but it was anything but straightforward and
here are some of the reasons.
1.
The Smithsonian had the Enola Gay for decades but had refused to
exhibit it. It was literally left out to rot in the rain and snow
getting progressively more decrepit and rusted. Their actions were
perceived for what they were, contempt for the history of this
country, contempt for the veterans. The Air Force begged for the
Smithsonian to give this historic plane to them so that they could
restore it and show it in one of their museums, but the Smithsonian
refused. The plane stayed in the rain and snow and rotted. This did not exactly endear the Smithsonian to the Air Force or the veterans.
2.
The dropping of the atomic bomb was an unusually specific event that
could be said to end one era and begin another. Usually these
transitions are more amorphous and take place over years or decades. But
because the atomic bomb either was apparently the
immediate cause of the end of WW 2 and the beginning of the cold war
and the nuclear age, it presented many difficult historical problems
that any exhibit either had to address or ignore, but a decision had
to be made about them and no decision could be a decision. Realize also that accomplishment of dropping that bomb was the culmination of at least three different important efforts that we, the United States, took during that war. Most people know of the Manhattan Project, but the creation of the B-29 and the story of the unit that dropped the bomb was no where near as well known.
3.
There are very strong differences of opinion about the value of
dropping the atomic bomb and its role in ending the war in the
Pacific. But there was no doubt in the minds of anyone in the US
armed services in the Pacific that it had ended the war and that it
had saved their lives by doing so. But many Americans who certainly know we dropped the bomb that day are not as aware of why the veterans thought it had saved their lives. (3)
4. The people at the Smithsonian Air & Space Museum determined that their exhibit about the Enola Gay and the dropping of the bomb was going to be a "balanced exhibit", in their words, that talked about many different points of view about the event. From the veteran point of view, this meant that they would be portrayed as heartless killers of children who had dropped a bomb for no good reason. . If America
had not had to drop the bomb and if it was an immoral act then
arguably America could be accused of committing a war crime in doing
so and this was obvious to the veterans who were not amused by this.
5.
It should be remembered that this was no mere article in a magazine
somewhere, this was the premiere United States aviation museum
passing judgment on the morality of dropping the bomb on the occasion
of the 50th anniversary of the event and the end of WW 2.
Before
I go further in describing the controversy around the exhibit I want
to digress for just a moment on the role of the bomb in causing Japan
to surrender and whether Japan knew it was defeated and was planning
to surrender anyway. Both of these issues are fabulously
complex and controversial. Most of all it requires the historian, professional or otherwise, to put themselves into the position of what was known at the time vs what was known later. And to understand things outside the experience of most normal people (like what is involved in invading the home islands of Japan and what it would mean to delay such an invasion to let things evolve).
(2)
6.
But drop the bomb we did, and shortly thereafter began a firestorm of
controversy about whether the bomb needed to be dropped to end the
war. 50 years later, the Smithsonian wrote a draft of the planned
exhibit, and that exhibit was leaked both to the Air Force and to
various veteran groups. Of course it should have been leaked, it
should have been sent for review by those groups. Surely the
Smithsonian did not think they could just surprise people with the
exhibit and their interpretation of the event?
7.
The resultant explosion was everything that could be desired and more
so. The veterans went nuclear, so to speak, and called for the
Smithsonian's blood. The Smithsonian retaliated by ripping the
wings off the Enola Gay and exhibiting it without an exhibition. No
interpretation or story at all. It just hangs wingless in the
Smithsonian (it has since been moved to the new gallery outside Washington and had its parts restored). The head of the Smithsonian and a few specific
historians returned to academia. The veterans got nothing, the
historians got nothing, the Smithsonian had completely dropped the ball.
The Enola Gay without its wings, with one propeller on the wall, and no discussion of what happened
It
was an unmitigated disaster for the Smithsonian as they had failed,
utterly failed, to represent in any reasonable way the event, the
technology, the end of the war, the story of the dropping of the
bomb, anything.
A
total failure.
But it wasn't over yet.
But it wasn't over yet.
End
of part 1.
_____________________________________________
1.
The other two are on the origins and legality of the American Civil
War and a post on writing the genre of prediction with special
reference to lessons learned from Nostradamus, a very misunderstood
writer of fiction.
2.
There are many, many controversies. A partial list includes: (a)
that we were about one month away from the invasion of Japan and we
knew this was going to be very bloody (b) that Japan knew we were
very close to invading and had every intention of fighting and had
worked with initiative to prepare and had done a very competent job
of that given their situation at the time, (c) that the bombing of
the Japanese cities had caused vast destruction and misery to all
sectors of Japanese society and yet had not apparently destroyed
their determination to fight and there is no doubt that situation
caused many Americans in leadership positions to wonder what exactly
was going to be necessary to cause Japan to surrender, (d) that Japan
leadership knew they had lost the war but hoped to negotiate an end
to the war that allowed them to keep their empire in Korea and
Manchuria, although the extent that this is true is certainly
debatable, (e) that the American people wanted this war over now, (f)
that the USSR having completed the war in Europe was now moving to
assist us in the far east in Manchuria and people were sensitive to
the role that Stalin and the USSR would play in the post-war world,
and some historians consider it immoral for us to consider this issue
in the decision to hurry the end of the war by dropping the bomb, (g)
and last but not least, unlike Germany, the Japanese armies were
undefeated in the field in China and Korea and did not see a terribly
pressing need to surrender all that they had been fighting for.
Yes, the home islands were suffering, yes in fact they were all
suffering, but from their point of view they were far from defeated.
3.
It should be no surprise that the average American does not know
their own history on this matter, but it is odd that the historians
do not. There are those who claim that this is because historians
are ignorant of the fundamental issues that they study and there is
quite a bit to support that argument. At the time the bomb was
dropped, we were in a terrific struggle with the Japanese and people
were dying by the scores every day, both Americans and Japanese. We
never had a defense against the suicide attacks on ships. They never
had a defense against our incendiary bombing of Japan or the
unrestricted submarine war on their merchant shipping.
By
far more Japanese were dying than Americans, but that was about to
change because we were literally within eight weeks of an invasion of the
Japanese home islands that would probably make the invasion of Normandy look peaceful in
comparison. Projected casualties varied wildly depending
on who did the predictions. When Truman took office after Roosevelt, probably his single most important issue to address was how to bring the war to a successful conclusion with a minimum of casualties. What you, the non professional, need to
understand is that for an invasion of this scope 8 weeks is almost no time at all,
its not even a weekend. You should think of it as 15 minutes before
midnight. It means that all the ships, planes, munitions, etc are
built and in place, and all the men are trained and in position (not quite, but almost, I exaggerate here a little). It
means that the hospital ships are built, and the
doctors and nurses trained, and most of the medical supplies are ready to go, or nearly so.
When
the bomb was dropped and the war suddenly and unexpectedly ended,
there were several million Americans in uniform getting ready to
storm the beaches and support that activity. These people to the
last person, as far as I can tell from reading mostly secondary sources and a few primary ones, believed that the dropping of the atomic bomb saved their
lives because it made it unnecessary to invade the Japanese home islands. For those who believe that the war was over, and that Japanese knew they had lost, you are invited to learn about the invasion of Okinawa and what that entailed.
But since we did not actually invade Japan, the number of casualties is of course not known, and many people who have studied the issue (but who were not there) have a different opinion of what would have happened had we not dropped the bomb.
But since we did not actually invade Japan, the number of casualties is of course not known, and many people who have studied the issue (but who were not there) have a different opinion of what would have happened had we not dropped the bomb.
Friday, September 4, 2015
FOIA FBI Background Check on Anna Rosenberg
In recent years
there has been a variety of issues that involve security background
checks and the questions people have about what information is kept
on them. But the examples used of government files are not
representative because they are usually of people who are very
involved in a variety of non-trivial, non-subtle and controversial
areas.
A classic example of
that in today's news is the FOIA request by Laura Poitras who has been
detained by Homeland Security whenever she has entered or left the
country and received various “no fly” judgments on attempting to
board an aircraft. I am sure that her file is quite interesting and
I am also sure that when we see it, it will be the kind of unusual or
controversial file that I am referring to above. Why? Because, as
Ms. Poitras knows very well, she is under suspicion for and is
certainly a collaborator in what is probably the single most damaging
and extraordinary intelligence disaster in the history of this
country, possibly any country. So of course she is being
investigated, and of course the file will contain intelligence
information as well as information that is part of various criminal
investigations that have not yet completed (and for which charges
have not (yet) been filed).
But what does a
normal file look like, one that is of a serious and senior
professional who has worked for the government, worked for private
industry and knows many people, some of whom are or were presidents
of the United States, and some of whom were certainly controversial
in one way or another, in this case because they were heavily
involved in the labor movement of the 1930s.
I happened to come
across an online version of the FBI background check file on Anna
Rosenberg who was a labor relations consultant before and after WW 2. She was attacked by the House UnAmerican Activities Committee during
the McCarthy period when she was nominated for a government post. She served on a variety of government
committees that involved labor relations particularly as it involved
the war effort. She worked directly for Pres. Roosevelt at various
times.
I think that her FBI
file is well worth glancing act to see what is involved, the kinds of
questions they asked, the things they noted that caused them concern,
etc.
True, this is about
a person from another era, a post WW 2 era, but I suspect it has
things in common with similar activities today (e.g. extended
background checks on people nominated for government service or who
require a security clearance). The Internet makes this process
easier, but by no means does it do all the work that needs to
be done.
So if you are
interested in such things, take a fast look at this. It can be found
at
Thursday, September 3, 2015
Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria by Dennis
draft, being rewritten
In a continuing series on "materials to use to procrastinate" we have the work by George Dennis who has written about the Etruscan cities and cemeteries of Etruria, ancient Etrusca, in what we now call Italy.
Its a combination archaeological guide and travel guide and filled with helpful tidbits of where to stay and who to ask to guide you around, referring to people and lodges long dead or out of business a century ago.
This is in the period when Italy was still filled with unlooted tombs, when you could walk into an ancient tomb and still find helmets, spears, urns, vases, and beautiful paintings some of which are sketched and included as part of this narrative.
Anyone interested in the archaeology of the West should read this fabulous travel guide.
The poverty of the people of Italy at the time is also made clear.
I was left with a profound desire to go and visit. Would a virtual tour of the places cited in this document as they are today be of any interest, I wonder.
Find this document on the internet, a bold new paradigm, here.
Its a combination archaeological guide and travel guide and filled with helpful tidbits of where to stay and who to ask to guide you around, referring to people and lodges long dead or out of business a century ago.
This is in the period when Italy was still filled with unlooted tombs, when you could walk into an ancient tomb and still find helmets, spears, urns, vases, and beautiful paintings some of which are sketched and included as part of this narrative.
Anyone interested in the archaeology of the West should read this fabulous travel guide.
The poverty of the people of Italy at the time is also made clear.
I was left with a profound desire to go and visit. Would a virtual tour of the places cited in this document as they are today be of any interest, I wonder.
Find this document on the internet, a bold new paradigm, here.
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
A Blog is not a Career and Other Notes
This is a
continuation of the ongoing series of what has been learned from
writing this blog in the hope that it may be of value to others who
are thinking of, or are actively writing, a blog. Previous posts can
be found by clicking on the tag admin.
Some of these comments have been made before. It just means that I still think they are true.
The blog seems to
have an audience, or rather audiences, who are interested in some but
not all of the various topics I write about.
There is a direct
and positive relationship between posts and traffic. There is a
direct and positive relationship between the amount of traffic and
the effort made on posts, up to a point.
But even trivial
posts can be better than no posts at all for generating audience. It
seems to be a positive reinforcement phenomenon which is not a
surprise.
The metrics
generated by www.blogspot.com are sufficient to give direction on what people
are reading, and when, and so forth.
The nuisance traffic
seems to be less.
The time to write a
post does not get less as time goes by. An interesting post still
takes time. Yes, on days when I am more focused and know what I want
to write I can do so quickly and on days when I am less sure what the
topic is or need to switch topics, it can take more time.
The blog is not in
and of itself a career.
Like any other
long-term project, certain goals and themes get lost and require
serious effort to achieve.
In particular,
certain themes which are (hopefully) the basis of a book (whatever a
book may be these days) need more traction.
Certain themes have
made sufficient progress on the blog, but not in real life. In other
words, writing much more about a topic would not be as useful as
taking other actions to help make those things happen.
The editorial
function for the blog (in other words, acting as my own editor) has
always been an issue as it is for most blogs. The most obvious way
this manifests itself are (a) posts that never see the light of day
but which I spend a lot of time on, then choose not to publish and
(b) posts that are determined to be too negative and whiny and are,
after a few days or weeks, eliminated.
The goal of the
editorial is to make the blog more useful, productive and readable in
the long run. In the short run, that means eliminating some posts
that are honest but digressive.
It is the long term
issues of traction on major themes, and the discipline of
self-editorial, that seem to be the most important right now.
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
The Search for Nazi Gold and Computer Animation
On
the occasion of a very disappointing Siggraph for those of us
struggling to make a living with computer animation and failing, as
so many do, several colleagues have suggested the idea that searching
for Nazi gold could be a viable career alternative.
Of
course, they are responding to the recent events in Europe where two
different stories about Nazi gold have been in the press. In one
case, a young woman found a mysterious ingot of gold at the bottom of
a shallow lake in the German alps with its identifying marks
scratched off. And in the other, two people in Poland claim to know
the location of a train that was allegedly hidden by the Nazis in a
labyrinth of railroad tunnels at the end of World War 2.
At
first glance, this activity might seem a promising way to make a
living, at least in comparison with the disaster of computer
animation, but I think when we review all the facts it will become
clear that there are other potential career paths, like art fraud or
laundering money, which have a better chance of being successful.
Its
hard for Americans to relate to the European concept of treasure
hoards littered around the countryside, left behind by invading hordes as it were, hoards from the hordes, whether Roman hordes, Anglo Saxon hordes, Crusaders acting like hordes, Moors,
Normans, Danish, Vikings and what-have-you raping and pillaging and
stealing everything they can get their hands on, only to melt it all
down and bury it for safe keeping, there to be found by a nerdy but
sincere metal detection wielding citizen who has been searching
relentlessly every weekend for the last 30 years. The facts are
that some people do this in Europe (search every weekend) and every once in a while they really
do find something. (1)
Aside
from these more official discoveries, there are also signs that
other, less formal, activities are taking place behind the scenes
with good results. An annoying number of previously unknown fine art
objects regularly show up on the antiquities market having been
plundered from an ancient grave by some scumbag who has been tempted by an evil antiquities broker. Some of these dastardly folks only
pretend to plunder graves, they dishonestly forge ancient art items
and shamelessly sucker some corrupt collector or curator into buying
them in a variation of the famous adage “you can not cheat an honest curator”.
But
as romantic as these more ancient hoards are, the real action is in
caches of art and gold left behind by everyone's favorite, the
National Socialists in the period roughly 1944-1945. As thieves and
murderers, the National Socialists of the last world war were in a
class all to themselves. First they would roll the Wehrmacht in,
then they would roll the gold out of national treasurys, the art out
of the museums, and the Jews into the camps stealing everything they
ever had along the way. When you melt down a million gold dentures,
it just looks like gold bars to those helpful Swiss bankers who are
always happy to launder money for the criminal du jour. Some
things never change.
But
do we really think that there is a lot more to find out there? The
problem is that it is very hard to tell. Officially, we know of lots
of things that are still missing. But who is to say that some of
this missing gold was found but no formal press release issued? Who
is to say which famous trainloads of decadent art were hidden in an
abandoned mine instead of being destroyed by aerial bombardment on
its way there? What 100 tons of gold were processed by the Swiss,
what disappeared into the Tsar's vault in Moscow, what treasure from
Troy now lies in the basement beneath the Hermitage waiting a year, a
century, a millinnia before it sees the light of day?
Keep
in mind also, that while the average computer animator knows hardship
and rough working conditions, he or she has rarely dealt with
abandoned mines, networks of crumbling railroad tunnels filled with
unexploded munitions, or deposits at the bottom of very deep, very
cold lakes. Yes a computer animator knows how to endure hardship
only to be disappointed. But for every hoard found by a metal
detection practitioner, how many others work for decades for a
handful of copper?
The odds are as likely that you will write a screenplay that gets made into a successful movie. Or that you will be recognized for your talent and invited to direct a film. One seems about as likely as the other, being successful in the motion picture industry or finding a cache of Nazi gold. If you have to go through the trouble of changing your career, I recommend finding something with more likelihood of success.
The odds are as likely that you will write a screenplay that gets made into a successful movie. Or that you will be recognized for your talent and invited to direct a film. One seems about as likely as the other, being successful in the motion picture industry or finding a cache of Nazi gold. If you have to go through the trouble of changing your career, I recommend finding something with more likelihood of success.
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1. The most famous recent example of this is the fabulous story of Maj (ret) Tony Clunn of the British Army, MBE, who discovered the location of the famous battle of Teutoberger Wald in Germany. See
Monday, August 31, 2015
dWi Logo Courtesy of Jane Stephan and Greg Ercolano
Greg took this picture of the dWi logo that was on the black film bag that Jane kept the remainders of her fabulous film cartridge give aways. I will at some point take pictures of the cartridge and film strip and post them here. Until then, here is the logo. Thanks Greg. Thanks Jane.
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
Communist Conspiracy or World Financial Collapse?
This post will attempt to channel certain belief systems from the long - over Cold War in order to explain current events in the world economy.
There is a lot of concern in certain circles that the crash of the Shanghai stock market will not only affect the Western stock markets, but that it signals a recession or depression in mainland China that will also affect the economies of the West. No one really knows how this one will turn out and every day you read a different story as the stock markets in China and the west continue to evolve.
Back in the good old days of the Cold War, 1960 or so, America and the world-at-large would not have had to worry about the Chinese communist stock market crash. This is because back in those days the communist Chinese were actually real Marxists and would never, ever have allowed that discredited tool of capitalism, the stock market, to exist as part of their economy.
Communist cadres would have fought to the death to prevent such an abomination from coming into existence. So how can we explain that this modern communist government has a stock market? There are only two explanations that seem possible: either they have fallen into sin and abandoned their most cherished beliefs in a shallow attempt to get rich or it is part of a larger plot to destroy the West by emphasizing the contradictions of decadent Western Capitalism.
Furthermore, the Shanghai stock market is not the only anomaly. We also have the spectacle of the Chinese Communist Party selling their own people as disenfranchised slave labor to western capitalists in order to increase the profits of western corporations and make China the (cheap) manufacturing center of the global economy.
This is is a very odd situation it seems to me. Karl Marx and Chairman Mao must be spinning in their graves.
And of course the potential collapse of the Chinese market threatens both the larger Chinese economy as well as the world financial markets since we are all part of the global economy whether we want to be or not But surely the collapse of the Shanghai market could not have been a surprise to the Communist party. Even the most casual student of capitalist economies of the last two centuries would have shown them that market crashes as a result of speculation and/or panic and the resultant economic depression is what unregulated markets do. It is their nature.
Our managed press and slave-economists notice nothing and say nothing while the world holds its breathe and waits to see whether the economy is about to take another fall. .
But in the more entertaining days of the cold war, things would have been different. Back then, political and economic analysts would look at this implausible communist capitalist behavior and the uncertainty caused by the collapse of their finance market and suspect that we were witnessing some sort of implacable communist conspiracy to destroy western democracy. I propose that the broad outlines of the perceived plot would be as follows:
1. First, China would use their slave labor to attract manufacturing to its shores with the intent to utterly destroy manufacturing in target nations, such as the USA and rely on the self-destructive greed of the wealthy industrialists of the west to
sacrifice any value or public good in order to increase short term profits. In so doing, the wealthy industrialists put a huge number of people out of work in America while continuing their efforts to finally destroy any remnant of the labor movement. Disenfranchised, impoverished and without help from their government who is indifferent to the misery of the poor, these unemployed people will be excellent recruits for future revolutionary movements.
2.
The Communist elite then use standard capitalist techniques to stimulate their economy in specific sectors. Economic stimulation, trade barriers, and other policies create an overheated economic boom. In this way, China becomes the fastest growing economy in the world, at least for a while. The International Communist Conspiracy is almost ready to pull the rug out from under the feet of the Western dupes who suspect nothing.
3. In an astonishing rejection of fundamental Marxist theory, a Chinese stock market is created. Stocks are traded, valuation
goes through the roof, and investors from all over the world make
substantial investments in Chinese ventures and Chinese billionaires
make investments in American and other non-Chinese companies.
4. Now, having made the stupid west dependent on your economy for their profits and integrated their financial markets with your own, you begin to pull the whole thing apart. First you selectively stop overheating your economy, causing sectors like real estate to begin to implode.
5. Your stock market collapses and takes the western markets with it. The world economy collapses.
6. The communist cells created from the people whose lives were destroyed by the greed of the Western capitalists are activated and a revolution occurs in the west which soon becomes part of the international communist government controlled by Beijing.
7. Helpless, and with their traditions of freedom destroyed, you can now implement your evil plan to implement gun control, teach evolution, and force everyone to have socialized health care.
5. Your stock market collapses and takes the western markets with it. The world economy collapses.
6. The communist cells created from the people whose lives were destroyed by the greed of the Western capitalists are activated and a revolution occurs in the west which soon becomes part of the international communist government controlled by Beijing.
7. Helpless, and with their traditions of freedom destroyed, you can now implement your evil plan to implement gun control, teach evolution, and force everyone to have socialized health care.
V. I. Lenin said, “The West will sell us the rope we will use to hang
them”. And he may yet turn out to be correct.
I have one more thing to say before I drop this line of thought..
We live in a very strange time in American and the world. I think it is much stranger than we, who are immersed in it every day, realize. And I cite to you by example the fact that the last major Communist nation in the world should in fact both have a stock exchange and be suffering from the classic instability of an unregulated finance market. Say what you will, explain it however you care to, but I think it is fair to say that this is a very weird situation.
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We live in a very strange time in American and the world. I think it is much stranger than we, who are immersed in it every day, realize. And I cite to you by example the fact that the last major Communist nation in the world should in fact both have a stock exchange and be suffering from the classic instability of an unregulated finance market. Say what you will, explain it however you care to, but I think it is fair to say that this is a very weird situation.
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For more on the despicable Chinese way of war see the Art of War by that proto-commie, Sun Tsu. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Art_of_War
Monday, August 24, 2015
Curl Crested Manucode Makes UFO Alien Death Ray Sounds
Cornell
has made its library of the recordings of birds from around the world
available online. One bird in particular was chosen from its
library because it makes sounds like a UFO death ray. How is it
possible for the Curl Crested Manucode to know so perfectly what
alien space brothers sound like? Clearly this is proof that aliens
visited New Guinea in ancient times and invented video game sound
effects.
Curl Crested Manucode tells stories of the Alien visitations to its young bird unit.
Listen
yourself if you dont believe me.
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