Now that it should be fairly clear to all what the so-called Arab Spring was really about--more a spring board into chaos than anything resembling springtime hosts of daffodils--an even larger pattern emerges. Why would Israel launch an orgy of killing innocents, making it a pariah state in the minds of all nations outside of the Anglo-American cartel? It is possible that Israel hopes to lure Hezbollah in Lebanon and forces in Syria into the fray for an all-out Michael Corleone day of reckoning. Should such an event occur and meet with some success, all of the nations of the Muslim world--with the exception of Saudi Arabia--will have been successfully destabilized, a chain of failed states from the Straits of Gibraltar to the borders with China. This would constitute a redrawing of the political map on a scale that we have not seen since the two world wars ended. In this context, the "War on Terrorism," actually the rape of a whole culture that stretches from the Atlantic to the Indian oceans, (never actually a war involving matched combatants), will have accomplished the aims of the Western powers, spearheaded by the U.S. No one will be able to oppose the American hegemon. Not a Muslim mouse will roar.
The American inspired and supported putsch in the Ukraine will serve to divert Russian energy from playing the role of a great power in the region, laying the groundwork for further deepening the West's control over the theater of operations. The Americans and the English were always better at mind games, the use of double and triple agents, false flag operations and the full panoply of covert operations--all deeply enhanced by their limitless capacity for being able to rationalize the most outrageous acts, costing countless loss of human lives--that gave us everything from Dresden to Hiroshima and Nagasaki to the saturation bombing of Vietnam where it is often said that more tonnage of bombs were dropped than in all of World War II. All for the greater good and the ultimate victory of Christian Civilization.
Sunday, July 20, 2014
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
It's Not Just the Cold War that Is Not Over--It is WWII
As the rioting in Kiev continues and grows more violent, it becomes ever more clear that there is unfinished business going back not only to the Cold War but to World War II and even earlier. Well within living memory for those who paid attention to history are the images of large numbers of Ukrainians greeting the invading Nazi troops not as invaders but as liberators. Many of the children and grandchildren of those who were happy to see German troops on their soil are now among the "peaceful protesters" hurling Molotov cocktails at the Ukrainian police.
Just as the West found ready allies in the Croats of the former Yugoslavia, it now finds allies in Ukrainian rightists with the same goal--the total destruction of any vestige of communist rule. What Poles, Croats and many Ukrainians share is their Catholic faith and their visceral hatred of Communism, particularly when that hatred is embedded in their ancient hatred for Russia. From the perspective of the West, those ancient animosities, combined with the Catholic church's demonization of atheistic communism and a nationalistic fervor vis a vis Russia, provide an ideal ally of opportunity in the effort to bury what is seen as the last bastion against American global hegemony--whether that foe is communist or not. For the United States, with its self-assigned exceptionalism, a world-wide form of manifest destiny, it matters little whether or not the cutting edge of opposition to Russia is nationalism, social philosophy (communism vs. capitalism) or religion; the underlying goal is the same. The truth of this proposition is easily demonstrated for, in fact, Western attempts to "contain" Russia predate the 1917 revolution. Russia has long been "in the way," as the so-called Great Game for control of Central Asia played by the first global empire that once flew the British flag everywhere the sun shined makes clear. Today, the mantle of global empire dropped by Britain has been picked up by the American empire. Today, the sun never sets on any of the over one thousand U.S. military bases that it maintains--even at the cost of nearly bankrupting itself--around the world.
Whether in Yugoslavia or Georgia or Ukraine, we can count on one American "statesman," Arizona senator John McCain, (a former fighter pilot in Vietnam), to spell out for us the U.S. agenda in some utterance akin to that which he loudly proclaimed when Russian troops entered South Ossetia: "Today, we are all Georgians." Completely and blithely ignorant of history, (its own let alone past realities in other parts of the planet), U.S. citizens are easily duped into accepting the enemy of their enemy as their friends. No crimes against their own people are too large for the U.S. to bury in the ash heap of history in exchange for their joining the cause--from Latin American dictators and their adherents even willing to assassinate Catholic priests to despots across the planet's longitudes similarly assigned to preserving the prerogatives of their various "one-percents."
Frightened to their core by the prospect of communism's spread, demoralized by a world-wide depression in the capitalist world, Europe and America tolerated the spread of Fascism, turned a blind eye to the depravities of Franco, Mussolini and Hitler. Some no doubt prayed that Fascism would do the dirty work and destroy the Soviet threat. In the end, the Frankenstein monsters proved intolerable, and the West was compelled to join in battle to defeat their creations. That battle cost incalculable suffering and loss of life. Next year we will celebrate the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II. There are still many alive who remember; many alive who harbor the unthinkable nightmare that it could happen again.
Saturday, November 02, 2013
Walking the Tightrope
The moment I laid eyes on the above photograph in a flea market stall I knew that I would be having a conversation with it for some time to come. A young woman survives the war and then, the embers of her city still glowing in the ruins, risks her life to walk a tightrope. The image jumped off the auction catalogue cover on which it appeared. It had been chosen from a collection of photographs being sold by a European auction house. When I picked up the catalogue sitting atop a stack of other magazines and looked into it, I was rather surprised to find that it bore no title or attribution; only the single word "ANONYM." I paid the vendor and left feeling that my purchase of the large, glossy version of the photo serving as the catalogue's cover was one of the best ten dollar bills I had ever spent. It is now framed and hanging in a place where I can look at it every day.
The photograph appears to have been taken amid the ruins of Berlin a short time after the Red Army had entered the city. I can only speculate. I might speculate even further that it was taken by the same photographer who took what I have always considered one of the most compelling photographs taken during World War II, Yevgeny Khaldei's image of a soldier raising the Red Flag over the conquered city. The two photos seem to share common artistic values, if not a common message.
I cannot be sure that Khaldei is ANONYM, but given the touchy relationship between Stalin and many Soviet artists, it would not be surprising if a Russian creator of an image bearing so open-ended a message as the woman on a tightrope at the end of the war might wish to remain anonymous. (When I googled to recall the Khaldei's name, I discoverd that Stalin's all-seeing eye noted that the soldier reaching up to the flag raiser was wearing a wrist watch on both of his wrists. Fearing that it would send out an impression of Red soldiers as looters, Stalin is said to have had the photograph doctored to eliminate one of the watches.) I find that as I get older, I am stripped of one romantic illusion after another. Following that tidbit found on the internet, I will never look at the image again without a certain twinge.
(http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-564643/How-iconic-photo-Russians-raising-flag-burning-Berlin-airbrushed-save-soldier-Stalins-rage.html)
More of Khaldei's image later. Let us return to the lady on the tightrope. That the image may serve as a metaphor is obvious. Less obvious is precisely what it is that is metaphorically represented. A beautiful young woman--blonde, shapely, wearing a simple blouse and an apron over her tights--precariously ventures out over a world in ruins, a scattered crowd of observers looking up at her from the streets below. The ruins may be the remains of Berlin, but they could just as easily be the ruins of countless other cities throughout Europe devastated by aerial bombardment--a tactic used with equal enthusiasm and barbarism by both the Allies and the Axis forces. The woman--a kind of everyman and woman--having beaten the odds and survived the bombing--now tests fate partly out of an expression of her own free will, partly driven to do so to survive the peace, to put food on her kitchen table, clad in the very apron she wears on the high wire. Or is it rather that she is driven by the need to express her art, to...in spite of all that had occurred, to feel alive?
As it turned out, we would all be walking a tightrope in the aftermath of the second Great War of the twentieth century, the second "war to end all wars". In the final analysis, what had two world wars--costing over a 100 million lives--ultimately resolved? Even more fundamentally, why had those wars been fought? My thoughts turned to the events surrounding the demise of the Soviet Union in the closing decades of the twentieth century, less than fifty years after the end of the Great Patriotic War. On the front pages of the New York Times, R.W. Apple described the unfolding events as the most significant since the European revolutions of 1848. Alexander Solzhenitsyn's front page piece in the Times soon upped the ante; he was quoted as seeing the events as the most important since the French Revolution of 1789, which had taken place, amazingly, exactly 200 years before. From the Olympian heights of the farm in Vermont where he had taken refuge from his homeland, Solzhenitsyn went on to declaim that the revolutionary ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity had been proven to be irreconcilable.
Next: "The Line in the Sand"
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
More Weapons of Mass Distraction
Here we are on the eve of a possible, hourly looking more
probable default by the U.S.
government. This is not feckless little Greece with one eye on Germany
awaiting salvation; this is the (tiresome phrase) the world's sole superpower
about to go under. The U.S. has no
Master Race to the North to look to; we are king of the mountain. This morning (about five a.m.) I found myself
posting this to the New York Times in
response to one of Tom Friedman's minderbender pieces ("Sorry Kids, We Ate
It All"):
"Seniors, Wall Street and
unions.."
The post-Reagan American Plan: Decimate the union movement, keep the wages of the average worker stagnant to diminished, deregulate the financial sector, embed hidden inflation to artificially keep inflation low, favor the corporations. The post-Panic of 2008 Global Plan: After greed, institutionalized corruption and outright bungling lead a newly laissez-faire capitalist system into the greatest financial crisis in history, look to the average man and woman here and throughout the globalized (flat Earth?) economy led by the U.S. to refinance the enormous debt and credit obligations that accumulated. In pursuit of the latter plan, have shameless journalists blame seniors and the few unions left for the mess, archly including Wall Street in their list of demons so they don't look completely detached from reality.
The post-Reagan American Plan: Decimate the union movement, keep the wages of the average worker stagnant to diminished, deregulate the financial sector, embed hidden inflation to artificially keep inflation low, favor the corporations. The post-Panic of 2008 Global Plan: After greed, institutionalized corruption and outright bungling lead a newly laissez-faire capitalist system into the greatest financial crisis in history, look to the average man and woman here and throughout the globalized (flat Earth?) economy led by the U.S. to refinance the enormous debt and credit obligations that accumulated. In pursuit of the latter plan, have shameless journalists blame seniors and the few unions left for the mess, archly including Wall Street in their list of demons so they don't look completely detached from reality.
I know.
Why do I bother? The truth is I
find it a bit therapeutic to vent in the Times. (I'm a little disturbed right now because of
my own financial decisions. Sold my
supposedly solid gold Berkshire Hathaway stock in anticipation of a crash--my
hoped for hedge against inflation in a financial world that gives .0001%
interest on savings.) Then, when I had
time to read what I had written and reflect on it a bit, I said to my
self-satisfied self, "Self, how right you are!" This led to further thoughts on the subject, admittedly,
just speculation. Remember that half a
quadrillion dollars in debt (only nominal valuation we were assured--whatever
consolation you want to take from that...) that was out there in the economic
cosmos in the aftermath of 2008? These
jokers pull out the hair on their Congressional barber shop coiffed heads about
a mere thirteen or so trillion in debt while their own debt makes
$13,000,000,000,000 dollars look like chump change. Let's see.
Only 467 trillion more to go. They
are not going to reach into their own deep pockets to bail themselves
out--after all the DNA of the capitalist compels him to accumulate as much
wealth as possible and then hold onto it through thick and thin--so they use
every nefarious device their Wharton-trained wunderkinds can come up with to
save their skins. And although they
spent thirty or forty years squeezing the little guys and gals, this is still
the richest country in the world, so...let's squeeze them some more. It's all so perfect. Put a clueless Black Harvard graduate in the
White House and let him take the fall.
Make it more interesting by creating the impression that it is those
Dixiecrats from Texas and other such benighted zones in the homeland or the Tea
Party that are to blame. Just so long as
you don't go knocking on the doors of Poor Old David Rockefeller and his pals for any
contributions.
Have you noticed how you are being
nickeled and dimed to death by just about everyone in a position to squeeze a
few pennies more out of you? Prices of
food, gasoline, just about everything go up and up (no inflation, remember),
utilities and cable companies, banks and credit card issuers (in spite of
Elizabeth Warren's tears) all more mercenary than ever, acting like pit bulls
grabbing you by the neck and then slowly taking in more and more of your throat
until you suffocate? Why, they are
behaving so desperately it's almost enough to make you feel sorry for
them. Almost. It's almost enough to make you feel guilty
accepting your social security check.
Gee, I guess they need it more than I do. I still have a few extra
bucks. Take it. Please
take it. Let me help you refinance. The over 40 million of our poor brothers and
sisters can always serve Cheerios for dinner and the fat middle class can
spread out visits to the dentist--or the cardiologist. If there is another stock market crash like
the last one that saw the Dow lose half of its value in a matter of weeks,
it'll be one great buying opportunity.
We're all going to get richer!
Monday, September 02, 2013
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
"Class Doorfare"
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/manhattan/class_doorfare_ZIEobiEylc8G1uQAcLZn1O
Credit must first of all go to the New York Post both for the title of this blog and the above graphic. (Almost needless to add, no such coverage could be found in our alleged newspaper of record.) Readers may find the complete article at the above link.
It would be hilarious if it were not so outrageous a sign of what has happened to our society. A developer of luxury housing, itself the beneficiary of socialism for the rich*, is given the obligation to put aside a number of apartments for those qualifying for so-called affordable housing. The decision is thus made that one way to ameliorate the impact of having his toney clientele forced to rub shoulders with the poor, is to segregate the two groups. Perhaps as well as "poor door" and "rich door," the developer could carve in stone above the respective thresholds, "Haves" and "Have Nots" or "One Percenters" and "Ninety-nine Percenters." We might then further compel the have-nots to wear arm bands emblazoned with a yellow "P" for Poor.
A diseased system generates fractals of its basic pattern. This is just one such fractal, but we are surrounded by countless examples here in New York City. After years of Bloombergian rule, it is no surprise that the developer Extell might feel it could get away with its scheme to shield worthier tenants from the unwashed (whose presence granted the company air rights and tax breaks). Twelve years of rule by the current mayor, (who, with an estimated 27 billion dollars in net worth, is said to be the seventh richest man in America), have once and for all proven the homespun theory that putting a rich man in office guarantees that he will be incorruptible. Yes, because it is he and others of his class who do the corrupting, brothers and sisters. Many New York City residents, like most Americans, raised to dream of unheard of riches for themselves, are now actually dreading the prospect of losing Michael Bloomberg with a trepidation only comparable to that which a nervous child fears the loss of a parent.
The internet version of the Sunday New York Times published an interactive graphic chronicling the enormous number of buildings erected during the mayor's tenure. Not just in Manhattan, but in Downtown Brooklyn, Williamsburgh and Long Island City, we see evidence of the building boom the city has experienced, or, depending on one's point of view, endured. The richest city in the world was largely sheltered from what hundreds of other American cities experienced in the aftermath of the 2008 crash, and there are no doubt those who will argue that this was in no small measure due to the sweetheart deals the mayor made with his cronies. There can be equally little doubt that the boom brought millions of dollars into the city. Some may even argue that given what the mayor has done in this regard, his essentially destructive redesigning of the city's streets and thoroughfares, largely out of a vendetta against drivers from the outer boroughs who refused to give him his congestion pricing, was a small price to pay.
With regard to the vast majority of New Yorkers, its working class and its poor, the picture is quite different. His attempt to give the city a world class school system, albeit a noble goal, has proven a disaster. Not only has he made it more difficult and expensive to drive a car in the city, he has made almost no efforts to improve the public transportation that would induce citizens to leave their cars at home. In fact, we have seen only cutbacks and increased fares, a virtual tax on the poor and working classes. Hospitals have been closed, money diverted from education for (no more effective) charter schools, decaying infrastructure largely ignored while the patrician in City Hall wages campaigns for more trees, smaller sodas and (for his purposes)conveniently street-crowding blue bicycle rental locations. Like his brethren on the Republican right, the very word public is anathema. After all, if he could amass a private fortune, what is your excuse?
The one consolation in all this is that, with the exception of Republican candidate Castimatidis, most of the candidates for mayor have not been blessed with assets in the billions. Unless, of course, Mike decides that he can't let go and forces through the end of term limits in the City Council. Certainly, Christine Quinn could take time off from her campaign to shepherd the measure through.
*Extell is also seeking a controversial 421a exemption — a tax break given to developers who include affordable housing in their market-rate buildings.
In October, The Post reported that five of the luxury firm’s towers cost the city $21.8 million in tax revenue in their first year alone.
Together, the buildings paid just $567,337 in annual taxes. Without the 421a program, they would have paid the city $22 million, according to appraisal firm Miller Samuel Inc.
---"Upper West Side condo has separate entrances for the rich and the poor." by Kate Briquelet. New York Post, August 18, 2013.
Thursday, July 25, 2013
Huma Weiner is an Abused Woman
It is hard to describe my reaction to Anthony Weiner's decision to stay in the mayoral race following the latest disclosures about his capers on the internet. Cynical laughter? Shock? Disgust? Is there some appropriate reaction to this kind of thing? The man certainly had liberal credentials, and that made all the more tragic the earlier revelations about his indiscretions, if not character. But there were indications that Weiner was unstable even before the sex scandal erupted. His outburst on the floor of the House clearly showed us that this was a man who has trouble reining in various of his emotions.
When he announced that he was throwing his hat in the ring in the New York City mayoral race, I, like many others desperate for an alternative to the current roster of candidates, was willing to hold my nose and hope that he might prevail. But the latest revelations are clearly too much, and, everyone except Anthony Weiner seems to know it. His latest crime, however, is not his inability to control his libido, it is his abuse of his wife, Huma. There was much speculation in the media--everywhere from NPR to the tabloid outlets about how Huma really felt. I don't think we need do much head-scratching about this. The woman clearly appeared alongside her troubled husband under duress. Granted that only the two of them know for sure what took place after the recent story was splashed all over the headlines, but can we not be fairly certain that Huma was embarrassed, humiliated, disappointed, distraught? She can't even hold her head up before the cameras. The finger-pointing maniac who inhabited Weiner's body in the most public forum of congress, armed as he is by an undeniable intellect and a debater's skill, must have used some interesting arguments over the kitchen table to get his wife to stand by his side this time around. She came, but she clearly would have preferred to be just about anyplace else on the planet. Were we the fly on the wall in the Weiner kitchen as Anthony made his case to his bride and the mother of his child, is it not possible that his importunings would look like nothing other than psychological abuse? If Huma's body language is any indication, abuse seems not just possible, but likely.
Yet, the wags wag on about whether or not Huma is an enabler, or the appropriate response of a political wife. From this writer's point of view, Huma Weiner should seek a protective shelter from a husband who is clearly out of control, and all those alleged journalists and seekers after truth should be calling out the alarm. Politics in this country has become more disgraceful than ever, but at least its games should be restricted to consenting adults.
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
The New Oxymoron: The Middle Class American Worker
For a brief historical moment, it seems, American workers could lead the proverbial "life of Riley." Unlike his shirt and tie television series cohorts, Ralph worked at "the plant," but nevertheless managed to maintain a home in the suburbs and a decent life style. The millions of unemployed and underemployed across America should by now be getting the message. There used to be a certain amount of hair-splitting over what actually allowed one to be considered middle class. Was Riley a member of the middle class or the working class? Though once at least a bit blurred, what is now coming into painfully sharp focus is that anyone who actually works for a living, that is, gets a wage for anything other than white collar efforts can forget about joining the "bourgeoisie". The great seer of the new world order is Tom Friedman who has found endless ways of expressing the same message in his books and in his New York Times column. Whether, on his flat Earth, you are an impoverished woman living in a developing country or an American college graduate looking for work, you need to recreate yourself, make yourself useful, cast yourself in the role of entrepreneur, reach deep down into your creative juices and find some way to house, feed and clothe yourself without being in someone else's employ. Since a world entirely inhabited by creative entrepreneurs would leave no one to do a lot of what society needs to get done unattended, Friedman has essentially made mere workers into an untouchable class, living beyond the castle moat, losers. And don't even think about going to the union hall looking for assistance. There is no union hall. While the capital city of the UAW (United Auto Workers) declares bankruptcy, thousands of non-union auto workers at the plants in our majestic Southland are busily assembling Japanese and American cars. Not so good wages, not so good health plans, no pensions, no grievance procedures, no unions, but, gee, at least they have jobs. Organize? Go on strike? Just try it, sister, and your work station will be outsourced to Indonesia. It's just a matter of time in any case. We really don't need you anymore. It would be better if you didn't exist at all.
Tuesday, July 09, 2013
Didn't Happen That Way
Didn't Happen That Way
All the stories that once took my breath away,
turns out,
didn't happen that way.
All my heroes and heroines,
apart from the flames that burned within,
placed there by forces completely beyond their control,
bore those flames in vessels
much like my own or truth be told-
a lot worse.
as beautiful or noble or enviable
would remain
to comfort and inspire me?
just the gelatinous waters
always beyond quenching
my merely human thirst
keep their power to move me.
hero I seek echoes out, "Noman!"
didn't happen that way.
All my heroes and heroines,
apart from the flames that burned within,
placed there by forces completely beyond their control,
bore those flames in vessels
much like my own or truth be told-
a lot worse.
Were I to live a lot longer,
how much of what I once sawas beautiful or noble or enviable
would remain
to comfort and inspire me?
Just the pastel clouds hanging high
in blue or gray skies too high to touch,just the gelatinous waters
always beyond quenching
my merely human thirst
keep their power to move me.
Like Cyclops poking a finger into
the cave, the name of the hero I seek echoes out, "Noman!"
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Word Alert!
"Preventative" is not a word. It is one of the classic barbarisms. The word is preventive.
This has not stopped preventative from spreading like a plague.
This has not stopped preventative from spreading like a plague.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Boston Massacre
Along with my fellow Americans, I reacted with horror at the prospect of so many innocents losing life and limb in the terrorist attack that took place yesterday afternoon at the Boston marathon. I awoke this morning feeling ill, hung over from exposure to the horrifying images broadcast on the networks following the bombing. We resist the pull of our imaginations as we put ourselves in the place of innocent bystanders suddenly torn apart by an exploding bomb and try to push back such thoughts. Yet, we cannot help but have thoughts not just of the injuries suffered by the victims, but the horrible impact on their families of what must seem so senseless, so unfair.
There will be those who will want, however, to censor another rush of images and feelings that most moral Americans no doubt also had as we watched these events from a distance. How many times have we watched news coverage of similar explosions, similar blood-stained pavements and expressions of anguish coming to us from Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria, Israel, an entire global terror zone stretching from the eastern shores of the Atlantic to the Himalyas? The thousands of men, women and children who have paid the price of living in world where violence is considered an acceptable method of achieving political and economic goals? As earlier empires learned to their ever-lasting regret, no police force, no security apparatus can truly protect us and take us out of harm's way.
Is it too much to hope that, rather than succumb to some desire for revenge, an ever-descending spiral into even more violence, a growing number of Americans, in tandem with the vast majority of like-minded men and women around the world, will be motivated to demand an end to the violence?
Thursday, February 07, 2013
Panetta's Last Gasp (False) Alarm
The ostensible reason for the speech was to alert the youngsters at Georgetown and the world at large of the perils for the U.S. military of allowing the dread sequester of government expenditures to take place. After listing a host of really bad outcomes, (the possibility of a "cyber Pearl Harbor" caught the media's attention), he cited the perils for the U.S. of not maintaining the strongest military on the globe, of not being able to fight two wars simultaneously, or even of not being able to maintain our "readiness." This last notion is perhaps the most interesting since it can only be interpreted to mean that if anyone questions the fiscal wisdom or necessity of our maintaining close to one thousand military encampments around the globe, they show a lack of regard for our "readiness" to fight wars on every continent and small archipelago on the globe.
Most blatantly stated in the Bush administration's pronouncements of National Security, the notion that we must, as a single national entity, have a military machine stronger than those of at least the next four or five most powerful nations combined, has become part of the American catechism. The Bush document made all sorts of other outrageous pronouncements, most famously, the right to pre-emptively strike at any nation on Earth, but no tenet of the faith is as sacred as our obligation, as patriotic Americans, to sign onto this notion of overwhelming force. Does anyone ever stop to contemplate what circumstances might arise that would make it necessary for us to have such a force, or to fight two major wars? Under what circumstances would we be so isolated from the community of nations that we would be forced, alone, to take on some adversary or adversaries? This is American exceptionalism writ so large as to make questionable the virtual sanity of our leadership.
When England was the last standing obstacle to Hitler's domination of the whole of Europe, we did, (even though it took perhaps a bit too long to come around), come to its defense. The war against Nazi Germany, in spite of American mythology, was a shared enterprise. We were a part of a group of nations; Eisenhower bore the title, not of the Supreme American Commander, but of Supreme Allied Commander. It would be interesting, (though one can probably guess), to get a typical American's reaction to a line or two from a review of a recent Churchill biography, written by Geoffrey Wheatcroft in a recent New York Review of Books. Referring to one of the book's authors, Paul Reid, Wheatcroft writes:
"...Reid says that Churchill "knew Hitler could not be crushed without American troops." But the truth is that Germany could not be crushed with American troops. Those other recent histories have been marked by unsparing realism, not least in their most un-Churchillian emphasis on the inadequacy of the British Army as a fighting force (and the US Army also) when faced with the Wehrmact, and on the plain fact that the Third Reich was defeated by the Red Army."
(Red highlight mine.)
Except for one thankfully brief interlude where the United States alone had atomic weapons, the notion that it was possible or desirable for any one nation to have enough power to alone dominate the rest of the world was almost beyond consideration. The prospect should scare any inhabitant of the planet. Even Hitler, with all of his delusions, never believed it possible to go it alone.
The fact that U.S. predominance at current levels has become a badge of one's patriotism is truly alarming. The fact that the richest nation in the world by far, even now, in the midst of a financial crisis, is still capable of fielding such forces, should not be an argument for our continuing to do so. Countless historians have understood that the major reason empires fail is that they overextend themselves militarily. Nations that ignore, as we currently do, the needs of their populations for decent housing, education, health care and, yes, even dignity and social justice, do so at their peril.
Our Defense Department was once called the War Department. Made in 1949, it was a wholesome, wise change in the way a nation should see the role of its men and women in arms. It captured the sprit of a speech made by our nation's greatest soldier at the close of World War II:
A new era is upon us. Even the lesson of victory itself brings with it profound concern, both for our future security and the survival of civilization. The destructiveness of the war potential, through progressive advances in scientific discovery, has in fact now reached a point which revises the traditional concepts of war.
Men since the beginning of time have sought peace.... Military alliances, balances of power, leagues of nations, all in turn failed, leaving the only path to be by way of the crucible of war. We have had our last chance. If we do not now devise some greater and more equitable system, Armageddon will be at our door. The problem basically is theological and involves a spiritual recrudescence and improvement of human character that will synchronize with our almost matchless advances in science, art, literature and all material and cultural development of the past two thousand years. It must be of the spirit if we are to save the flesh.
"We have had our last chance."
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Syria and the Spanish Civil War
I have often thought back to that historical episode when, in the face of
injustices taking place, I try to deal with my own barely contained rage at
policies our own government has pursued and is currently pursuing. I find it extremely difficult to stand by and be a witness to events that all of my reason and instincts tell me are wrong yet nevertheless go unopposed. It is
sometimes not enough to console oneself with Martin Luther King's observation
that "the arc of history is long, but it bends toward justice."
(Ironically, fascism in Spain
far outlived the regimes in Germany
and Italy ,
lingering until Franco's death. Some injustices clearly die hard. It would not
be until Francisco Franco's death in 1975 that veterans of the Lincoln Brigade could return to a Spain finally
free of fascism.) Perhaps, for children of the 1960s, the slow tread toward
justice is a particularly bitter pill to swallow. We had tasted at least one
victory when, in the same year that Franco had died, the puppet regime in Saigon fell to the North Vietnamese army. Though the war in Vietnam had
gone on for decades, tens of thousands who had marched against American
involvement felt that that they had had a role in bringing it to an end, that
peaceful protest could have an impact.

By the time Bush, Jr. entered the Oval Office, the Evil Empire had morphed into an Axis of Evil which included such threats as North Korea, (Goodbye, Sunshine Policy.), and dangerous Cuba. Those roaring mice, of course, would never have invited the response to external threats that we would soon be treated to, a response that would transform the nation into an Orwellian nightmare with a tattered constitution that was twisted to allow for torture, rendition to foreign torture chambers, robot drone attacks out of The Terminator, and a new language, a glossary that seemed to come out of Goebbel's playbook. Suddenly, we no longer had a nation, we had a "homeland," (heimat? vaterland?), and restrictions on human rights were euphemistically summed up in the "Patriot Act."
Even before 9/11, however, it was clear as soon as the Supreme Court gave Bush the presidency and he announced his cabinet choices in December of 2000, that his was a war cabinet. I can recall upon hearing that such as Colin Powell, Donald Rumsfeld and Condoleeza Rice would be joining Dick Cheney on his team that I ran down the hall from my office to a friend's office and cried out, "My God, he's chosen a war cabinet. We're going to war!" Rumor had it that Bush, the son, was obligated to deal with the unfinished business his father had left in Iraq. All that was needed was a convenient casus belli and the games could begin. It was not long in coming.
It is not necessary here to sum up the events following September 11, 2001. Ultimately, the neo-con cabal and the cowboys had to be reined in following disasters in Iraq and Afghanistan. A caretaker government was in place well before the permanent government had installed another restoration president. Rumsfeld would go replaced by Gates, a member of the Iraqi War Commission, who stayed on to be Barack Obama's defense secretary. Bush had been declawed. Though many of the trappings changed after he left the White House, and there was talk of withdrawal from Iraq and Afghanistan, it soon became clear that, Nobel Peace Prize notwithstanding, the new young president would continue the grander design.
Next: Drones, the Arab Spring, Gaza, and the attack on the Hassad regime.
Thursday, November 08, 2012
Bubbles
I had the distinct pleasure of benefiting from the resources of two of New York City's elite high schools. I attended Brooklyn Technical High School in the late 1950s, and then, after an already long career teaching English in other schools, had a twelve-year stint at Stuyvesant High School from 1992 until 2003, when I retired. Although my formal education had been in the humanities, I have had a life-long interest in science, particularly in astronomy and physics, and, so, I came to enjoy the opportunity to have informal conversations with my students about some of the issues about which I had questions. I can recall one such conversation in which I shared with a group of students my dismay and annoyance at the way science text books represent reality. Based on these conversations, I got the impression that in the forty years (1959 to 1999) that had passed since I was a student that while science had changed a great deal, pedagogy had not kept pace.
What exactly is a wave? Throughout all of our schooling we are taught about waves--sound waves, light waves, radio waves, ripples in ponds and waves in the ocean. The stylized radio antenna depicted above has been reproduced in countless texts. What this iconic image purports to show is an antenna emitting radio waves. What we actually see is a series of broken concentric circles with their source at the tip of the antenna. I could never understand how those broken circles even came close to actually depicting waves. If anything, I suspected, a more accurate depiction would be a series of concentric spheres, in effect, bubbles within bubbles emanating from the antenna. Similarly, the often offered alternate image of ripples made by a rock thrown into a still body of water, a pond, seemed to have a similar drawback. While it is true that, in this case, we seem to have advanced to both concentric circles and the standard image of a wave, if we take the added step of visualizing the ripples in cross section, our cross-section seems restricted to the surface of the water. That is, the trough of the ripple/wave still does not depict what may be going on beneath the surface. Even the oscilloscope, another standard device that is understood to depict waves electronically, seems merely to be a line of light having a certain amplitude and frequency (height or intensity and time period between pulses).
Thus all three of the most common depictions of waves, namely fret lines, ripples, or squiggly lines of light on an oscilloscope's screen, seem merely to be shorthand methods of showing us what a wave is. I struggled to find some way to better understand and visualize what was actually taking place. I imagined a light going on in a room or a hand clapping. In both cases, whether I was considering light or sound, it was obvious to me that there was no linear wave emission from either source. Whether at the speed of light or the speed of sound, whatever was being created at the source reached everyone in the room regardless of where they were. Some way of illustrating something akin to an expanding sphere of some force or energy seemed to be called for.
When I found the image on the left, of a guide in a children's museum blowing bubbles within bubbles, what was going on seemed closer to what my instincts told me actually emanated from a point at which light or sound (and thus anything said to take the form of waves) might be depicted. At this point, however, I had the sinking feeling that a knowledge of calculus might be a good thing to have. I knew enough about the construct underlying calculus to know that it dealt with objects in motion. Had I arrived at one of those junctures where only mathematics could express what was going on, and that what I wanted to see simply illustrated no more surrendered itself to pictorial explanation than all those rubber sheets and curving graph lines through black space could succeed in depicting Einstein's theory of General Relativity?
I searched for one more common device that might help--a cheap fiber optic lamp. (I have even bought one online so I can stare at it and await enlightenment.) This last seems closest to what I envision happening when any object emits or even reflects light. But where is the wave?
I applied myself to the problem. It now seemed to me that a combination of the bubbles within bubbles and the fiber optic lamp might offer a solution. But there are problems. If you turn on the lamp, you instantly see the points of light emerging from the end of each plastic fiber. Given the speed of light, one would not expect to see the photons gradually traveling from their source to the end of each individual fiber. It would be ideal, I thought, if one could make two important modifications to my table-top toy: first, slow down the speed of light to a degree that one could see the light travel from its center to the end of the fibers, and, second, so increase the number of fibers so that, rather than seeing pinpoints of light, the lamp would ultimately produce something closer to a perfect sphere of light. If the light were traveling slowly enough what one would see is a gradual transformation--from a small sphere at the moment one turned on the lamp, to a larger sphere whose radius would be determined by the length of the fibers.
You have probably guessed that my "solution" raised more questions than it answered. When, in my conversations with students, I shared some of these speculations and offered that, ultimately, if we could actually see all of the waves in the room we were in, radio waves, television waves, X-Rays, ultra-violet rays,etc., coming into the room, bouncing off one another, reflecting one another, we would find that we were in a dense "soup" of bubbles and intersecting bubbles, (are those the strings of string theory?), a cosmic foam of bubbles, several of them told me that, "Hey, there are some scientists we have heard about who also believe in bubbles. You're not alone."
...to be continued.



I searched for one more common device that might help--a cheap fiber optic lamp. (I have even bought one online so I can stare at it and await enlightenment.) This last seems closest to what I envision happening when any object emits or even reflects light. But where is the wave?
I applied myself to the problem. It now seemed to me that a combination of the bubbles within bubbles and the fiber optic lamp might offer a solution. But there are problems. If you turn on the lamp, you instantly see the points of light emerging from the end of each plastic fiber. Given the speed of light, one would not expect to see the photons gradually traveling from their source to the end of each individual fiber. It would be ideal, I thought, if one could make two important modifications to my table-top toy: first, slow down the speed of light to a degree that one could see the light travel from its center to the end of the fibers, and, second, so increase the number of fibers so that, rather than seeing pinpoints of light, the lamp would ultimately produce something closer to a perfect sphere of light. If the light were traveling slowly enough what one would see is a gradual transformation--from a small sphere at the moment one turned on the lamp, to a larger sphere whose radius would be determined by the length of the fibers.
You have probably guessed that my "solution" raised more questions than it answered. When, in my conversations with students, I shared some of these speculations and offered that, ultimately, if we could actually see all of the waves in the room we were in, radio waves, television waves, X-Rays, ultra-violet rays,etc., coming into the room, bouncing off one another, reflecting one another, we would find that we were in a dense "soup" of bubbles and intersecting bubbles, (are those the strings of string theory?), a cosmic foam of bubbles, several of them told me that, "Hey, there are some scientists we have heard about who also believe in bubbles. You're not alone."
...to be continued.
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Still in the Labyrinth after Fifty Hours of Youtube Videos on Quantum Physics
“Philosophy [nature] is written in that great book which ever is before our eyes -- I mean the universe -- but we cannot understand it if we do not first learn the language and grasp the symbols in which it is written. The book is written in mathematical language, and the symbols are triangles, circles and other geometrical figures, without whose help it is impossible to comprehend a single word of it; without which one wanders in vain through a dark labyrinth.”
--Galileo Galilei



I have always been fascinated by cosmology and the knowledge claims of twentieth century physics. Here, then, I hoped, was my opportunity to see if I could actually understand concepts like relativity, space-time, the wave/particle dichotomy. I mean really understand, not just on the surface level that, for all their virtues, PBS and the BBC present, but with real insight. And herein lies the rub. What did I learn after fifty hours or so watching those Youtube lectures? Not a heck of a lot.
I am not ready to blame Youtube for my frustration. Perhaps there are sites that would allow me to prepare better by spending time acquiring the necessary background in advanced algebra and calculus that would open more doors for me. Because herein lies the rub. There is simply no way that one can understand what it is these talking heads from the physics community are talking about without--to borrow the popular phrase--doing the math. It has become a fixture of talks designed to explain science to the lay public that, undeterred, presenters will bend over backwards to assure their audiences that they will not be called upon to understand any of the math, any of the equations that are intrinsic to really understanding the subject.
A good many times I have been present at gatherings of people who, by the standards of the traditional culture, are thought highly educated and who have with considerable gusto been expressing their incredulity at the illiteracy of scientists. Once or twice I have been provoked and have asked the company how many of them could describe the Second Law of Thermodynamics. The response was cold: it was also negative. Yet I was asking something which is the scientific equivalent of: Have you read a work of Shakespeare's?
I now believe that if I had asked an even simpler question — such as, What do you mean by mass, or acceleration, which is the scientific equivalent of saying, Can you read? — not more than one in ten of the highly educated would have felt that I was speaking the same language. So the great edifice of modern physics goes up, and the majority of the cleverest people in the western world have about as much insight into it as their neolithic ancestors would have had.
--from Wikipedia entry on C.P. Snow
The above quotation is from a lecture delivered in 1959 by C.P. Snow which he titled, "The Two Cultures." I would argue that in the ensuing six decades since Snow gave his lecture very little has changed. If anything, science has become more esoteric and thus even less accessible to the vast majority who are--dare we admit?--mathematically illiterate. While, on the one hand, the only remedy to this problem seems to be the obvious, which is to say that, if you really care, you have no choice but to take the painstaking steps to acquiring the language of science, yet, and this is the real point in my writing this piece, I believe that more can be done, a great deal more.
While Snow was presenting his thesis in 1959, I was a student at Brooklyn Technical High School where we were told by our English teachers that, (on the assumption that we were destined for careers in science and engineering), as future scientists and engineers, we had an obligation to learn how to express ourselves clearly. While it was true that most Tech students would go with the program, stubborn recalcitrants like myself were placed in what they called the College Prep Program, a track that accomodated boys (only boys attended in those days) whose aptitiudes were more in the humanities. We were bluntly told that scientists and engineers were notorious for their poor writing skills and their inability to communicate with anyone outside of the fold. We were going to be different. No one had to twist my arm to make me believe that this was not just a malicious stereotype since I found that both in the way math and science were typically taught as well as in the way math and science text books were written rote learning ruled. All of my childhood curiosity soon dulled. I was one of those boys who always took things apart to see how they worked, whined until I got a Gilbert chemistry set for Christmas, looked at the night sky with wonder, read science-fiction and loved dinosaurs. At Tech, my grades in math and science nose-dived. Rebellious and resistant to authority even as a child, I felt that my science texts were more catechisms than guides to true understanding and discovery. There is one bit of business in science texts which, though seemingly trifling, always left me frustrated and angry.
...I will discuss this and conclude this post in a blog to follow.
While Snow was presenting his thesis in 1959, I was a student at Brooklyn Technical High School where we were told by our English teachers that, (on the assumption that we were destined for careers in science and engineering), as future scientists and engineers, we had an obligation to learn how to express ourselves clearly. While it was true that most Tech students would go with the program, stubborn recalcitrants like myself were placed in what they called the College Prep Program, a track that accomodated boys (only boys attended in those days) whose aptitiudes were more in the humanities. We were bluntly told that scientists and engineers were notorious for their poor writing skills and their inability to communicate with anyone outside of the fold. We were going to be different. No one had to twist my arm to make me believe that this was not just a malicious stereotype since I found that both in the way math and science were typically taught as well as in the way math and science text books were written rote learning ruled. All of my childhood curiosity soon dulled. I was one of those boys who always took things apart to see how they worked, whined until I got a Gilbert chemistry set for Christmas, looked at the night sky with wonder, read science-fiction and loved dinosaurs. At Tech, my grades in math and science nose-dived. Rebellious and resistant to authority even as a child, I felt that my science texts were more catechisms than guides to true understanding and discovery. There is one bit of business in science texts which, though seemingly trifling, always left me frustrated and angry.
...I will discuss this and conclude this post in a blog to follow.
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