Veteran of four wars, four enlistments, four branches: Air Force, Army, Army Reserve, Army National Guard. I am both an AF (Air Force) veteran and as Veteran AF (As Fuck)
Monday, July 22, 2019
Sunday, July 21, 2019
A Chinook Helicopter Lifting a 105mm Howitzer, Part 1
This sequence is the end of the process. I will post some more with details of the hook up. Photos were taken at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pa.
Hanging on the bottom of the forward door guiding the pilot.
Saturday, July 13, 2019
The Price of Leadership: An excerpt from "Master and Commander"
In Patrick O’Brian’s book“Master and Commander” the sixth chapter begins with the ship’s doctor on land
thinking about how men age. After
college, in my early 30s, I decided that the price of taking power was far too
high, so I determined to be a journeyman at writing rather than a leader. Dr. Mathurin’s reflections fit my own
experience and make me glad of my choice.
Mathurin is thinking about what happens to men as they age and become
absorbed by their profession and set on a path by the cumulative effect of
their choices. He sees middle age, around 40, as where the line is crossed and
is talking specifically about a mid-career Lieutenant, James Dillon:
“It appears to me a critical
time for him…a time that will settle him in that particular course he will
never leave again, but will persevere in for the rest of his life. It has often seemed to me that towards this
period [middle age] … men strike out their permanent characters; or have those
characters struck into them. Merriment, roaring high spirits before this: then
some chance concatenation, or some hidden predilection (or rather inherent
bias) working through, and the man is in the road he cannot leave but must go
on, making it deeper and deeper (a groove or channel), until he is lost in his mere
character—persona—no longer human, but an accretion of qualities belonging to
this character.
James Dillon was a
delightful being. Now he is closing in. It is odd—will I say hear-breaking?—how
cheerfulness goes: gaiety of mind, natural free-springing joy. Authority is the
great enemy—the assumption of authority. I know few men over fifty that seem to
me entirely human: virtually none who has long exercised authority. The senior
post-captains here…Shriveled men (shriveled in essence: not, alas, in belly).
Pomp, an unwholesome diet…pleasure…at too high a price, like lying with a
peppered paramour. Yet Lord Nelson, by (Captain) Jack Aubrey’s account, is as
direct and unaffected and amiable a man as could be wished. So, indeed, in most
ways is Jack Aubrey himself; though a certain careless arrogancy of power
appears at times. His cheerfulness at all events is still with him.
How long will it last? What
woman, political cause, disappointment, wound, disease, untoward child, defeat,
what strange surprising accident will take it all away? But I am concerned for
James Dillon: he is as mercurial as he ever was—moreso—only now it is all ten
octaves lower and in a darker key; and sometimes I am afraid in a black humour
he will do himself a mischief. – page 202-3.
-->
Tuesday, July 9, 2019
Stalingrad by Vasily Grossman: War and Peace set in the 20th Century
-->
“Stalingrad” by Vasily Grossman opens with the sentence:
“On 29 April 1942 Benito Mussolini’s train pulled into
Salzburg station, now hung with both Italian and German flags.”
In the first two chapters of this thousand-page novel are a
description of a meeting between Adolph Hitler and the Italian fascist
dictator. Mussolini is the older of the two, but the junior partner. Mussolini
notes the signs of age and exhaustion in the 53-year-old Hitler. Hitler notes
the decline in square-jawed Italian who is approaching his 60th
year.
Hitler describes his plans for a post-war Nazi-dominated
Europe. As he does, Mussolini sees
Hitler as vain and stupid. Mussolini knows he is the smarter of the two, but
Hitler has such overwhelming numbers in men and machines, that he can only
accept his role as the junior partner.
Hitler believes one great thrust into Russia will put him in
control of all of Europe. Britain will capitulate, America will stay away, and
he will be able to concentrate on the new world he created.
Nothing turned out as Hitler planned.
Grossman is a wonderful storyteller. This novel in two volumes is nearly 2,000
pages, “War and Peace” set in the 20th Century centered on Stalingrad. I read second volume “Life and Fate” in
2015. The first volume was just
published in English translation.
Grossman was a Russian war correspondent throughout the
Second World War. Russians everywhere read his dispatches from the front.
That storytelling ability pulls the reader in, keeping the
vast tale personal and close. After
showing the plans of Hitler through the jealous eyes of Mussolini, the next few
chapters follow Vavilov, a father in his forties who gets a notice to report
for military service the next morning. His son is already in the Army. Vavilov
looks with love around his hut and does what he can to make sure his wife and
family can survive the next winter without him.
Next we are at a dinner party in Stalingrad. The Nazi armies
are still far off, but relentlessly advancing.
The group of professional workers, engineers, doctors, academics,
speculate about what will happen to Stalingrad, to Russia, to themselves.
I loved “Life and Fate” and hope to re-read it next year, now that I have finished the fist volume of this 1,800-page tale of the battle that was the beginning of the end of the Nazi attack on Russia.
Monday, July 8, 2019
Old Soldier: New Ignition
I just finished walking two miles because I rented a car with a pushbutton ignition--and I dropped the key!
I rented a 2019 Mitsubishi SUV to bring my son home for the 4th holiday, then to visit his sister Lauren and Godparents Stanley and Terry Morton and in Richmond.
Today I took some recycling to the drop-off point before returning the SUV. As I left the center, I dropped the keys, but the ignition was running so I drove away. I stopped a mile away to an Asian grocery store and the car would not restart. No key.
I knew where the key was, so I called the recycling center. They have a phone with a real answering machine. While I was leaving the message, the manager picked up, we made a couple of jokes about keys, and I walked the rest of the way.
As I returned, the only parked car on the side of the street where I was parked was my rental car. The street sweeper was 50 feet away. I jumped in the the car and took off before I got a $25 ticket.
After that, I bought pickled ginger and went home. Now I am going to return the rental car.
Friday, July 5, 2019
Tank Cannon Splits Turret in Half Every Time We Fire
Every time a gunner pulls his trigger in a tank and fires the main gun, the turret is split in half as the gun recoils--stopping just a couple of inches before the rear of the turret.
As the gun snaps back into place, the spent shell pops from the breach, a nearly yard-long cylinder of hot aluminum that bounces from the back of the turret to the turret floor.
I was thinking about that black cannon cutting the turret in half and the clattering cannon shell bouncing in the turret because I am reading "Master and Commander" by Patrick O'Brian. This exciting book about late 18th Century sea battles explains gunnery at sea in considerable detail, including the injuries common when firing a battery of muzzle-loaded cannons on a ship at sea. Crushed feet, burned faces, smashed arms, bodies trapped between guns, all these injuries happen frequently enough for Captain Jack Aubrey to say during a long fight, "The guns are as deadly to the crew as to the enemy."
It reminded me that I could not remember anyone who was injured by our 105mm cannon snapping back in a black blur of recoil then spitting a spent shell as it returned to its lethal place. I am sure many armor crewman have been injured in a tank turret in the hundred years since tanks debuted on the battlefield, but it did not happen in my tank.
I am glad to have dangerous fiction and safe reality.
Saturday, June 29, 2019
Evolution: Israelis and American Jews Grow Apart
in the Sinai during the Six-Day War in 1967
I love Evolution. Not only is it one of the most brilliant theories
in the history of science, fundamentalists of every kind just hate it and Charles Darwin is not
Jewish, not even a little!!
As a Jew, I have heard the sub-text of criticism of science all my life. Sigmund Freud,
Albert Einstein, brilliant Jews without number have been disparaged for their work by
people who hate Jews. But the man fundamentalists hate the most is as thoroughly English as Windsor Castle and the family that lives there.
Darwin, the reclusive English gentleman, developed a theory
of life so sweeping that critics, especially religious conservatives, are still
trashing his theory 150+ years later: a theory that has proven as tough and
durable and resistant to flame as cast iron frying pans.
Most of all, I am delighted at examples of Evolution working
right in front of our eyes. The way to see Evolution work is to take a
population of any living thing, separate it into two or more parts as far away
from each other as possible, a water barrier is especially good, and watch the two populations change.
Darwin famously illustrated his theory with Galapagos
finches. Gil Hoffman, politics reporter at the Jerusalem Post, showed me how evolution occurred with Jews living in Eastern Europe, primarily Poland and Russia and nearby
countries, for hundreds of years before the 20th Century, when everything changed.
At the end of the 19th Century, that population
began to divide into two parts. Zionists
left to restore Israel as a nation. Others, like my own
grandparents, left for America.
You could say there were three groups: those who left for
America, those who left for the land that would become Israel, and those who
stayed. In 1939, those who stayed were
the largest group. By 1945, millions were slaughtered and many survivors fled
Europe for the Middle East or North America.
Beginning in the 1970s, more than a million Russian Jews would flee to Israel and America,
continuing the trend.
But the early Zionists and my grandparents in America were
the populations that separated and evolved.
Jews who fled for America largely assimilated. The tailors
and shopkeepers and laborers had children who became doctors, lawyers and the writers
who shaped American literature, Broadway and Hollywood. They were American success stories. The
Zionists became pioneers, making the desert green, fighting for survival,
eventually gaining independence and becoming one of the fiercest Armies in the
world.
One culture produces Moshe Dayan and Ariel Sharon. The other
gives the world Jerry Seinfeld and Philip Roth.
All four brilliant in their own way, but no doubt who you would call if
you were under attack.
American and Israeli Jews speak a different language, eat
different food, celebrate the same religious festivals in different ways and in
this century are increasingly separate on politics.
Gil Hoffman travels regularly between Israel and
America. He spoke at my Synagogue this
year. He worries about the increasing
divide between Israel and American Jews.
He did an excellent episode on the subject on his podcast “Inside IsraelToday” on the Land of Israel Network.
In America, three of four Jews identify as Liberal and/or
Democrat and in the same numbers, loathe President Trump. Israel, in sharp contrast, is one of just
three countries in the world that have a positive opinion of Trump: nearly 70%
of Israelis have a favorable view of Trump. The other two countries positive about Trump are
the Philippines and Nigeria. Apart form those three nations, the 192 member countries
of the United Nations have a negative opinion of America’s chief executive,
including America.
As more anti-Semitic incidents happen in America, the gulf
between the two communities continues to grow.
Over the last century, American Jews have become much more American:
rich, largely insulated from the virulent anti-Semitism of the rest of the world, and driven by personal ambition.
Trump made the alt-right and white supremacists his base, infamously saying there were “fine people on both sides” at an event with one side waving Nazi flags and chanting “Blood and Soil.” Anti-Semitism in America increased rapidly as Trump ran and won his racism-centered campaign.
Trump made the alt-right and white supremacists his base, infamously saying there were “fine people on both sides” at an event with one side waving Nazi flags and chanting “Blood and Soil.” Anti-Semitism in America increased rapidly as Trump ran and won his racism-centered campaign.
In Israeli society, universal conscription means the path to
power and influence is through the Army.
Israel is under constant threat and defines itself by its readiness to
fight with enemies on every side. For Israel, surrounded by enemies, Trump is an ally who moved the US embassy to Jerusalem and pulled out of the Iran treaty that was so unpopular in Israel.
The political differences between American and Israeli Jews
are likely to get worse no matter what the future holds for the two countries.
When groups split and grow apart, the usual trajectory is to
grow further apart. When Gil Hoffman
speaks on this topic, he hopes to be a small part of bringing the two groups
closer together, even as he reports the news that shows Jews separated by six
thousand miles in distance are separating even further in politics and
practice.
I am going to try to live part of my life on both sides of
the divide. I am planning to spend the first three months of 2020 traveling in
Israel. For Jews, anti-Semitism is a
question of if, not when. Israel is a place of refuge for all Jews everywhere.
So I want to know and experience more of the Land of Israel. We’ll see how my thinking evolves.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
"Blindness" by Jose Saramago--terrifying look at society falling apart
Blindness reached out and grabbed me from the first page. A very ordinary scene of cars waiting for a traffic introduces the horror to c...
-
Tasks, Conditions and Standards is how we learn to do everything in the Army. If you are assigned to be the machine gunner in a rifle squad...
-
On 10 November 2003 the crew of Chinook helicopter Yankee 2-6 made this landing on a cliff in Afghanistan. Artist Larry Selman i...
-
C.S. Lewis , best known for The Chronicles of Narnia served in World War I in the British Army. He was a citizen of Northern Ireland an...