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)
Thursday, December 7, 2023
Henry Kissenger and The Nazi Pope: Long Lives Addicted to Power
Monday, December 4, 2023
Austria 1938--The Sudden Betrayal
In September I walked through this square in the center of Vienna where Hitler spoke from a balcony announcing the Anschluss (joining) of Austria and Nazi Germany. This sudden tragedy haunted "The Sound of Music" one of the annual movies of my childhood.
When Trump was elected, I read many books and articles about how The Holocaust happened. Each country was different. Each was a tragedy. In some ways, Austria was the worst.
Jews in Austria, Vienna in particular, had very good lives. They lived in a country of long cosmopolitan tradition. So when the Nazis took over on March 11, 1938, the change was sudden, dramatic and terrible. Teenagers planning to be in college the following year were in ghettos. Many lost one or both parents to suicide or beatings. Doctors, lawyers, professors, artists, writers and others middle class professionals were broke, shunned by all, their property confiscated, humiliated in public.
While no one could have believed in 1938 how bad The Holocaust would be, Jews in other countries had experienced years of prejudice and open violence. German Jews knew that rural white Christians, Catholics and Jews, led the coalition that put Hitler in power, knowing that Jews would suffer and die if he took office. Once the Nazis invaded Poland, Jews across Europe knew they were in mortal danger. They had months, sometimes years, to adjust to knowing the entire world hated them.
Austrian Jews went from citizens to pariahs overnight. Which is why, I believe, the suicide rate was so high among Austrian Jews. Their world collapsed overnight.
As an American Jew, I can barely imagine what it felt like to be a Jew when Nazis ruled much of Europe and had millions of sympathizers here in America. Anyone who thinks it was easy for Jews in America between the World Wars should read People Love Dead Jews by Dara Horn.
Since 2016, I have experienced an emotional kinship with Jews under the Nazis. When Trump was elected and put the Nazi-enabler Steve Bannon in the White House, I was alarmed. When Trump winked at the Nazis in Charlottesville, I thought America would show the true Nazi basis of "America First." The Tree of Life Synagogue shooting by a Trump lover is so far the worst violence against Jews.
From Trump's election to October 7 of this year, I joined more than 300 protests from New York to Washington, but mainly in Philadelphia. The only protest I have been to since October 7 was the Pro-Israel Rally on the National Mall.
Beginning on October 7 and since, many organizations I protested with have become open Jew haters. They have cheered HAMAS. The Jewish babies burned in their cribs, the Jewish women raped and killed, the slaughter of families in their homes is not even tragic, it is an acceptable cost.
So I can no more ally with those groups than I can join with the Republicans who want to abandon Ukraine and support Christian Nationalism.
Since October 7, Black Lives Matter, the Democratic Socialists of America, the World Workers Party, all of whom I have joined at protests, are now my enemy. If I am to ally with any feminist organization, I will want to see their condemnation of the barbaric violence against women on October 7.
HAMAS celebrated their rape and torture and murder on videos they posted on social media. A transcript of one is here.
The feeling I had on October 7 hearing BLM, DSA and other progressives is the sudden betrayal with an echo of Anschluss. Anyone who can cheer for HAMAS is the same as a swastika-wearing Nazi to me.
Friday, December 1, 2023
On Tyranny 1
Saturday, November 25, 2023
The Prince, Chapter 23, Avoiding Flatterers
The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli, Chapter 23
Sunday, November 19, 2023
Nigel's 24th Birthday
My youngest child and youngest son is Nigel Garrison Gussman. He was born November 19, 1999, in Pittsburgh where he lived until he was six weeks old when we brought him to Lancaster. He was officially adopted a year later.
Nigel lived in Lancaster until 2021 when he moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota, where he lives now. His sister Lisa Stanton lives just a few miles away.
Nigel is named after 1992 Formula 1 World Champion Nigel Mansell and the writer Garrison Keillor, host of Prairie Home Companion and author of several books, and his Mom's favorite pop culture personality.
Like me, Nigel is a fan of Formula 1 racing. We have both followed and cheered for 7-time champion Lewis Hamilton since his rookie year in 2006. We are both hoping he will get one more championship before he retires at the end of the 2025 season.
Nigel raced bicycles and played basketball when he was in school and coached middle school basketball recently in Minneapolis.
Monday, November 13, 2023
Transcript of HAMAS Terrorist Bragging About Murder--To His Parents
Thursday, November 9, 2023
Fast Tour of Philadelphia and NYC
My best friend from the 1970s Army and I made a fast tour of Philadelphia and New York City on Monday and Tuesday this week. I met Cliff Almes in 1978 in Wiesbaden, West Germany. We were both sergeants in the American millitary community headquarters. We were roommates in 1979 until Cliff left the military and eventually became Bruder Timotheus in a Lutheran monastery in Darmstadt.
In October and November, Cliff was in the U.S. to visit his family and spent the last five days in Pennsylvania, visiting me Lancaster then Philadelphia and NYC before flying back to Germany.
In Philadelphia we visited the Liberty Bell, the Customs House where I was part of protests against former Senator Pat Toomey for six years as part of Tuesdays with Toomey, my former workplace at the Science History Institute and Independence Mall.
We drove from Philadelphia to New Jersey, taking the ferry from Hoboken to Wall Street in Lower Manhattan. We took a ferry that went north to Port Imperial in Weehauken NJ before turning south, so we saw a lot of Manhattan lit by the late afternoon sun.
When we got to Wall Street, we heard about aPro-Israel protest in Central Park West. It was rush hour. We had to go across town and north. The fastest route was three transfers because of delays on the A Train. We missed the event but talked to a guy leaving the event.
We had dinner with friends in Noho, which meant more subways and walking. We got back to the hotel in New Jersey taking the PATH train to Hoboken. It was midnight by the time we got back, not Cliff's usual schedule.
The next day we took the ferry back to lower Manhattan and visited the World Trade center Memorial and the new tower.
Then we went to Williamsburg. Cliff is a big fan of "Unorthodox" and wanted to see the Brooklyn neighborhhod at the center of the drama. We walked a few hundred feet from the subway station to an Orthodox shul.
The next morning I dropped Cliff at Newark Airport for his flight home by way of Charlotte NC.
Back in Panama: Finding Better Roads
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On 10 November 2003 the crew of Chinook helicopter Yankee 2-6 made this landing on a cliff in Afghanistan. Artist Larry Selman i...