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)
Wednesday, January 3, 2024
Jefferson Davis Was Not Tried for Treason: America still suffers from that decision
Wednesday, December 27, 2023
Top Blog Posts of 2023: Meeting Friends and Perennial Favorites
In 2023, various stories from my blog were opened more than 20,000 times. The two most popular with more than 1,500 reads each were the story about Larry Murphy's amazing rear-wheel-only landing of a Chinook Helicopter on the roof of a shack on the side of mountain in Iraq. A local artist turned the photo into the painting above. The story is here.
The other most-popular post is titled "Task, Conditions, Standards" the basis of all Army training. That story is here.
Next are several stories about meeting friends, new and old.
The Summer Social at the Hannah Arendt Center at Bard College this summer.
In Paris, following a Facebook post, I went to a gallery opening featuring my high school classmate and artist Paul Campbell and his wife Susan.
Several years ago, I was a guest on the Cold War Conversations History Podcast. I visited Ian Sanders and got a tour of Cold War and World War II Manchester, UK. He also treated me to lunch with fish and chips and mushy peas!
On the same trip I caught up with Katharine Sanderson, a writer for Nature magazine I have know for almost 20 years.
I write often about books but they are not usually popular posts. But this post about the book and HBO video series Band of Brothers has been read every year since I wrote in 2017.
In 2016 I wrote a post based on an essay by C.S. Lewis. He says during most of history in most places, men looked at military service with dread. The American all-volunteer Army is a big exception. The essay got a few hundred readers in 2016. Not much since, then all of a sudden in December 2023, more than 120 new readers. Who knows why now?
The most popular post I ever wrote was about Myles B. Caggins getting promoted to Colonel. He retired early this year, but I still get people reading his story.
Happy New Year to all.
Thursday, December 21, 2023
Books of 2023, Part 2
Part Two of my 2023 update begins with fiction and a book recommended by my daughter Lauren; Anxious People by Fredrik Backman. This book is so funny I was laughing on every other page. Read and laugh out loud! I wrote about the book here.
After watching the movie "Living" by Kazuo Ishiguro, I re-read The Death of Ivan Ilych by Leo Tolstoy, on which the movie is (loosely) based. It is such a lovely story that and a haunting view of life and death.
After reading a story about the main character dying, I read Eternal Life by Dara Horn, about a woman who could not die. It was strange and beautiful and reminded me of novels I read fifty years ago.
Poetry for 2023 includes a seventh re-reading of Inferno by Dante Aligheri, Shakespeare's Sonnets, Thank You For Your Service, poems about the Vietnam War by Richard Epstein, and Beowulf translated by Seamus Heaney.
In philosophy, I read The Jewish Writings by Hannah Arendt, a book of hers I had not read before. I read two books with the title Free Will. One was the "Oxford Very Short Introduction" to the subject which I read after reading Sam Harris' book of the same title. I deeply disagree with the premise of the Harris book, which is that we have no free will. But in one of the weird coincidences of modern life, I subscribed to his podcast last month after hearing his long essay on the events of October 7. I could not agree with him more on Israel and the necessity of destroying HAMAS and all other Jihadist groups if we want to live in a civilized world.
In the category biography I read Oppenheimer by Kai Bird and Martin Sherwin. It's the book on which the movie "Oppenheimer" was based. I saw the movie four times in three countries, the last time with French subtitles. The book has much more depth and reveals even more of the complexity of Robert Oppenheimer's character. The two complement each other well.
I also read Someday You Will Understand by Nina Wolff. It is a biography of her father who escaped The Holocaust, came to America and served in the American Army in World War II. The book is based on her father's letters. It's an amazing story of survival and building a life in America after the war.
Another biography of a very young man who became a great man twice was Hero of Two Worlds by Mike Duncan, a biography of the Marquis de Lafayette, the young French general who made American independence possible and then helped to pull France together after the fall of Napoleon.
Finally, my favorite book of the year: That All Shall Be Saved by David Bentley Hart. In the book Hart, an Eastern Orthodox Theologian asserts that there is no eternal Hell. Further he says that Hell is contrary to the character of God and is a terrible thing to believe about God.
Hart made me realize that the belief in an eternal Hell is so deep in western culture that I believed in Hell even as a vaguely agnostic teenager. Not sure about God, sure about Hell.
A beautiful part of Hart's argument is that God intends every person who ever lived to live forever, together. He deals with Hitler and other horrible people in the argument. And says that belief in eternal Hell means being separated forever form those we love: which ever side of the Heaven/Hell divide we would end up on.
Before I read this book, I re-read Inferno and felt even more revulsion at Dante's celebration of eternal punishment, which only echoes the theology of Thomas Aquinas. Hart showed my why I was so repelled.
I agree with Hart completely and since reading the book have looked at the world differently.
I wrote about the other books I read in 2023 here.
Saturday, December 16, 2023
Books of 2023, Part 1
I hope to finish Churchill and Orwell by Thomas Ricks before midnight on December 31 for the final book.
In addition to the eight Master and Commander novels, I read two naval histories by Ian Toll. One is about the birth of the American Navy titled Six Frigates. The other is The Conquering Tide about the war in the Pacific between 1942 and 1944. A total of ten books about war and life at sea.
Six of the books I read were on science including The Dawn of Everything the long book about the origins of life and humanity--with some very tough criticisms of the most popular books in the genre: Sapiens and Guns, Germs and Steel.
Eight were on politics, including the delightful How to Spot a Fascist by Umberto Eco and Identity by Francis Fukuyama. I also re-read The Prince for the 11th time and On Tyranny for the 5th time.
That adds up to 26 books and the three largest categories. Next Post will include poetry, fiction, philosophy and faith.
Monday, December 11, 2023
Eternal Hell Does Not Exist: Says David Bentley Hart and I Agree
Since October 7, I would have happily consigned every member of HAMAS to Hell along with every Nazi and a host of other criminals. But I now believe, with Hart, that even the worst people who ever lived will not be in eternal Hell, because the kind of god who would put limited beings in an eternal Hell is not the God of Israel.
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.
"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...
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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...
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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...
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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...