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Dozens dead after explosion rocks Turkish capital
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Page 4: Opinion
4 22:11 Knuckles Trotsky2582 [1] 
6 16:42 g(r)omgoru [1] 
3 23:46 Nguard [4] 
1 00:34 newc [3] 
17 22:52 swksvolFF [3] 
1 11:04 Procopius2k [2] 
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Page 6: Politix
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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
This Biannual in Emergency Preparedness - Spring Forward
by swksvolFF

Greetings.
Here at chez Kansas, we take a moment each time change to perform a safety review. It is an opportune time, as it is not only a marked day to remember, it is also a seasonal shift to review safety and emergency devices.

First, to judge my advice I must share myself at a certain level. I am a family man, and live in a house in southwest Kansas. I am not Johnny Rescue, though I have experienced at some level all aspects of such, nor am I Burt Gunner, which my other limited experience goes to badanov's This Week in Guns. I am just a guy with a family whose household responsibilities include safety and preparedness.

So by all means, this is a discussion, and all suggestions will be considered. It is important for you to take into consideration who you are and are not, where you live, and what level of preparedness you feel comfortable attaining. I am of the school better to have it and not need it, but there is also the consideration of overpacking, especially with a boogie bag or car kit.

This first posting is really an overview of the basic safety and awareness check I perform biannually. Later posts, as discussion permits, will get into particulars such as a good boogie bag

So forgive me for donning my nanny chapeau for the basics, then we will consider dynamic emergency preparedness supplies.

Around the Home
First off: smoke detectors. If the last time you checked your smoke detector batteries was cooking fajitas, it is time to check them again. And like a tetanus shot, if you cannot remember the last time you changed your batteries, it is time.

Same for carbon monoxide detectors and any other disposable battery operated detectors you may have.

Along the same lines, if you have a biometric vault, just go ahead and change the batteries; chances are you have a remote control or something else which can use the rest of the replaced battery's charge. Locate visually any back-up keys. Someone I, ahem, know had a battery go out and the key was missing - the only thing good about it was I, errr, that person was able to test the durability of the safe.

Firearms in the house? It is a good time to check all safety locks for effectiveness. Time to review with the kids that guns are not toys, and if you see one laying out do not touch and go tell an adult.

Review your fire escape plan. As we all age, abilities and responsibilities change, especially as children grow up or we get sick or injured. Can a person escape through a window on their own ability and initiative? Can or should a person be responsible for operating a fire extinguisher? Where is your rally point? Everyone know not to go back in no matter what?

And that is a tough question with a simple answer. If the structure is still survivable, information such as how many, where, and how to get there will greatly assist fire fighters who have the right equipment and training to enter an involved structure - remember, it is the smoke which is most dangerous, especially with all the plastics and specialized batteries in the modern house. If the structure is not survivable, then a person re-entering the structure just made a bad situation worse.

Pretty straightforward, right? In the spirit of Spring Training, here is a curveball: attic insulation. Many insulations lose their fire rating over time, especially the paper-based stuff. I know, it is expensive and inconvenient to replace, but a number of calls I have been on were made or broke on account of the effectiveness of the attic insulation's fire retardant. Hey, at least you will have better climate control.

How about a slider: when was the last time you checked your water heater? No, not cussing at it because you stubbed your toe, but checking connections and the bottom for corrosion. If you have an electric heater and it goes out, it is a bad day. If you have a gas heater and it goes out... you have a problem like when we returned from a trip and our heater failed just enough to put out the pilot light, but not make much of a mess. It must have just happened because there was only a whiff of gas. Still, everyone went to fire rally point while I shut off the line and circulated/dispersed the air.

Check your gas stove too.

Also, check your main water lines for corrosion/failure. If a pipe breaks, being able to shut off the main and/or branches can be the difference between a jolly mess and serious structural and wallet damage. Usually it is the toilet, especially when someone is just learning about toilet paper. Even children can operate that valve, but check to see if it still functions.

At this point you are probably lsaying, gosh golly Auntie K, anything else? Perhaps my sock folding is inappropriate?

Well, yes, but above are the basics of nearly every living space. Starting to get a bit more specific: check the foundation for cracks, check the chimney for obstructions, the porch, etc for overwinter damage, make sure skunks cannot get under the porch, make sure coyotes can't get through the fence - but that is your job to problem-solve your place. Take a look around. It is only twice a year, and can be done during game timeouts.

If you have a car kit, check your perishables - food and water - for quality. Rotate batteries. Replenish paper towels - not the ones in the cab, the ones in the trunk which were grabbed when the kids used up the roll in the cab.

Emergency Preparedness
I want to talk about the famous Kansas weather phenomenon I have at the top of my list for natural disaster preparedness.

No, not tornadoes: prairie fire. That involves my boogie bag, but I'll hold that bag of beans for the next post because you will be like, "You have a tomahawk? Really?" I will say yes, and it came handy.

Instead, in honor of tornado season, I will hit on storm sheltering. Hat tip to Mullah Richard for our discussion on storm spotting and emergency equipment and supplies. Y'all can get detailed in the comments, I may refine my suggestions as well or even follow up with a later post.

A wind event, including tornadoes, hurricanes, microbursts, and political rallies are the most likely, widespread storm emergency for nearly everyone living in the US. Everyone else, sorry, you know your weather; I don't.

First off: locate your storm shelter. The most likely problem will be stuff going through your windows, so consider flying glass. The most popular suggestion is lowest floor, at the center. That does not work for me, as right above me is a five ton olde school bath tub I am not interested in wearing as a hat.

A lot of people do not have basements. I would suggest a windowless interior room, if possible. Rule of thumb: if you can see a window, something can come through and hit you. Do random objects get blown fast enough to stick in things? Yes. Yes they do. I cannot tell you with any authority whether sheltering in a bath tub is effective or a wive's tale, only that it is better than standing in the doorway taking selfies.

Space is a consideration as well. It must be large enough for everyone to fit. Also, any cache is going to take space and if it is a permanent cache that is space which cannot be used for other things. I prefer a permanent cache because out here, even with all of our advanced communications and weather radar, storms often come through in less than an hour, and if that is nap time, well, Surprise! Second, I don't have to pack/unpack/did I repack? all the time. Third, and most important, there are other things to think about when shepherding the family into position.

Now we have established your storm shelter, time to add some basics. To do that, we have to have some considerations. First, the power is out, and will not be back on for quite a while. Second, your windows are busted in - notice in. Third, everyone needs help, so help is not arriving anytime soon.

I'm going to put out a basic list, and this is where everyone can play along.

Heavy Blanket
Nice to wrap everyone in to protect from debris lacerations and eye damage, as well as hearing protection. Blinders for the kids are nice I hear. If you have structural damage, this is some extra protection from the elements.

Food & Water
If Pecos Bill just stopped by, nothing is going to be where you left it, and may not be usable if you find it. You have no idea when or where chow will be available. I have 24 hours worth of stuff, really just easy snacks and bottled water. Besides, wouldn't it be better to be munching on a granola bar while taking in the damage?

Weather Radio
There are a ton of these. Sometimes storms split or piggyback, so it is nice to know that before going outside to find your car. Also, emergency instructions should be broadcast, such as triage centers and chow halls.

Whistle
If you are trapped or need assistance, nothing says "Over here!" like blowing a whistle.

Extra Shoes
Windows are blown in, glass is everywhere. Storm isn't going to wait on you to chase the rabbit around the tree and through the hole. If you want to be fancy, or as I call it, practical, have a pair of shoes with built-in protection from nails such as construction boots. Nothing will ruin your I Survived! story like stepping on a nail.

Work Gloves
Again, this is to protect yourself while extricating a damaged structure.

Flashlight
Power is out. Nighttime is dark. Also good for signaling and for morale. Do not forget extra batteries.

Bandages
There is a large selection of bandages. I suggest those with the clotting agents. Getting around with blood in your eyes is tough, etc. and it is good for morale.

Backpack
Put all the stuff into a comfortable backpack. You may need to go somewhere and having all this stuff portable will be handy. Also, it keeps the items from walking off; especially the flashlight.

Basic stuff. I have a closet in a spare bedroom to play with, so over the years I have packratted items such as safety helmets, safety vests, knee protection, extra food, water, bandages, a larger pack, a framing hammer, deck of cards, waterproof matches, MREs, heating packages, water purification systems, eye protection, extra blankets.

Again, this is just a guideline and conversation starter. Thank you.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 03/13/2016 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Another thing to not forget is a fire ladder for any bedroom upstairs. We also plan on having a fire extinguisher for each bedroom upstairs as well but that comes as money trickles in.

But it's hard to stress enough the importance of talking through these things with your family. Everyone has to be familiar with the plan and most especially their part in it.
Posted by: Silentbrick || 03/13/2016 9:38 Comments || Top||

#2  Stuff a day or two of any vital med into the socks you put in those back up shoes/boots. Might be a few days before you can get your hands on refills while things sort out.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 03/13/2016 10:57 Comments || Top||

#3  $200 cash, a change of clothes and pajamas for each child (I put last season's soccer uniforms, which had the trailing daughters' names on the back), and colouring books and crayons went into the bug out backpack when the children reached that age. And yes, several of each person's prescription meds in the original, labelled bottles. Most prescription meds have a three year expiration date -- double check with your pharmacist for yours.
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/13/2016 11:09 Comments || Top||

#4  "Another thing to not forget is a fire ladder for any bedroom upstairs."

Agreed, #1 SB. During the timer I was a firefighter in our small county, I know of at least one life saved because she had such a ladder. She couldn't have gotten out otherwise, and we couldn't have gotten there in time to get her out.

I don't know what they cost today, but they're worth every penny if you have bedrooms on the second floor.
Posted by: Barbara || 03/13/2016 11:10 Comments || Top||

#5  Very nice, swksvolFF. Very thorough.

I might add that at least one Weather Radio you have should be battery operated. The plug-in-only kinds don't work well if power is down. I like the Midland WR120 for an inexpensive ($25 at Sprawl-Mart) AC/Battery model or their EH55VP rechargeable portable ~$50.

I'm sharing this thread with a few other folks and you might see a weird nic or two in the comments.

Again great job.
Posted by: Mullah Richard || 03/13/2016 12:42 Comments || Top||

#6  Oh, I missed the medicines. (wife gives me a dirty look as meds are part of her education)

My boogie bag has pain relievers and anti-histamines (bees/wasps/etc) and keep it in my storm shelter. Wife confirms to leave meds in their original container, very important.

Add to the check list - open windows to be used in an emergency to make sure they can open. Something we teach at the safety day is to take out a dresser drawer and using it as a battering ram if the window does not open, knock out all the glass, and use the heaviest blanket available to lay over the bottom of the sill.

I have also seen emergency hoods with a breath-through-mouth air filter, and cartridge masks with dedicated fire/smoke filters.

I have an emergency radio with runs on batteries, and also has a hand crank which will charge a built-in battery.

There is a lot of emergency supplies out there now, even more so than when I first started building. I have marine (boating) emergency food and water, basically highly concentrated granola bars and water in high-strength pouches; look like capri sun pouches but durable.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 03/13/2016 13:04 Comments || Top||

#7  All seriousness aside be sure your beer supply is topped off. When the SHTF it'll be too late for a beer run.
Posted by: BrerRabbit || 03/13/2016 13:26 Comments || Top||

#8  Just thought of something. Have a drinker and/or tobacco user, might want some of that nicotine gum and a pint....under somebody else's stewardship. Cold turkey can be ugly and that may not be the time for it.

For our rural readers, Greensburg KS is a good study. For our more urban, Joplin MO.

Two ways out of every bedroom. Ladders for 2+ stories, step stools for basement windows.

Stay low, it is the smoke which will make a person pass out. Check doors with the back of your hand and on the door so you do not fry-stick your hand to the knob.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 03/13/2016 13:28 Comments || Top||

#9  Thanks, swksvolFF.

This is excellent information, all in one spot.

You helped a lot of people today.
Posted by: Barbara || 03/13/2016 13:43 Comments || Top||

#10  take the batteries OUT of your emergency radio, put them in a ziplock bag, and tape that bag to the radio. Take them out and use them for toys, put new ones in the radio and test it, then put them in the baggie every spring and fall. Prevents corrosion form the occaisional bad battery and ensures the radio works.

Or else get a hand cranked radio if you have the money.

One medicine to pack: Benadryl. Pills. It works great for allergic reactions (have the benadryl cream on hand if you/yours get rashes frequently), and can be used as a make-shift sedative to help a person sleep in unfamiliar or stressful situations in the aftermath of a disaster.
Posted by: Heriberto Glumble9907 || 03/13/2016 14:47 Comments || Top||

#11  awesome list!
Posted by: newc || 03/13/2016 14:49 Comments || Top||

#12  Everything HG9907 said is right on.

I will say that both my flashlight in my bunker gear and my 'what was that noise' on the bed stand, I keep the batteries in but unscrew the back enough to break the circuit but not let the batteries fall out. So far (couple years now) no corrosion.

Flashlights today: wow. They will knock out a person's night vision for sure - consider if that is a good thing or bad thing.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 03/13/2016 19:25 Comments || Top||

#13  I have a ladder that would reach the upstairs windows but in an emergency I'm sure I'd have never thought of it. That's a good idea.
Posted by: Abu Uluque || 03/13/2016 21:01 Comments || Top||

#14  inside rope ladder = better
Posted by: Frank G || 03/13/2016 21:03 Comments || Top||

#15  There are emergency rope/chain ladders which will fit underneath a bed; hooks over the sill.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 03/13/2016 21:46 Comments || Top||

#16  Another thing I need to add to my bug out bag is a charged extra battery with appropriate tips for the various cell phones, and make sure there are car chargers in the various cars. I've given this away as a stocking stuffer to the trailing daughters and acquired offspring, so I won't have to worry that their phones will die during an emergency. I carry the next size up for myself, because heaven forbid both the phone and the iPad die at the same time while I am away from electricity -- the thought that I might not be able to reach Rantburg is too horrifying to contemplate. ;-)
Posted by: trailing wife || 03/13/2016 22:30 Comments || Top||

#17  A cigarette lighter inverter, and there are solar chargers with various attachments, as well as solar chargers for traditional sized rechargeable batteries.

I have one which one end goes into a cigarette lighter charger, and the other end is a USB port. There are also various sized battery to battery chargers like TW's link.

There is a battery pack/tire inflator ostensibly for jumping a car/filling tires, but the capacity and sockets allow for recharging items or even running a microwave for x amount of time.

I have an inverter with which I can plug into car's CL charger, run the car, and it could power my fridge and freezer (as gasoline allows).
Posted by: swksvolFF || 03/13/2016 22:52 Comments || Top||


The Grand Turk
The rage against the Constitutional Court
[Hurriyet Daily News] When The Sick Man of Europe Turkey
...the only place on the face of the earth that misses the Ottoman Empire....
’s Constitutional Court took a fateful decision on Feb. 25 to release imprisoned journalists Can Dundar and Erdem Gul, the Western media hailed it. Here was the proof that at least some checks-and-balances still existed in Turkey, as there is some "independent judiciary" left.

Notably, this argument was put forward by none other than Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu earlier this week during a presser in Brussels. Answering criticisms about the lack of a free press in Turkey, the prime minister referred to the Constitutional Court and defined its recent decision as proof of an independent judiciary.

This was nice to hear, of course, but only until one flies from Brussels back to Turkey and sees what the current regime actually thinks of the Constitutional Court and the plans for its future (by "regime" I am not referring to the Davutoglu government, but rather the much higher and bigger pyramid of power spearheaded by the president).

What this regime thinks about the Constitutional Court is actually very clear: It is very angry at the top court and is now mobilizing to curb its powers, even perhaps to fully disestablish it in the "new civilian constitution."

This anger is visible everywhere. First, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
... Turkey's version of Mohammed Morsi but they voted him back in so they deserve him...
spoke several times against the Constitutional Court, blaming it for "violating the constitution." When the court released a 33-page document explaining the legal basis of its decision, Erdogan said he did not have time to read the document, and repeated his accusations against the court, which were actually all refuted in the document.

Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag, an Erdogan confidante, went further and blamed the top court for "killing law." The pro-Erdogan media went even further, with headlines and editorials every single day demonizing the high court as a treacherous body occupied by the nefarious "parallels." Here is an illegitimate "tutelage" on the "national will," they keep saying, which must be subdued by the "nation" (i.e. the president).

No wonder plans are now being made to fix this systemic problem. As pro-Erdogan daily Yeni Safak announced joyfully on March 8, the government is now working on a new set of legal amendments which will curb the top court’s authority to intervene in local court’s processes for "the protection of the violation of rights." Since some of these "local courts" are clearly designed and mastered by the government, you can read this as the elimination of the last stronghold of an independent judiciary.

If the top court’s authority is really curbed, or somehow intimidated or transformed, then we will really have to say goodbye to the notion of human rights
...which are usually entirely different from personal liberty...
in Turkey as a higher value than the political ambitions of the ruling party. The only remaining hope will be the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), which still has the right to penalize Turkey, as a state, for "violation of rights."

But, well, Erdogan seems to have solved that problem as well, for he declared, regarding the ECHR, "We will pay whatever their penalty is; it is not binding." So, we do not want EU legal standards in Turkey, we’d rather find ways to override them.

By looking at all this, I feel really pessimistic about Turkey’s near future. Let’s all just pray and hope that this is an exaggerated pessimism.
Posted by: Fred || 03/13/2016 00:00 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under: Sublime Porte

#1  Sick man of Europe... or whatever now. Another Shariah anti-semite Moslem Brotherhood useless piece of shit, Erdogan.
Posted by: newc || 03/13/2016 0:34 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke Slams Trump Protesters
[Young Conservatives] The progressive Left is afraid of Donald Trump becoming president and will do everything to prevent it.

These protesters should not be allowed at his rallies.

If things continue like this, somebody will get killed.

Sheriff David Clarke weighed in on the violence that unfolded in Chicago on Friday that prompted Trump to cancel his rally.
Posted by: Besoeker || 03/13/2016 03:53 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The urban narco entrepreneurs, 'free stuff', and big gov't crowd will do anything to stop Trump. This election is devolving into a banana republic political revolution. Toppling the Leftest power structure will be difficult. I fear for the safety of Trump and his family.

Notice how the protests have suddenly diverted attention from the Clinton legal woes.
Posted by: Besoeker || 03/13/2016 4:13 Comments || Top||

#2  If things continue like this, somebody will get killed.

That's the plan.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 03/13/2016 7:03 Comments || Top||

#3  And their plans may not work quite like they expect. There are a lot people just waiting for the balloon to go up.
Posted by: Zebulon Check7490 || 03/13/2016 10:21 Comments || Top||

#4  Democrastas* here in SE hate Clarke with a passion. For one simple reason. He has refused to become part of the standard Black Urban Political Organization. He ran as a Democrat yet refuses to toe the party line. Which drives the more liberal side of the party crazy. He has to them dangerous ideas, such as the law applies equally to all and criminals should be behind bars.
Posted by: Cheaderhead || 03/13/2016 12:19 Comments || Top||

#5  If only more black people would come to reality like this sheriff has. He seems to represent the long lost Democrat who I thought didnt exist anymore.

Someone who treats politics like an honorable political opponent, but not an enemy or object of hatred. This is what we have lost in 8 years of press/left hatred of Bush, and 8 years of Obama passive-aggressive poisoning the well with the progressive press help.

He has guts to take this stand contra his progressive and violent party.
Posted by: Craiger Omomose2197 || 03/13/2016 14:42 Comments || Top||

#6  An African-American, a dying breed.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 03/13/2016 16:42 Comments || Top||


Syria-Lebanon-Iran
After five years of civil war, it’s time to bid farewell to Syria
The view from Israel:
[IsraelTimes] The former state is gone and will never return. A regime of sorts survives in Damascus, but it takes its orders from Iran

Approximately five years have elapsed since the popular protest against Bashar Assad’s regime began in Syria — a protest that spiraled into a blood-drenched civil war that has claimed the lives of nearly half a million people. After years of battle, murder, massacre, and even attacks with chemical weapons, no end seems to be in sight.

Five years in, the only thing that can be said with any certainty (this is the Middle East, after all) is that Syria in its former guise — a state with clearly defined borders and a single government based in Damascus — is no more. It has passed from the world, (evidently) never to return. What remains is an area of land that is split, torn, and divided among hundreds of groups of armed men fighting against one another and working hard to wipe out anything that might be left of it.
Continued on Page 49
Posted by: Fred || 03/13/2016 00:00 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under: Govt of Syria

#1  Hopefully, they'll be still killing each other a hundred years from now---with locally made swords and bows.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 03/13/2016 4:00 Comments || Top||

#2  Kurds consolidate the south and west. they will need to move to the north. Eastern Turkey is in for a nasty civil war given the Kurds being a majority there. Perhaps NW part of Iran as well.

Who will the US back when it comes to that?
Posted by: Snose Juling2943 || 03/13/2016 14:52 Comments || Top||

#3  Who will the US back when it comes to that?

To quote the punch line from the old college sports teams with same names joke: Go Tigers!

I believe we will be backing whoever is behind at whatever given moment.

We have no friends among the dar ul islam. We only have interests. Our long term interest is to see that no one group predominates.
Posted by: Nguard || 03/13/2016 23:46 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Culture Wars
Smartly Stupid
The infrastructure of manufactured intelligence has become a truly impressive thing. Today as never before there is an industry dedicated, not to educating people, but to making them feel smart. From paradigm shifting TED talks by thought leaders and documentaries by change agents that promise to transform your view of the world, manufactured intelligence has become its own culture.

...Smart once used to be an unreachable quality. Einstein was proclaimed a genius, because it was said that no one understood his theories. Those were undemocratic times when it was assumed that the eggheads playing with the atom had to be a lot smarter than us or we were in big trouble.

Intelligence has since been democratized. Smart has been redistributed. Anyone can get an A for effort. And the impulse of manufactured intelligence is not smart people, but people who make us feel smart.

Intelligence to a modern liberal isn't depth, it's appearance. It isn't even an intellectual quality, but a spiritual quality. Compassionate people who care about others are always "smarter", no matter how stupid they might be, because they care about the world around them.

...Liberal intelligence exists on the illusion of its self-worth. The magical thinking that guides it in every other area from economics to diplomacy also convinces it that if it believes it is smart, that it will be. The impenetrable liberal consensus in every area is based on this delusion of intelligence. Every policy is right because it's smart and it's smart because it's progressive and it's progressive because smart progressives say that it is.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru || 03/13/2016 09:49 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Intelligence to a modern liberal isn't depth, it's appearance.

Wizard of Oz: Why, anybody can have a brain. That's a very mediocre commodity. Every pusillanimous creature that crawls on the Earth or slinks through slimy seas has a brain. Back where I come from, we have universities, seats of great learning, where men go to become great thinkers. And when they come out, they think deep thoughts and with no more brains than you have. But they have one thing you haven't got: a diploma.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 03/13/2016 10:40 Comments || Top||

#2  ...Liberal intelligence exists on the illusion of its self-worth. The magical thinking that guides it in every other area from economics to diplomacy also convinces it that if it believes it is smart, that it will be. The impenetrable liberal consensus in every area is based on this delusion of intelligence. Every policy is right because it's smart and it's smart because it's progressive and it's progressive because smart progressives say that it is.

We've are seeing this arrogance play out on the left today and we have seen it before. In other words, the lemmings march over the cliff in lock step. Where's the intelligence, thought, compassion, and diversity in that? Lenin had a phrase for these folks--"useful idiots."
Posted by: JohnQC || 03/13/2016 10:59 Comments || Top||

#3  I've been saying this for 20 years. Reading the NYT makes you *feel* smart. They leave out all the important bits, but if that's your only source of information you'll never notice.

Reagan: "The trouble with our Liberal friends is not that they're ignorant; it's just that they know so much that isn't so."
Posted by: Iblis || 03/13/2016 12:54 Comments || Top||

#4  "if it believes it is smart, that it will be."

Isn't this called Magical Thinking, a psychopathology, a sign of Personality Disorder types of mental illness?
Posted by: Knuckles Trotsky2582 || 03/13/2016 22:11 Comments || Top||


This Week in Books - March 13, 2016
Ship of Ghosts
The Story of the USS Houston, FDR's Legendary Lost Cruiser, and the Epic Saga of Her Survivors

James D. Hornfischer
Bantam Dell, Random House, 2006

I picked this book up solely on the performance of Mr. Hornfischer's book Last Stand of the Tin Can Soldiers. That decision was a well rewarded leap.

Ship of Ghosts is one of Mr. Hornfischer's three (at the moment) installments of the World War II Pacific Theatre actions, including in chronological order: Ship of Ghosts, Neptune's Inferno, and Last Stand of the Tin Can Soldiers. For full effect, though they are not back-to-back books, I would suggest reading them in this order.

It is 1941, and for those opposing the Japanese, it looks very dark as Japan is rolling up all opposing forces. One of the few holdouts is in the Dutch East Indies, the location of the Dutch government in exile. On the heels of the December 8/7 opening hostilities, the USS Houston barely makes sea. (Page 32)

..."We had hardly cleared Iliolo entrance when we heard gunfire astern of us and saw a ship aflame," Cdr. Arthur Mahar recalled. Hidden in the dark backdrop of Panay's mountain ranges, the Houston avoided notice of the Japanese pilots. She joined a pair of Asiatic Fleet destroyers, the Stewart and the John D. Edwards, in escorting two fleet oilers and the old seaplane tender Langley out of the war zone.

Anyone overconfident about America's prospects against Japan might have asked why the invincible U.S. fleet was on the run. En route to Surabaya, Captain Rooks called his officers and department heads to the executive officer's cabin and informed them that war had started. On December 10 more than fifty twin-engine Japanese bombers struck Cavite unopposed, burning out most of its key installations, destroying the harbor facilities, and sinking a transport ship. When Tokyo Rose came on the radio that night, she purred an optimistic report that President Roosevelt's favorite heavy cruiser had been sunk. The men of the Houston were at once flattered and unnerved by the attention. Embracing their status as a priority target not only of the Japanese military but of its propagandists too, they would coin a defiant nickname for the ship: the Galloping Ghost of the Java Coast.

On January 15, ABDACOM (American, British, Dutch, Australian command) under Admiral Hart is formed to present a last line of defense of the resource-rich Dutch East Indies.

Mr. Hornfischer's well referenced book presents the dire, detailed series of actions versus the Japanese in a careful, creative description which leaves action movies in their little kids' chairs. (Page 80-81)

For the Allies, the seeming ritual nature of the engagement ended less than an hour after it began. A medium-caliber projectile struck the Java, while an eight-incher arced down and slammed into the Houston. The latter passed through the main deck aft of the anchor windlass, penetrated the second deck, and tore through the starboard side above the waterline without exploding. Another hit ruptured an oil tank on the Houston's port side aft, but it too failed to explode. Either the warheads were duds or the ship's treaty-mandated limitations on weight, which dictated lighter armor protection than would become typical for a heavy cruiser, paid the dividend of failing to detonate a projectile engineered to sink ships with heavier hides.

Mr. Hornfischer recounts the final actions of the Houston and ABDA fleet in a manner I can only describe as "they may just make it", as he does in all three of the aforementioned books. The second topic of this book details the after-action of the ABDA fleet and other Allied soldiers and sailors who were enveloped by the operations of the Japanese. (Page 232-233)

Fujita had plenty to lose in his dealings with the Japanese. His father's countrymen, his captors, had no idea of his true heritage. Fujita didn't quite know why. He assumed they took him for a Filipino or a Mexican. Though his name was as Japanese as could be, no one paid him much attention. But his buddies did. "Hell, they are going to kill you," they would tell him. "Change your name. For God's sake, don't tell them you're half Japanese." Fujita was scared. He had no doubt they were right. Yet he could not quite pull the trigger on adopting a racial disguise. "If I change my name to Joe Martinez or something, well, when they kill me anyhow they might have me listed as Joe Martinex, and then my folks will never know what happened to me. So I figured hell, I was born with this name, and I might as well die with it."

On November 28 he found himself jammed with 2,200 other men aboard the Kamakura Maru, at 17,500-ton Japanese passenger ship. Each man had a single canteen to last him the ten-day voyage. The ship left Singapore and stopped at Formosa, where some POWs debarked. Continuing north, the ship reached Japan on December 7, 1942, and docked at Nagasaki, the home Fujita's father had left in 1914. The northern winds were cold on his face.

You may be familiar with the movie Bridge Over the River Kwai. The third topic of this book covers the plight of the POWs who were involved in the building of the Japanese rail plan in Indochina. Mr. Hornfischer reports with a particular scowl towards that famous movie as disingenuous to the events which actually happened. Mr. Hornfischer relays the stories of overworked, underfed, diseased people impressed into hard manual labor in an unforgiving environment, and how they fought their own battle of subterfuge. (Page 336-337)

While some were chosen to stay in the mountain camps and maintain the railway against erosion and bombing and the varied sabotages of a defiant jungle, most were shipped to camps in western Thailand. Boarding boxcars to ride the narrow-gauge railway themselves, the evacuees thought of their efforts at sabotage, of the soft pilings they had bolted in place and the weak sports in the embankments they had cultivated, and worried those might be instruments of their own demise. "It was more or less like a Toonerville trolley," said Gus Forsman. "The boxcars swayed an awful lot, and you wondered - especially when you went across a bridge or something like that - whether it would hold, or whether you were going to go crashing in."

Among the efforts of the Allied forces to prevent a transportation project across previously unnavigable terrain, often resulting in the bombing deaths of POWs, is this innovation: (Page 355)

It was a largely uncelebrated technical achievement - the Allied nations' first smart bomb - that made it possible finally to destroy the great bridge over the Rive Kwae Noi. The newfangled bomb known as the VB-1 AZON was delivered to the Seventh Bomb Group's 493rd Squadron in late 1944. It was a thousand-pounder equipped with a gyro, solenoids, and moveable fins to hold it steady in free fall, and a radio receiver and servometer to steer it left or right. The acronym "AZON" stood for "azimuth only," indicating the limited (though revolutionary) extent of steering control the bombardier had over the weapon in flight. There was no way to adjust its range in free fall, no way to flatten or steepen its trajectory. But it could be guided left and right by visual means, as a powerful flare burned in its tail fin. Against a long, narrow target such as a bridge, control over one dimension of the trajectory was usually enough to greatly improve the chance of a hit.

Mr. Hornfischer's book is well referenced, and the hardcover version contains many photos, including Sgt. Frank Fujita and various depictions of the Houston from shipyard to a replica of an oil painting highlighting a Japanese crew preparing to launch torpedoes towards it.

I highly recommend Mr. Hornfischer's series of books, especially Ship of Ghosts. As even Mr. Hornfischer notes, the plight of the Galloping Ghost of the Java Coast and her sister ships of the ABDA has been overshadowed by the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Link is to Amazon's Ship of Ghosts.
Posted by: swksvolFF || 03/13/2016 00:00 || Comments || Link || [2 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Mr. Hornfischer relays the stories of overworked, underfed, diseased people impressed into hard manual labor in an unforgiving environment

Remember when the usual suspects who bray that only white people can be racists, they'll also whine about only black people who were victims of slavery.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 03/13/2016 11:04 Comments || Top||



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