Anybody interested in Project Paperclip should probably stay away from the Jacobson book
Monte Davis
montedavis49 at gmail.com
Fri Mar 7 11:17:19 CST 2014
Joseph, if I run into anyone who denies that there are and have been real
government conspiracies, or that the national security state has subverted
law and the Constitution on many occasions, I'll certainly pass on your
message.
On Fri, Mar 7, 2014 at 11:11 AM, Joseph Tracy <brook7 at sover.net> wrote:
> Beliefs probaby differ in origin and nature depending on the belief and
> the person. Some are tentative working hypotheses and some are inherited
> fundamentalisms, some emerge from experience or revelation. Operation
> paperclip was not a matter of belief but of real actions
>
> What you are saying about beliefs is relevant to certain conspiracies
> and theories about conspiracies. But that is not what I have been talking
> about at all. From 1946 to 1948 in Guatemala The US Health service
> deliberately infected prisoners, soldiers, and patients in a mental
> hospital with syphilis and, in some cases, gonorrhea, with the cooperation
> of some Guatemalan health ministries and officials. A total of 696 men and
> women were exposed to syphilis without the informed consent of the subjects.
> This is the kind of thing I am talking about when I am talking about a
> government conspiracy- a secret illegal action involving several
> institutional decision makers. I am not talking about something inside
> anyone's imagination but an action that injures others to achieve a goal by
> means that ignore due process of law and normal ethical constraints.
>
> A conspiracy theory is a hypotheses about a conspiracy. It could be a
> wild guess or a very accurate estimate based on evidence.
> Because there are conspiracies and because they hurt people, there are
> legitimate reasons to investigate suspected abuses of a conspiratorial
> nature. The fact that many people with selfish motives publish half baked
> and stupid conspiracy theories does not discredit the good work that gets
> done and sometimes saves lives or brings compensation to victims.
>
> The degree to which the national security state has subverted
> constitutional government is open for debate, but the fact that the FBI,
> CIA, NSA, and military intelligence have all engaged in secret criminal
> acts is a matter of clear historic record. The fact that those crimes are
> organized around a fairly consistent geopolitical strategy should produce
> reasoned but aggressive efforts to define a proper constitutional role for
> these agencies and to limit their unchecked growth.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Mar 6, 2014, at 10:54 PM, David Morris wrote:
>
> > Conspiracy beliefs are the natural product of an inquiring mind.
> Nihilism is its opposite. Does the world make sense? Or is there no sense?
> These are the choices. Conspiracy is a component in this question only
> because any sense that can be discerned is not freely given. It is hard to
> find. It requires a quest. And such a quest implies an opponent.
> Eventually the questioner realizes the opponent is himself. We have met
> the enemy...
> >
> > David Morris
> >
> > On Thursday, March 6, 2014, Mark Kohut <markekohut at yahoo.com> wrote:
> > I might suggest Conspiracy-beliefs and Paranoia are the mental warpings
> of a sick society full of the sado-masochistic warpings of history.
> >
> > Sent from my iPhone
> >
> > On Mar 6, 2014, at 2:25 PM, alice malice <alicewmalice at gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > > A symptom. Right. So in BE Maxine and March, though sympathetic (in
> > > the traditional sense of a sympathetic character), are satirized for
> > > their paranoia and for the conspiracy theories. And for tossing around
> > > phrases like "Late Capitalism" and the cant of the preterit
> > > psudo-intellectual (see V. and the Freudian cant the Sick Crew speaks
> > > at the local watering hole). So, yes, the Sick Crews are, while more
> > > sympathetic than the corrupt aristocracy, the Elect and Elite and
> > > their Henchmen, still subjected to the satire, to the moralist's irony
> > > and his clever plays and puns.
> > >
> > > Sure.
> > >
> > > But Conspiracy and Paranoia are symptoms of what?
> > >
> > > The moralist would name it, the satirist would offer correction. But
> > > not Pynchon. In his works, their is no way out, no cure, no
> > > treatment...only...well...there is humor.
> > >
> > > As Horst sez, Humor is Sacred.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > On Thu, Mar 6, 2014 at 12:35 PM, Monte Davis <montedavis49 at gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > >> I've no answers for either of you about better tactics or democratic
> > >> mechanisms, nor any very inspiring successes to show for my own
> efforts
> > >> along those lines.
> > >>
> > >> Let me put it in terms of Pynchon rather than of history and policies
> and
> > >> politics. His books are full of conspiracies and paranoia, and there
> is a
> > >> school of interpretation that takes that at face value: TRP is
> himself a
> > >> "conspiracist," one who believes that consensus history is a shadow
> play and
> > >> that sinister cabals are really pulling the strings.
> > >>
> > >> I couldn't disagree more strongly. I think TRP is a moralist and
> satirist in
> > >> the line of Dante and Voltaire and Mark Twain, who treats the
> conspiracist
> > >> stance as a symptom, not a cure, even -- or especially -- when it's
> embraced
> > >> by his most sympathetic characters.
> > >>
> > >> In GR, for example, consider the flaws of spirit and vision that took
> us
> > >> from the London missile in 1944 to the Los Angeles missile in 1972.
> Are they
> > >> all summed up in that crass, cruel, yee-hawing racist Major Marvy and
> in the
> > >> big shots at the Potsdam conference? Or are there hints of them even
> in
> > >> sweet, innocent Tyrone? Was it only the covert manipulation of Dr.
> Jamf and
> > >> the SOE and the White Visitation that got him playing his special
> part in
> > >> Opration Paperclip? Or -- maybe, just maybe -- could his all-American
> > >> worldview, built (as Pynchon reminds us a hundred times) of Westerns
> and
> > >> detective stories and Hollywood ("old fans, who've always been at the
> movies
> > >> (haven't we?)") and friendship with that cool, dashing
> Cold-Warrior-to-be
> > >> Jack Kennedy -- could that have been part of the problem, too?
> > >>
> > >> In Vineland: Is Zoyd Wheeler a victim in a vacuum, at the mercy of
> > >> conspiracies of Reaganite power freaks and greedheads? Or -- maybe,
> just
> > >> maybe -- did his withdrawal into weed and the woods after those
> fabulous
> > >> Sixties, paying no attention, make things a lot easier for the Brock
> Vonds
> > >> of this world?
> > >>
> > >> One reason I value Pynchon is that my gut tells me he agrees with me
> about
> > >> who's in the big bad conspiracy and who's in the poor victimized
> preterite.
> > >> But over time, I've come to value him even more because he cuts
> *nobody* any
> > >> slack.
> > >>
> > >> Including seven-year-old me, watching Dr. Wernher von Spacefuture
> display
> > >> models of yet-to-be-built Moon and Mars craft on Disney programs
> (along with
> > >> 40 million other Americans), enthralled by how *totally cool* the
> American
> > >> remix of the Raketenstadt was going to be.
> > >>
> > >> And hardly thinking at all about those other models lined up on the
> credenza
> > >> behind him: Redstone, Jupiter, Thor, Atlas... all of them already
> built,
> > >> deployed, and ready to make fireballs of Minsk and Rostov and
> Smolensk and
> > >> Kiev, should the defense of freedom and democracy require it.
> > >>
> > >> I suspect that in 1944, seven-year-old Tom Pynchon was enthralled by
> the
> > >> impending victory over the Axis of Evil (version 1.0), and looking
> forward
> > >> to the shiny world of peace and prosperity (a-and ROC
>
> -
> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
>
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