Monday, August 13, 2012

Equivocating Truman?



Last week, Clifton Truman Daniel, the eldest grandson of President Harry Truman, attended memorial services in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. His grandfather made the decision to drop atomic weapons on those two cities in August of 1945. Over 200,000 people died as a result.
Daniel has put himself in to an impossible position. He’s on a tightrope of appeasement between condemnation and approval. He cannot approve of the bombings in Japan and he cannot condemn them when he returns to Chicago, where he lives. So he struggles rhetorically to keep his balance and keep everybody happy. 
In Japan, in response to the inevitable question about his grandfather’s decision, he said, “I’m two generations down the line. It’s now my responsibility to do all I can to make sure we never use nuclear weapons again.”
  He can’t be bothered with “the context” of the bombings. It was a long time ago. He wasn’t there. He doesn’t know the circumstances. 
Here is some context. The loss of American life during World War II would equal an 9/11 attack every five days for three and a half years.
Daniel has chosen to take on the issue of nuclear weapons. He is a prisoner of his DNA. He will be asked about his grandfather’s decision forever. His last name is irrelevant. His middle name is his destiny.
Daniel said he went to Japan to hear the stories of the survivors of the bombings.
Daniel said he is working on a book about the bombings. Being a former journalist, I assume he would want to tell this story in its totality.
To that end I would offer an open invitation to Daniel, to come to Oak Ridge, Tennessee and hear the stories of the Manhattan Project workers who helped end the deadliest conflict known to mankind.
These workers, who have been terribly marginalized by history, need to tell their stories. They have been ignored by history because the world community focuses on the bombings and not on the Japanese surrender. The horrors of war have trumped the ending of war. 
These Manhattan Project workers are heroes. They helped end the war. What happened in Oak Ridge is the greatest untold epic story of American history. 
If Daniel could get off the tightrope of appeasement, he could help tell this amazing story.



Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Punching Your Resistance Dance Card


On August 6th of 1945 the United States exploded an atomic weapon over the city of Hiroshima, Japan. The enriched uranium for that bomb was processed at massive war time industrial plants in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
Oak Ridge, Tennessee is a hard place to live and still keep your dignity in clear focus. Oak Ridger’s know they were essential to the swift ending of World War II, but twice a year protestors come to town to lecture the dumb-ass locals about the real, horrible, legacy of the war. Oak Ridgers know the true legacy of World War II in their bones. The protestors are clueless. 
The entrance to the Y-12 National Security Complex is usually the setting for both protests. This is where atomic bomb parts are dismantled, disposed, refurbished and replaced.  It is home to the largest source of weapons grade uranium in the world.
Two different themes drive the protests: the proliferation of nuclear weapons in general at one protest and the sins of Hiroshima in particular for the other. The weather seems to drive the proliferation protests. It can happen as early as April and as late as August. It seems the protestors want to pick a nice day for a picnic.
The calendar drives the Hiroshima protest. Come August 6th they protest, the weather be damned.
The weather versus the calendar means the tone of the two protests are vastly different.
The proliferation protests, from the videos I have seen, feel like a carnival mixed up with a family reunion. The dress code and the convictions seem causal and comfortable. Picnic blankets and water bottles have replaced molotov cocktails. Several protestors are in clown costumes.  Speeches are made, songs are sung and then the protestors get down to the serious business of getting arrested. This is essential to the protests.
Protestors are arrested for trespassing. They want to put it to da Man: trample a bit of his real estate. You can block a public road and get arrested on state charges. This is easy time. Or, you can cross over on to Y-12 federal property and get arrested on federal charges which is harder time. A federal arrest is a medal of honor.
The agitators must choose. One Des Moines man explained on a YouTube video his choice of state charges: “I want to leave my resistance dance card open so I can continue to have a presence in Kansas City.”  Federal jail time might have caused his absence at the K. C. protest a few weeks later.
  All the players know their roles. This is pure theatre.  They’ve been going through the motions for years. The agitators play their part, the police officers and federal agents know their roles, and the broadcast media is in the thick of the choreography.
I wouldn’t be surprised if the protestors and police are on a first name basis.
Civil disobedience feels like a resume stuffer. Check off the Oak Ridge box on your resistance dance card and hit the road for an Occupy Chicago protest. Going to jail seems a largely empty gesture: a weak personal conviction calculating a meaningless sentence on state or federal charges.
Once the arrests are done, protestors, police and media cameras scatter like dead dandelion blooms on the east Tennessee winds.
The August protests, in amazing contrast, are quiet, reverential, solemn, sincere and nobody gets arrested. It’s a much smaller group. The video I saw featured a lectern and a peace bell as the only props. Members of the audience approach the lectern and express their compassion for the Japanese people. Theatre certainly, but more befitting the subject.
The locals shrug their shoulders or roll their eyes when the dissenters  are mentioned. They’ve been  kicked in the teeth for decades.         They might say something about everybody has a right to an opinion, or that this is America where folks can object to anything they wish.
When told that some of the protestors dress up like clowns, they smile. 
     When the locals do dare speak their mind, they do the 360 degree sweep of the room with their eyes to make sure nobody can over-hear them and then lower their heads and their voices to say, “What did they want us to do? The slaughter would have continued for months!”
Oak Ridgers believe one thing about the bombings and the agitators quite another, and in this way, Oak Ridge is a microcosm of the nation.  A Quinnipac University 2009 poll of 2,409 registered voters showed that by a 3-1 margin, Americans believe the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was a good thing because it brought a swift end to a deadly war. Among voters over 55, the margin was greater than 5-1.
Yet, each year, the protestors, with help from the mainstream media are center stage. The media covers the condemnation of the United States worldwide. To watch the coverage, you would assume we bombed Japan without any provocation.
Oak Ridger’s hold their tongues because they know the true costs of ending World War II.
Ending World War II. What does that mean? In 2012 what does the ending of World War II mean to us? Time marches on as the greatest generation fades away. 
The loss of American life during World War II would equal a 9/11 attack every five days for three and a half years. 
This is the true legacy of World War II which the protestors ignore. Facts are stubborn things which can shatter strongly held convictions.
How would the protest marchers respond to such an obscene number?
A Department of War consultant estimated that over 400,000 American soldiers and five million Japanese would die in the invasion of Japan.
Hiroshima and Nagasaki were horrific by any measure, but what would the protestors say about the invasion numbers? Would there be a shrug of their shoulders? I think so. For them, any alternative carnage would be preferred over the bombings.
The protestors have leaders, they have intellectuals who have advanced their theories about the bombings and its implications for the world.
These social critics, with total support of the media, have dominated how this story has been covered since the 1960’s. The critics decided, unilaterally, our nation should be ashamed of how we ended the war with Japan.
I don’t think we should be proud. I wouldn’t want to live in a country where August 6th, and 9th were national holidays. That’s not how we roll. There must be something between the extremes of shame and pride.
The lifeblood of shame is always silence. The critics imposed a sentence of disgrace on our nation. We accepted it. The lifeblood of shame is silence.
       If you dare broach the subject, the critics will shout you down as a blood-thirsty, bombing throwing, nut case. Inflamed rhetoric, shaming and censorship  are the critics’ only tools.
Because of this national shame, because of our collective silence, the 130,00 workers of the Manhattan Project have been shunned like war criminals. 
The domination of the critics has been complete. There is no mention of the Manhattan Project workers at the World War II Memorial in Washington, D. C. Why in the world not? The monument designers knew there would have been a firestorm of protests from a tiny vocal minority of Americans who oppose the bombings. 
Because of these workers the end of the war came swiftly. Because of their work, millions of Japanese lives were saved. 
The critics refuse to acknowledge these facts. The critics have thrown the amazing stories of these workers onto the trash heap of history while we stand by in silence.
This is wrong. It is time for the majority of Americans to wrestle this issue away from the social critics, academics and the protestors.
What happened in Hanford, Washington and Los Alamos, New Mexico and Oak Ridge is the greatest untold epic story of American history.
It is the duty of our country to honor these workers.
It is time to build a memorial at the World War II Memorial in Washington, D. C. to honor the Manhattan Project workers who helped end the deadliest conflict known to mankind.



Monday, May 28, 2012

The dog days of August

      August is just around the corner and that is the only time the world thinks about Oak Ridge, Tennessee and even at that, it is to condemn the town for the sin of Hiroshima.
       So this year, I am getting all my op/ed material ready early, so I can send it out early and hope against hope, that a mainstream editor somewhere will have the courage to the run a piece supporting the Manhattan Project workers. A guy can dream can't he?

Sunday, May 13, 2012

James Cameron and me

      Sometimes the world turns in unexpected ways. Got sent a link where James Cameron, evidently, issued a press release saying that his only projects going forward will be Avatar sequels. Now, I could write at length about why a creative person would paint themselves into a creative corner like that, but will focus on the real issue.
      When Cameron bought the movie rights to the non-fiction book Last Train From Hiroshima he was pushing a massive pile of his poker chips onto the table. Now he has thrown his cards on the table and walked away. Those chips are still on the table. Does Hollywood know those chips are still on the table? Are they looking at their own cards and thinking it's a pretty weak hand I have, but Cameron walked away, so maybe those chips can be all mine!
      Here is the link.

Cameron makes a vow.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

You Served Radio Interview

     Was interviewed last night on You Served Radio live! Troy, CJ and Wendy were all great hosts. If you want to listen in, I have provided a link. My interview begins about 65 minutes into the two hour show, but you should really listen to the first interview with military cartoonist John Holmes. And yes, if you had ever told me I would follow John Holmes on a radio interview I would have laughed in your face. Life is strange that way.
      I have no idea if I connected with the audience or not. Such is radio. My YouTube video got a very respectable bump overnight, so I am very happy about that!
      Listen in if you want. Pass it around with your friends. This is how this story will get out there!

You Served Radio

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Lady Gaga and me.

      Monday, my YouTube video broke through 40,000 hits. Lady Gaga gets over 400 million hits, but we really aren't much alike. First off, she gets more hits than I do.
      Secondly, she peddles sex and I peddle history and science. This goes back to her hits versus my hits.
      Over all, I am stunned at the number of hits the video has gotten. As always, this ain't about me. The Oak Ridge story resonates with people. They like to discover stories and they like the idea that they can help fix an injustice of history.
      But to get Hollywood to pay attention, the hits need to grow to the 500,000 range. My work is cut out for me, for sure. Need to get the story OUT THERE.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Keep Throwing Mud Against the Wall

      Got a link about an exhibit of photographs at The Tennessee State Museum in Nashville. Joe O'Donnell spent seven months in Japan in 1945 and 1946 taking photographs for the Marines. He took a bunch of personal photos "off the clock." The exhibit is 24 images from his collection. Images from Hiroshima are in the exhibit.
      I took three deep breaths. E-mailed the gal at the museum who was the contact for the O'Donnell exhibit and asked, "Ever thought about Ed Westcott?"
      One of the curators e-mailed Monday. He said, paraphrasing, no we haven't and we should.
      On other fronts, a military blogger that I sent my YouTube link to, e-mailed and said there are three of them who do a podcast and wanted to know if I was interested in doing a live interview. Sure. Why not?
      So things are looking up a bit.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Getting On With It

      Got up, dusted off my pants and got back to work. This has been going on, in one way or another, for almost seven years. I will fall down again and I will just get back up.
      Working on Twitter each day. Simply posting the message many times a day. Won't change a thing. Will sit down and look at the YouTube numbers after May 5th. Perhaps the tea leaves will show a pattern after four weeks of tweets.
      Also, will video tape my TED talk and get that posted. The presentation will be the easy part. The logistics of getting equipment and camera operators together will be the main hurdle. Again, want to have that posted on YouTube by May 5th. at the latest.
       The Oak Ridge story is a great story, my screenplay is a solid story of a little boy losing his father. Everything else is simply execution: leveraging social media to raise awareness of this great American epic and also raise awareness of my screenplay in Hollywood. One or two lucky breaks and this story will get out there!

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Just Get On With It

      There are many reasons for my current funk, but the main reason is the failure of my IndieGoGo campaign. I've got $80 online and another $60 in person. Have eleven weeks to go. My goal was $100,000 by June 14th. Safe to assume I will probably not reach my goal, but at IndieGoGo you keep whatever you raise.
      Need to promote it on the social media sites with a ton of personal appeals to folks. Will also send links to hundreds of military bloggers. Will also need to press the flesh in east Tennessee. The concept of ideas going "viral" on the Internet is smoldering somewhere between a cliche and mythology. Stories abound, but contrary to the myth, the more I pass out my business cards, the more hits I get on YouTube.
      People will donate to this "cause" because they have a deep personal connection to it. In short, they had a family member who worked on the Manhattan Project in Oak Ridge.
      Here are the links for both IndieGoGo and YouTube.


http://www.indiegogo.com/forgivenessonline-1?a=433232


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQO7pOfBdxY

Monday, April 2, 2012

A low point

      I decided to do another practice run of my TED style speech. TEDxNashville had their show on Saturday. I chose not to go. I think it would've been hard for me to sit through presentations which I knew were weaker than mine.
      Not to imply that all the presentations would be weaker, but I've watched repeatedly all the presentations done in 2011 and 2010. There were a couple of real clunkers each year. It happens. I should have been on that stage in Nashville Saturday.
      I invited 15-20 people to the Sunday practice run. One person showed up. We had a great talk about how I needed to better leverage my time and efforts to get the Oak Ridge story out to the world. It was a very productive discussion.
      But still, it was a very low moment for me. If I can't get Oak Ridgers to act, how in the world can I expect the world to take notice?
      I spent last night looking at all the work over the last seven years and all the dead end leads I have chased down. My life would be extremely easy and carefree if I just stopped trying to sell Forgivenessonline. I have spent thousands of hours pounding my head against the wall.
      Thousands of hours a year would be available. I could go back to reading 50-100 books a year. Hell, I could write a book. Freedom to Fail, my long essay about the social contract in America has been collecting dust. I could spend hundreds of hours fixing up my wife's house. It needs lots of TLC. I've always wanted to shoot 90 on a golf course. That would take a little time. Always wanted to hone my skills in a kitchen so at least I could claim a certain competency there. And my guitars gather dust. I could really take my playing to an aspiring, awesome place.
      But could I live with myself if I gave up on Forgiveness? Would I be haunted forever? Would I, deep in the night, look out the window, listening to the wind sing through the leaves on the trees and think, "What if?"
      I don't know. I don't know.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

The roller coaster that is IndieGoGo

      It's early in the morning in east Tennessee. It's very quiet. Too quiet for me. I have posted my IndieGoGo link on Facebook several times over the last three weeks. Have gotten three donations from close friends, but that is it.
      I have got a few weeks to turn this puppy around. Will start sending the crowd funding link to the hundreds and hundreds who have contacted me because they watched my YouTube video about Oak Ridge.

Here are the links:





 

Monday, March 12, 2012

Leprechauns at Rockefeller Center In New York

      Rumor has it that this morning a small Leprechaun with a green mohawk roamed the canyons of Rockefeller Center hoping to snag some airtime on The Today Show. A leprechaun, the dictionary tells me, is a small mischievous sprite. That's a perfect description.
      This kind of punked-up version of an Irish prankster, hoped to promote a 5K run this St. Patricks' Day in Oak Ridge. She had a sign to flash at the TV audience. At the bottom, she was kind enough to provide the website address for my newly posted site.
       Everything was going according to plan until said Leprechaun, with entourage in tow, arrived at Rockefeller Center. The sprinting little spirit was determined to force The Today Show, into an unexpected direction.
       But powerful social media forces had other plans. Over 10,000 screeching teenage girls had jammed into Rockefeller Center to make certain that The Today Show went in One Direction and one direction only. Over 10,000 vials of 16 year old estrogen cannot be ignored. Plans were abandoned. Green mohawks are powerful things, particularly with St. Pat's approaching, but 10,000 squealing girls??? There are limits to what even sprites can do when a hot new boy band comes to town.

      I can't make this stuff up. At least she tried. Plenty of stories to tell at the 5K run on Saturday!

forgivenessonline website 

Saturday, March 10, 2012

There He Goes Again!

      Your time is precious, I don't want to waste it, but you folks need a little background about the people who are critics of the bombing of Japan. There is a small group of academics who are called "the revisionist historians." Their title tells all. This is what they believe.

  • Japan, in the summer of 1945, was on the verge of collapse, and surrender
  • The United States KNEW Japan was on the verge of collapse
  • We bombed them anyway, just to bully the Russians

      Over two-thirds of Americans, when last polled, believed the bombings were necessary. You would never know this from tracking the major news outlets. The revisionists dominate the conversation, and they have for decades.
      The Godfather of the revisionists is Professor Gar Alperovitz. His book, The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb, is the bible for revisionists. Published in 1995 it reflects over 30 years of research. I have read it. Felt it a duty to do so. The body of the text is 668 pages. With notes, index and acknowledgments it comes in at 847 pages.
       Professor Alperovitz recently had an op/ed piece on the website of The Washington Post. It is a very true reflection of his beliefs.  Here is the link:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/on-leadership/from-the-atom-bomb-to-attacking-iran-a-leadership-lesson-for-obama-from-our-nuclear-history/2012/03/07/gIQA7Pu2wR_story.html

      Hope you enjoy it. The sixth paragraph begins, "Although documentation is sketchy......." That describes the professor perfectly.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Unintended Consequences

      Started a fund drive at IndieGoGo.com a few weeks back. Set it up before the drive really started, so I could work out all the wrinkles across platforms. Still a few wrinkles, but it is working.
      Part of the donation process at IndieGoGo is that donations can be made anonymously. Or, donations can be made in the name of another person. And the amount of the donation can be hidden too. So, at the end of the drive, I could get thousands of donations anonymously, or in the name of others, or in the name of fictitious folks or, in amounts that are unknown. In the secret city, most of the funding could be secret. Hidden. In the shadows. It seems fitting, doesn't it?

Monday, March 5, 2012

A Bazzilion Things to Do

      Pretty well buried this morning. Website building, twittering, learning about forming an LLC in Tennessee, building a national media campaign, rewriting my 18 minute TEDxNashville speech, forming a strategy for a social media campaign and finally, working on the "crowd funding" project at IndieGoGo.com for the next 102 days.
      Doing all this while working full time at another unrelated job. I am NOT complaining. Nobody is forcing me to do this. I've brought this on myself.
      Focusing on what is important is critical. You know how you eat an 800 pound elephant? One bite at a time.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

With a little help from my friends.

        Feeling a bit over-whelmed right now. Have started a "crowd funding" effort on IndieGoGo. Want to find 5,000 people to donate $20 each by June 14th. The silence has been deafening. 
      Working on a presentation for TEDxNashville at the end of this month. I have been nominated, but still don't know if I have been accepted. The odds are very long, but the opportunity is huge, so the effort is worth it. TED talks are limited to 18 minutes. That is hardly any time at all. It goes by really fast. Again, the silence from Nashville has been deafening.
      Also, I am working on a website at forgivenessonline.info so I can have a hub for all my Internet efforts. I am building the website myself because the bids I got to have it done from web designers were through the roof. The only capital assets I have are between my ears. 
      The challenges for me are daunting. I want to change how the nation looks at the bombings of Hiroshima of Nagasaki. There are two legacies from the bombings: one is that we did a horrific thing, the other, is that those bombings ended the war.
      For over 50 years our nation has only focused on one of the legacies: the horrific bombings. This is historically shallow and intellectually dishonest in the extreme.
      The hurdles in front of me are huge, but I know this project is the right thing to do. With a little help from my friends, it will happen.