ErsatzCoalButter

joined 1 week ago
 

Following is synopsis of Justus Rosenberg's book on Kobo's shop. Thanks to @[email protected] for reminding me of this text with your previous relevant post. The book itself is both pretty entertaining (Justus is a very good story teller AND IT'S SHORT) and you know, sobering and terrifying in that whole "witness to man-made horrors beyond all comprehension" kinda way.


“Thrillingly tells the story of an Eastern European Jew’s flight from the Holocaust and the years he spent fighting in the French underground.” —USA Today

An American Library in Paris Book Award “Coups de Coeur” Selection

In 1937, after witnessing a violent Nazi mob in his hometown of Danzig, a majority German city on the Baltic Sea, sixteen-year-old Justus Rosenberg was sent by his Jewish parents to Paris to finish his education in safety. Three years later, the Nazis came again, as France fell to the Germans. Alone and in danger, Justus fled Paris, heading south. A chance meeting led him to Varian Fry, an American journalist in Marseille who led a clandestine network helping thousands of men and women—including many legendary artists and intellectuals, among them Hannah Arendt, Marc Chagall, Andre Breton, and Max Ernst—escape the Nazis. With his intimate understanding of French and German culture, and fluency in several languages, including English, Justus became an invaluable member of Fry’s operation as a spy and scout.

After the Vichy government expelled Fry from France, Justus worked in Grenoble, recruiting young men and women for the Underground Army. For the next four years, he would be an essential component of the Resistance, relying on his wits and skills to survive several close calls with death. Once, he found himself in a Nazi internment camp, with his next stop Auschwitz—and yet Justus found an ingenious way to escape. He spent two years gathering intelligence, surveying German installations and troop movements on the Mediterranean. Then, after the allied invasion at Normandy in 1944, Justus became a guerrilla fighter, participating in and leading commando raids to disrupt the German retreat across France.

At the end of the Second World War, Justus emigrated to America, and built a new life. After decades teaching literature at Bard College, he now adds his own story to the library of great coming-of-age memoirs, a “gripping” chronicle of his youth in Nazi-occupied Europe, when he risked everything to stand against evil (Kirkus Reviews, starred review).

[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

I have read some firsthand stuff from French resistance folks and artists in more similar situations to my own from this time period. I find their accounts easy to commiserate with and it is a very frustrating time to be alive. Foresight and historical knowledge have been so unhelpful to me.

Now, in small gatherings of your oldest friends, you feel that you are talking to yourselves, that you are isolated from the reality of things. This weakens your confidence still further and serves as a further deterrent to—to what? It is clearer all the time that, if you are going to do anything, you must make an occasion to do it, and then are obviously a troublemaker. So you wait, and you wait.

Hey, wow. Been there.

But the one great shocking occasion, when tens or hundreds of thousands will join with you, never comes. That’s the difficulty. If the last and worst act of the whole regime had come immediately after the first and smallest, thousands, yes, millions, would have been sufficiently shocked[...]

If you were seriously activated at a recent-ish point in America, 'Occupy' era until today, you've experienced situations where you field at a critical protest point only to find:

  • most people actually don't support anything progressive
  • most people who claim to support you are committed to inaction under even very dire circumstances, they will always draw a new line in the sand
  • representatives like politicians and nonprofits for causes are mostly there to diffuse energy and frustrate efforts, and at the very least tie action to money
  • there actually are many people who are openly against things like feeding kids, racial equality, preventing climate change and they have more money than you
  • there are serious, life altering costs to real activism

I guess a more positive way to look at it would be "wow, so stuff also sucked for this dude..." like hey another time comrade

PS: Most people don't get which historical point in time we're at because the camps started at the borders and most people don't look there

 

The latest update video from Leon the Lobster, a cozy docu-series about a lobster rescued from the grocery store.

As of this post, Leon the Lobster is alive and appears to be recovering from dropping a claw. Sorry-not-sorry for spoilers, nobody needs to be introduced to a cool animal with a fake-out like the video's real title. Brady. You jerk. All of us have high enough blood pressure.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 4 days ago

😭 its the funniest joke they have ever made

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 days ago

Grousing about Mr. Graff's silly hyperbolic description of the DOTWant to take this seriously as much of it merits serious discussion, but I just don't know what to do with weird nonsense like this:

The Transportation Department, which has had such a literal renaissance of imagination, innovation, and investment under Mayor Pete and the flood of infrastructure money from the Inflation Reduction Act, would be cut back extensively.

Here is the DOT's own propaganda: [https://blog.bayareametro.gov/posts/us-dot-highlights-infrastructure-accomplishments](US DOT highlights infrastructure accomplishments) What the heck does "literal renaissance of imagination, innovation-" mean here? Gosh Biden's years were such a letdown, and then they tout the barest accomplishment of their jobs as the second coming as if people don't have eyes and ears.

What if suddenly living in Denver versus Austin or Charlotte versus Tampa start to come with very different sets of rights as an individual in terms of your family’s access to basic health care, what books your child gets to read in school, whether you can walk the streets without carrying your “papers,” whether your kid’s school requires basic vaccines, or even whether the public water supply is considered safe?

This is already the case in the Rust Belt. Default is you don't have basic healthcare, your kid goes to some fake voucher school or an extremely underfunded school (books comment is weird, Texas decides most of the books already), you can't get vaxed or operate in the economy without your "papers", public water supplies are not safe by modern standards. This crumbling ramped up during Trump 1 and became the default in the pandemic and the region didn't really recover.

Anyway the Fed isn't my friend and the decline of that faction isn't the part of this mess that has me worried. Has the Fed been really helpful or a positive influence where you are located? Mostly to me they are ICE and FBI offices and I don't think those folks do good work.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago

The hard nationalist name is a great giveaway

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 week ago
  • You are not going to vote your way out of this
  • There is no just or reasonable way to govern a transcontinental slave empire
[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

Oh okay I think we just disagree then.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (2 children)

I can see why you might read my post that way because what other context do you have. I don't belong to the "us" group you mentioned. I spent 2015-2022ish doing direct service activism and it cost me a great deal. Part of the reason I sound disillusioned is because the fascists directly attacked and destroyed much of my work as I was performing it (especially in 2018 2019 when they were a little better organized). I did literacy and library access work for the incarcerated, primarily. My work was primarily volunteer so it seriously hurt my family's economy, in addition to being undone in real time as paper bans and mail bans were put in place. People at the universities I "worked" for would provide verbal support, but that was all it ever amounted to.

Part of the reason I like Doctorow is because he gave a pretty accurate description of how literacy access within the prison system works in The Bezzle except for the part where he was using it to distribute LSD. That sounds cool but its largely based on a myth made up to protect prison employees who trade drugs inside.

You don’t even have to do anything and there are thousands of people out there trying to protect you from getting more fucked[...]

Don't go around telling them they don't have to "do anything" plz 😅

Not trying to call you out otherwise, how are you supposed to know

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

Heyyyy you're right

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago

fantastic post, I wouldn't have considered that fan setting issue on Bazz...

wonder if one of the linux fans speed apps can replace that functionality to some extent

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 week ago

Since all my local newspaper websites went pay-to-read, I walk two blocks to my local library and read the hard copies maybe once a week. There's only about one or three articles per week that aren't just USA Today internet drivel, so it's not like I'm sitting there for hours pouring through papers like a maniac, and how dare you picture me that way.

If you are a traveler, it is a good trick to pick up as many library cards as you can get your hands on. So many libraries are traveler friendly from old COVID policies and if you aren't working touristy towns, even pretty flimsy community connections can get you a card. "Oh I work for this practice in the community, can I-" and when your contract in that community ends, what, are you going to go turn in your library card? And let your community's ebook DRM go to waste? No 😜

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

You know I think he actually uses the music producer example in his 2nd novel (The Bezzle).

 

Wikipedia TL;DR

Oil! is a novel by Upton Sinclair, first published in 1926–27 and told as a third-person narrative, with only the opening pages written in the first person. The book was written in the context of the Harding administration's Teapot Dome Scandal and takes place in Southern California. It is a social and political satire skewering the human foibles of all its characters.

The main character is James Arnold Ross Jr., nicknamed Bunny, son of an oil tycoon. Bunny's sympathetic feelings toward oilfield workers and socialists provoke arguments with his father throughout the story. The beginning of the novel served as a loose inspiration for the 2007 film There Will Be Blood.

My Take: Basically the TL;DR is that Oil companies have been buying politicians and stalling progress while their actions destroy the lives of untold masses forever. This book is like 100 years old, so that means it has been a big enough problem to write a whole pulpy novel about it for longer than any of us will ever live. Corporations are bad. Great characters and retro cultural obscura!

Linked below is an excellent copy by Standard Ebooks you can legally have for free if you also want to be mad about the oil industry and capitalism more broadly.

Oil! 🌋 Upton Sinclair

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