A Geek History of Time - Episode 180 - V the Leftist Allegory Turned Fascist Dogwhistle Part II
Episode Date: October 15, 2022...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
And we begin with good day, sir.
Geeks come in all shapes and sizes, and that they come into all kinds of things.
I was thinking more about the satanic panic.
Buy the scholar Gary Guy-Gak's.
Well, wait, hold on.
I said good day, sir.
Not defending Roman slavery by any stretch.
But let him vote, fuck off.
When historians, and especially British historians,
want to get cute, it's in there.
OK.
It is not worth the journey. 1.0-1.1
2.0-1.1
2.0-1.1
2.0-1.1
2.0-1.1 This is the peak history of time. I'm a rock and roll hits for you. I'm a witch teacher. I've got Warren fuzzy, and I love to play.
I'm a rock and roll hits for you.
I'm a witch teacher.
I've got Warren fuzzy,
and I'm a witch teacher.
I've got Warren fuzzy,
and I'm a witch teacher.
I've got Warren fuzzy,
and I'm a witch teacher.
I've got Warren fuzzy,
and I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher.
And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch teacher. And I'm a witch graders. And I am now coming to terms with the fact that I am very,
very happy teaching sixth graders as a group.
Like I'm really happy with the students I'm teaching
because they're still little kid enough
that I can get away with messing with their heads because they're still little kid enough
that I can get away with messing with their heads
in a way that it's harder to do with seven graders,
which is way too much fun.
Number one.
And number two,
they're just sweeter.
They're still kids.
Now the part of teaching sixth grade that I don't like so much is the seventh grade curriculum
is basically my dream curriculum. It's like oh hey, oh yeah, what part of world history is Ed like a total madman about. Follow through all the shiny. That would be, yeah. Followed Rome through the early modern period up until the French Revolution.
Like, oh, okay, that's my jam.
Like, there we go.
We're good.
And in the middle of that, by the way, we're going to talk about how geography affects.
Culture, and we're going to spend a shit ton of time, you know, introducing kids to
the idea of primary and secondary sources
And is this reliable and like let's have fucking arguments about these things and like oh my god, right
And I know I'm in the sixth grade curriculum
Which is not that no it's it's it's from the beginning of you know what you could do those
Point out to them from the beginning of time. Yeah, you could do those from the beginning from the beginning of time.
Yeah, you could point out to them though that it's all about beer.
And I think you'd have fun with that once you have permanency.
Yeah, once, yeah, next year I can start doing that.
You could talk about fermentation and how you have to wait around.
Yeah, you got to sit around for a while.
Yeah, that, you know what?
That's a whole, that's a whole angle that I'm going to have to hit on. But yeah, so I have now spent the last three days of my
teaching life, which I will never get back, working with, with three periods of sixth graders on how to navigate an atlas in the front of their textbook.
And here's the thing, I'm going to have to spend at least three more days because if I don't,
the rest of this year is going to be a goddamn nightmare. Like, I am going to be so fucking
frustrated so many times. If I have to like spoon feed them for the rest of the year that no, no, where this is China,
China is in Asia.
Like I'm, so now I'm going to have to spend three days finishing the coaching on this.
And if you ever want to think of a thankless task, like, okay, thankless is the wrong word,
because eventually this is going to pay off into something.
But a feels like it's Cicifian task.
It is getting 10, 11 year olds to look closely enough at a printed map. To, for example, find where Patagonia is in the world.
That was one of the questions I gave them.
Which continent is Patagonia on?
And we've talked about physical versus political maps.
Patagonia is a physical feature,
I mean, speaking very broadly.
It's a physical region, It's not a country.
So you're going to want to use the physical map.
Right.
Look for it.
You're going to have to look like you're really going to have to look because the print is small.
But then figure out which continent it's on.
Tell me that's all I need to find out.
Right.
Oh my God.
I am a herod man. Like the amount, the amount of, okay, I'm going to give you all a hint.
If a continent does not touch the southern hemisphere,
on that continent. And like, and that still was not like they still were struggling. And I
and on the one hand, part of me was like, oh my god, just like seriously scan the fucking apps. On the other hand, part of me was like, I really should be trying to find a way to coach
them on this. But I really don't know how to do it with that spoon feeding them a fucking answer.
Like, what do I do? Oh, I've got a suggestion for that when you're ready. Okay. Yeah. I mean, off, off out of out of here.
Cause up to you. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. No, I don't, I don't want to take any more time away from what we're, what we're talking
about. But like, that's what I've been struggling with the last three days. So if I
sound a little bit aggrate, that's what I've been doing. And that's me. And who are you?
And what have you been up to? Well, I'm Damian Harmony. I am a, this is the last year I've been doing. And that's me. And who are you and what have you been up to?
Well, I'm Damien Harmony.
I am a, this is the last year I'm doing it.
Latin teacher as well as a US history teacher.
I love how you keep coming up with ways to say that different thing.
Well, yeah.
And it's, yeah.
It's on hospice and it should have been, it's on a respirator and a ventilator and
all the
things.
And yeah, I mean, it should have, it should have been put out to pass your a while back.
But you know, it's public education.
So equity, but yeah, I'm up here in the Northern California at the high school level doing
that.
The thing that I have to say is that I went to my own kids back to school night, oh,
talked last week about your back to school night. I was a my own kids back to school night. Oh, last week about your back to school night, I was back to school night.
My daughter's teacher told a dad joke to which my daughter,
I find this out at back to school night.
I walk in. I'm Damien Harmony, you know,
and you know, where's my daughter said?
And she's like, Oh, your Julie is dead.
Yes, I am.
And she said, um, you know, like, you know, I told a dad joke today to your daughter and or
to the class and your daughter just did this.
She put her, you know, I think we can hear that over the microphone.
Yeah, I heard it.
So she, she had Paul, then she's like, oh my God, like you were, you were just as bad as
my dad.
You are going to meet him tonight.
Um, so, and she said, yeah, so you, you're, I'm like my dad, you are going to meet him tonight.
So, and she said, yeah, so you, you're, I'm like, oh, I do it professionally.
Hashtag and dad goals.
Right.
I'm like, come on.
But I said, I do it professionally
and she kind of laughed.
I'm like, no, I'm serious.
It pays for Christmas.
I run a pun tournament for capital punishment.
It's been going six years.
It's the longest running pun tournament in the world,
which is actually true,
because we've been going the entire time.
Nice.
Yeah, and we are international.
So, this is true.
Yeah, so I said that and she's like, are you serious?
I was like, yeah, she's like, I said, yes,
I will email you the flyer.
It's fine.
So.
Cool.
Kind of building your audience.
One fellow punster at a time.
And then to just drive the point home,
I was like, well, where's my daughter sitting?
And my daughter was right next to me.
And I said, where are you sitting?
And she says to me, oh, you have to find it.
I was like, OK, well, kids know kids all drew their own Like self portraits
Okay, and then I I scanned the room and I just went to to the desk and she's like how'd you know from all the way over there
I said you're the only child your age reading Warren piece and it's on top of your desk
There you go out yeah, you're reading habits.
You're reading habits betray you.
Totally.
Oh, you will be pleased.
My son is seventh grader.
You will be pleased also at the same back to school night.
Yeah.
The social science teacher told me, oh, William got a perfect score in his condensed
quiz.
I was like, yeah, well, his love of
trains would absolutely do that for him. So yeah, that would that would certainly
help. That points in that direction. And and can I just say I admire your son
deeply. Yeah, like he's goals in so many ways. And this is just one of them. Yeah, yeah, so yeah, very cool
I am I feel a little better
Hearing that knowing that somebody seventh grader
Because oh my god, Bill freighter Robert and your kids his face now. I you know what I will yeah totally will yeah
So all right, so so we last time we talked V, right? Yeah. And I ended with the really quick run
through the plot that took still 15, 20 minutes because it's a galloping a galloping run through
the plot that took forever because holy crap. Yeah. What was interesting to me about it was that
the Kenneth Johnson's ideology filtered into what he had written so clearly.
He names it can't happen here as a massive influence, like in interviews today.
But Johnson immediately turns it into spacious fascists because that's what Tartikov needed.
And in all his interviews, there wasn't a specific thing that he was pointing to, though
he did draw a few aspects of what was happening in the early 80s for some of what happened in the miniseries.
So what I mean there is that normally, you know, our zeitgeist absolutely feeds into
what we're doing, he already came with a ideology that he was trying to push.
But the trappings of the 80s certainly filtered in, but it wasn't he looked around and then
found in ideology.
It was he came with the baggage.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
He was definitely writing from a specific point of view and an understanding conceptually
and actually of the menace of fascism.
But the dude didn't name much at all from the early 80s and Reagan represented one hellibot
shift right word that Kenneth Johnson just
kind of ignored.
Well, yeah, I actually, you know, thinking about that, because in episode three, you know,
the same time as Reagan, of course, was Thatcher.
Yep.
And in British science fiction, and particularly, amongst the people who are responsible for
Warhammer 40K, you know, Thatcher was like, oh my God, this is the fascist be all end all.
Now, you know, I wonder if part of the difference between them and Johnson might have been the
fact that Britain was more centralized,
more centralized economy had more industries
that were being managed in a more farther left kind of way
to begin with.
Like they, they already had the National Health Service.
They already had, you know, they had the post work
in census that was, okay, you know,
they were far more in a middle ground between, you know, total laissez-faire capitalism and socialist,
you know, democratic socialism. Yeah, I think you got something there. Even though Nixon
says we're all Kenzians now, yeah, you know, that American Kenzianism versus British Kenzianism is clearly different.
Very.
You know, American Kenzianism is we're going to pump money into the economy.
It's not, we're going to nationalize things.
Yeah, that's a really good point.
You know, but also say that they were also a lot closer to the Nazis physically.
Yes.
Yes.
And so there was more of a specter there,
and they're subconscious.
They have shit that's bombed out that's still on display.
We don't.
No, we never did, which was why neutrality was a powerful
hurt.
We have a hurtment in this country.
But that's literally it.
But number one, that's literally it.
Number one, and number two,
there are some emotional resonances involved in Pearl Harbor.
As somebody who wrote about literally past Arizona
five days a week for two years going to school as a kid,
there are some emotional resonances
that are very powerfully different.
Yeah.
London got bombed. Like, and had to rebuild. And powerfully different. Yeah London got bombed like and had to rebuild and had to rebuild
Yeah, and that's and that's the biggest city in the United Kingdom and that is civilian targets that is
That is that is very different from
You know, we have a lot of military personnel who are still entombed in ships in the
bottom of Pearl Harbor.
And there are parts of this air force base where they have not corned down the buildings
or filled in the bullet holes from the attack.
I think some of that's we also have so much more room for things so that we can have large memorials.
Yeah, population density, yeah.
I mean, certainly that's part of it.
But I think there's a very big difference between,
the Japanese army and Japanese naval Air Force,
blew up a fleet of military sailors. Yep.
Versus the Germans came in and just flattened everything.
Yeah, people had to hide.
You know, people had to hide underground.
Right.
There's a very different kind of effect that has on the memory of those events.
And we as a country have always wanted to lionize and glorify our war dead.
Yeah.
You know, forever since the revolution.
And for the Brits, no, the Nazis just like killed fucking everybody.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
And so there's a more immediate kind of peril to that in their international psychology.
Yeah, I agree.
I would be, and this is all, you know,
armchair psychologizing.
Mm-hmm.
But, you know, and so I think the fact that Reagan,
to Americans didn't come across as the blatant right wing authoritarian threat
that for some Britain, for many Britain's thatcher was.
You know, I think I think is a matter of degree and a matter of lived experience during World War
2. I also think effectively it didn't matter because you're
effectively both reigned for roughly the same amount of time.
Granted, that's true.
Yeah.
Now, I think there's some other reasons why, you know, Johnson, Kenneth Johnson, isn't
specifically calling out Reaganism or anything.
Okay. Number one, he's not Alan Moore.
And I think that can't be understated in us.
That can't.
Yeah.
Number two else is.
Yeah.
So there's that.
Yeah.
So number two, he might not have really felt it as he was living somewhere
comfortably as a writer.
I mean, I don't think he was making really good mailbox money yet, but he also didn't
speak at all of suffering personally and economically either in any of his interviews.
He wasn't like I was a starving writer. Third, he works in Hollywood and he has to deal with producers.
So getting specific about their patron saint of union busting might be a no no.
Okay, you know, yeah, that makes sense.
Okay, you know, yeah, that makes sense. But I'm more than happy to point some stuff out because
John, we're, you know, 40 plus years later.
Didn't put stuff in there.
So we'll go from the least to the most obvious.
Okay.
So first, right after the title card that states, quote,
to the heroism of the resistance fighters past, present,
and future, this work is respectfully dedicated.
That shows up.
The very first scene that we see is Michael Donovan as a cameraman covering a journalist
while he interviews a rebel during the Salvadoran Civil War.
The rebel says, quote, these wounds are nothing, see, compared to all the wounds that they've inflicted on our country, but we're gonna,
we're gonna fight them till we win.
You got that.
We're gonna fight till El Salvador is free.
So it's not a made up country.
It's a real place.
And then Donovan affirms that he got it on camera.
And right after that, they're attacked by a couple helicopters.
They stand bravely against them.
And Donovan ends up getting chased in a truck
by the helicopter, which he continues to film almost defiantly. And then the helicopter flees
in the face of the visitor ship. So that's your first scene. That's your in May the Array thing,
you know, like it's right there, right? So yeah, real quick. Sure. Clarify for me. Uh-huh. The resistance in El Salvador.
Okay. Was leftist, or were they counted, or were they anti-communist?
Funny that you asked. I remember the El Salvador. Right. Well, I'm about to get into the history
of El Salvador in conflict. Okay. Well, there we go.
All right.
So why is he picking El Salvador as the starting point
for this?
Well, like you said, it was in the news.
But in the late 1800s, coffee was king in El Salvador.
And it was in over, like how to put this,
it was more than 90% of their economy in the 1800s,
the late 1800s.
Well, because colonialism high.
And most of that went to the top 2% of the of the country's
population. So you've got a very sharp divide between the
halves and the other 98% cases.
Okay. In such a situation, depending on exports, if you have a
great depression worldwide, that could make things much worse.
Now, given the amount of changes that happened politically in the 1930s, you could see that the
candles burning quickly on both ends. Fascism is really popular to those with money and the power
to pay people to use guns to keep them in power with money. And socialism would be really popular
with the other 90% of the country. What? I'm sorry, 98.
Well, I'm thinking you could hire 8% to shoot at the other 90%.
Oh, okay, fair.
Yeah, fair enough.
Uh, so, or at least with a lot of the indigenous people who'd suffered tremendous abuse by those
on top and the, uh, and the peasants who've been kept in povish going into the Great Depression,
that would only make things more stark,
and they formed the Central American Socialist Party,
which quickly led to an uprising of the peasants
against the government in 1932.
One really important leader in this effort was a man named Augustine,
I'm sorry, Augustine Farabundo, Marti Rodriguez,
or Farabundo Marti for short, or Marti.
There's an accent on the eye.
I'm a marti.
Marti.
Okay.
Okay.
He was the son of a farmer from Teo Tepeque, Teo Tepeque, uh, Tepeque.
Sorry, the Latin is just going to fuck you.
Yeah, I know.
I know.
Yeah.
Teo Tepeque, who, who,, who he was the son of a farmer,
and he himself went to university,
but he dropped out to fight for the rights of the people
because he'd learned in college and likely before
that the structure of the government and economy
in Salvador was immensely exploitative.
So, see?
Well, yeah, oh, yeah, well, yeah.
Reading ground, you know.
Yeah, yeah, leftist.
Yes, paradise. Yeah.
So he renounced it. He renounced the government. And in by 1920, he was getting arrested and
exiled by those in power for rising up with students to oppose the system. Of course, when you
exile someone of a peasant background in the 1920s for speaking against exploitative governmental and economical policies
They're going to come back and with a lot more theory than they left with so in 1925
Sorry, I'm sorry. I just picture them coming back with a backpack full of books. Yeah, I had it under the art series and like a strap of yeah
Oh books. Yeah, I had it under the arm. Like, and like a strap of, of, yeah. Uh, so, I got papers at all. Look at these these. Sorry. And yeah, no, it's fine. He comes back in 25.
And marti is a member of the international organization called the all America anti-imperialist
league, dedicated to teaching
Marxism and Leninism to peasants so that they could liberate themselves and join a world
revolution in the 1920s.
Because world revolution was like the thing.
Yeah.
There were a lot of people getting fucked.
Yeah.
You know, like it sounds pretty good.
And not in the way they want to be.
Yeah.
Yeah. And now this gets marty excited, or I'm sorry, not excited, getting fucked.
Um, no, it gets him exiled again in 1930, but not before he gets nominated for president.
Well because that's the pattern.
Right.
And of course, he loses that election because he's not around, um, being an absentia the
whole time.
And given that the government in
1931 had a vested interest in making sure that someone with such leanings and policy choices didn't
get elected, this time he comes back with friends though. And their movement was cut short by the
government and the military. And from there, Marti helps to organize the peasants into a Marcus
Carilla army, which was exacerbated by yet another fall
in the price of coffee world. Why? They took on the newly stepped up vice president, turned
military dictator Maximelio Hernandez Martinez, who had 30,000 peasants massacred 10 days later.
What 30
Thousand this was something called the Lamatanza the slaughter
Because Lamatanza is Spanish for the Matanza and yes, and scholars scholars are in some agreement about that But also they they agree that it should be called the slaughter so
30 I'm sorry. Yeah, I'm still getting over the numbers
Wow, okay, Well, it's because of the uprising, the peasant and indigenous uprising in 1932, specifically the indigenous people called the PIPL. And so, now officially it lasted for five months. It really was done by the 10th day with so many dead.
Okay. The insurgents maybe killed a total of 100 people. It's probably closer to 50, but let's
give them credit for 100. Either way, this feels very armdermony to me.
a hundred. Either way, this feels very armdermony to me. Among those killed during La Matanza was Francisco Sanchez and Feliziano Amma, both of whom were hanged. School children were forced
to attend the lynching of Amma. And it might be Amma, I didn't, the accent didn't copy over.
The slaughter was affected in several ways. Obviously, the hunt and kill efforts
for the army, putting down an insurrection, right? But also, anyone found in possession of a machete
as that was the most common weapon amongst the papilla. And then anyone found to have indigenous
features. So think of these as concentric circles. After machete, it's, do you look indigenous?
This is how you get to 30,000.
However, you could, if you had indigenous features, you could present documents proclaiming
your innocence to the army. If your paperwork was in order and you were found to have indigenous
features, you were killed in groups of 50 in front of the wall of the church
It's much more weight. Yeah, wait wait wait wait wait wait
If your paperwork was in order. Yep, then you were grouped
So what you say is the racist genocide against the people yes
Others had yeah, yeah, others had to dig mass graves and then they were shot into the
mass graves.
If you own the house, your suspect and you were suspected as being guilty, it was burnt
and then you were killed.
Now right after La Matanza was officially over, the legislature passed a law that gave
immediate amnesty to anyone who participated in the killing in order to quote, restore order, repress, persecute, punish, and capture those accused of the crime of rebellion
this year. Yeah. Now it, it takes a lot to render me speechless, but wow. I'm there. Yeah.
Like, well, after this, after this,
marty was captured.
He was tried and he was executed in short order during the Lama Tanza.
His last day was February 1st, 1932.
The effort didn't stop in 32, however, more,
it set the policy that led to almost totally wiping
out the papil.
Lama Tanzas set the tone for the next 50 plus years for the government.
Now all of that is to set you up for understanding what exactly the FMLN was, the Farrabundo Marti
Nazionale Liberation Front.
They were named after him.
Hmm. So from 32 to 69, the military dictatorships rotated around, of course, squashing the peasantry to varying degrees, middle working and peasant class people,
all began to grow louder and louder over the next 40 years. And then that gets us to July 14, 1969.
See Honduras and El Salvador started a war over a football game.
Yes.
Yeah.
I remember this.
Yes.
Now it was called the football war.
It was called the 100 Years War.
Really, it wasn't over football.
It was over land reform policies in Honduras and population and wealth issues in El Salvador
because of those issues over 300,000 people migrated
to Honduras.
So you can see why Honduras is a lot larger
than El Salvador, but it has like half of its population.
They're still gonna be upset
that 300,000 people have crossed their borders.
Yeah.
And at that time, Honduras was all corporate it up,
like United Fruit Company level of
corporate it up.
US intelligence, state department as part owners of corporations corporate it up, like
that kind of shit.
Three years earlier, the United Fruit Company, which I ate client state, corporate it up.
Yeah, okay.
Three years earlier, the United Fruit Company, which owns 10% of Honduras's land,
10%
on the one hand that's staggering. On the other hand, there's a part of me surprised it's that low. Well, they had interest in other places too. No, okay. It could also be a certain 10%
you know, like the part that has all the fruit. Yeah. Anyway, the UFC, the United Fruit Company, joined together with many other large corporations
and companies and created the Federation, National, the Agri-Cultores y Ganaderos de Honduras
or Finas for short.
Shockingly, this group was anti-campusino.
Campusinos are the tenant farmers, anti-peasant and anti-salvatore and migrant.
Fenog pressured the president of Honduras to go fuck them all over in order to protect
the wealthy landowners and owners in Honduras.
So you've got a lot of tension between these two countries, essentially, dicking over poor people for the benefit of rich people and foreign ultra-rich people.
This meant taking a lot of land for much of the decade, in the 1960s, from Salvadorans,
squatters, immigrants, migrants, and gave it to native Hondurans, which makes sense,
it's Honduran land, but this was unclaimed land previously. So then what the hell?
First, Salvadorans who were married to Hondurans were especially screwed
Because sorry, you don't get this land anymore
Second all the other Salvadorans were screwed and this also meant mass deportations and expulsion from Honduras back into the overly fucked
El Salvador with half the land
and twice the people.
Yeah.
And because FIFA makes everything worse, the two countries were playing.
Thank you, John Oliver.
These two countries were playing in a two game 1969 qualifier for the World Cup in 1970.
Right. Right.
Okay.
There was a great amount of violence in each capital city when a match was held there.
The Hondurans won when they are in Honduras.
The El Salvadorans won when they were in El Salvador.
This means that it's tied and you need a third game.
That would be in Mexico City.
El Salvador's government dissolved diplomatic everything with the Hondurans after the second game
because Honduras's government deported nearly 12,000
Salvadorans and had done nothing to secure the safety
of other Salvadorans during the riots in their capital
during their game.
Okay, so there's a lot of back and forth. And there's a lot of back and forth. Yeah. And there's a lot of back and forth
Air Force fighting interestingly with the dictator of Nicaragua giving ammunition to the Honduran
government. Mostly like literally ammunition like bullets and rockets. Yeah. What reate.
And it's interesting because I think this is the only war that I could find where it was 1940s American aircraft fighting against 1940s American aircraft.
Really? Yeah, because that's what their air forces were made of.
Well, I mean, okay, the 1960s and land America that makes sense.
I mean, you say 1940s American aircraft, are we talking about corsairs or war hawks or like like corsairs must
hang that kind of stuff. Oh shit. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. See, as a aviation guy, I have to look
this up. Yeah. Okay. But they're also bombing the shit out of each other's populations.
Yeah. I'm going to have to I'm gonna, I'm still, Nicaragua was giving...
Supplying the ammunition to Honduras.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because they also had some kind of
reg against El Salvador or...
Or they were allied more with Honduras.
Okay.
And Nicaragua was their interests aligned more
with Honduras' because they were owned by the same
corporate masters. Yep. Right. Meanwhile, the Salvadoran army, which had a lot of
practice against its own peasantry for the last 40 years, was marching successfully
toward the Honduran capital. This caused Honduras' government to ask the OAS to
intervene and call for a truce and a ceasefire and an
eventual peace. The OAS is the organization of the American states.
Once the OAS threatened economic sanctions, the Salvadoran army finally withdrew from Honduras.
While El Salvador seemed to have come out of the other side of this short war with a victory,
the economic and social pressure brought about
by the fighting. With the new influx of 300,000 of their own citizens back into their country,
the damage trade between the two countries and the governments on we and inability to
tend to these folks caused problems in El Salvador that would worsen by quite a bit over
the next 10 years. The military came out stronger, but politics skewed more corrupt
in the shadow of that. The military endorsed party, the PCN, the National Coalition party,
won in a very corrupted election in 1972. Resultingly, the Fuerzas Populores de Liberación,
Farabundo MartÃ, began fighting in opposition. So the FLMN.
Okay.
With our leftist, Marxist, and Leninist groups also sprung up as well.
So that gets us to 1973.
Do you remember what the big issue in 1973 was?
Was it an oil crisis?
Yes.
And that of course causes food prices to rise, which of course hurts the poor more and gives more moral backing to the groups that are fighting against a
clearly corrupted government. In 1977, there's more corrupt elections and the government brought
in paramilitary and military groups to gun down the protesters in San Salvador in numbers
around 1500 or so. So 1500 people get killed by the government troops.
President general, which that's always a good sign.
You have a president general.
So let me, we both play Mac warrior.
That's like so very merit it hurts.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So Carlos who marathor Romero also, the use specifically of paramilitary privatized
death squads in the countryside because why not go all in?
By 1979, the amount of people that the government was killing was enough that the Catholic church
denounced the El Salvadoran government who in turn repressed the priests.
Eventually, yes. government, who in turn repressed the priests.
Eventually, yes, General Carlos Humberto Romero was put down in a coup in October of 79,
which really were the United States because is this communism?
The coup was a military dictatorship coup of a different striped in Romero's, but a military
dictatorship all the same.
That said, Jimmy Carter, the humanitarian that he is and the US State Department
Proped the hell out of him because what if the communists came?
Because Cold War right by the time that Ronald Reagan comes into office in January of 1981
He's more than quadrupled the US spending to support El Salvador
one, he's more than quadrupled the US spending to support El Salvador.
Up or he did, he, that's one of the first things he did, up to a billion a year by 1984.
And because everyone at the top of these coups were military folks who were allied with rich folks, you can imagine a lot of competing interests that were exactly the same.
Make sure that you protect our holdings of land and we, and we pay you this, this group
was called the revolutionary government junta
and it's been my experience that anytime you have a government body called revolutionary anything
they're not and certainly not in a good way if they are yeah the J.R.G. was no different they
wanted to stay in power however they were a bit too warm and fuzzy for American interests and for
the ultra-rightist interest in El Salvador.
The, uh, what were they called the Revolutionary Government, junta, the J.R.G.
wanted to redistribute land to peasants on cooperative farms and to nationalize a lot of the growing.
Obviously, this doesn't sit well with the, uh, private owners, the top 0.1% who owned 77% of the land at the time.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
Oh, the Salvadoran army, along with several wealthy elites who helped fund them, set up attack
and death swads, stepped up their killings and got ready to go to war with this new unreasonable
government. The US backed the rightist because that was the only way to stop the communist from
taking over the Salvadoran J.R.G. that had been weakened by the rightists.
Yeah.
This, this, this is more complicated than a Japanese soap opera.
Yeah.
Like, oh my God.
Yeah.
Now, this includes helping them stop union strikes in Nelson.
Now, this includes helping them stop union strikes in else and student demonstrations and helping kidnap
important leaders on the left.
Oh, because of course.
Of course, that's all of that.
Like, because in for a penny, in for a pound,
yeah, yeah, it's ghosts than aliens.
Like, I mean, it's all of a piece.
Like, we got it.
Oh, God, damn it. Of Like, I mean, it's all of a piece. Like, we got it. Oh, God damn it.
Of course, the government began to respond
to rightist military folks by attacking the citizens
because they feared a leftist takeover,
which would obviously be emboldened
by the rightist weakening the government
and their attempt to stop the leftists.
So everybody is beating the shit out of Charlie Brown
because they're worried that Lucy will take power.
Yeah, because Charlie Brown is the only one who is not directly allied to anybody. And oh my God,
we got to keep him from lying with everybody because fuck Linus. And fuck Sally because
Shrota and Lucy are worried about getting power and don't get me started on violet. Um, so now,
pig pen, we don't even want to like, right?
Not even bring him in.
Well, he's already been exterminated. Uh, okay. Right. Yeah. Oh my God.
So now both sides have death squads and it's 1980. And by this point, the
composinos, the peasants and the indigenous people of El Salvador have seen
nearly 50 years of generational violence against them in the name of not letting the communist win, which is mostly a smoke screen so that whoever's in charge can continue to enrich themselves.
Rinsen repeat, and by this point, they say, well, why the hell not? And they form the FMLN in the name of Marti, which sees a fair amount of success in the face of such suppression. Oh, you're
going to accuse us of being leftist. Let's give that a shot because y'all been giving
us a lot of shots. So some of this is due to the sense.
Which we all use right now. Yeah. God. Less it. Okay.
Now, some of this is due to the sense of piety that people have about liberation. And some
of it is due to not having much to lose, given that they're the target of attacks, regardless
of what they do or don't do.
And quickly, several villages and neighborhoods become FMLN zones, which leads to the government
bombing the shit out of them, killing plenty, and not changing the pieces on the board at
all.
In February 1980, Archbishop Cesar Romero, a total badass whose story does not get told
enough, he makes it very public what's going on and he wraps it all up in the fact that
he's a priest.
He called on the Salvadoran soldiers not to follow orders to murder people in March of
1980.
So he's saying, don't kill people. So of course he gets killed during mass the next day by people in March of 1980. So you say, don't kill people.
So of course he gets killed during mass the next day
by the last hour of military.
And Role, Julia plays him in a biopic.
Yes.
Yes.
And yeah, no, and a figure who deserves
an awful lot more attention historically
and speaking as a Catholic, I think it says less
than positive things about the church
that they have not found a way to canonize his ass yet.
Yeah.
I do not disagree.
I mean, yeah.
Yeah.
You know, and the thing was he was a man of books.
He absolutely was not considered to be any kind of a liberation
Theologist or anything. He was a quiet read your books Catholic
You know a man of letters, you know, and then and then he's like I can't I can't not speak on this
Please don't kill people and then don't don't kill innocent people. This shouldn't be something I have to tell you
Yeah, now at his funeral sniper shot 42 of his mourners. Oh, Jesus.
Like, see what happens when you stop me one sentence short. You see what happens.
I'm sorry. Yeah, it's fine. It just, yeah, you, yeah, you, uh, now you have to deal with the consequences of knowing that.
Now it only gets worse from here.
Uh, by 1982 and 1983, there's an attempt of the FM LN.
To the FM LN tries to get a ceasefire, bring together all the sides to organize,
but Ronald Reagan said that this would lead to a communist dictatorship.
So no.
Then there's a long insurgency by the FMLN against the government and the rightist death squads and it's largely a battle between the landed elites with the military and their employee versus a small band of resistance fighters who refused to
See their country to such people.
Their politics are nominal and certainly something
that had an appeal. But largely, it's resistance against power in that same amount of time,
the FMLN carried out deliberate and organized sabotage missions that fucked the Air Force
for a while. They cut it nearly in half with their sabotage and we're talking close to a
thousand arson's and sabotage attacks in a single year.
Oh wow. Yeah. Yeah. FMLN even occupied major citiesage attacks in a single year. Oh wow. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's a million.
That's a whole lot.
Yeah.
Even occupied major cities at different times in the year.
And they were obvious and they weren't going anywhere.
The government that Reagan supported continued killing civilians by the hundreds in response
to this.
This is shades of Lama Tonsa.
Just as V was hitting the air, the government was killing Union leaders.
And it would take until 1997 to recognize peace throughout the country to the point where the
truth commissions could actually be set up. And this is the war that Johnson's mini-series
starts out with. He clearly is watching and reading the news and he represents this very struggle in the
opening scene of V. But it feels more that it's a timely thing that fits in with his dichotomy of
unyielding resistance versus military overwhelming superiority rather than here's fascists and here's
communists. To the heroism of the resistance fighters past, present, and future, this work is respectfully
dedicated. This is the present. These are the resistance fighters that he's talking about and he
shows them in the first scene. Wow. Okay. Johnson was highlighting a very real conflict to service
the conceptual point that he was making, but he was far more interested in using old symbolism to point loudly to the idea of fascism,
and it can't happen here. Far less about American intervention and collaboration in
El Salvador, despite his featuring it in the first scene. In essence, as often happens with our
authors, Johnson fell over backward in the same way that John Carpenter did with they live. Yeah. Yeah. And it's interesting how his framing of that and his particular lens on that
reveals a very significant level of privilege.
It does. Yeah. Like it's like it's really easy for him as a an American specifically an American
sci-fi writer. Yeah. Yeah. An American television writer. He didn't want to be pigeonholed as an
SF writer. But as an American, as an American writer of entertainment, who was living comfortably
enough that as you said in our last episode, you never talked about any kind of financial struggle. Right. He was in a position to view these folks in a non-ideological lens. You
know that they were resisting against our when it was like, okay, no, we are, we are literally dirt for farmers who have been oppressed for forever by feudal overlords.
You know, it's an interesting,
I mean, looking at it from a meta level
this many years later,
it's an interesting study in,
well, in paradigm,
and in separation from what it is
that you're writing about.
Mm-hmm.
You know?
Yeah.
Yeah, while you were expressing what a complete
and utter shit show that was.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Um, you know, I was thinking, okay, so, so the FMLN were, were ideologically leftist.
Meanwhile, at the same time, there was a leftist resistance fighting in El Salvador in Nicaragua,
which had been funneling my Honduras.
Oh, we're gonna get to that.
In the Honduran War.
We're gonna get to that.
Okay, yeah.
Yeah.
The Contra is in the San Nistas.
Yes, yes.
Was the kind of reversal of that?
Yeah, because you had a,
well, you had what happened in Guatemala
and what happened in Chile.
It's happening in Nicaragua.
You had a legally elected government
that was too far left for some people
and they started attacking it.
Yeah, so yeah, but we'll get to that, don't worry.
There's plenty more V to go around.
Jesus.
Now, both Carpenter and Johnson had a perspective
that they were writing from Carpenter was specifically
critiquing the Reagan era, if you recall, episode 150 and 151.
Yes.
Johnson was specifically avoiding present politics, though using them as a backdrop and going
with his, it can't happen here, themes, though he did so by co-opting a whole bunch of history.
Let's look now to the scientists in the mini-series who
are being delegitimized while they're following a leader or while following a leader who wants to
take over other places to harvest their resources. Okay. At one point, Donovan asks Martin, Martin
is the fifth columnist. Says, how did someone like that get to be your leader anyway? And Martin
responds, charisma, circumstances, promises, not enough of
us spoke out to question him until it was too late. It happens on your planet, doesn't
it? Oh, Al. On July 29th, 1921, Hitler became chairman of his party and renamed it the
NSDAP. Do largely to his ability to make rousing speeches. On April 1st, 1924, Hitler turned
his trial for the failed
insurrection into a platform to get his ideas out there. And though he spends the rest of the
year in a really soft jail, he's gotten his message out and has others carrying out plenty
of brutalizing violence, largely attacking leftists whom Europe seems to really not mind getting killed.
In 1928, the NSDAP only gets about 3% of the vote in the Reichstag, very easy
to ignore a small political arm. In 1930, January 23rd, William Frick became the first Nazi
to hold a position of any note whatsoever in the German government when he became the
minister of the interior for Thuringia, a thoroughly unimportant province in German history.
I know because I guess what is it?
Thuringia.
Oh, correct.
Yes.
Okay.
Which I looked it up, ain't nothing happened there of much note.
July 16th, 1930, Heinrich Bruning.
It's got an umu out over the you, who's in charge of the right-leaning coalition of
the Reichstag.
He's unable to secure the votes necessary to put forward his deflationary budget in
the face of the worldwide depression, which is hitting Germany harder than most owing
to the Treaty of Versailles.
So he invokes Article 48, Article 48 of the Weimar Constitution states, quote,
if public security in order are seriously disturbed
or endangered within the German Reich,
the president of the Reich may take measures
necessary for the restoration, intervening if need be
with the assistance of the armed forces.
For this purpose, he may suspend for a while,
in whole or in part, the fundamental rights provided
in articles 114, 115, 117, 118, 123, 124, and 153.
It's a super dangerous precedent 114, 115, 117, 118, 113, 123, 124, and 153.
It's a super dangerous precedent that nobody is super clear on yet.
And at that point, nobody really saw the Nazis
or ate off Hitler as a threat.
On September 14th, 1931, the unemployment rate in Germany
is painfully rising, which allows Hitler and the Nazis
to make promises due to
those circumstances and grow to 18.4% of the Reichstag, making it the second largest
party in the Reichstag.
October 1931, writers suggest another coalition that includes Nazis.
Hitler agrees.
By this point, Thompson had interviewed and warned the world about Hitler.
But nobody's listening.
January 1932, industrialists reach out to Hitler because they think he'd be a good ally that they can control.
April 10, 1932, Hindenburg beats Hitler on the second ballot, but Hitler came in a strong second on both ballots. April 13th, 1932,
burning banned the essay from marching. May 30th, 1932, burning was forced to resign as president
of the government and a bit of a problem with a conflict of interest and his whole cabinet
resigned in protest to his not pushing forward. It's fun and complex, but it's too long for this
podcast, at least this episode. Anyway, Hindenburg becomes president and appoints von Popen, chancellor.
June 16th, 1932, the essay ban was lifted. They can now march in the streets again.
In August 31st, 1932, Gering, another Nazi is president of the Reichstag and will eventually
help to push von Popen out. December 2, 1932,
von Popen is forced out as chancellor, General Kurt von Schlescher is a super-rightist,
and he becomes chancellor. January 30, 1933, von Popen maneuver is von Schlescher out,
and Convincen's Hindenburg that Hitler should be chancellor and himself vice-chancellor,
that way they can control Hitler, like we're on either side of him and get the industrialists
on their side because they support Hitler because they could control him. Luckily, after that,
everyone listened to Thompson and put a stop to all of it and everything went great afterwards.
August, August, August 2nd, 1934 Hitler merges the president and chancellor positions and
has already had the backing of the enabling act that made him dictator for four years.
I'm sure that Donovan speaking to his mom, quote, you always said it couldn't happen
here.
Then one day we woke up and we were living in a fascist state and quote, is totally irrelevant
to what I've just listed and nothing like it was said at all to anyone in Germany at the time.
Yeah.
So that's the leader.
Now let's talk about the uniforms.
The youth brigade that Daniel Bernstein joins in V specifically gives him a brown uniform.
This is not accidental.
That's your essay connection right there, the brown shirts.
Yeah, like I said, I'm going from least to most obvious, right?
So it's gonna get real easy here. In December 1934, the German government passed the law against malicious attacks on state and property.
It outlawed quote, malicious rabble-rousing remarks or those indicating base mentality.
malicious rabble-rousing remarks or those indicating base mentality. Wasn't there something about like, hey, you can't desecrate statues during the summer of
2020?
Yeah.
So, this law also said, quote, whoever purposefully makes or circulates a statement of a factual
nature which is untrue or grossly exaggerated, or which may seriously
harm the welfare of the Reich or of a state, or the reputation of the national government
or of a state government, or of parties or organizations supporting these governments
is to be punished provided that no more severe punishment is decreed in other regulations.
With the statement or with imprisonment of up to two years, and if he makes or spreads
a statement publicly with imprisonment of not less than three months, if serious damage
to the Reich or state has resulted from this deed, penal servitude may be imposed.
Whoever commits an act through negligence will be punished with imprisonment of up to three
months or by fine.
Yeah. Alphonse Heck, who was later interviewed about his activity in the Hitler youth, said of his father's railings against the government to his own parents.
In front of Alvonse, he says, quote, in retrospect, I think it was the last time my father
railed against the regime in front of me.
He wasn't much of a drinker, but when he had a few too many, he had a tendency to shout
down everyone else, not a small feat amongst the men in my family.
You mark my words, mother, he yelled, that God damned Australian house painter is going
to kill us all before he's through conquering the world.
And then his baleful eye fell on me.
They are going to bury you in this goddamn
monkey suit, the Hitler youth uniform. My boy Alphonse's grandmother chided her son because
she had a very real fear that her grandson would turn in her son. Quote, why don't you
leave him alone? Do Dummer Nahr, which is German for you stupid fool. And watch your mouth.
You want to end up in the KZ, which
is the concentration camps. Alphons later mused, quote, my grandmother had every reason to
warn him about talking loosely for his classification as politically unverliable. Surely would have
sent him to a KZ had anyone reported his remarks, even within the family. But there were also
two of our farm hands at the table, and Hans, the younger
of the two, had recently announced his decision to apply for party membership. He had ambitions
to attend an agricultural school and knew full well that party membership would help him
get in. Perhaps luckily for my father, Hans was getting pretty drunk himself, although
I doubt he would have reported my father had he been stoned sober. Despite the fact that
I later attained a high rank in the Hitler youth, which required me to be a specially
vigilant, I never considered my father to be dangerous
to our new order.
I merely thought him a fool who had long since been left behind.
Daniel absolutely uses his newfound power to attain
prestige within the visitors organization
and among other kids.
But his grandfather, who lived through the Holocaust, repudiates him harshly when Daniel says that he'll use his position to force Robin to marry him under threat of turning them into the visitors for being a family of scientists.
And after Daniel's parents are questioned and tortured and returned home, their grandfather is now dead.
They live in fear of saying anything that
Daniel will inform on. The uniforms that the visitors use, yeah, yeah. So there's your essay,
there's your Hitler youth. The uniforms that the visitors use are, well, they're uniforms, right?
They're almost entirely the same shade of red that we see George Von Trapp ripping up in the sound of music.
I'm sorry, Georg.
And they definitely cut a nice triangular figure.
But the calf length boots, the cap, the belt and the chevrons that denote rank coming from the neck down the old leaks in a more pronounced version of the ribbons of recognition that German troops would wear on the vermoct.
They're all jet black. So is
their gun? Oh yeah. Yeah. And so is their gun which resembles a luger, but it's science stuff a bit.
Yeah. So their gun is also luger-like, but it's, you know, a little more sciencey.
And the insignia you they use is black on red.
I'll try to describe it and then I'll find you a picture.
A thin black rounded rectangle going north to south,
rounded on both ends.
A small space between that and a horizontal rectangle
of the same kind, but half is long
that extends from the northernmost spot eastward.
Same from the southernmost spot westward. And so if you measure the width and the length, they'd be pretty close to the same. Then starting directly above the southern horizontal half line,
there's a simple solid black dot. It's diameter is the same width as the horizontal line.
You have the same size dot starting below the northern half line. So based on that description and I'm sure you could be looking
it up right now. Yeah, so based on that. Oh, okay. So based on that and I will show you just really quick
V insignia.
Based on these two things, there we go.
So based on all of that description and what I've just shown you, and I had to pause it
because I didn't want people to hear me clicking and clacking, what does it look like?
Yeah.
Yes, it does.
Right. Like they're not going to get sued by the Nazi party for product infringement.
But that's it. Good point.
Good point.
Oh, they always had the German cross.
They never had the schwarzsick as, yeah.
Yes.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
So this would satisfy that, right.
So now let's get on to the scientists. I keep promising a scientist. Here's the scientist. On April 8th, 1933, the German student union published the 12 feces calling for a pure German language and a pure German culture achieved only through burning and cleansing the literature of Jewish intellectualism, which bridges the gap from science through literature, through Marxism, and attacks on anything
not considered hella straight enough.
The very first things burnt were actually an attack on the Institute for Sexual Alvies
and Shaft.
This institute, I can't believe I can say that word, but if you give me the word for eggs
in French, I'm fucked. Well, ifs, I, well, because I'm pretty sure you're not supposed to pronounce the, the
VES when you add the S to the VE. So I think it ends up being, where is one is if, yeah,
it just so, but sexual abuse and shaft, no problem.
Yeah, yeah.
So anyway, this had been the leading source of academic and medical research in Europe and the US and possibly the world on the issues of gender trans identity and whatnot.
By burning these 20,000 books and journals from the Institute's library, the German student union entirely with the support of Gerbels and the Ministry of Poppaganda destroyed unique studies and
works on intersectionality, homosexual, transgender and other related topics.
They...
No, I'd literally the next sentence was how much they said it back by so good.
It's also very likely that Dora Richter, the very first known and documented transgender
woman who underwent gender confirmation surgery, was killed during this burning.
Although some reports have it that she was arrested afterward and died in custody, either
way, attacks on transgender folks were at the van
of the Nazi attack on marginalized groups, which led specifically to eliminating the people
who could have and would have called out what the Nazis were doing as they were doing it.
The following literatures were also outlawed in Nazi Germany, making critiques by such folks
all but impossible. They got rid of porn, all books degrading German purity, pop literature, that was Tubaoujwa,
Tubaoujwa superficial, Tubaoujwa silly, any writing that was damaging to the folk,
literature that was too decadent, anything on sex that focused on individual pleasure rather than
duty, anything that advocated bloodless, constructivist, or decadent art, anything egalitarian, anything
that history doesn't center, doesn't center the German folk, and its exceptionalism, as well as
exceptional leaders. Any history that explains history through a study of the masses, no liberal
literature, no democratic literature, no pacifist literature, anything that is about the Vimar Republic,
anything Marxist, anything communist, anything Bolshevik, anything that denies racial structuralism
that sets the Aryans at the top, anything written by traders, anything written by foreigners
who think that they can attack Germany through literature, and anything by any Jewish author
no matter what the field.
This led to the burning of over 80% of the school libraries and 75% of the scientific libraries in Poland after they conquered
Yeah, now I'm going to date this podcast a little bit. There is a
Middle school in Texas that is named after a guy who learned how to read in his late 90s
He his name is George Dawson. George Dawson
Middle School just banned his autobiography from the Middle School library that bears
his name. Yeah, so luckily it can't happen here. Now combine this with the Hitler youth and
you have a national policy enacted that is
specifically aimed at encouraging brutality against those deemed not of the folk, especially
Jews.
You also had the burning of the Reichstag blamed on Communists, which was quickly
accreted to include anybody, Jewish.
To be one was to be the other, therefore any conspiracy imagined or discovered by Communists
was also a Jewish plot.
This exiled many writers, many artists, and many people who are important to this podcast,
scientists.
From V, quote, and actually, before I get into this, because I'm going to quote to you
a bunch of dialogue that talks about this.
Is there anything that you wanted to reflect on in everything that I just brought up? Yeah. and the I'm not sure if you're going to be able to do that.
I'm not sure if you're going to be able to do that.
I'm not sure if you're going to be able to do that.
I'm not sure if you're going to be able to do that.
I'm not sure if you're going to be able to do that.
I'm not sure if you're going to read in the first place.
And you're bringing everybody else down to your level by legislation.
Yeah.
Yeah. Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm. the Right.
Right. Well, they're not going to claim that they're threatened by it, though. That's the thing.
Like, I think you're begging the question quite honestly. They're claiming that they are
the guardians of purity and of children. So yeah, now see you've proven your
weak because you you disagree with them. And I think that's the loop that they
get themselves into. Yeah, but you won't because you're there with your kid. And you
don't have a two by four. And you can't afford to stay in jail.
They're using the rules of society and politeness against you.
That's what they do until they run the entire public square.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
Okay.
So from the TV series V, here's the dialogue, quote, the world was shocked today when Nobel
Prize winner Dr. Morris Jankowski of the Brussels Biomedical Institute in Belgium held press
conference today or to reveal the existence of an international conspiracy against the visitors.
And then it goes to Jankowski.
It came to my attention when Dr. Rudolf Metz in California asked to speak with me on what
he called urgent confidential manners.
Other colleagues of mine are also being approached by scientists, primarily biomedical and anthropological
scientists.
From many nations who are apparently a part of this insidious conspiracy, their plans
quite simply are to seize control of several motherships belonging to the
visitors.
They tried hard to convince me that this was to protect the human race or to keep such
powers from the military on our planet.
I do believe, however, that their motivation is by far more personal.
Then Jankowski signed his statement, listing those he claims tried to bring him into this
conspiracy.
When word began to spread of the Jier-Kowski statement, the international scope revealed
itself as scores of scientists around the world came forward to admit that they had been
approached or actually confessed that they were part of the conspiracy.
Seen here is Dr. Jacques Duvier, Duvier Vier, Duvier Vier.
Yeah.
Also, yeah, yeah, they're the problem, not me.
Their language has been around far longer than I, but yeah, they're the problem.
Yeah, Dr. Jacques de Vouville, also a Nobel laureate physician and leading biochemist in France,
who was detained by the Suret A and has confessed to his involvement,
naming other scientists as his co-conspirators.
Then after the news, there's a specific scene of a scientist who works with Julie and Ben. Ben is the brother of Elias that I talked about last week.
Two biologists who joined the resistance later having his office searched.
It's a lie. It's a vicious lie. You don't need to warrant search my files. There's nothing. You'll find nothing.
What's that? No, I never saw that. No, it's not true. I don't know how this got here. It's a lie I tell you and then you cut back to the news while Robin Maxwell's dad the scientist who lives next door to David is
discussing the several of his friends who are missing
uh, and so you hear and many other scientists and he says they they simply they've simply vanish which
Which some think lens credence to the charges brought against them.
Christine Walsh, press secretary for visitor supreme commander John had this to stay.
So as Christine is the journalist who is now fully co-opted,
the visitors were shocked to learn of this conspiracy and fearful of the chaos which could possibly
result. Not only would their own needs be impaired, but all the benefits they plan to share with us
could be in danger.
Scientific seminars planned for next week will be postponed.
Then you cut to the Berkowitz family watching TV.
And because it's still too early to determine how many scientists are involved, the UN has
agreed to visit requests that all scientists and their family members must register their
whereabouts with local authorities.
Computers will be used to verify their registration, and then you cut to
Abraham, the grandfather, talking to a friend who says, quote, Abraham, don't get so wound up. Nothing's
going to happen to you or your family. They're not doctors or biologists or even scientists. You're
not involved. Anyway, it's going to pass. And he says, that's what I said in 1938 back in Berlin.
But this is different. Is it? And then it literally cuts to his grandson,
David, walking with a visitor wearing his new brown uniform. And then back to the news.
The Supreme Commander wants to make it clear that while he's sure all scientists all over
aren't hard of this conspiracy, it's difficult to ascertain which of them may not be.
While police have scoured scientific files for facts on the conspiracy,
startling evidence is being found that many scientists have actually had major breakthroughs in research,
which they've suppressed. Senate Medical Affairs Committee Chairman Raymond Burke had this to say.
And then he says, yes indeed, I do have evidence that revolutionary cancer treatments do exist,
and have existed for some time, along with many other breakthroughs, which apparently are scientific
friends kept quiet about and haven't shared with this. Why would they do that? I won't speculate, except to say that there's a lot of
money to be made in research grants. Yeah. And there's a lot of yeah.
Yeah, and it's a politician saying it to gain political support.
He's seeing a crisis and he's seeing where he can grift.
And on top of that, you hear all these scientists who are coming forward and saying, yeah, I was
part of the conspiracy.
Or I mean, you've got this kangaroo thing going on, right?
So then there's a few scenes showing that people are turning their backs on the scientists.
They're spurning them.
They're canceling plans because they don't want to be seen with a scientist.
A girl comes home from school having gotten into a fight because someone called her dad a dirty scientist.
And among the first who join the resistance in VR
as a result, scientists and journalists and clergy
and criminals.
And I just want to make sure that we have this list down.
Scientists, journalists, clergy and criminals.
Because this very much apes the makeup of plenty of resistance
in partisan movements during World War II in Europe.
Many intellectuals took up the cause of resistance
in partisanship, militarily sewn Western Europe,
whereas in Eastern Europe it was largely underground,
supply and information chains at fed necessary information
to Eastern European partisan groups.
Still, the makeup was similar, clergy,
criminals, intellectuals, and journalists, and if you look at the number of ghetto and
concentration camp-uprisings, the networks that existed before and after them, the amount
of expatriates who came back and fought and died against the Nazis who occupied their
homeland, it's easy to see that such resistance as that, as well as what we saw in the Salvadoran
Civil War starting in 1979, was definitely something that Johnson would pull for him for his writings.
Johnson didn't want to make this a science fiction miniseries because he feared being
pigeonholed, but when the network was thirsty to make money off the post-ET craze, and the
post-Empire strikes back craze, he realized he could tell the same story just with aliens instead of actual Nazis.
And he didn't seem to have a specifically positive ideology though.
He was more conceptual in his approach, despite the miniseries releasing on Mayday.
That seems to be more of a coincidence than anything else.
And again, it got a 40 share for the two nights that is on.
It was huge, and NBC actually got more eyes on their network than CBS or ABC for the two nights that is on. It was huge and NBC actually got more
eyes on their network than CBS or ABC for those two nights, which was unthinkable and
NBC prior to that show. Yeah, I'm gonna stop there because the next episode is gonna be
about the next mini series they made based on this
Because they did making it because the success of this they were like fuck let's do it again
But there's gonna be a lot of differences too like this is the only one that michael johnson had an actual creative hand in
Yeah, now he helped pick the writing team for the next one, but we'll get into what happened,
but yeah.
But yeah, I mean, you see this like it's very clear he's writing from a point of view
and he's writing from an ideology and he's pulling in stuff, but it's not like he on,
like I said, he's falling over backward on it, right?
Right and anti-fascist it is anti-fascist. Yeah. Right, right.
Right.
Yeah. Well, and I would also say like the only time.
Yeah, the only time you see a politician doing something is when he's hopping on a bandwagon
of things.
There's no politician sitting there going, we could use this.
There's there's nothing like that.
If there was something like that, I'd be like, okay, he's calling out right wing stuff, but no, there's nothing like that.
Sure.
the True. Oh, yeah.
Right. Yeah, I mean, it's not like Reagan.
Right.
It's not like he wasn't a fucking monster, but he still got 49 out of 50 states in the 1984 election.
still got 49 out of 50 states in the 1984 election.
Like, goddamn. Right. Like the way that Alan Moore saw Maggie Thatcher.
Yeah.
And by the way, she's immensely popular after an assassination attempt goes wrong. And she she in right Ronnie run and and they run and gun for roughly the same amount of time.
Yeah. Sure.
Mm-hmm. Yeah, that's exactly true. Mm-hmm.
Yep.
Oh yeah. Yep.
Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Yup.
Yeah.
There's so much neo-fascist bullshit.
Mm-huh. Right.
This is true. Very true.
But who really liked it can't happen here which yeah
Mm-hmm right right right
right
right right
right and the
it's it's the having a perfect perfect ceiling for plaid and just not doing it.
So, all righty. Well, uh, that's what you've gleaned. Is there anything you want people to read.
Okay.
Okay.
I'm going to recommend actually two things.
One, you can find V. I don't know if it's you have to rent it or not because I'm a little
spoke to that prime.
But you can find the original mini series both on 2B, which I know you can do for free. And I think on prime for free.
But do the one that's for free. So that is is what I'm going to
recommend mostly. But also because we were talking Nazis so
much, I would like to also recommend another book. And it's
called, I've recommended this before as a please go order this,
but now mine has come and I've started reading it,
it's called all the frequent troubles of our days
by Rebecca Donner.
It's the true story of the American woman
at the heart of the German resistance to Hitler.
So there's this woman from South Dakota
and she's living in Germany, translating stuff like that. She joins a resistance and she is moving documents back and forth and she's helping fight Hitler from within.
In 1943, she gets captured by the Gestapo and she gets sentenced to six years of hard labor
in a concentration camp.
Hitler steps in and goes,
no, no, no, no, no, no.
Behead her tomorrow.
She is the only woman ever having,
only American woman ever having been ordered executed by Hitler.
And she died.
So it's written by her great niece.
Yeah, so I say read that shit.
So yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So.
Anybody want to find you online, where should they look? , Okay. I'm not sure if I can do it. I'm not sure if I can do it. I'm not sure if I can do it.
I'm not sure if I can do it.
I'm not sure if I can do it.
I'm not sure if I can do it.
I'm not sure if I can do it.
I'm not sure if I can do it.
I'm not sure if I can do it.
I'm not sure if I can do it.
I'm not sure if I can do it.
I'm not sure if I can do it.
I'm not sure if I can do it. I'm not sure if I can do it. I'm not sure if I can do it. Let's see, duh harmony, two Hs in the middle on Twitter and Instagram, probably the easiest
place to define me.
Also if you are in the Sacramento area within 60 miles and you want to come down to Luna's
cafe on either, let's see, I think this is going to drop after,
but just in case, October 7th, November 4th or December 2nd, I will be there with my crew
capital punishment running our pun tournament for over six years now. Justine Lopez has now joined us,
stepping us up to the next level, and it's going to be an amazing show, bring proof of vaccination as well as $10 and come check out an amazing show. So that's where you can
find me. So for a geek history of time, I'm Damien Harmony.
you