Here’s another one where my procrastination is
embarrassing. In this case, I cannot actually complete the task. At all. (One
the plus side, for yesterday’s task, I have already heard back from Roberto!)
The procrastination did not go on quite as long
on this one. I finished reading Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA, by Tim
Weiner, in December of 2009. It is a lengthy book on its own, but I also felt
compelled to read the notes, because they were so fascinating. There were all these
little stories tucked in there that enriched the material, and yet which would
have completely dragged down the main text if included there. (The book is also
fairly dense, as well as long.)
There were two places in the notes where there
were web links for more information. One was an audio archive from President
Kennedy, and the other was some writings of General Petraeus. I intended to
look both of these up. Now the links have changed. I suspect the material is
still up, but I cannot find it now. This is my own fault.
The incident happened at a time of transition. I
had been in a book club for a while, which had ended up being really good for
me. It got me reading fiction again, where there were definitely some books
that I would not have read on my own, but I was glad to have read. It gave me
some monthly socialization, and conversation about books. That was all pretty
good. Then people started getting married and moving, and it disbanded.
This happened around the time I got onto
Facebook (late 2008), so one thing I started doing on Facebook is posting a
note with a review after I finished a book. Remember Notes? Anyway, it wasn’t
quite the same as a discussion, but I was putting my thoughts on my reading
together, and it was something.
Somewhere around this time period I also got
onto Goodreads, and then I started reviewing my books there. This made a lot
more sense than doing the Notes. Reviewing books was exactly how you were
supposed to use the site. I got on it for convenience in tracking books that I
wanted to read eventually. (I’m afraid I still can’t escape the 3:1 ratio on
books that I wish to read versus books that I’ve read, even adding the graphic
novels, so easy tracking is very important.)
Legacy of Ashes was transitional. It was right
around the time period where I was shifting, but also in the review I could
mention things that conspiracy theorists would find interesting, going on the
assumption that probably at least a few of my Facebook friends fit that
category.
Ah, but I was waiting to cover those two last
bits of content before posting that last note, and now I never shall. But hey,
the regular review was posted ages ago, and for those who are interested, here
goes:
Truthers, sorry, but there is no reason to
believe that there was any US conspiracy to bring down the Twin Towers. There
is no evidence of it, there is evidence against it, and frankly, there is no
need for a conspiracy, because there was so much arrogance and incompetence and
lack of cooperation among the different agencies that it was all enough to
allow the plot to succeed. Look, once Charlie Sheen started saying it, that
should have been your first clue that the story was not sound.
However, while it appears most likely that
Oswald was a single shooter, it does appear that he was hired by the Cuban
government in retaliation for CIA led attempts on the life of Fidel Castro. So
that’s kind of interesting, right? Kennedy just keeps looking worse
incidentally. I’m kind of a Johnson fan though, so I’m good.
(And please appreciate that I referred to the
Kennedy assassination without making any Umbrella Academy references, but the
opportunities were totally there.)
On the book itself, yes, it is a difficult
read—you can’t just breeze through it at the beach—but there were two things
that it did for me that I really liked. One is that it filled in a lot of
blanks for things that I kind of remembered but did not understand at the time,
like Grenada and Lebanon.
The other question that had persisted, even when I was older and understood current events better (Gulf War, Noriega, Iran-Contra) is why the US kept betting on the wrong horse. We would get people into power and then have to remove them, over and over again. A lot of that was simply the narrow-minded anti-Communism focus, because even as it kicks into
high gear after World War II, we do not seem to understand that fascists and
nationalists are not inherently better. That being said, of the previously
mentioned incompetence and arrogance, it does seem like at any given point, there
is always at least one of those in play.
Sometimes knowledge can be discouraging, but I
can’t give up on it. So hey, if you like books, get on Goodreads, and if you
are on Goodreads, friend me! The Goodreads Bookshelf on the right will take you
right to me.
No comments:
Post a Comment