Friday, October 15, 2021

The World War Two Adventure Movies

War adventure movies?

Well, yes.

This is a category that I may be pioneering a bit, but it's relevant to the way our blog deals with movies in history.  There can be no doubt that movies portraying an historical event help frame that event in the popular imagination.  Indeed, no matter how inaccurate they may be, some movies define what people believe about an historical era or occurrence.

This is true enough for events that actually set out to be a portrayal, in some fashion, in history. So in movies like, for example, A Bridge Too Far, or Lawrence of Arabia, we can expect people to take their historical understandings from film. But such understanding aren't taken just from movies that are intentional portrayals of real historical events.  They're also taken from movies set in an era, but for which that era provides some sort of backdrop for some other purpose.

And war has been used as a backdrop for movies in which the war is a vehicle in more than one fashion.  Indeed, if we were to expand this out, there are adventure movies, comedies and even romances which use the big drama of war for other purposes.  Here, we look at just one category, that being the war adventure film, and we're doing that as movies of that type are so common. And they're particularly common in regard to World War Two.

So what do we mean by a War Adventure Movie. Well, it's a little difficult to define, but what we mean by that is a film which doesn't intent to accurately depict an historical event, but merely uses the historical event as a vehicle for the story telling.  Moreover, a film that, in doing that, doesn't attempt to tell us something about war itself.

As war is often a character in a war picture.  Saving Private Ryan may be fiction, and it may tell a compelling story, but it's set with a backdrop of real events that are significant to it and war is a character in the film.  Likewise, In Harms Way may be complete fiction in its characters, but it too uses war, no matter how badly, as more than a mere vehicle. The same could be said of Pearl Harbor.

These films are different. World War Two is in them, but they aren't really "about" World War Two. They're set in it, of course, but they're set in it to tell an adventure.

Put another way, war is to these movies what the Cold War is to the Eiger Sanction.

None of which keeps people from thinking they're picking up bits of history from them.  So let's take a look at them.

In doing that, we'd note that we're not presenting these in a definitively significant order. We sort of are, but sort of are not. So they're presented, sort of, in the order they're related to each other, and kind of in degree of quality.  But not strictly.

The Dirty Dozen

U.S. Army Rangers at Pointe-du-hoc, June 6, 1944.

The Dirty Dozen may be the best example of this genera in more than one way.  This 1967 film, a film adaptation from a well regarded novel, involves a disgruntled and disillusioned U.S. Army Major who has been assigned to train a group of Army prisoners for a commando raid on a French château used as a R&R center by German officers on D-Day.  The plot scenario involves obvious adventure, dramatic tension, and drama right from the onset, with conflicts between the prisoners and the whole world and the Major, played by Lee Marvin, a Marine Corps veteran of World War Two, in real life, and the Regular Army.  Moreover, the ensemble cast included a host of first rank actors from the time, including Ernest Borgnine (U.S. Navy veteran), Robert Ryan, George Kennedy (U.S. Army veteran), Charles Bronson (U.S. Army veteran), Jim Brown (famous NFL and collegic football player), John Cassavetes, Trini Lopez (folk singer) and Telly Savalas.  It was directed by Robert Aldrich who had a large collection of well regarded films to his name.

If you haven't seen  it, you should.

So how's it hold up as history.

Well, of course, Operation Overlord really did occur on June 6, 1944, and it did feature some commando actions.  The Germans did have some fairly large gatherings of officers in France, and in fact one, which was on the occasion of a large war game, was running on at least June 5/6.

But the Allies didn't try to intentionally take out any larger gatherings of German officers.  If they had been inclined to do that, they would have used specialized commandos.   All of these organizations were made up of highly trained formations that were made up of volunteers who had been trained for months in their military roles, and often for months for their roles in D-Day.  A put together pick up unit.  Not so much.  Indeed, not at all.

And, while the film is so popular that people occasionally attempt to maintain that it's based on something real, vaguely, it isn't.  It's just good fiction.  With thousands of men to choose from, the Army wasn't so desperate as to put a vital mission, even a suicide mission, in the hands of felons.

Lord Lovat with members of No. 4 Commando, an example of real (in this case British) commandos.

Okay, what about the material details, then?

Oddly, this movie starts off well in this category but then fades later on.  Early in the film Major Reisman is shown in uniforms that would be correct for the time, including field uniforms.  For example, he wears the M-41 field jacket, which was the common field jacket in June 1944.  And the prisoners wear the herringbone tweed cotton uniform that would have been correct for them. At some point, however, everyone switches to the M1943 field jacket and OD trousers. This might be understandable if this was because everyone involved is a paratrooper by implication, and this in fact might be why this was done.  While the M1943 field jacket had been designed for paratroopers and had already been adopted, however, on June 6 it wasn't yet being worn by the troops and paratroopers were wearing the M42 uniform.

Movies of the 60s often got these details wrong, of course, and frankly they often didn't bother with them at all, so that's understandable.  Less so, however, is the depiction of everyone carrying the M3 submachinegun.  The M3 wasn't even in the infantry, including paratroop infantry, TO&E, although a commando unit might be expected to carry some submachineguns. Certainly airborne units unofficially did.  They carried Thompsons however, for the most part, in June 1944, when they had them.

This film was made during an era in which the movies loved submachineguns and that probably serves to explain it, and the reason that every German is carrying a MP42.  Pretty unrealistic, however.

So there you have it.  Good drama, but pretty bad history.

One final thing regarding this film, while it wasn't great history, it was good movie making, and the movie was so well regarded by director Sam Peckingpah that he pretty much tried to hire its cast wholesale for The Wild Bunch.  Indeed, Ernest Borgnine, then a little slimmer, and Robert Ryan did made the trip over to Peckinpah's film.  He tried to hire Lee Marvin for the Bishop Pike role, but he wasn't available so William Holden was hired instead.  Somewhat ironically, Marvin had already played a similar role in 1966's The Professionals, a film which Ryan was also in.

The Dirty Dozen has a pile of sequels. None of them are worth watching.

Let's look at a British one.

The Guns of Navarone

 Well, a somewhat British one.

The Guns of Navarone was a huge hit when it was released in 1961, only fifteen years after the end of the war, and it featured a largely British and European cast with Gregory Peck, the American actor, for star appeal, and with Anthony Quinn in his universal role of exotic foreign person.  The book is a faithful rendition of Alistair Maclean's novel of the same name.

The plot of this film involves the assembly of something like a SOE squad to go in as commandos and take out coastal artillery guns that have been positioned on the island of Navarone. It's early in the war and a British garrison on a nearby island needs to be evacuated before the Germans land on the island. The guns are a threat to any Royal Navy evacuation.  Because they're emplaced in a man made cavern, they can't be bombed from the air, so commandos will have to do it.

Okay, historic accuracy?

Well, the British expedition to Greece, which we recently covered, did feature some major withdrawals from the region, and they were done in a way that later in the war they could not have been.  Later, aircraft would have decimated such efforts, but the Germans lacked sufficient air assets in the region to cause that to occur. And the British did occupy some major Mediterranean islands, Crete and Malta among them.

So the setting has some plausibility.

And the British were big on small-time raids by commandos, and indeed had already engaged in them in the general region.  And as the SOE in particular was an odd group that seemingly engaged in some assignments on a sort of pick up basis, well that too makes some sense.

So overall, the plausibility of the plot doesn't completely lack merit.

Of course, what does strain things is getting two massive coast guns into a man made tunnel without the British apparently knowing about it in time to prevent, or even on any sort of timely basis. That'a  real stretch.  It's one the Germans, moreover, would have been pretty unlikely to attempt.

So. . .

Well it is an adventure film. . . 

On material details ,this film isn't too bad, all in all, but it does fall into the submachinegun era of World War Two films and it further is a mostly British film. The British in this period paid little attention to accuracy in firearms details and so their own weapons show up a lot in the hands of enemy troops. This film has piles of submachineguns in it, which makes a little sense for the commandos as they are relatively compact, but the Germans carry an inordinate number as well. And sometimes the Germans, in this film, carry British Sten guns, which is just period movie sloppiness.

So, this film does better than we might suspect, and it is an adventure classic.  One thing to note is that for the big gun scenes production values have really changed, so its pretty hard to suspect present awareness for some of them.

I should note that I thought about putting this film first in this list, as its arguably the gold standard, in some ways, for these films.  It's not a better film than The Dirty Dozen, but its sort of the archtype of the war adventure film.

Force Ten From Navarone

Yugoslavians partisans.

Taking things somewhat out of order, as we've delt with The Guns of Navarone, we might as well take up Force 10 From Navarone next.

First, in doing this, let us note that the "from Navarone" part of this film actually makes little sense whatsoever, as the fictional Greek island has nothing to do with this movie.  Rather, the title was an obvious attempt to recall the other film, which Alistair MacClean's 1968 novel did as well, attempting to recall both his earlier book and the success of the 1961 film.  There is, however, a tie in, and we'll note it below

Made seventeen years later in 1978, the movie, the film's thesis is an SOE mission to Yugoslavia which reassembles some of the survivors of the mission to Navarone, including its commander, Mallory, the explosives expert, Miller, and oddly Squadron Leader Barnby, an extremely minor role played by Richard Harris in the first film.  The hook to the first film is that it contained hints that the mission had been betrayed right from the onset, and this one picks up with that.  The betrayer has been identified, and has gone from Navarone to Yugoslavia, where's he's a German agent embedded with the Yugoslavian Communist partisans.  Mallory's mission is to go in and get him.

From there the plot develops that the SOE just can't land a conventional mission to do this.  It has to have cover.  And the cover is that the men are fleeing justice with a stolen aircraft which they take to Yugoslavia.

Okay, the initial plot device is goofy and adds dramatic tension but nothing else in the film.  Barnby is recast as an American in this one, with Harrison Ford playing the part, apparently for his star power alone.  Carl Weathers is a hapless African American soldier who gets on the plane at the last moment actually believing that it's a party of men who have busted out of detention, as he has.  In Yugoslavia, we meet the Chetniks, the party is imprisoned (like it was in Guns of Navarone) by the Germans, and they link up with Yugoslavian partisans.

Okay, how does it rate, history wise.

Well, the British were very involved in the war in Yugoslavia through the SOE. The Yugoslavian partisans were heavily equipped by the Soviets, as this movie, filmed with the cooperation of the Yugoslavian army, shows.  There were pro German Chentnik parties.  The partisan war in Yugoslavia was fairly large scale.

So, like the Guns of Navarone, the historical background is there.

On material details, this film does much better than the Guns of Navarone.  British uniforms are correct.  Ameican uniforms are more or less correct, with some British additions. The German and Chetnik uniforms and equipment are correct, in no small part thanks to the Yugoslavian army, although old T-34 tanks stand in for German armor.

What doesn't really hold up, however, is the movie itself.  It just isn't all that good.  

Part of that is that it suffers from being an obvious sequel, and most sequels aren't all that good. Beyond that, the movie is surprisingly slow, and the plot is really strained.  Obvious efforts to throw in current stars, such as Harrison Ford, and also Barbara Bach for window dressing, fail.  Robert Shaw, in his last role (he died prior to the movie being released) gave an excellent performance, as did British character actor Edward Fox, but its not enough to make the film worth watching.

Which it isn't.

Where Eagles Dare

Crest of the German 6th SS Mountain Division Nord.

Having looked at two joint British American works based on novels by Alistair MacLean, let's look at a third, Where Eagles Dare.

Where Eagles Dare is a 1968 film based on MacLean's 1966 novel.  This gives us an interesting look at how entertainment of the era worked, in that this film was well received and is now regarded as a classic and, by some, one of the best films of all time.  It's interesting to note that in the context of the film being released in the annus horriblus 1968, right at the height of the Vietnam War.  Based on what we know and popularly recall of the times, we'd not expect this film to have come out in that year, let alone be a hit, but it did, and it was.

This film can probably be regarded as the pinnacle of MacLean's war adventure stories, which doesn't mean that it's the best of the genre.  Rather, this film is heavy on the action, while still rooted in the war.  The plot, which is extremely complicated, involves a British commando team, led by a British Major John Smith who is a Grenadier Guard.  It's a pick up team, not one that has preexisted.  It has one American member, which may have been the screenwriters way of assuring interest for an American audience (I haven't read the book), Lt. Shaffer.  Major Smith is played by British screen titan Richard Burton, who was at the height of his star power at the time and who was playing a character well outside his wheelhouse.  Schaffer was played by rising star Clint Eastwood.

The commando team must parachute into the Alps in order to rescue an American general who, we're told, knows the details of Operation Overlord, although as the story develops, that's not the real purpose of the mission.  This is so that they may make their way down into a neighboring town in order to secure access to a towering castle just outside it.  Further, they parachute in wearing the uniforms of SS Gebirgsjäger, mountain infantry, and we're informed that the castle is the headquarters for the "SS Mountain Corps".

Frankly, from this point on, the plot is just too complicated to detail, but the winter scenery is spectacular, and the action faced pace.  The screenplay manages to work in a really scary tramway twice, a castle, a spectacular Alpine flight of a Fokker Ju 52 transport, and Ingrid Pitt as window dressing in her seemingly only one serious role.

It is, quite frankly, a great adventure film.

How's it hold history wise?

Well . . .

Okay, lets start with what it gets right, where we can.  We know, of course, that Germany includes Alpine regions and of course the setting, Europe prior to Operation Overlord, takes place in an actual period of World War Two.  The Waffen SS did have mountain troops as the Waffen SS, as the war progressed, came to have mirror image formations of everything the regular German army did.

So far so good, right?

From there, things decline. For one thing, the distinction between the German army and the SS in this film is really vague.  We know that most of the regular soldiers are in the SS, as we've been told that early on. This doesn't seem necessary for the film, however, and the two senior officers seem to be in different services, one in the SS and the other in the army.  They're both aligned against a third character, SS Sturmbannführer Von Hapen who is in the regular, i.e., not the Waffen, SS, as we can tell from his all black uniform.  Why he's there isn't clear, and why the senior military figure from the Waffen SS would be at odds with another member of the SS isn't explained either.

All of those, perhaps, are minor details that can be excused in the name of adventure.

Well, how about material details?

The movie suffers from the everyone carrying a submachinegun thing so common to this era.  That makes more sense, however, than the introduction of a helicopter to the film.  The Germans did actually order and deploy a handful of helicopters during the war, so perhaps that can be excused, but they were ungainly things that wouldn't have carried a passenger to the top of a mountain castle.

A bigger problem, aviation wise, is that the Ju 52 didn't have the sort of range that would be necessary for the mission depicted. . . even one way.  There's no way a Ju 52 could fly from the UK to an Alpine region of Germany and back.

But, taking it all in, as noted, this film's purpose is adventure, not history.  So you have to excuse a lot of liberties taken with this one. Fortunately, the adventure aspect of the film, including some with really high suspense, are well done and so its pretty easy even for the history conscious to enjoy the film.

The Eagle Has Landed

Unit symbol of German 1st Parachute Division.

Going from one "eagle film" to another, we'll next take up the 1976 film The Eagle Has Landed, which was based on Jack Higgins' well done novel of the same name.

Given the name, a person might think that this film was a sequel to Where Eagles Dare, but in fact it has no connection with it other than that it involves people parachuting and German uniforms.  In this case, however, the subjects are actually German paratroopers.

Indeed, that fact makes this the most unusual of these films as its the only one in which hte protagonists are mostly German.  There are very few English language films featuring German soldiers or airmen as the central characters, let alone sympathetically, and for good reason.  So this film is a real exception to the rule.

The plot here involves a German colonel who is in the Abwehr, German intelligence.  Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, who remains enigmatic to this day, comes back from a meeting with Hitler in which he informs Col. Radl, the subordinate, that Hitler has ordered a feasibility study be done on kidnapping Winston Churchill.  Canaris considers the concept insane, but he orders that it be done, but be done with bare minimum effort, as he also knows that SS leader Heinrich Himmler will follow up on it.

Radl, played by Robert Duvall, sets about his work and soon learns, as he's doing it, that an odd set of highly temporary coincidences actually might make the plan feasible.  He submits his report in that fashion, which in fact gets it the attention of Canaris in a negative fashion.  It's soon revealed, however, that his office is bugged or contains a plant, as Himmler knows of the plan nearly immediately, calls Radl to Berlin, and orders the plan carried out, supposedly under Hitler's orders.

The plan itself involves parachuting a group of German paratroopers into England near a coastal town which is a Catholic remnant village.  Some days prior a member of the Irish Republican Army must make his way to the same town in order to arrange for things.  His contact is a woman living in the town, seemingly part of it, but in actuality a long displaced Boer whose family suffered due to the results of the Boer War.  Churchill is set to visit the town.

The paratroopers themselves are serving in a penal unit assigned to the extremely small German vessels that launched single torpedoes. Such vessels, often mistakenly regarded as human torpedoes, did in fact exist in 1943, the year the movie was set in, and the Germans in fact used them.  The unit operates from one of the Channel Islands, and the Germans did in fact occupy some of the channel islands.  The unit has been assigned this duty as their commander, Col. Kurt Steiner, attempted to rescue a Jewish girl at a railroad station, which led to a confrontation with the SS.

The men, in the reverse of Where Eagles Dare, parachute in wearing British uniforms but marked with Polish insignia, posing as Polish paratroopers serving in the UK.

Pretty complicated plot.  And it gets more so.  It turns out that a unit of American Rangers is stationed nearby.

Well, how does it hold up, history wise?

In 1943 there were Polish forces in the UK that were serving with the Allies.  About this time, the first Rangers of the U.S. Army did start training in the UK.  Unlike Where Eagles Dare, the airborne mission using a captured C-47 would have been an easy flight.  The Irish Republican Army actually did cooperate with the Abwehr until 1944, when it terminated its cooperation as it became obvious that the Allies were going to win the war.

So far, so good?

Well, there are certainly some holes as well.  For one thing, the village being Catholic, which isn't really necessary to either the movie's plot or the books, would be extremely unlikely. There were large numbers of Catholics in the UK by 1943, but they still remained a distinct minority, and there were next to no villages that had managed to retain being wholly Catholic since the Elizabethan Religious Settlement.  Individual Catholics and Catholic families certainly persevered the entire time, but entire villages, with a few notable exceptions, not so much.  Perhaps that's why that is a bigger element of the book as compared to the movie.

Churchill, it might be noted, didn't have a body double, which is an essential element of the plot, but it's also an excusable one.

More inexcusable, German paratroopers really can't be denazified.  They were part of the Luftwaffe, of course, and while there were members of the German army who transferred into them, they were also recruited out of Goering's police forces as well, so they had more than a few real Nazis early on.  Perhaps their officers might have been more or less equivalent in views to officers of the German army, but that wasn't exactly a benign view by and large and the "good German army" myth is just that, a post-war myth boosted by former German officers to excuse their conduct.  German paratroopers, moreover, were complicit in atrocities in Crete, so long-serving ones, as these were supposed to have been, were unlikely to have fought a morally unobjectionable war.

The portrayal of American Rangers as more or less regular infantry, and incompetently led, is very far off the mark.  Rangers were commandos from the onset and always extremely skilled.

Indeed, it's on that point where the movie really breaks down.  Most of the departures from one thing or another can be excused or ignored up to this point, although the good German soldier thing is hard to accept, but Rangers as green incompetents is way off the mark. And here we can start our discussion of material details as well.

The Rangers in this film are almost all equipped with M2 Carbines.  This is another film that's in the submachinegun era, and the M2, which is rarely seen in film at all, is almost a submchaine gun.  It wasn't really a World War Two weapon, however, having been introduced at the very tail end of the war.  Indeed, it was introduced so late that whether it saw any action at all during the war is debated as a point of military minutia.  In 1943 Rangers would have mostly carried M1 Garands, although it is known that some were training with M1917 Enfields.

They also wouldn't have had an armored car, which was almost exclusively a cavalry vehicle in the American army.

On the paratroopers, we have less to complain about in terms of material details. As noted, they're all equipped with submachineguns, but that's the standard for this movie era, and it makes more sense, if not complete sense, in the case of paratroopers.  Most British and British equipped paratroopers would hvae carried rifles.

So am I giving this one a thumbs down?  No, not really.  It's entertaining and good enough to be watched.  It's quite good early on and doesn't really start to suffer until the Rangers enter the picture, by which time most of the film has been watched.  It's worth viewing.

Kelly's Heroes

Kelly's Heroes is an unusual film here, as it's the only one I've reviewed before.  I dealt with in our entry on the War Movies of 1970.  What I stated about it is here:



Kelly's Heroes is the exception in this list for a lot of reasons, a significant one being is that it's sort of freakishly accurate in material details for a movie of its era, as noted above.  In this area, the film really stands apart from almost every war film of this era.

This movie involves a plot in which a wrongly demoted former officer, Kelly, learns from a POW of a German cache of gold in a French village.  While never really explained, it's pretty clear that he's part of an anti tank section and its equipment is correctly portrayed for this period, including a half-track mounted anti tank gun.  Having learned of this information while interrogating the officer POW, he forms a plan to sneak through the lines and hit the bank in the village before the advancing allies get there.  He enlists first the aid of his section, then picks up a small group of M4 Sherman tanks led by the aforementioned Oddball, and the plot grows from there.  Ultimately, the result is a true advance in the lines, while a spastic General, played by Carroll O'Connor, tries to catch up with the men of his command who are seemingly engaging in an independent advance.

This is, as noted, an adventure movie, so we wouldn't really expect many of the details, both historical and material, to be accurately portrayed. But they actually are.

On history and the movie, this film is set in the rapid advance stage of the war in France and rapid advancement is depicted in this film nearly as well as it is in the movie Patton, save for the fact that the material details of this film are much better.  Combat scenes are fairly realistic, including scenes with armor.  

In material details, this movie really shines, which has made it sort of an obsessed over classic in the military history community.  Almost every item depicted in the film is depicted correctly.  American vehicles, including armor, are correct.  German armor appears correct, the moviemakers having retrofitted Yugoslavian T-34s to appear like German Tiger tanks.  The small arms depicted in the film are largely correct. Submachineguns appear again, but not to the exclusion of other arms, and submachineguns would actually be correct for the type of unit that's portrayed.  This film shows the correct use of the M1919 machinegun as well as a Browning Automatic Rifle.  Uniforms are also largely correct.

Indeed, things are so accurate that it's the small inaccuracies, some intentionally inserted in the film, that stand out.  The Oddball character wears an A2 flight jacket, which a tanker would not, but then a tanker wouldn't have had a beard or fairly long hair either.  Given his role in the film, however, the departure makes sense.

The BAR depicted in one scene is an FN made variant with a pistol grip. That's incorrect for the U.S. Army, but you have to be paying very close attention to notice it.  Kelly wears black postwar combat boots, which are not correct for the period depicted, but that's difficult to notice in a film in which the uniforms are otherwise very correct.

About the only real noticeable oddity is that one of the soldiers carries a Mosin Nagant sniper rifle, which makes no sense at all.  The movie makers seemingly wanted this individual to carry a captured rifle and may simply not have had access to a German rifle, but its very difficult to rationalize if you know what it is.

Otherwise, the film is surprisingly accurate in every detail, something we wouldn't expect from a film of this type.  As note, that's why this film is well liked by the World War Two history community, and its well worth watching.

Inglourious Basterds

Every movie in this list, up until the last one, has been either a British production, or a British American one.  And up until this one, the most recent of them was made in 1976.  Inglourious Basterds was made in 2009, some thirty years later. Both of those facts may be worth noting.

This film is awful.

As in, really bad.

Because this is a Quentin Tarantino movie, it has a following. That is, as far as I can tell, the only reason that anyone has ever watched it.  

This film is basically Tarantino coming to the World War Two adventure film in the same manner that he came to the Western.  A Tarantino film, at least after Pulp Fiction, tends to be a caricature of itself, and this film is no exception.  It has the Tarantino hallmarks of extreme violence and weirdness, which is what Tarantino has become known for.

The basic plot of this movie is that a group of American commandos, made up of Jewish soldiers, is assigned, after a lot of pre event weirdness, to assassinate Hitler at a movie theater in Paris.  The details leading up to this are weird and strained and not worth going into. Think apartment shoot 'em up in Pulp Fiction.  Hitler is killed, giving us a different ending to the war.

History?  Well the Nazis were really bad.  Commando unit of all Jewish soldiers?  Well the British, who really were the champs on commando units and special operatives, did have a group of Jewish special operatives. So there's something, albeit very little, to the plot.

On material details, by 2009 there's really little excuse for major material detail errors, and this one, given the oddity of the plot, doesn't really have any.

It's just a really bad movie.

Don't bother.

Some final thoughts.

World War Two was almost the dawn of the special troop unit, so perhaps it's not too surprising that it gave us the military adventure movie. There are some pre-WWII examples of very special units, but they're relatively rare.  Quite a few of them are subjects of movies, it might be noted.


But commandos are really a British invention, and the war was uniquely suited to them.  By the wars end the British had at least four special operation groups of a military or quasi military nature, all of which conducted special missions. The US followed suit with the Rangers and the Marine Corps Raiders.

The Second World War was a huge war, and that meant, by extension, that it gave rise and license to any number of wild military projects, sometimes by wild men.  Naturally, that reflected itself in film, and probably naturally, it reflected itself first in British literature and film first. The British originated the special group, during the period during which they were on the desperate defensive, making a virtue out of necessity.

Oddly, perhaps because of their British origin, none of these films involves the war in the Pacific.

Such units carried on after the war, of course, and therefore, perhaps also not surprisingly, the military adventure movie and book also finds expression in wars after World War Two, but nowhere to the same extent.  And notably, the heyday of these movies, in so far as the Second World War is concerned, lingered into the 70s, but it was really wrapping up by 1970s.  We really  only have three post 1970 examples, and they're all a little problematic.  Only one, The Eagle Has Landed, is worth watching.  And very notably, the last one, filmed in 2009, is total junk. 

This genre may have ended.  Or not.  Any time a film genre is declared over, something comes along.  But nothing has come along worth watching in over forty years now.

Which leaves you with the better examples of these films, which in fact remain nearly as good as they ever were.

Blog Mirror: Preserving Flyover Country


 Preserving Flyover Country



Saturday October 15, 1921. America's making and a railroad strike.


In Washington D. C. a group gathered to meet with the President in advance of the America's Making exposition in New York City.



America's Making was an exposition celebrating the immigration history of the United States.  It was interesting in that it's an early example of a "multicultural" celebration in the context of US history.


Across the United States, railroad workers began to go out on a nationwide strike.  In the context of the times, before interstate trucking, and before effective air travel, this was truly a national disaster.

This fellow won this trophy involving this horse.  I don't know what it was about otherwise, but it is a good looking horse.



Thursday, October 14, 2021

Friday October 14, 1921. Horses and trains.

 



Cpt. R. R. Allen of the U.S. Army was photographed with a perfect cavalry pack.  A really fine example of the same, but with an interesting non GI saddle blanket.

On the same day, then Crown Prince but future Emperor of Japan, Hirohito, attended a celebration marking the 50th anniversary of railroads in Japan.



Wednesday, October 13, 2021

Monday October 13, 1941. Hitler grounds Nachtjagdgeschwader 1 over the UK. The Germans commence mass murder in Dnipropetrovsk.

 On this day in 1941 Hitler ordered the cessation of German night raider operations over Great Britain.


Unit symbol for Nachtjagdgeschwader 1, which operated all German  night fighter units during World War Two.

First, giving credit where credit is due, I learned of this here:

Today in World War II History—October 13, 1941

The decision was a curious one.  The operation of night fighters to interdict RAF bombers had been expensive at first, but it was also having an outsized impact on the RAF and was gaining ground.  Hitler seems to have wanted, however, the night fighter to operate over German territory, where the bombers were actually less vulnerable, as anything they shot down would be visible to the German population.  He also seemed unconvinced that the tactic of hitting bombers over their bases was a sound one, was the RAF had not adopted it during the Blitz.

British captured Bf-110.

Simple logic, however demonstrated that the Luftwaffe was right.  Equipped at the time with early production variants of the Bf-110, the Luftwaffe did not yet have a radar equipped night fighter.  Therefore, RAF bombers had to be intercepted by site, after being guided by ground radar into location.  As the Luftwaffe knew where RAF airfields were, however, this meant that sending night fighters to areas where the bombers had to land was not a hugely difficult plotting proposition.  In contrast, sending them to where the RAF intended to strike over Northern Europe, and intercepting the bombers where they were going, was a hugely difficult task.

Regarding the RAF, Newsweek featured the latest model of the Hurricane on its issue that came out on this day.  The aircraft on the cover appeared to be a MkIIC, which introduced 20mm cannons in place of .303 machineguns.

On the same day the Germans took ground to the northwest and southwest of Moscow.  In Dnipropetrovsk they commenced a two-day massacre of the region's Jewish population.

Time Magazine's cover featured Marshall Budenny with a caption noting that "an army". . ."is only as good as its generals".  Budenny was a crappy General at this point, if he ever had been, but Stalin's favoritism of him meant that he not only survived Stalin's murderous purge, but it kept Budenny in uniform, if by this point sidelined forever.

 A U.S. soldier sent this letter:  October 13, 1941 Moss letter home.

Friday, October 13, 1921. Giants take the Series, Turks take former Imperial Russian Territory, Hine takes photographs of 4H Club members.

The Giants took the World Series with a 1 to 0 victory over the Yankees.




The Treaty of Kars fixed the boundary between Turkey, still at war with Greece, and what was effectively the Soviet Union.
The treat effectively operated in Turkey's favor, granting it territories that had been within Imperial Russia's boundaries.

While both nations were in a shaky position at the time, it's worth remembering that Turkey, while on the defensive, was holding its own against Greece. France and the UK, initially allies in the Greek effort, had abandoned Greece as it became more aggressive in regard to its territorial demands and efforts.  The Turks, on the other hand, had shown an inclination to look East into Turkic territories, something the USSR didn't need to happen.  Moreover, the Soviet Union was having difficulty imposing its moronic economic system on an unwilling population and its political thumb on various ethnicities, so it was arguably in a worse position than Turkey was.  Also, its population was enduring famine to the lunatic nature of its farm policy.

After World War Two Stalin pressed for the return of Imperial Russian lands, but Turkey resisted it, and the Western Allies backed Turkey's position.  Soviet demands were dropped, but Georgia and Armenia have never been happy with the border that the treaty created.

A photographer took a photo of Jacksonville, Florida.


Jacksonville, Florida.  October 13, 1921.

Hine was at the state fair in Charleston, West Virginia, where he photographed members of the 4H clubs.














Philander Knox, a well known U.S. Senator, was reported as having died the day prior.


He was 68 years old.

The original Lyric theater (there's been one since, which while relatively new, is no longer a movie theater, was running Man-Woman-Marriage, a film released that previous March.  It's interesting in that it gives us a glimpse of the touring speed of movies at the time.

A less lurid ad from somewhere else.

Billed as the "Greatest love story of all time" by advertisers, the ostensible plot involved something to with a woman rebelling against a forced marriage, but also gave the filmmakers view of marriage throughout human history.  Robert Sherwood of Time magazine described the film as the worst move ever made, adding that it was "a grotesque hodgepodge about woman's rights through the ages (interminable ages they are, too) with a great deal of ham allegory and cheap religious drool, used to cloud the real motif — which is sex appeal."

Based on the Casper ads, that was probably about right.

Be that as it may, the ads run in the Casper paper got the biological facts right.  Generally, they showed some guy leering over a woman dressed in about as revealing fashion as allowable in the Casper papers, and, viewed left to right, a baby ensues.

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

The Fate Of The Nation


Anyone with an interest in politics, or in the future of the United States, owes it to themselves and the country to listen to the October 10 editions of This Week and Meet The Press.

Mandatory listening or viewing.

Truly.

For one thing, they had the news a bipartisan committee that has been investigating the Justice Department and the insurrection just released some findings showing that Donald Trump sought to appoint a new Attorney General insider specifically as he was expected to be loyal in overturning the election, but did not when a mass resignation from the department was to occur.  The information makes Trump's involvement in an effort to overturn the election at all costs manifest.  The House committee is now pondering criminal referrals.  It'll be interesting to see how this all plays out by the next election.

And additionally there are now two new books looking at the events of the immediate post election events in the  White House.

What's become clear is that at first Trump was sullen, but rapidly turned towards trying to overturn the results.  These efforts were open and manifest and ultimately were focused on Georgia. Trump sought the aid of the Justice Department but the career Attorney Generals, including the then sitting AG, were not willing to go along in what they knew to be a fraud.  Trump was then going to replace the AG with a loyalist who would likely have been willing to participate, but the AGs threatened a mass resignation.

Trump has been essentially conducting early 2024 campaign rallies recently and circulating the lie that he won the election.  The question is whether he believes this.  The more news that's coming out, and it's starting to be a flood, it is clear that he was taking what essentially was a version of the apparently apocryphal William Randolph Hearst line about the lack of fighting in Cuba, when informed that by Frederic Remington, that being "you give us the pictures, we'll give you the war."  Trump told people, basically, that all they had to do was to point the finger, and he'd make it happen.

Anyway you look at it, it's now irrefutable that Trump was deeply involved in an effort to topple the 2020 election.  Those who remain in Trump's camp, and there are quite a few in the rank and file GOP who do, have to face this or simply live in denial of it.  Living in denial is likely what most are going to opt to do.  Otherwise, you have to maintain: 1) that Trump knew that election misconduct had occurred and that's why he was acting this way but was frustrated by his staff, or 2) he was delusional, or 3) he was attempting to steal the election.

Given what everything has clearly demonstrated, there's no doubt that the election was fully free and fair, although I have heard friends I deeply respect who are well-educated still maintain that it was questionable.  This gets us to the GOP today.  The GOP has yet to deal with this with many current candidates still embracing Trump and others trying to take the "quick, turn away and don't look" approach.  Those in the latter, which include the main GOP challenger to Cheney in Wyoming, Harriet Hageman, haven't been able to successful make their argument of "we need to look forward" while still grasping part of the past.  I.e., you can't really accuse Cheney of betraying the state, as she is, when her supposed betrayal is pointing out that an attempt to overthrow the election was going on.

This is all the more the case now as its more and more clear that Trump has the hubris to believe that at his extremely advanced age he is still going to be fit for office in 2024.  He's running for the Oval Office right now.  If he's alive in 2024, which frankly given the ravishes of old age and his ever advancing years, is probably a 50/50 proposition, i.e., old age catches up with us all and claims us whether we're ready to go or not, he'll run.  He's running right now.  

This means that at this point we really have to start taking Trump's statements seriously.  When he was elected the first time he made sounds about being a three term President.  Nobody took that seriously  Prior to the 2020 election, The Atlantic ran an article outlining how Trump would attempt to steal the election if he lost it, and got it more or less 100% correct, a fact which shows this effort was charged with scienter.  There's every reason to believe that if he makes it to 2024, he'll try to make it to 2028. There's something in his makeup which doesn't allow for not being at the pinnacle of whatever, even if he's really not

Democracy turns out to be much more fragile in this day and age than ever we'd imagined. Ironically, if Trump had won, he would have gone on to have a wild ride, no doubt, in his second term, but he'd passed out of office with no third term and have gone into history as, probably, an aberration at least as to his character.  Having lost, however he's become a real threat to the democratic process itself and various state legislature have acted to make interfering with elections easier.  Even in our state there's been sounds about doing that, although so far nothing has come into fruition.

We live in perilous times.  In perilous times, you need to look the danger afresh.  In the coming months, we're going to get a chance to do so.

Sunday, October 12, 1941. The Massacre at the Stanisławów Ghetto

Over 10,000 Polish Jewish residents of the Stanisławów Ghetto, part of the town of Stanisławów, which had been a prewar Polish provincial capitol, and then part of the Ukraine following the 1939 Soviet invasion, and at this time under German control, were murdered by the Germans.  The massacre was ordered by Hans Krueger of the SS.

Countess Karolina Lanckorońska in 1945.

Krueger survived the war, and entered private life following it, ultimately entering politics.  He claimed to have been an antifascist, but his public activities brought accusations as to whom he actually was, and he was arrested and put on trial in 1967.  He had assumed no victims of his crimes remained alive, but had apparently forgotten that some captives were spared the massacre for various reasons, including Countess Karolina Lanckorońska, whose family had paid a ransom for her life, which resulted instead to her spending the rest of the war in a concentration camp.  Krueger had admitted to her that he'd murdered twelve Jewish individuals, which was used at the trial.  Other survivors of the ghetto also emerged during the trial, which ran two years, and which featured anti Semetic outbursts from Krueger.  He was convicted and remained in prison until 1986.  He died in 1988.

Ironically, Lanckorońska actually had been arrested for partisan activities.  She's survived the war and died in 2002 at age 104.

For reasons that are unclear, the Germans transferred the Spanish Blue Division from Operation Typhoon to a quiet portion of the line outside of Leningrad.

The Licheng Rebellion broke out against the Chinese Communist Party in part of that country which it controlled. The rebellion was unsuccessful, although it had been long in the planning.

October 12, 1921. The delegates and the students.

American delegates to Disarmament Conference, 10/12/21

American delegation to disarmament conference,  Root, Underwood, Hughes, Lodge, Mills, 10/12/21


The Mullen's children and neighbors ready for school, October 12, 1921.

Their home.

Their school.


A little log cabin occupied by the F.T. Castle family.


 
Row of Coal miners shanties on Elk River at Bream, W. Va. Location: Bream, West Virginia




The New York Giants beat the Yankees, 2 to 1, in Game 7 of the 1921 World Sereis.

Subsidiarity Economics. The times more or less locally, Part IV

  


TerraPower, Wyoming Governor and PacifiCorp announce efforts to advance nuclear technology in Wyoming

Natrium™ Reactor Demonstration Project will bring new energy development and jobs to the state

 

CHEYENNE, Wyo. –  TerraPower and PacifiCorp, today announced efforts to advance a Natrium™ reactor demonstration project at a retiring coal plant in Wyoming. The companies are evaluating several potential locations in the state.

“I am thrilled to see Wyoming selected for this demonstration pilot project, as our great state is the perfect place for this type of innovative utility facility and our coal-experienced workforce is looking forward to the jobs this project will provide,” said Wyoming Governor Mark Gordon. “I have always supported an all-of-the-above energy portfolio for our electric utilities. Our state continues to pave the way for the future of energy, and Wyoming should be the place where innovative energy technologies are taken to commercialization."

The development of a nuclear energy facility will bring welcome tax revenue to Wyoming’s state budget, which has seen a significant decline in recent years. This demonstration project creates opportunities for both PacifiCorp and local communities to provide well-paying and long-term jobs for workers in Wyoming communities that have decades of energy expertise.

“This project is an exciting economic opportunity for Wyoming. Siting a Natrium advanced reactor at a retiring Wyoming coal plant could ensure that a formerly productive coal generation site continues to produce reliable power for our customers,” said Gary Hoogeveen, president and CEO of Rocky Mountain Power, a business unit of PacifiCorp. “We are currently conducting joint due diligence to ensure this opportunity is cost-effective for our customers and a great fit for Wyoming and the communities we serve.”

“I commend Rocky Mountain Power for joining with TerraPower in helping Wyoming develop solutions so that our communities remain viable and continue to thrive in a changing economy, while keeping the state at the forefront of energy solutions,” said Wyoming Senate President Dan Dockstader.

“Wyoming has long been a headwaters state for baseload energy. This role is proving to be ever more important. This effort takes partnerships, and we welcome those willing to step up and embrace these opportunities with us,” said Wyoming Speaker of the House Eric Barlow.

The location of the Natrium demonstration plant is expected to be announced by the end of 2021. The demonstration project is intended to validate the design, construction and operational features of the Natrium technology, which is a TerraPower and GE Hitachi technology.

“Together with PacifiCorp, we’re creating the energy grid of the future where advanced nuclear technologies provide good-paying jobs and clean energy for years to come,” said Chris Levesque, president and CEO of TerraPower. “The Natrium technology was designed to solve a challenge utilities face as they work to enhance grid reliability and stability while meeting decarbonization and emissions-reduction goals.”

Wyoming’s Governor Gordon committed in early 2021 to lead the state in becoming carbon net negative while continuing to use fossil fuels through the advancement and utilization of next-generation technologies that can provide baseload power to the grid, including nuclear and carbon capture solutions. Wyoming is the largest net energy exporter in the United States and finding carbon solutions will ensure the state continues to provide energy to consumers across the nation while decreasing CO2 emissions.

In October 2020, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), through its Advanced Reactor Demonstration Program (ARDP), awarded TerraPower $80 million in initial funding to demonstrate the Natrium technology. TerraPower signed the cooperative agreement with DOE in May 2021. Next steps include further project evaluation, education and outreach as well as state and federal regulatory approvals, prior to the acquisition of a Natrium facility.

Learn more about this project and the Natrium technology at wyadvancedenergy.com

Allow me to note, you heard it here first.

I've been advocating this for several years.

This is, quite frankly, a major event.  This signals, whether people wish to realize it or not, the state realizing that a new economic era has arrived, and the state needs to plan on that basis.  It also acknowledges the reality that if the US is to have a carbon neutral economy, as it claims, and no matter what you think of that, nuclear is not only part and parcel of that, it's central to it.

June 3, 2021

More on this big (and it is big) story.

The move is in association with Bill Gates' and Warren Buffett's Terra Power and is clearly part of their push for green energy.  It's slated to begin producing electricity in 2028, which is remarkable for a facility whose location has not yet been chosen, although some potential sites, including Glenrock, have been mentioned.

The reactor would be a Natrium small modular reactor, which is much smaller than the large nuclear reactors we're familiar with, such as those depicted above.   These smaller reactors are designed specifically to replace coal-fired plants by using part of an existing coal power plants cooling system.

June 11, 2021

A Federal Court suspended drilling on 630 square miles of Federal lands in Montana and Wyoming for the BLM failing to comply with NEPA in regard to sage chickens when the leases were issued.

Fire season commenced all over the state this past week as temperatures soared into the 90s.

Yellowstone introduced driverless electric shuttles.

June 15, 2021

The price of oil is up over $70.00/bbl, a recent high.

While this is good for Wyoming, there's every sign that the economy is overheating and entering an inflationary stage, in spite of the Biden Administration's early indications that this wouldn't happen.  At the same time, there's an increasing labor shortage caused, in part, by laid off workers refusing to return to their pre COVID jobs.

June 16, 2021

Practically buried in all of the other news and entertainment, the G7 agreed to forego extending loans to coal firepower plant construction.

A Federal Judge declared President Biden's executive order suspension on new oil and gas leases blocked.   While not having read this opinion, as Presidents can classically withdraw Federal lands from entry, I suspect this will ultimately be reversed, but not before numerous additional leases are issued.

June 26, 2021

The new nuclear power plant planned for Wyoming is estimated to create up to 3,000 construction jobs and perhaps up to 400 full time jobs.

June 28, 2021

The Shoshone and Arapaho Tribes have taken over production on their Circle Ridge oilfield directly.  In doing so, they've noted that it is their view that fossil fuels are on the way out.

June 28, 2021, cont.

And. . . 

Supreme Court deals final blow to Wyoming coal port suit

presumably, nobody was surprised.

Headline from the Trib.

At least we weren't, as we were predicting an end unfavorable to the state for, well, forever.

July 9, 2021

Natrona County approved a wind farm to go in north of town.

The event was notable for the opposition it drew which puts a spotlight on how this debate has evolved over time.  Early on, many of those closely associated with the extractive industries, or those who just had a traditional view of energy generation, dismissed wind farms as inefficient and something that would never really get rolling. At the same time, there were those who opposed them based upon their ascetics, or based upon the threat they pose to birds.

Since that time wind turbines have become much more efficient and even though people hate to admit it, they can now compete with coal-fired electrical generation.  This has caused the debate to shift among some people, and it's taken on a political right/left aspect to it in some quarters, much like everything else in the country right now. Just recently, for example, Senatorial candidate Chuck Gray blamed wind turbines for the mid-winter power outages in Texas.

Given this, it isn't too surprising that the proposed wind farm drew some opposition, indeed quite a bit of it.  One Natrona County Commissioner claimed he "despise[d]" renewable energy, even though he felt the application had met the criteria and voted for it.  It's hard to imagine anyone despising renewable energy and I suspect that wasn't really what he meant, but there is a lot of opposition to it.

In contrast, a Converse County Commissioner came to speak in favor of it, noting that recent wind farm construction in his county had been an economic life raft during the recent oilfield slow down.  The airport testified against the wind farm out of safety concerns, but apparently the FAA had found there were none.

Personally, it's hard to see wind turbines as ascetically pleasing, but there are at least two wind farms visible from the city already, which makes the view shed argument somewhat difficult.

July 13, 2021

Plains Tires, a Wyoming tire retail company with stores around the state, has been bought by Les Schwab Tire Centers, a larger company with 500 stores across the west.

Plains Tires was founded in 1941.

July 15, 2021

The state's coal production fell 21% in 2020.

July 20, 2021

Governor Signs Temporary Executive Order to help Alleviate Fuel Shortages

CHEYENNE, Wyo. –  To help prevent potential gasoline, diesel and aviation fuel shortages, Governor Mark Gordon has signed an Executive Order (EO) that puts in place temporary emergency rules for the Wyoming Department of Transportation allowing drivers to make extra fuel deliveries.

The order is effective July 20 through August 20.

Demand for fuel has increased due to post-pandemic travel in the United States, with increases in travel and tourism seen throughout the state. In addition, an early fire season has resulted in increased fire suppression efforts which have also impacted demand for various fuels across the western United States.

“It is critical that we have adequate fuel supplies. This is particularly necessary for air support during this fire season,” Governor Gordon said. “These emergency rules will help increase fuel deliveries without potentially harmful delays.”

The emergency rule suspends regulations on driving hours to allow drivers to meet the increased demand for fuel, but still indicates drivers cannot be on the road when they are fatigued. Fuel delivery companies are specifically asked to take extra precautions to ensure the safety of both the public and company drivers.

This order applies specifically to drivers bringing gasoline, diesel or aviation fuel to Wyoming or doing in-state deliveries. The order also aligns Wyoming with other surrounding states, which have implemented similar executive orders.

For questions pertaining to enforcement, contact Wyoming Highway Patrol Lt. Dustin Ragon at 777-4872.

A copy of the Executive Order is attached and may be found on the Governor’s website. 

July 24, 2021

I'm constantly hearing around here that electric vehicles will never really come to Wyoming as their just not suited for the state. 

Never mind that nobody on the plant really makes vehicles for Wyoming.  Indeed, if that were the case we'd all be driving the Toyota Hilux as it's about the last pickup made on Earth that's really rugged in the old-fashioned Dodge Power Wagon sense. But even the "no electric truck" argument just doesn't hold water.

Ford here make a pitch that the day of the electric pickup has arrived, starting off with a cowboy in their advertisement.

There’s a New Revolution Starting

I know that this isn't a popular view around here.  The state just completed an always doomed effort to force Pacific coast states to have a coal port against their will.  A political ad that's now running claims one politician "saved our coal jobs".

Well, things are definitely changing and we need to prepare for it.

July 30, 2021

Two large Wyoming coal producers have asked for royalty reductions.

August 3, 2021

The University of Wyoming is seeking to use American Recovery Plan Act funds to fund its restructing.

August 20, 2021

Gillette Community College will become its own district, with large scale support of area voters in a special election.

August 28, 2021

PacificCorp announced plans to retire all of its coal-fired power plants by 2040, with the majority retired by 2030.

September 1, 2021

The moratorium on Federal oil and gas leases will end in December.

September 2, 2021

County health is predicting a rise in labor shortages locally due to an increase of school related COVID 19 cases, as parents return home to take care of sick children.

September 11, 2021

Harvard University announced that it will not invest in fossil fuels and will wind down its existing legacy investments.

As an isolated matter, this probably doesn't matter much, but it recalls similar acts concerning investment in South Africa which did contribute to the end of the apartheid era.  If this becomes a larger movement, it could become significant.

September 15, 2021

Taking a page out of Wyoming's "sue 'em" book, Vermont has sued four oil companies, alleging that they have misled the public on global warming.

There's no reason to believe that Vermont was inspired by Wyoming's recent coal port lawsuits, but the danger of such actions is made apparent by this.  The doors of the courts, of course, are open to all.

September 20, 2021

The Bureau of Land Management is moving its  headquarters back to Washington D.C.

September 21, 2021

Bridger coal is closing it's underground mine in Wyoming. This will result in the loss of about 100 jobs.

October 6, 2021

The International Council on Mining and Metals, a mining organization, has committed to zero green house gas emissions by 2050.

Delta receives a subsidty to continue serving the Natrona County International Airport

October, 6 cont:

Updates for October, 2021

 

October 6, 2021.  Governor Gordon visits US/Mexico border.

October 7, 2021

As a followup to the above, although not exactly on topic, the Governors involved in the border meeting issued the following plan regarding the border crisis:

JOINT POLICY FRAMEWORK ON THE BORDER CRISIS 10 Policies to Protect America, Restore Security, and End the Crisis

1. Continue Title 42 public health restrictions: The Biden Administration should continue to invoke Title 42 to refuse entry to individuals coming into the country due to the COVID-19 public health risk, which was initially issued by the previous administration. Title 42 currently expels approximately 44% of apprehensions. In July, more than 18% of migrant families and 20% of unaccompanied minors tested positive for COVID-19 upon being released from Border Patrol custody. Reports estimate that the Biden Administration has placed approximately 40,000 COVID-19 positive migrants into American cities.

2. Fully reinstate the Migrant Protection Protocols: The Biden Administration should comply with recent federal court rulings and fully reinstate the Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP) established by the prior administration, which require asylum seekers to return to Mexico to await their court hearing outside of the United States, serving as a deterrent to cross. Upon taking office, President Biden issued a directive to terminate the MPP, and although litigation may continue, the Biden Administration should halt any attempts to appeal and fully reinstate the policy.

3. Finish securing the border: The Biden Administration should reopen construction contracts to continue building the border wall and invest in infrastructure and technology, such as lights, sensors, or access roads, to complete the border security system. Upon taking office, President Biden terminated the national emergency at the border, stopped all border construction, and redirected funds to build the wall.

4. End catch and release: The Biden Administration should end the Obama-era policy of catching and releasing apprehended migrants into U.S. cities along the South Texas border, leaving illegal immigrants paroled and able to travel anywhere in the country. Upon taking office, President Biden issued an Executive Order reinstating catch and release policies that incentivize illegal immigration and make deportation laws difficult to enforce.

5. Clear the judicial backlog: The Biden Administration should dedicate additional judges and resources to our U.S. immigration courts to end the growing backlog and expedite court appearances for illegal migrants. Reports indicate backlogged cases total more than 1 million, the most ever.

6. Resume the deportation of all criminals: The Biden Administration should enforce all deportation laws of criminally convicted illegal aliens. Upon taking office, President Biden issued an Executive Order ordering the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to prioritize only the deportation of aggravated felons, gang members, or terrorists, leaving other criminals to remain in the United States.

7. Dedicate federal resources to eradicate human trafficking and drug trafficking: Due to the rapid increase of cartel activity, the Biden Administration should dedicate additional resources to eradicate the surge in human trafficking and drug trafficking, arrest offenders, support victims, and get dangerous drugs—like fentanyl and methamphetamine—off our streets.

8. Re-enter all agreements with our Northern Triangle partners and Mexico: President Biden should re-enter the prior administration’s agreement with the Northern Triangle countries (El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras) and Mexico. The countries agreed to enforce their respective borders, fix their asylum systems, and receive migrants seeking asylum before they journey north to the United States. Upon taking office, President Biden issued an Executive Order terminating the agreements.

9. Send a clear message to potential migrants: President Biden, Vice President Harris, and Biden Administration officials at every level should state clearly and unequivocally that our country’s borders are not open and that migrants seeking economic opportunity should not attempt to abuse or misuse the asylum process. Prior to and after taking office, President Biden blatantly encouraged illegal immigrants to come to the United States.

10. Deploy more federal law enforcement officers: Due to overwhelming needs at the border, the Biden Administration should deploy more and provide greater resources to U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. Due to a lack of federal resources, Arizona and Texas have had to initiate an Emergency Management Assistance Compact to request law enforcement resources directly from states, receiving offers from eight states, to arrest and detain illegal trespassers.

October 9, 2021

A global agreement has been reached on an international corporate minimum tax of 15%.  The agreement will have to pass Congress before it becomes law in the United States, something which the nearly evenly divided Senate will make difficult.

October 10, 2021

The budget reconciliation bill before Congress contains a provision for an 8% royalty on minerals extracted from Federal lands under the Mining Law of 1872 and related provisions.  Right now, such extraction is Federal royalty free and always has been.

October 12, 2021

Oil is up over $80.00 a barrel

Prior threads:

Subsidiarity Economics. The times more or less locally, Part III





Monday, October 11, 2021

" "Day

Today is Columbus Day.

And Indigenous Peoples Day.

And, oddly enough. Coming Out Day.

It's self-evident why it'd be Indigenous People's Day as that's a counterpoint to Columbus Day.  Why somebody chose this for Coming Out Day is a mystery.

It's also General Pulaski Memorial Day, International Day of the Girl Child and International Newspaper Carrier Day.

All of which is a lot of titles for one day, and which is why for most people, anymore, October 11 is a work.  Not that I've ever worked anywhere that had it off.