Showing posts with label USSR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USSR. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Which is which?

updated photo selection: okay if you are the one person who actually look at this often (Hi, mom), you'll be able to tell, since only one changed - I got a much better photo from Japan (thank you, Der Spiegel).


Tell me which one is Fukushima (Tokyo) and which is Chernobyl (Prypyat)?

Photograph #1


















Photograph #2
















A Ukrainian Liquidator, one of the first on site at Chrnobyl & surprisingly still alive, compliments the Japanese. "We wore normal clothes and a face respirator. As we went in to the reactor we were given an iodine preparation which was normally the first emergency aid..."

Today, 50 are remaining to control 3 reactors, hoping to keep them cooled. Or more, depending on which source. The Ministry of Health increased the acceptable exposure limit to "to 250 millisieverts from 100 millisieverts, five times the maximum exposure permitted for American nuclear plant workers."

Despite the demands of occupational safety experts here to protect workers, I can't imagine the Dept. of Labor (i.e., OSHA) actually being capable of moving overnight to change an exposure limit. The cynic in me thinks this is, in part, because after-the-fact the safety professions would turn around and demand to have all of the other 30-year old limits changed, too.

I'm surprised the Green Party in the US isn't going more ballistic, given its absolutist platform on nuclear power. The party chair for Die Grüne [the German Green Party] was making this point in a rather restrained manner Sunday, anticipating the impending state elections in Baden-Württemburg. Given the party's platform on feminism, I suppose referring to her as the chairman would be gauche.

Interestingly in the German news, the Greens are confronted with 'warming their hearts' [ihre Seele wärmen] over the opportunity to renew one of their core beliefs coming to conflict with their desire to create a Black-Green coalition government, i.e. CDU/Green, which to the American bipolar condition sounds strange with the conservatives & tree-huggers. Admittedly, the German Conservatives are still in touch with reality, unlike ours.


#1 = Chernobyl
#2 = Fukushima

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Freedom of Speech?

okay, so this is a bit dated, but it's still awfully funny


Q: Is it true that there is freedom of speech in the Soviet Union the same as there is in the USA?

A: In principle, yes. In the USA, you can stand in front of the White House in Washington, DC, and yell, "Down with Reagan!", and you will not be punished. Just the same, you can stand in the Red Square in Moscow and yell, "Down with Reagan!", and you will not be punished.


I looked for my standard file of jokes or just funny things, and found a dozen Russia/USSR jokes. I have no idea where they came from. I do wonder where my older, much longer list went...

Monday, February 16, 2009

[rev.] Polar Star



On to another series of detective/murder mystery books. This one by Martin Cruz Smith (presumably no relation). You've no doubt heard of either the book or the movie Gorky Park. I just can't see William Hurt as the detective, Renko. He might have totally nailed the part, but I was just a bit taken aback when I checked out who played him in the movie (which I haven't seen). Apparently Smith caught political flak from the Soviet government after publishing the book. Perhaps that's incentive enough ...? If not, perhaps my opinion might be? It's a good book. It's gripping, the further it gets, the more you wonder about this Renko fellow. Yet I found him rather sympathetic: neither hero nor vilian, just horribly normal.

On to Polar Star:

This is not a movie (and if they make one, they need a younger actor), though it has the substance to make a rather good one, if they could find a director like Peter Weir, who can take a small, isolated environment and make it seem both huge and claustrophobic at the same time.

Renko, the Investigator for the Moscow police, is no longer an Investigator, nor a Party member, and definitely not above suspicion by those from the previous book. He's drifted across Siberia to avoid political problems, arriving on the Polar Star, a fish-processing ship in the Bering Sea. Operating the fishing boats are Americans in a joint-venture with the Soviets (it's now 1989), with the Soviets operating the gigantic processing operation, where Arkady is working on the 'slime line'.

Interest picks up early with (of course) a dead body, one of the crew of the Polar Star, who falls out of the fishing nets one morning. Someone discovers Renko has experience with making little inquiries, and puts him on a one-day task of helping the 3rd mate find out what happened. He sees this as a pleasant respite from gutting fish in a freezing hold. Yet, he points out to the Capitain it would be much simpler if they just told him what the desired result for the investigation; it will increase the probability of them getting it.

Here is a man who is completely aware of the way life in the USSR works, of Justice's frequent sabbatical, and yet who is himself relentless in his pursuit of that ideal.

The story revolves around a man thawing out of his professional funk when he starts pursuing the job he's really good at, in this case, investigating. It's quite interesting to see the gradual change throughout the story of him emerging from his cocoon, the rust sloughing off his police skills.

I'm never quite sure how to take the personality of this Arkady Renko. Is he really the epitome of the Straight Man? Because he assuredly is delivering the straight lines throughout the story. Is it a total lack of humor? Or a completely refined sense of the ridiculous & self-preservation?

As one review put it: [police procedurals] are a way to study human nature under stress, to see how a society worksfrom the inside out and the bottom up. Smith paints a lucid picture of Soviet society at the time (he wrote this in '89, it's not 'retrospective', but a contemporary view). It provides a picture of the USSR struggling with being socialist / communist, and yet seduced to the Dark Side of Sony Walkmans, jogging suits, and Swatch Watches.

Since any browse through a book store will tell you there's another book, it's difficult to avoid the fact that he must live through the book. I still found myself anxiously wondering if he'd live. I find it intriguing that Smith has kept pace with history. There's been 6 books over 26 years:
Gorky Park; Polar Star; Red Square; Havana Bay; Wolves Eat Dogs, and most recently Stalin's Ghost.

Rating:
2 - sure, go buy it, you'll definitely read it more than once





Review of Gorky Park the movie: