Remarks on President Obama’s Speech on Accepting The Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo 12/10/2009

President Obama’s speech on accepting the Nobel Peace Prize on December 10, 2009 has generally been reviewed in the US with much glow about its rhetorical heights and appreciation of its depth of thought. I did not watch Obama give this speech. Instead, I turned to the text which I could read at my leisure and without the speechifying fireworks that Obama has clearly mastered.

Although I seem stuck in a reflexive backward glance towards the eight disastrous years of Bush II whenever I evaluate Obama. I am still amazed at the enormous moral and practical abyss we fell through in those years. Obama brushing his teeth in the morning is reassuring in contrast. Nevertheless,  it is worth looking a bit more closely at what Obama did and did not say here. Much has been said of his straight forward assertion that violence is necessary and even useful in a world inhabited by human beings who seem almost genetically predisposed to killing each other off. And, with the invocation of Martin Luther King and the discussion of just war theory, he covers well worn territory, though it is cheering to have a sitting US President talk in this fashion.

There is much to applaud in Obama’s speech: control of nuclear weapons, assertion of human and civil rights, multilaterialism in conflict resolution and enforcement, denial of religion as a justification  for oppression of others.

But, we come to a significant claim, one that the US government has asserted for my entire lifetime,  and which the US media and populace would support:  “Whatever the mistakes we have made, the plain fact is this: the United States of America has helped underwrite global security for more than six decades with the blood of our citizens and the strength of our arms.” And, Obama continues with the summary moral claim that underlies this assertion, “We have borne this burden not because we seek to impose our will. We have done so out of enlightened self-interest – because we seek a better future for our children and grandchildren, and we believe that their lives will be better if other peoples’ children and grandchildren can live in freedom and prosperity.” Continue reading

New York State Museum, Fitchburg MA, Simonds Saw & Steel, Nuclear Waste, and Family Connections

Karen and I went on a one of our mid-week jaunts to Albany and the NYS Museum. The museum is quite large with more than one visit’s worth of exhibitions about NY and its history. As a longtime New Englander with a somewhat Boston-centric view of history, it is obvious that I need to do a bit of work on the Dutch phase of colonial NY.

Along the way towards the exit, we came on an exhibit about logging in the Adirondacks. This included some samples of saw blades. I am not sure when carbide inserts came into use, but there was one saw with carbide inserts manufactured by Simonds on display (see image to left). This is a familiar name to the Fitchburg world of my youth. My father did business with Simonds Saw & Steel when he was President of Fitchburg Machine and Screen Plate Co.. He had a large lathe with a faceplate that was seven to eight feet in diameter on which circular saw blanks were cut. The pictured saw was doubtlessly not cut on this machine since it is only four feet in diameter or so.

On searching for links to Simonds Saw & Steel discovered that the company not only still exists as Simonds International but also has a history that I knew nothing of. Namely, there was a specialty steel plant in Lockport, NY (north-northeast of Buffalo, NY) established in 1911. There were a number of other plants in the US and Canada, but this plant became involved in the post-WWII development of nuclear munitions.

Here is a photo of production at the Lockport plant and notes from the Lockport-NY.com website at this URL (http://www.lockport-ny.com/Pictures/views13.htm). I reproduce it here because the website appears to be closing down.



Lou’s Views
….Lockport’s Old Photo Album

It May Not Have Been Radioactive…But It Was HOT!
Remembering Production At Simonds Saw & Steel Mill!

At one time Simonds Saw & Steel Company employed about 900 workers in its Ohio Street complex in Lockport.  The steel and metal plant was in operation from 1910 through 1978.  Its facilities were sold out to Guterl Special Steel Corp of Pittsburgh, PA in 1978 and that company went into bankruptcy in 1982.  The Lockport plant closed in 1983.  A segment of the company’s property (non-contaminated with hazardous waste) was purchased by Allegheny Ludlum (with financing backed by Niagara County IDA bonds) in 1984 for $9.5-million at a bankruptcy sale.   Operations continue there today with employment estimated at under 100.   Allegheny melts and refines “specialty metals.”

The picture at the left was of the steel operation at Simonds in its heyday.

The Simonds family started the business in 1910 making cutting devices such as saws and knives.  It gradually moved into specialty steel production.

From 1948 to about 1956 the company did work for the United States government fabricating about 35-million pounds of uranium and about 40,000 pounds of thorium—both radioactive metals.  The work was extremely profitable for the Simonds operation and much of the details were conveniently covered in secrecy for “national security considerations.”  But the workers knew of the types of material they were working with and that it had “some degree” of radioactivity.  Current reports indicate workers will never informed of the level of radioactivity or of the dangers of chronic exposure.  Nor were they adequately protected, reports say,   from the dust generated by the operation.

The company didn’t disclose publicly that waste from the operation was being dumped on site.  It wasn’t until many years after the Simmonds family sold their stock (in 1965) and bailed out that the liabilities left behind became known.

As with many hazardous waste sites there have been enough property transfers along the line to make the question of  payment for cleanup a legal matter.   The Simmonds family appears to be fairly well insulated from current claims on their collective fortunes to help pay for the cleanup.  The Orange County investment company (Shelter Rock Investors Corp) which bought the Simmond stock and operated the company until its sale to Guterl, also appears to have sheltered itself from paying for cleanup.  With Guterl bankrupt, that appears to mean that the taxpayers of Lockport, New York State, or the United States are left holding the bag —- estimated to cost millions of dollars. (9/9)

 



As usual, the rich get richer and, in this case, also stay healthier.

There is also a  website devoted to the residual pollution from this plant, Simonds Saw & Steel, The US Atomic Weapons Program, and the Myth of “Practically Innocuous” Radiation.

Diamond Street Hudson, New York – the story of the little town with the big red light district by Bruce Edward Hall

Bruce Edward Hall’s Diamond Street Hudson, New York – The Story of the Little Town with the Big Red Light District1 is every new resident’s introduction to a part of the history of Hudson missing from conventional touristics materials. Turns out that Hudson has depended on weekend traffic far longer than the current economy of Manhattanites (and others) coming to enjoy the mile of antiques and art along Warren St. For over a hundred years up to 1950 Hudson served a different weekend crowd, almost all men, men in search of sex, alcohol, gambling, and other male excitements. According to Hall’s history, Hudson ( a city of just 2.7 square miles and never more than 11,000 inhabitants) had over 60 bars and dozens of brothels, floating crap games and telegraphic feeds of horse race results from upstate and down. Hudson was a sleepy factory town that was transformed by arrivals via car and rail into a thriving hub of vice every weekend.111909Diamond-Street

Virtually very public official was on the payroll or at the very least winking broadly. There would be sporadic attempts at ending the corruption but it seems that for most of this period, occasional police raids, mostly netting the female side of the traffic and leaving the “johns” to wander home unscathed, was the norm. During periods in the 1920s and 1930s, the city attempted to normalize the prostitution by imposing weekly blood tests on the prostitutes for venereal diseases.

As a newcomer to Hudson it is interesting to learn that the divide between the North and South sides of Warren St. is not a new phenomenon. One block, the 300 block of Columbia St (long named Diamond St.) was the center of the prostitution for much of the city’s history. Today it is a truck route with ramshackle housing.

Somewhere in this story may be an explanation for why Hudson was one of the few cities to be offered a Carnegie library that turned it down leaving the city without a public library until 1949.

The book appears to be very well researched with ten pages of Notes and Bibliography as well as a serviceable Index. Hall’s writing is fluid and journalistic with lengthy stories that dig into key moments and bring to life the details of how the city became so interwoven with it life of crime and dependent on it. There is a five page “Diamond Street – The Hudson “Red Light District” Tour – A Self-Guided Low Life Adventure, 1994″ at the end of the book for those who want to visit the scenes in person. The 223 pages are a delightful read.

Who is the author, Bruce Edward Hall? He died in 2003, but lives on at his own eponymous website. It is not clear what brought a Chinese American who grew up in NYC’s Chinatown to research and write about Hudson. Perhaps it is just the delight in a good story that also happens to be history receding into the mists.

  1. Black Dome Press Corp. 1011 Route 296 Hensonville, NY 12439 www.blackdomepress.com © 2005 []

Stumbling on a Piece of American History and Americana

Karen and I were off on an errand to Radio Shack yesterday about noontime. In the parking lot was an armada of motorcycles. There were lots of big round middle-aged and older men (predominantly) dressed in motorcycle regalia huddled around one person who was speaking to them. We ventured over and asked a woman at the back of the crowd, “What’s this all about?”. She informed us that this was a Patriot Guard accompanying the remains of an unknown civil war veteran to Saratoga for burial.

Below, you can see a couple of photos  I made at the event as they were organizing for a prompt noon departure from Hudson.

For more details here is an article from the Saratogian.

Excerpted from the Saratogian article of 9/16/9:

By PAUL POST

SARATOGA SPRINGS — April Weygand couldn’t explain what drew her to view the flag-draped coffin of an unknown Civil War soldier.

Like dozens of others who turned out Wednesday, the Wilton resident just wanted to pay her respects.

The Union soldier’s remains will be buried today with full military honors at Gerald B.H. Solomon-Saratoga National Cemetery, exactly 147 years after his death at the Battle of Antietam on Sept. 17, 1862.

……..

A Military Forces Honor Guard made the 862-mile round trip to Antietam National Battlefield in Sharpsburg, Md., to retrieve the soldier, arriving in Saratoga Springs with a full police escort and more than 50 Patriot Guard motorcycle riders.

……

A pine coffin, typical of the Civil War era, was covered with an American flag and lay in state for public viewing at the New York Military Museum on Lake Avenue. Civil War re-enactors portraying 125th New York Regiment comprised the official Union honor guard.

……

The soldier’s remains will leave the museum at 9:20 a.m. today en route to the cemetery for 10 a.m. ceremonies led by Major General Joseph Taluto, adjutant general for New York National Guard. The soldier will be buried with artifacts found with his remains, including several uniform buttons and a “U.S.” waste belt plate.

He’ll be the first unknown soldier and the first Civil War soldier buried at Saratoga National Cemetery. For the first time in nearly a century and a half, he’ll no longer be alone, however, as he joins the 8,622 veterans already buried there from World War I to the War on Terror.

The soldier’s remains were discovered last October by a hiker at Antietam, generating nationwide interest, especially among Civil War enthusiasts. Uniform buttons identify him as being from New York, and skeletal data places him between 17 and 19 years old. Otherwise, there is little known information about him.

……

Patriot Guard Riders09162009-meeting09162009-casketPatriotRiders-09152009.flv.mp4

Armies and Orchids – a new poem by Linda Larson

Armies and Orchids

The little white posts
Stuck in the soil
Markers naming the orchids
At the flower show

Mimic acres of white crosses
Sturdy and upright
Over bones as fragile as
Ruby’s Dragonfly.

Orchids, deceptive,
Feed only on air.
A rich man’s hobby
Nonetheless, crosses

Bedecked, celebrating holidays
With bright, cheerful flags waving
Hello from those consumed
In battle, at War Meister’s

Command, Nightfire,
Simple Pleasures, Shoot or be shot.
Origami cranes,
Piled high at Hiroshima

Truman’s trade off in lives,
The Emperor’s Saffron Delicacy,
Pacific fang,
Its unspeakable retort.

Babies caught in the
Tiger’s Jaw of history, spat out
In its grinding wheel as
Fossils of one century

Name a blood-spattered
Specimen after Rasputin
Sorcerer’s Kiss, and I
When my ship comes in

As one day it must
Will name a red as deep
As pockets left by Hellfire missiles
For Bush’s war, Soldiers’ Dust.