Monday, 14 March 2016

Rocky Flats



Frontline PBS episode on the secrets of Rocky Flats bomb factory. Many of the characters involved are still fighting for the truth to be revealed. The bomb factory has since been decommissioned and transfered to the Fish and Wildlife Service as a wildlife refuge. Many people who are privy to the plants history are concerned over the Fish and Wildlife's plan to open the refuge to the public. Since the transfer of the land as a wildlife refuge the history of the plant has been largely forgotten and several housing developments are springing up around the highly contaminated site.

"Secrets of a Bomb Factory," originally aired on Oct. 26, 1993. "Wes McKinley didn't know what he was getting into when, in 1990, he was chosen as foreman of a special grand jury investigating potential crimes at the Rocky Flats nuclear weapons plant in Colorado. But what McKinley and the other grand jurors learned in their two-and-one-half years of listening to testimony and examining other evidence disturbed them enough to risk prosecution themselves by going public. FRONTLINE examines what the grand jury learned and what led to their rebellion."

Ralph Tortorici


"Stop government experimentation!"

[Was Ralph's case different from all of the other cases you've tried?]

... One of the biggest hurdles for the DA ... is that he had this history. From our perspective, the part that was most troubling about it is that he had gone around warning people that the exact type of thing that was going to happen was going to happen. At one point, he even went into the state police barracks, and told him that the microchip was telling him to do this or telling him to do that. ... He had gone to the health professionals at SUNY and told them that he had the chip implanted, that it was telling him to do things and he was trying not to listen to it. ...

Gunman Terrorizes Students in Campus Siege


ALBANY, Dec. 14— Thirty-five students at the State University here showed up this morning for the last day of class in the History of Ancient Greece, expecting the usual fare, bloody but distant: wars, empire, Alexander the Great. 
Instead, the police said, they were held hostage for two and a half hours by a rifle-wielding psychology student who ranted about a microchip in his brain, threatened to kill the students and demanded to speak to President Clinton, Gov. Mario M. Cuomo, members of Congress, the university president and financial-aid officials. The standoff ended when a 19-year-old sophomore from Long Island lunged at the gunman, who shot and wounded him before others in the class wrestled him to the ground. 
The Albany police arrested Ralph J. Tortorici, 26, and charged him with attempted murder. As he was led from the lecture hall by police officers, Mr. Tortorici, wearing a blue blood-stained sweat shirt and camouflage fatigues, shouted at a crowd of student bystanders, "Stop government experimentation!" 
The standoff began just after 9 A.M. as Prof. Hans Pohlsander was starting his history lesson on ancient Greece in one of the two dozen lecture halls that lie underneath the campus's central quadrangle. 
As Mr. Pohlsander scanned the hall, he saw Mr. Tortorici standing in the rear and asked him, "Are you part of the class?" At that moment, Mr. Tortorici pulled a .270-caliber Remington rifle from a duffel bag, the police said. He was carrying over two dozen rounds of ammunition in the bag, the police said.
"He said: 'Don't worry. Nobody move. You guys are getting held hostage,' " said Lisa Cramer, an 18-year-old sophomore from Rensselaer who was among the hostages. "Stuff you see in movies."
The injured student, Jason McEnaney, 19, of Hicksville in Nassau County, was shot in the upper leg, groin and abdomen as he grabbed Mr. Tortorici's rifle, dislodging it from his grasp. The police say that one bullet apparently caused all of Mr. McEnaney's wounds. He was listed in serious condition after undergoing surgery at Albany Medical Center Hospital this afternoon.
"He was a hero," Joel Blumenthal, a spokesman for the State University's Albany campus, said of Mr. McEnaney. "He took a risk and saved people's lives."
Police officials said Mr. Tortorici's motives were unknown because he made no specific demands other than to speak to various political and university officials. They described the gunman, whose only known address was a Schenectady post office box, as angry and irrational throughout nearly two hours of negotiations.
"At one time he said that if his demands were not met, he would start killing people," said Major Lloyd R. Wilson Jr. of the State Police Department.
Several hostages said Mr. Tortorici told them that he believed that a computer chip had been implanted in his brain at birth by doctors at Albany Medical Center as part of an experiment. "He said his actions were being governed through a microchip," said Ms. Cramer. "He was basically mad because they wouldn't give them his degree or something."
Saying the college has been criticized for lax security in recent weeks, another hostage, Robert Urban, said, "At first, a lot of us thought it was a test of the internal security system of the university."
Brandishing his weapon and nervously pacing the center aisle, Mr. Tortorici ordered students to barricade the doors to the subterranean room with desks and chairs. He also had one student squirt a fire hose into the hallway outside for several seconds before making him tie the door closed with the hose.
"He said he wanted to flood the university," said the student, Scott Gushlaw, a 25-year-old senior from Troy. "He never said why."
When two students began crying hysterically, he allowed them to leave. He also released Mr. Pohlsander and three other students, demanding that they deliver messages to Mr. Clinton and other officials, as well as to local news reporters, two of whom he asked for by name.
Mr. Pohlsander alerted campus police about the gunman, and by about 9:30 A.M., dozens of city and state police had arrived at the scene. Three police negotiators took up positions in a projection room overlooking the lecture hall, concealed from Mr. Tortorici by a screen. At one point, the gunman fired a shot through the screen, barely missing two of the negotiators.
Several hostages described Mr. Tortorici as agitated when he talked to the police negotiators, using a microphone in the lectern to amplify his voice. But at other times he was calm and even lighthearted with the students, offering them cigarettes, demanding that the police bring them snack food and sodas and designating a corner of the room as a latrine.
"He walked by and looked at one of my books and said: 'Greek? Why do you want to take that?' " Mr. Urban said.
Throughout the standoff, Mr. Tortorici eyed Mr. McEnaney nervously, several times warning him to stand still. "He kept telling Jason, 'You better quit moving around or I'm going to shoot you in the head,' " Mr. Gushlaw said. "That's why Jason went after him, because he knew his life was in danger, there's no doubt about it."
The end came around 11:30 A.M., when Mr. Tortorici ordered Mr. McEnaney to separate from two other students and stand near the front of the room behind a makeshift barricade. As Mr. McEnaney passed the gunman he grabbed his rifle, witnesses and the police said. Mr. Tortorici fired several shots, at least one of which hit Mr. McEnaney, before losing his grip on the weapon, which tumbled to the floor.
As Mr. McEnaney scrambled away, Mr. Tortorici retreated toward the back of the room, reaching for a hunting knife that had been concealed in his belt. But before he could draw it, a student kicked him in the face and another pushed him into a wall. Three others helped hold him down as scores of heavily armed police officers poured into the room.
Mr. Tortorici's right hand was cut in the scuffle and he also received bruises to his chest, face and hands. He was admitted to Albany Medical Center for treatment to his hand this evening.
Little was known about Mr. Tortorici tonight. Several hostages said he said he was in the military reserves, but the police could not confirm that. University officials said he entered the college in 1990 and had enough credits to be a senior. They said they had no record of any conflicts involving him and the university.
Police officials said their only brush with Mr. Tortorici, whose parents live in the Albany region, was on Nov. 29, when they arrested him for possession of a small amount of crack. They said he did not have any drugs in his possession today and did not appear under the influence of drugs or alcohol when he was taken into custody.
The 17,000-student campus at the edge of Albany was thrown into pandemonium for much of the day. Classes were canceled, hundreds of students milled about the hostage scene and the university telephone switchboard malfunctioned, overloaded with calls from worried parents.
This was the second incident in recent weeks to disrupt campus life. Two weeks ago, a white freshman claimed that she had been beaten in her dorm room by a black man. Several days later, the police arrested her father for the attack, saying that the woman fabricated the story to protect him. The incident sparked a highly publicized debate about racial tensions at the school.
Mr. Blumenthal, the college spokesman, said that today's canceled classes would be rescheduled for Thursday and that faculty had been asked to postpone final exams, scheduled to begin Friday, where possible.
"It's been a ruckus around here," said Debra Guss, a 21-year-old senior from Staten Island. "It feels like everything happens to us."
Photos: Ralph J. Tortorici is led out of a lecture hall in Albany yesterday, after a two-and-a-half-hour standoff involving hostages. (Alan E. Solomon for The New York Times); Jason McEnaney, who was shot trying to subdue a man accused of holding State University students hostage. (pg. B1) Map/Diagram: "THE SCENE: Shooting at SUNY Albany" The hall where the shooting occurred is underground at the center of the campus. It is one of several lecture halls grouped around a sunken reflecting pool and fountain. 1. The gunman, indentified as Ralph J. Tortorici, 26 entered Room 5 with a rifle; he moved to the center of the room and ordered the students from their chairs. 2. The students gathered at the front of the room and toward one side. 3. Jason McEnaney, 19, after being asked by the gunman to move to the front, headed toward the center aisle. Once near the gunman, he struggled with him. In the scuffle, Mr. McEnaney was shot at least once. 4. Five more students helped subdue the gunman. Map of the campus shows the location of the hall where the incident occurred, and a diagram of the hall itself is provided showing the approximate positions of the gunman and the students. (B10) Map of Albany shows the site of the shooting. (pg. B10)

Man Sentenced in Albany Hostage Drama


ALBANY, Feb. 16— A man convicted of holding students hostage at the State University at Albany and shooting one of them was sentenced today to consecutive terms totaling 15 2/3 to 47 years. 
The man, Ralph Tortorici, 27, was not present at his sentencing for first-degree assault, second-degree kidnapping and first-degree reckless endangerment. Sentences for criminal use of a firearm and criminal possession of a weapon will run concurrently. 
During comments by Justice Larry Rosen of State Supreme Court, Mr. Tortorici began muttering and was removed from the courtroom. Earlier, during his statement, Mr. Tortorici attributed his troubles to a Jewish conspiracy, and noted that Justice Rosen is Jewish. 
Mr. Tortorici said he had taken the class hostage in order to inform people of a government conspiracy through which, he said, microchips had been planted in his body. 
On Dec. 14, 1994, Mr. Tortorici, armed with a rifle, entered a SUNY Albany classroom and took 35 students and a professor hostage. After about two hours, a group of students, led by Jason McEnaney, jumped and restrained the gunman. Mr. McEnaney was shot in the groin and abdomen.
During the trial, Mr. McEnaney, 20, provided graphic testimony about his injuries, which resulted in his inability to father children. An alternate juror fainted during his testimony and was excused from duty.


Inmate Ralph Tortorici hangs self in prison cell

New York State
Department of Correctional Services
Glenn S. Goord, Commissioner

Office of Public Information
[518] 457-8182
www.doccs.ny.gov

For immediate release:
Tuesday, August 10, 1999
Inmate Ralph Tortorici ( # 96-A-1194), who held more than three dozen SUNY-Albany students hostage in a classroom in December of 1994, was found hanging in his cell at 4:48 a.m. today in the maximum-security Sullivan Correctional Facility in Fallsburg in Sullivan County, approximately 116 miles south of Albany.
A Correction Officer making rounds found Tortorici with an unaltered bedsheet tied around his neck and tied to a clothing shelf in his cell. A nurse was summoned from the prison infirmary. He was pronounced dead in the infirmary at 6:47 a.m. by the county coroner. Tortorici was last seen alive in his cell at 4:30 a.m. by an Officer making regular rounds. 
As in all unattended deaths in state prison, an autopsy is pending and investigations are being conducted by the Department's Office of the Inspector General as well as by the State Commission of Correction.
Tortorici, 31, was received into the prison system on February 27, 1996, serving a sentence of 15 2/3-40 years on 10 counts - four of kidnaping, four of reckless endangerment, one of first-degree assault and one of first-degree criminal use of a firearm. All 10 charges stemmed from the incident at SUNY-Albany, during which he shot one student in the groin area and fired at least one round at the police officers who were attempting to negotiate his surrender and the release of the hostages. His original parole date was October 2, 2011, with a maximum expiration date of February 2, 2036.
Tortorici was housed at Sullivan because it is one of the prison system's nine general confinement facilities for males offering "level one" care by the state's Office of Mental Health. Staffing there includes a full complement of psychiatrists, psychologists and other mental health professionals. Tortorici had been housed in that 64-cell mental health Intermediate Care Program since his July 14 return from the Central New York Psychiatric Center in Marcy. Since his incarceration, Tortorici had spent 19 months at Sullivan and 22 months at Marcy.
Tortorici was being seen daily by mental health staff as well as receiving weekly treatment services. Other than that, his day consisted of time in his cell, plus access to libraries, the yard and recreation areas. Cells in the unit are 7-by-11 feet and include a bed, locker, stool, clothing shelf, desk, toilet and sink.
Tortorici had previously attempted suicide at Sullivan on July 24, 1996, when he was found at 11:55 a.m. with a sheet around his neck tied to the shelf in his cell. He received medical treatment at the prison infirmary before being transferred to a local hospital.
Sullivan, with a capacity for 594 inmates, today houses 570. It was opened in 1985. The last suicide at the facility was in May of this year. There have been five previous suicides this year at the state's 71 facilities, which as of today house 71,517 inmates.

Surprise

Thursday, 10 March 2016

Tradition! - Talmudic Thinking from the Ghetto to the Steppe andtheYiddish Rennaissance



"Occasionally, this approach can end up producing great lawyers... 

But mostly what you get instead is a bunch of neurotic schmucks.

Because there is no content to it. It's a completely Aristotelean approach to knowledge."

- Harvey Schlanger


Oct. 2001 Harley Schlanger, Taking inspiration from Dante, & Cervantes, a few Jews , Mendele Mocher Sforim, I L Peretz, & Sholem Aleichem, decided to transform some kitchen jargon, Yiddish, into a literate form of language in order to transform the backwards and degraded culture of the Shtetl (ghetto). 

Earlier developments around great intellects such as Maimonides and Moses Mendelsohnn are gone through. Articles on the subject are at the Schiller Institute website. 


The statement from Mr. LaRouche that is read by Harley at the end of the presentation is the Fidelio article "Music, Judaism, and Hitler" http://www.schillerinstitute.org/fid_...

An article on Moses Mendelssohn is at http://www.schillerinstitute.org/fid_...

Since any discussion of Jews brings up the old prejudices by the usual nudzh that would make a good character in a Sholem Aleichem story, I would prefer that the comments get shut down, but for the chance at poking fun, I'll keep it open. Be warned nudnicks! :)

"Although A.D. Judaism is an outgrowth of the development of Christianity (e.g., the first such rabbi, Philo of Alexandria), there was a preceding Hebrew faith of sorts, elements of which were syncretically assimilated in the successive phases of manufacture of post-Philo Judaism. 

The earlier Hebrew doctrine is itself a synthetic hodgepodge of chiefly Mesopotamian legends. 

Rabbi Ezra, the author of the fictional personality of Moses, is exemplary of the circumstances and contents of Hebrew doctrine—a creation of Achaemenid [Persian] protection and edict. Ezra's Persian version of Hebrewism was, in turn, significantly influenced by an earlier, pre-Pentateuch version, created in conformity with Babylonian edicts. . . . 

"...errrm.... IT WAS A TEST..! You passed with flying colours!"

From Ezra onwards, and even before, Hebrewism was an assimilationist doctrine developed to provide special juridical status (and ideological self-image) for a caste of merchant-usurers within a pre-capitalist society.


[Rabbinical] Judaism is not a true religion, but only a half-religion, a curious appendage and sub-species of Christianity . . .  [Rabbinic] Judaism is the ideological abstraction of the secular life of Christianity's Jew, the Roman merchant-usurer who had not yet evolved to the state of Papal enlightenment, a half-Christian, who had not developed a Christian conscience, etc. 

Judaism is the religion of a caste of subjects of Christianity, entirely modeled by ingenious rabbis to fit into the ideological and secular life of Christianity. 

In short, a self-subsisting Judaism never existed and never could exist. As for "Jewish culture," otherwise, it is merely the residue left to the Jewish home after everything saleable had been marketed to the Goyim."

- Lyndon LaRouche

" After ten days, Andre's fencers finished their competitions... and he and Ankie traveled to Holland to spend time with their baby Anouk... whom they had left in the care of Ankie's parents. 

The next morning at 10:00, he had to take the train to Munich. 

"He woke up a little bit late. We got to the train station, and the train had left. 

I was desperate because I thought he's going to get in trouble... when he gets back to Munich because they're waiting for him there. 

He said, "Well, another day with you. "

I said, " No, let's try the other train station about 30 miles onwards.

So we raced to the next station... and in Eindhoven in Holland, that's where he jumped on the train. Without a ticket. The train was already in the station. 

I still remember me running next to the train... and he left. 

And that was the last time I saw him." 

On the night of September 4, as Andre arrived back at the village... 

the Israeli delegation was enjoying a night out at the theater... 


watching Fiddler on the Roof. 

They returned to the village at midnight. 

The night of the operation.






Jewish Studies at Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts | http://www.newschool.edu/lang/jewish-...

The modern tradition of Jewish humor emerged from the same ideological ferment that produced Zionism, Liberal Judaism, Modern Orthodoxy, and a wide variety of secular forms of Jewish identity. To this day, Jewish humor reinforces the bond between Jews even as globalization has brought it to millions of non-Jews. Is this lively tradition the result of a seed of humor planted deep in Jewish textual traditions, or is Jewish humor an exercise in self- loathing by an insecure minority? Having transcended its Yiddish forms in American comedy (from Lenny Bruce to Larry David), is Jewish humor a way for Jews to be Jews in a genre at once particular and universally accessible?

Jewish Cultural Studies | http://www.newschool.edu/jewishculture
THE NEW SCHOOL FOR GENERAL STUDIES | http://www.newschool.edu/generalstudies

Participants include:

Michael Wex, author of Just Say Nu: Yiddish for Every Occasion (When English Just Won't Do) and Born to Kvetch; Noah Isenberg, author of Between Redemption and Doom: The Strains of German-Jewish Modernism and editor and translator of The Face of East European Jewry by Arnold Zweig; Jeffrey Israel, author of a dissertation on Jewish humor and politics; and Val Vinokur, author of The Trace of Judaism: Dostoevsky, Mandelstam, Babel, Levinas.

Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts | http://www.newschool.edu/lang

Presented by Jewish Studies at Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts and the Jewish Cultural Studies Program.

THE NEW SCHOOL | http://www.newschool.edu

Location: Wollman Hall, Eugene Lang Building
04/27/2011 6:30 p.m.

He Hath Risen


"Have I been so long time with you, and yet hast thou not known me?"


Spook Central

Master Apartments at 310 Riverside Drive, 
New York, NY





Egon Spengler
The structure of this roof cap is exactly like the kind of telemetry tracker that NASA uses to identify dead pulsars in deep space.

Ray Stantz
Cold riveted girders with cores of pure selenium.

Peter Venkman[to jailbirds] 
Everyone getting this so far? So what? I guess they just don't make them like they used to.

Stantz[slaps Venkman up the head] 
No! Nobody ever made them like this! The architect was either a certified genius or an authentic wacko!

Venkman
Ray, for a moment, pretend that I don't know anything about metallurgy, engineering, or physics, and just tell me what the hell is going on.

Stantz
You never studied. The whole building is a huge super-conductive antenna that was designed and built expressly for the purpose of pulling in and concentrating spiritual turbulence. 

Your girlfriend, Pete, lives in the corner penthouse of Spook Central.



Venkman
She's not my girlfriend. I find her interesting because she's a client and because she sleeps above her covers. 



Four feet above her covers! She barks, she drools, she claws...



Spengler
It's not the girl, Peter, it's the building! 



Something terrible is about to enter our world, and this building is obviously the door. 



The architect's name was Ivo Shandor. I found it in Tobin's Spirit Guide

He was also a doctor. Performed a lot of unnecessary surgery. 



And then in 1920, he founded a secret society.



Venkman: Let me guess: Gozer worshippers?

Spengler: Right.

Venkman[to Stantz] 
"No studying"!



Spengler
After the First World War, Shandor decided that society was too sick to survive. 

And he wasn't alone; he had close to a thousand followers when he died. 



They conducted rituals up on the roof, bizarre rituals intended to bring about the end of the world, and now it looks like it may actually happen!

Venkman
[singing] 
So be good, for goodness sake! Whoa! Somebody's coming! Somebody's coming!

Ray Stantz
We have to get out of here. We've gotta get a judge or something.

Zeddemore
Hey, wait a minute! Hold it! Now are we actually gonna go before a federal judge, and tell him that some moldy Babylonian god is gonna drop in on Central Park West and start tearing up the city?!



Spengler
Sumerian, not Babylonian.



Venkman
Yeah. Big difference.
Zeddemore
No offense, guys, but I gotta get my own lawyer.