To be is to be contingent: nothing of which it can be said that "it is" can be alone and independent. But being is a member of paticca-samuppada as arising which contains ignorance. Being is only invertible by ignorance.

Destruction of ignorance destroys the illusion of being. When ignorance is no more, than consciousness no longer can attribute being (pahoti) at all. But that is not all for when consciousness is predicated of one who has no ignorance than it is no more indicatable (as it was indicated in M Sutta 22)

Nanamoli Thera

Saturday, June 20, 2026

The Buddha and the Catch-22


It is now twenty-five years since the publication, in 1961, of Joseph Heller’s astonishing novel, Catch-22 (New York: Simon and Schuster; London: Jonathan Cape Ltd.); yet so far, it seems, there has been no public comment on certain striking parallels between the Buddha’s Teaching and some of the content of that novel. Perhaps it would be as well to discuss those affinities now, before another quarter century elapses.

The most immediately obvious (though hardly the most profound) similarity between the Teaching and the novel is that both are deeply concerned with man’s mortality. “Old age, sickness, and death” is a phrase that occurs repeatedly in the Buddha’s Teaching, as recorded in the Pali Suttas (and, indeed, throughout the later Sanskrit, Chinese, and Tibetan texts as well). A citation of even a small portion of such textual references[1] would be far beyond the scope of this brief discussion: the fact of man’s mortality — a constant peril in an inconstant world — is a perception absolutely fundamental to the perspective of life presented by the Buddha’s Teaching.

And in Catch-22 the protagonist, Yossarian (a bombardier in World War II), is no less deeply concerned about old age, sickness, and death. The spectre of their imminence is his constant dread. As his friend Dunbar puts it,

“Do you know how long a year takes when it’s going away? This long.” He snapped his fingers. “A second ago you were stepping into college with your lungs full of fresh air. Today you’re an old man.”

“Old?” asked Clevinger with surprise. “What are you talking about?”

…”You’re inches away from death every time you go on a mission. How much older can you be at your age?” — pp. 38-9

As for sickness:

Yossarian had so many ailments to be afraid of that he was sometimes tempted to turn himself in to the hospital for good and spend the rest of his life stretched out there inside an oxygen tent with a battery of specialists and nurses seated at one side of his bed twenty-four hours a day waiting for something to go wrong…. Aneurisms, for instance; how else could they ever defend him in time against an aneurism of the aorta? …He wondered often how he would ever recognise the first chill, flush, twinge, ache, belch, sneeze, stain, lethargy, vocal slip, lose of balance or lapse of memory that would signal the inevitable beginning of the inevitable end. — pp. 171-2

But even more than old age and sickness, it is the spectre of death itself that haunts both Yossarian and the novel: “At night when he was trying to sleep, Yossarian would call the roll of all the men, women and children he had ever known who were now dead. He tried to remember all the soldiers, and he resurrected images of all the elderly people he had known when a child…” — p. 339. Yossarian is enmeshed in a killing war which is (as the novel’s disclaimer makes clear) representative of a larger framework,[2] a war to which “there was no end in sight. The only end in sight was Yossarian’s own” — p. 16. Nevertheless, Yossarian “had decided to live forever or die in the attempt, and his only mission each time he went up was to come down alive” — p. 29. Yossarian feels death hovering about him — indeed, even living with him, in the form of a dead man named Mudd, who was not easy to live with.

However, old age, sickness, and death are not apprehended merely as things, as objects in a world of objects, in themselves neutral. The fact of death changes Yossarian’s world, as it does ours, radically, and Heller’s insistence upon this point is the beginning of the novel’s profundity.

In a world in which death is an unavoidable presence, “it made sense to cry out in pain every night” — p. 54. Indeed, the disorder that the awareness of death introduces into a world which, throughout our lives, we are forever trying to order, leaves us with neither simple order nor simple disorder, but rather with “a world boiling in chaos in which everything was in proper orders” — p. 143. Death, the great modifier, alters everything, so that for Yossarian “nothing warped seemed any more in his strange, distorted surroundings” — p. 402.

It is this strange distortion that is the keystone of the novel’s humour — not merely that of its many throwaway jokes but also of the tragicomic perception which circles round and round the death of Snowden (“Where are the Snowdens of yesteryear?” — p. 35: what a poignant joker), drawing ever closer, while at the same time mockingly inverting that trivial sensibility which ordinary men use to deny the disorder of death: “the Texan turned out to be good-natured, generous and likable. In three days no one could stand him” — p. 9; “Nately had a bad start. He came from a good family” — p. 12; “Yossarian couldn’t be happy, even though the Texan didn’t want him to be” — p. 16; “strangers he didn’t know shot at him with cannons every time he flew up into the air to drop bombs on them, and it wasn’t funny at all. And if that wasn’t funny, there were lots of things that weren’t even funnier” — p. 17. But it is not merely the one-liners that are inversions of everyday logic: that everyday sensibility is twisted into various shapes, so that each character is seen to exist in his own uniquely topsy-turvy world, a world whose shape hovers somewhere between a wry smile and a teardrop.

And of all the characters who live in their separate worlds of twisted logic (and the names, often as twisted as the logic, seem nearly endless: Hungry Joe, Chief White Half-oat, Doc Daneeka, Major — de Coverly, Milo Minderbinder, Major Major Major Major…) perhaps the most logically insane character of all is the soldier in white, who “was encased from head to toe in plaster and gauze. He had two useless legs and two useless arms” — p. 9.

Sewn into the bandages over the insides of both elbows were zippered lips through which he was fed clear fluid from a clear jar. A silent zinc pipe rose from the cement on his groin and was coupled to a slim rubber hose that carried waste from his kidneys and dripped it efficiently into a clear, stoppered jar on the floor. When the jar on the floor was full, the jar feeding his elbow was empty and the two were simply switched quickly so that the stuff could drip back into him. — p. 10

Changing the jars was no trouble to anyone but the men who watched them changed every hour or so and were baffled by the procedure.

“Why can’t they hook the two jars up to each other and eliminate the middleman?” — p. 168

The other patients in the ward… shrank from him with a tenderhearted aversion from the moment they set eyes on him…. They gathered in the farthest recess of the ward and gossiped about him in malicious, offended undertones, rebelling against his presence as a ghastly imposition and resenting him malevolently for the nauseating truth of which he was a bright reminder. — p. 166

Although Yossarian too is mystified by the soldier in white, yet he “would recognize him anywhere. He wondered who he was” — p. 358. And if we need an image of samsāra we would have to look far to find a better one, or one more universal. The message of the soldier in white (who keeps turning up again)[3] is as universal as that of the letters in black (p. 8) — the letters which Yossarian, as bored censoring officer, blacks out completely or nearly so (and endorses them “Washington Irving” or, sometimes, “Irving Washington,” thus unwittingly endangering the chaplain’s life), “thereby leaving a message far more universal.”

This tragicomic perception of man’s condition (in which lots of things aren’t even funnier) leads naturally to the question of the purpose of such a life, or of any life at all. (On the soldier in white: “It wasn’t much of a life, but it was all the life he had….”) Dr. Stubbs, in conversation with Dunbar, raises this point but fails to answer it:

“I used to get a big kick out of saving people’s lives. Now I wonder what the hell’s the point, since they all have to die anyway.”

…”The point is to keep them from dying for as long as you can.”

“Yeah, but what’s the point, since they all have to die anyway?”

“The trick is not to think about that.”

“Never mind the trick. What the hell’s the point?”

Dunbar pondered in silence for a few moments. “Who the hell knows?” — p. 108

But if the point of life is not known, and if life is nevertheless perceived as both tragic and comic, then from another perspective it could as well be seen as both sane and insane: and this leads naturally to the novel’s comic inversion of the notions of sanity and insanity, an inversion which is an underpinning of the book’s logic (or, as some would have it, illogic). Continuing their conversation, Dr. Stubbs and Dunbar discuss Yossarian and the dreaded approach of a particularly dangerous mission:

“That crazy bastard.”

“He’s not so crazy,” Dunbar said. “He swears he’s not going to fly to Bologna.”

“That’s just what I mean,” Dr. Stubbs answered. “That crazy bastard may be the only sane one left.” — p. 109

Indeed, in a world in which “men went mad and were rewarded with medals” — p. 16 — who is sane, save he who would escape from that world? This is Yossarian’s dilemma, the “vile, excruciating dilemma of duty and damnation” (p. 136): he doesn’t want to be in the war. He doesn’t want to die. “He thirsted for life” — p. 331. For Yossarian the enemy is not the Germans, or at least not only the Germans. “‘The enemy,’ retorted Yossarian with weighted precision, ‘is anybody who’s going to get you killed….'” And because of this “morbid aversion to dying” — p. 297 — men shrink from him and regard him as crazy. Clevinger is such a one. “You’re crazy!” Clevinger shrieks at Yossarian on p. 16; but later (p. 75) we are told that the patriotic and idealistic Clevinger was a dope “who would rather be a corpse than bury one”; and finally (p. 103): “Clevinger was dead. That was the basic flaw in his philosophy.” And yet, by the very fact of being part of such a world one cannot be completely sane; and to be not completely sane is to be not sane at all. But if one tries to escape is that not then evidence of a spark of sanity? Perhaps so; but the problem is that when we try to escape we discover that we can’t: every effort to free oneself from (in Buddhist terms) involvement with craving, aversion, and delusion or (in the novel’s terms) the war — every effort apparently brings one back to the same dilemma, and results only in making the problem more urgent (and perhaps also more evident), as will be recognized by anyone who has ever tried to extirpate the root of craving, and failed. Is it not madness, then, to try to escape?

And yet, if to do nothing is regarded as less insane, still that too does not lead to disengagement from a mad world. This is the very crux of Yossarian’s dilemma, and ours as well: a dilemma illuminated in experience by the effort to practice the Buddha’s Teaching and in fiction by Yossarian’s effort to escape from the war. Heller puts it this way:

“Can’t you ground someone who’s crazy?” [Yossarian asks the flight surgeon, Doc Daneeka.]

“Oh, sure. I have to. There’s a rule saying I have to ground anyone who’s crazy. “

“Then why don’t you ground me? I’m crazy…. Ask any of the others. They’ll tell you how crazy I am.”

“They’re crazy.”

“Then why don’t you ground them?”

“Why don’t they ask me to ground them?”

“Because they’re crazy, that’s why.”

“Of course they’re crazy,” Doc Daneeka replied. “I just told you they’re crazy, didn’t I? And you can’t let crazy people decide whether you’re crazy or not, can you?”

Yossarian looked at him soberly and tried another approach. “Is Orr crazy?”

“He sure is,” Doc Daneeka said…. “I can ground Orr. But first he has to ask me to.”

“That’s all he has to do to be grounded?”

“That’s all. Let him ask me.”

“And then you can ground him?” Yossarian asked.

“No. Then I can’t ground him.”

“You mean there’s a catch?”

“Sure there’s a catch,” Doc Daneeka replied. “Catch-22. Anyone who wants to get out of combat duty isn’t really crazy.” — p. 45

Thus Yossarian’s efforts to establish a rational basis for being grounded must fail. Logic is an inadequate tool to deal with the human situation, for whenever we apply logic there is always a catch. This is not to suggest that logic is not necessary, but rather that it is not adequate. In this computer age we could hardly manage without logic. Let alone computers, without logic we could make neither mathematics nor music nor marmalade. But whenever we try to deal with the fundamentals of existence, with the forever unanswerable question, “Who am I?” (or any other question concerned with “me”), we find that logic neither answers that question nor shows us the way to stop asking it.[4] (“‘Why me?’ was his constant lament, and the question was a good one” — p. 34.)

And the reason for this, the Buddha informs us, is because of avijjā, or ignorance. But avijjā is not a mere absence of information; it is a refusal to see what is at all times there to be seen. It is not failure to see one particular thing among other particular things, but a radical refusal to see the way all particular things are, and in this respect it is as great a modifier as death — indeed, the two are (so the Buddha tells us) inseparable. The dependent arising formulation says, in summary, “With ignorance as condition, ageing and death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair come into being.”

The deluded person, in refusing to see the nature of all things, refuses also to see the nature of his refusal to see (which is also a thing). That is, he refuses to see delusion. Thus, by denying itself delusion sustains itself. This is stated in the Suttas (e.g. Sammāditthi Sutta, M. 9) as follows:

Friends, that which is non-knowledge of suffering, non-knowledge of the arising of suffering, non-knowledge of the ceasing of suffering, non-knowledge of the way leading to the ceasing of suffering, this, friends, is called ignorance.

For after all, what is “the way leading to the ceasing of suffering”? It is (the Suttas tell us) the noble eightfold path. And what is the first factor of this path? Right view. Ignorance, then, involves non-knowledge of right view. And right view is knowledge of the arising of suffering; that is to say, knowledge of ignorance. Right view is knowledge of right view, and also knowledge of wrong view, whereas wrong view is non-knowledge of wrong view, and also non-knowledge of right view. And this structure of ignorance is, in fact, Catch-22 at its most fundamental level:

There was only one catch and that was Catch-22, which specified that a concern for one’s own safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of a rational mind. Orr was crazy and could be grounded. All he had to do was ask; and as soon as he did, he would no longer be crazy and would have to fly more missions. Orr would be crazy to fly more missions and sane if he didn’t, but if he was sane he had to fly them. If he flew them he was crazy and didn’t have to; but if he didn’t want to he was sane and had to. Yossarian was moved very deeply by the absolute simplicity of this clause of Catch-22 and let out a respectful whistle.

“That’s some catch, that Catch-22,” he observed.

“It’s the best there is,” Doc Daneeka agreed. — p. 46

Thus, with absolute simplicity, we are condemned to madness. And if this is not convincing, Heller presses his point home by telling us (on the same page) that Catch-22 is like the flies that Orr sees in Appleby’s eyes.

“Oh, they’re there, all right,” Orr had assured [Yossarian]… “although he probably doesn’t even know it. That’s why he can’t see things as they really are.”

“How come he doesn’t know it?” inquired Yossarian.

“Because he’s got flies in his eyes,” Orr with exaggerated patience. “How can he see he’s got flies in his eyes if he’s got flies in his eyes?”

It made as much sense as anything else….

Yathābhūtam na pajānāti: he does not see things as they really are: the phrase — so typical a Sutta description of the puthujjana, the unenlightened commoner — is used here by Heller to illuminate precisely the characteristic of being entrapped in a situation. Not only does the puthujjana have flies in his eyes, he does not see that he has them, and he does not see this because he has them. His dilemma is that though he must find a way to see, yet he cannot find that way precisely because he cannot see. Indeed, he cannot even see for himself that this is his problem. And this is the dilemma which, at its most fundamental level, is the specific concern of the Buddha’s Teaching. The structure of avijjā, the structure of Catch-22, the structure of “having flies in one’s eyes”: they are one and the same. Catch-22 is avijjā. The title character in both the novel and in our lives never appears and yet is omnipresent.

All of this does not oblige us to conclude that Heller is enlightened, or that he is even a Buddhist. Describing something and seeing it directly are two different things; and even in direct perception there are different levels of profundity. “At the field a heavy silence prevailed, overpowering motion like a ruthless, insensate spell holding in thrall the only beings who might break it. The chaplain was in awe” — p. 371. This, it is clear enough, is of the same nature as having flies in one’s eyes; and yet it is also clear enough that this sort of spell is of a much less fundamental grade. Not only can we on the outside see it, it is conceivable that the men at the field could be aware of the spell at the same time they were (for the time being) powerless to break it. Appleby, on the other hand, must be entirely unaware of the flies in his eyes.

On an even less fundamental level is the situation of the men while they await the dreaded mission to Bologna. The mission cannot be flown until the rain stops and the landing strips dry out. But the rain-forced delay in the mission only gives the men more time to be more terrified. “Their only hope was that it would never stop raining, and they had no hope because they all knew it would…. The more it rained, the worse they suffered. The worse they suffered, the more they prayed that it would continue raining” — p. 117. Again we have a situation of entrapment, but on a crude and manifest level of experience.

But though we would describe these various levels of Catch-22 as being only rough approximations to the subtle and pervasive deception of avijjā, as expounded by the Buddha, we must also recognize Heller’s achievement in seeing the central significance of this self-replicative structure in human existence and (though he doesn’t know what to do about it) in describing it in a form which has struck a deeply responsive chord in so many. Although he may lack the wisdom to resolve the dilemma he describes, yet he has sufficient wisdom to not let go of that perception; nor should we, for by being manifest such occurrences can serve both to remind us of the subtle central dilemma which is the template upon which those coarser experiences depend and also to provide us with a model which, applied with proper attention, can indicate what action, or what sort of action, can bring that central dilemma to an end.

In the end, perhaps due to the exigencies of the novel’s form, Heller does suggest a solution to Yossarian’s dilemma. Whether this solution works artistically is not of concern to us here. Rather, we need to understand why this suggestion of a solution is incompatible with the Buddha’s Teaching.

The Buddha’s Teaching is concerned with letting go of what can be surrendered within the sphere of the unenlightened (namely, sensuality, hatred, lethargy, agitation, and doubt — the five hindrances) in order to allow for the possibility of seeing what might be let go of beyond that sphere. This further perception can be indicated by one who has already seen for himself, and must be initially accepted by the practitioner as an act of faith, until he too comes to see it. At that point it is possible for there to be a further letting go, a giving up of what can be surrendered only outside the sphere of the unenlightened, namely, all beliefs concerned with selfhood (sakkāyaditthi, attavāda) and, eventually, the conceit “I am” (asmimāna). Thus the Buddha’s Teaching is a course of practice concerned fundamentally with renunciation. Without giving up the world to the limits of one’s ability to do so one will never be able to extend those limits: one will instead remain entrapped within the world.

Heller considers this approach, but rejects it. Yossarian certainly sees the problem: he is “unable to adjust to the idea of war” — p. 297 — and repeatedly flees the oppressiveness of the world by running to “the cloistered shelter of a hospital” — p. 177 — with a supposititious liver ailment. That this flight is meant to be seen as (at least in a sense) religious is borne out by a doctor who tells Yossarian that the family of a just-deceased soldier have

“travelled all the way from New York to see a dying soldier, and you’re the handiest one we’ve got.”

“What are you talking about?” Yossarian asked suspiciously. “I’m not dying.”

“Of course you’re dying. We’re all dying. Where the devil else do you think you’re heading?”

“They didn’t come to see me,” Yossarian objected. “They came to see their son. “

“They’ll have to take what they can get. As far as we’re concerned, one dying boy is just as good as any other, or just as bad. To a scientist, all dying boys are equal….” — p. 181

Thus the doctors, the staff of that cloistered shelter, perform the essentially religious function of reminding Yossarian (“how could he have forgotten”) of his mortality; and they also insist that he observe the celibacy normally associated with monastic institutions:

“How do you expect anyone to believe you have a liver condition if you keep squeezing the nurses’ tits every time you get a chance? You’re going to have to give up sex if you want to convince people you’ve got an ailing liver.”

“That’s a hell of a price to pay just to keep alive….” — p. 181

Precisely: giving up sensuality (to say nothing of hatred, lethargy, agitation, and doubt) is a price Yossarian is not prepared to pay. He wants the sybaritic salvation sought also by Hungry Joe, to whom women were “lovely, satisfying, maddening manifestations of the miraculous, instruments of pleasure” — p. 52 — and he dreams of being interred for the duration of the war (i.e. for all eternity) in Sweden, an earthly (and earthy) paradise where he could keep himself busy siring dozens of illegitimate little Yossarians. Yossarian wants the world’s pleasures without having to endure the world’s drawbacks, and he fails to see the essence of the world’s dangers. (Hungry Joe is more consistent than Yossarian on this point, for he goes to pieces each time he finishes flying the number of missions Headquarters requires, and recovers only when Headquarters raises the number of missions required, as it inevitably does, throwing him back on combat status. )

If any character in Catch-22 comes close to accepting the Buddha’s advice it would be Dunbar, who tries to increase his lifespan by cultivating boredom, on the grounds that when you’re bored time passes slower. His idea seems to be that if only he could achieve a state of total and absolute boredom he would be, for all intents, eternal. This sounds like a rough literary approximation to meditation (although we must remember that the Buddha, unlike many Eastern teachers, quite explicitly stated that meditation by itself is an insufficient condition for enlightenment).

Dunbar, given to cultivating boredom, to seeking eternity, lies motionless in bed: he goes so far in his efforts that at one point Yossarian, looking at him, wonders whether he is still alive. This will remind us of the story of the Ven. Sañjīva who, we are told (M. 50: i,333), was seated immersed in the highest meditative attainment when some cowherds, shepherds, and ploughmen, passing by, saw him and thought, as did Yossarian of Dunbar, that he was dead. They collected grass, wood, and cowdung, heaped it up about the Ven. Sañjīva, set his pyre alight, and went on their way. The next morning Ven. Sañjīva emerged from his meditative attainment and went wandering for almsfood. His would-be cremators were astonished at seeing him alive and gave him the name by which he became known, Sañjīva, which means “with life.” Dunbar seems to have lacked the Ven. Sañjīva’s meditative abilities, but each sought to escape death (Ven. Sañjīva, the Sutta tells us, successfully), and each came thereby to be taken as dead.

It is common, of course, for beginning meditators to be assailed by boredom (as well as the other four hindrances); however, this does not justify equating boredom and meditation: on the contrary, boredom is an enemy of meditation. Despite the story of Ven. Sañjīva, then, we must regard any effort to equate meditation with the cultivation of boredom as tenuous, and as being further weakened by the episode in which Dunbar becomes a fortiori. However, we must also note that it is immediately after Dunbar becomes convinced, upon re-encountering the soldier in white, that (p. 358) “There’s no one inside! …He’s hollow inside, like a chocolate soldier” — thereby perhaps suggesting something of the Buddha’s teaching of anattā, of not-self — that Dunbar is disappeared. We never learn the meaning of this cryptic event (“It doesn’t make sense. It isn’t even good grammar” — p. 359), but if the parallel with meditation is accepted then the further parallel that would be suggested here is with nibbāna, extinction. After being disappeared Dunbar is described (p. 360) as being “nowhere to be found”, which is exactly how the Suttas describe beings who have attained full enlightenment (arahattā).[5]

Perhaps a literary parallel of an achievement that transcends literature (let alone literature, nibbāna transcends bhava, being) could not be more closely described; but in any case we cannot allow that the parallel is more than a suggestion, and (no doubt inevitably) an inaccurate one at that. And in any case to be disappeared sounds, from Heller’s description of it, far less desirable than extinction, from the Buddha’s description of that. (Still, it would be interesting to know how much acquaintance Heller actually had, if any, with any school of Buddhism during the seven years in which he was writing Catch-22.[6])

And if any character tries, however ineffectually, to understand the real nature of his situation, it is not Yossarian but the chaplain. The chaplain (he was named Shipman in the hard-cover edition, but for some reason the name was changed in the paperback edition to Tappman — not his only identity crisis), who has an open mind, is continually

wondering what everything was all about. …There was no way of really knowing anything, he knew, not even that there was no way of really knowing anything. Was there a single true faith, or a life after death? …These were the great, complex questions of ontology that tormented him. Yet they never seemed nearly as crucial to him as the question of kindness and good manners. He was pinched perspiringly in the epistemological dilemma of the skeptic, unable to accept solutions to problems he was unwilling to dismiss as unsolvable. He was never without misery and never without hope. — pp. 262-3

In the chaplain’s tale the human dilemma is presented from a different point of view: it is not a question of sanity or insanity but, in Kafkaesque terms, one of guilt or innocence. Because it is the nature of beings that they are continually trying to establish an existence that continually eludes them[7] their existence is perpetually in doubt, and they exist, if at all, in a state of guilt. This, it would seem, is the basic perception of Kafka’s Trial: Joseph K. arrests himself by recognizing that his existence, being unjustifiable, is essentially guilty. And the chaplain (for whom the question “Who am I?” becomes acute when he is formally charged with “being Washington Irving” — p. 378) is also in this situation:

“You’ve got nothing to be afraid of if you’re not guilty. What are you so afraid of? You’re not guilty, are you?”

“Sure he’s guilty,” said the colonel. “Guilty as hell.”

“Guilty of what?” implored the chaplain, feeling more and more bewildered. …”What did I do?” — p. 373

And later the chaplain’s identity crisis and dilemma of existential guilt is expressed in the same terms that were used earlier to describe Catch-22:

“I offered it to Sergeant Whitcomb because I didn’t want it.”

“Why’d you steal it from Colonel Cathcart if you didn’t want it?”

“I didn’t steal it from Colonel Cathcart!”

“Then why are you so guilty, if you didn’t steal it?”

“I’m not guilty!”

“Then why would we be questioning you if you weren’t guilty?” — p. 377

Thus each of us faces the question of our basic unjustifiability in a purposeless world. Some, of course, flee from these questions and deny them (by indulging in sensuality, hatred, lethargy, agitation, and doubt); but the questions return for so long as their root, the conceit “I am”, exists, and the verdict is inevitable: Guilty.

“Chaplain,” he continued, looking up, “we accuse you also of the commission of crimes and infractions we don’t even know about yet. Guilty or innocent?”

“I don’t know, sir. How can I say if you don’t tell me what they are?”

“How can we tell you if we don’t know?”

“Guilty,” decided the colonel.

“Sure he’s guilty,” agreed the major. “If they’re his crimes and infractions, he must have committed them.”

“Guilty it is, then,” chanted the officer without insignia…. — p. 379

And guilty it is for all of us, if the charge is the fundamental one of being possessors, or even of simply “being”: being what?

And thus Heller repeatedly and ingeniously offers us brilliant literary expressions of the dilemma of existence. The formulations are lucid and compelling, and they fully take account of the circular and self-sustaining nature of the dilemma. For this we can praise Catch-22, and perhaps find it of use as a tool in keeping to the forefront of our awareness the nature of our problem. But it would be asking too much to expect the novel to offer the means of resolving that dilemma. For that we must turn to the Buddha’s Teaching.


Footnotes:


1. E.g.: As the herdsman drives his kine with a stick to pasture-land,
thus decay and health’s decline
drive out the life of man.   — Dh. 135

2. Perhaps it would be going too far to discover in this larger framework a reference to the Buddha’s recognition of samsāra, the round of deaths and rebirths; but it cannot be excessive to relate the facts of birth and death to the minute and Learical apocalypse achieved in the vision of Snowden’s death: “Man was matter, that was Snowden’s secret. …Ripeness was all.” — pp. 429-30

3. The circular nature of samsāra finds its parallel in Catch-22 — if circles can have parallels — not only in the re-appearance of the soldier in white, but also in the circling round the death of Snowden, going around twice over Ferrara, the soldier who saw everything twice, and many other recurrent events and phrases. Each time Yossarian gets close to having completed his missions Headquarters raises the number required: there is always another tour of duty. Like Rohitassa (see Samy. II,26 = Ang. IV,45), and like us, Yossarian cannot reach an end by going.

4. It is for this reason that the Buddha’s Teaching is said to be atakkāvacara, not in the sphere of reason or logic. (Catch-22 is not the only well-known book which asserts the insanity implicit in being in a situation. In Alice in Wonderland the Cheshire Cat tells Alice, “We’re all mad here. I’m mad. You’re mad. You must be or you wouldn’t have come.” Indeed, Catch-22 contains a number of very specific allusions to the Alice books.)

5. The phrase occurs frequently in the Suttas. See e.g. the concluding lines of the Vakkali Sutta (Samy. XXII,87). At Dh. 180 we find:

That tangle of snares by which he’d be penned isn’t found anywhere.
His range has no end, that Buddha awake.
What track can there be to trace one who’s trackless, craving-free?

6. This question was put to Mr. Heller. The reply was that he knew “not an inkling.” The range of the puthujjana, it seems, is more extensive than commonly supposed. [Back to text]

7. Thus the question “Who am I?”, whether or not it is answerable, is recognized at once to be vital and fundamental to the epistemological dilemma we each face; indeed, it is thus that there is the concept of such a dilemma at all. 

Sāmanera Bodhesako

Biography of Sister Vajirā (Hannelore Wolf)


by Hellmuth Hecker

14.10.1928 Hamburg – 7.12.1991 Maschen

In an upper class neighbourhood in Hamburg a wife lived in well to do conditions. She had two sons and no concerns. However, somehow she sought for a deeper meaning and came across Schopenhauer while reading. Then a wandering preacher of a Christian sect appeared in Hamburg who appealed to her religious feelings and she followed him. Soon she got a child from him: Hannelore Wolf. Although the sect worshipped the child as the God-sent heir to the master, he himself abandoned mother and child without giving any financial support. They had to live in St. Pauli in a damp cellar. The government child inspector, on the reason of neglect, gave the child to foster parents. Her foster father Bading was an employee at the department of finances in Hamburg. Hannelore grew up in this family together with two adopted sisters. After finishing school she followed a course in technical design. In the meantime, her physical father had turned to politics and had ended up in a mental home before the war. Her physical mother suffered a similar fate and died in the early 1950s.

Hannelore was looking for religious meanings. In early summer 1949 she noticed a poster that announced a four part introductory course to the teachings of the Buddha. It was held by Paul Debes. Thus she went to the university’s main lecture theatre where the talks were given on 23.6.1949. After the first talk she hesitated to go again, but nevertheless did so.

The talk was especially agreeable to her. I wrote to my friend Fritz Schäfer in Itzehoe on 25.6.1949: “It was great. It was dead silent in the hall and nobody left (same as during talk No. 1). The spiritual contact was remarkably close. Although nothing new was really said, I was completely taken.”

Hannelore was so much impressed that she listened to the next talks, came to the seminary group of Debes, and took part in his first “weeks of investigation” in an Adults’ Education College in the Lüneburger Heide area on 6-27.8.1949. I noticed her there. On her belt she wore a medallion with the inscription “In tempestate securitas.” She told me that the summary of the Buddha’s teaching was: “To increase good, decrease evil, avoid staying on.” The next year she only participated during 3 days of the 3 weeks study course of the second “weeks of investigation”. There she said that she wanted to become a nun in Ceylon. She remarked: “All of you like it too much around here.”

During both courses of “weeks of investigation” she had become friendly with Mrs. Erika v.d. Osten (PhD). … She suggested to Hannelore to become a private teacher for her son and daughter. Thus Hannelore moved to their place in Sept. 1950, and lived quite happily with the family. When Mrs. v.d. Osten’s husband returned from internment as a prisoner of war, the family moved back to Hannover. Hannelore returned to Hamburg and worked as a technical designer again. She also joined the circle of Debes-friends there.

She wrote to me in London on 12.4.1953, where I did some studies in order to prepare legislative on Army Service Refusal: “All of you are lovely and terribly worldly people. Always hanging out in the world without ever finding satisfaction.” After returning from London, I met her frequently at Dhamma talks. In autumn 1953 she founded, together with two female friends from the Debes group and me, a Dhamma discussion group … Hannelore played an influential role in the Buddhist circles and tried to deflate tensions.

In June 1954 the Sinhalese monk Ven. Nārada suddenly turned up in Hamburg. Hannelore took the opportunity trying to get a chance to go to Ceylon as a nun. Debes had tried in vain to find such an opportunity through sister Upalavanna. At the instigations of Ven. Nārada “Hamburg Buddha Mandala” was founded, out of which the Buddhist Society of Hamburg evolved on 9.10.1954. Ven. Nārada gave Pali names to many Buddhists and Hannelore, called Hanna, became Vajirā. The founding of the society and Hanna’s ambitions caused a lot of unrest. My brother in law, Wolfgang Seel, also a Buddhist and later working as a psychologist, who had good character knowledge, was of the opinion that it was much to early for Hanna to go to Ceylon and to isolate herself completely from her cultural background. It would not be good for her.

After much turmoil she finally got a chance to go to Ceylon. In 1955 the Vihāra Mahā Devi Hermitage at Biyagāma near Colombo was to be opened, where Buddhist nuns (dasa sila upāsikā = ten precept female followers) lived. Through the mediation of Ven. Nārada and Mrs. Salgado, the leader of a Buddhist women society supporting the Sangha, she could go there. After I had vouched for any possible costs of a return journey, she got her visa and departed on 1.4.1955. from Genoa by the ship called “Asia”. I brought her on board and she said: “Now I go away to meet the real life, and you return, hopefully in order to get fed up with the world.”

On board she got to know the astronomer Dr. Winfried Petri, who later converted to Buddhism. He was on his way to Ceylon to watch a solar eclipse. Together with him she visited Ven. Nyānatiloka and Ven. Nyānaponika in Kandy as well as the Island Hermitage of Polgasduwa, about which she wrote:

“After I had seen this island, I can only say: If someone does not become a saint here, he will never become one, because he is not internally capable of doing so, as the external conditions are perfect. … On the whole island there are only 3 monks and an upāsaka. Solitude is difficult to bear.”

After she had moved from the house of Mrs. Salgado to Biyagāma on 6.5.1955 where at that time ten young Singhalese women lived as nuns, she also took on the 10 rules and was ordained as Sister Vajirā by Ven. Nārada on the full moon of July. About her life she wrote: “By the way, I live here as if in a fairy-tale. In my whole life I have not had it so good and beautiful as here… I can’t describe the peace entering my heart when I see a sunset, which is different every day… I am surprised how gentle I have become, in any case, with regards to judging others.” (1955)

To provide her with even greater quiet, generous supporters built a nice bungalow for her in the palm-tree forest of the monastery garden. However, before long her moods changed. She suffered internal lack and noticed that she could not possibly meditate all day long. At the turn of 1955/56 she wrote, that she had reached the end of her wits. She felt relief when the cars of her donors came up the driveway to the monastery and would bring some diversification. Finally, she became even physically ill.

The abbess, Sister Sudhammā, was also a [school] teacher in Colombo. Sister Vajirā found it non-ascetic when a nun was earning money and wrote a critical memorandum in English with her views about the defects of the nun’s life. She sent me the text and requested me to make cyclostyle copies of it so that she could distribute it. When I declined, she turned to Mrs. v. d. Osten, who made the copies of the text. After the polemic pamphlet had been sent out, Vajirā made herself many enemies. They took offence that the stranger, who was living on the alms food of the country, knew everything better. The nuns, for example, switched off the power supply to her kuti and turned a cold shoulder on her. When I got to hear about it, I approached Ven. Nyānaponika for help, who made an extra effort and went to her and mediated with a lot of difficulties, so that at least she could remain at Biyagāma, now only tolerated with Buddhist equanimity.

Taking on scholastic work offered itself as a way out of her frustration. Having learned English quickly, she then started with intensive Pali studies and soon started to translate texts and carried on a correspondence about Dhamma topics. On her request, I sent her a type writer.

She once visited Sister Upalavanna, but the two women from Hamburg did not get along with each other. Dr Petri, still a Catholic at the time, wrote to me in his report about his journey to Ceylon, having expressed his reverence for Ven. Nyānatiloka and Ven. Nyānaponika:

“With the German postulant Vajirā I could not escape the impression of a rigid and completely unfeminine ambition… It seems that she envisions the founding of a Buddhist nunnery for Europeans following the example of Nyānatiloka, of which she was to become the first abbess. … She categorically refused to participate in any communal religious activities-not even making exceptions for the sake of doing others a favour.”

One of the dāyakas of the monastery who also donated for her benefit and whom she respected a lot, was Dr. Ananda Nimalasuriya from Colombo. He owned land east of Galle, at Heenatigala near Talpe, in the dry zone, which offered healthier conditions than the coastal zone near Colombo. He got a nice bungalow, a small hermitage, built there, to which she moved in 1959. Young Sinhalese women venerated her very much there, and one lived temporarily with her as a disciple.

In September 1961 I had sent her the first edition of my Ethik des Buddha. She replied that especially the description of renunciation was not convincing enough, which was true. She also wrote that she was learning the Dhammapada by heart in Pali and had started with an English translation with the text newly arranged. She also had visited Ven. Nyanāloka on Polgasduwa, and complained about the oppressive climate. Wolfgang Seel had written to her in September 1961 and had criticised her a lot. She did not reply. In any case, correspondence with German Buddhists, I included, faded away in 1961. Only with Mrs. v.d. Osten she continued corresponding.

Around autumn of 1961 the English monk Ven. Ñānavīra Thera, who lived 40 km from her in a kuti in the jungle as a hermit, had sent both to me and to her, a text he had written, A Note on Paticca Samuppāda, wherein he criticized the extension over three-lives interpretation. Vajirā had briefly met him and his friend Ven. Nyānamoli at the Vajirārāma monastery in Colombo in 1955. About that she wrote this to Germany at the time:

“I was told that he tried to live in solitude in the mountains, because he is a great friend of meditation; however he had to return because he did not get enough to live on.”

In 1956 Ven. Ñānavīra had written an article called A Proof of Rebirth in the Buddha Jayanthi magazine, which was published in Colombo to commemorate the 2500th anniversary of Buddhism. Vajirā liked it so much that she translated it into German and sent it to Max Ladner in November 1956. He agreed to publish it in the magazine Einsicht. However, Ven. Ñānavīra did not agree with the translation and publication which in the end didn’t take place.

On 12.11.1961 she thanked Ven. Ñānavīra for sending the Note, “which could have been written for me,” [original quote in English] for a letter of 9.11.1961 and notified him that she would like to meet him on Polgasduwa, where he was staying for a few days, to talk about his text. On 18.11.1961 she arranged that her supporters bring her there by car early in the morning. A conversation which lasted for several hours took place on the island. Thereupon an intensive exchange of letters followed. She wrote sixteen more long letters, the last one on 25.1.1962. His letters she burned, for which she apologised: “That I burnt your letters and notes was the most dangerous act that I ever committed.” (Clearing the Path, p. 530.) [quote in English]

Years later Ven. Ñānavīra, who had sent her letters to a friend, wrote about her:
“Sister Vajirā is an extremely passionate and self-willed person, with strong emotions, and apparently, something of a visionary … she alternates between modes-one could almost say attacks-of emotional periods and of admirable clear-headedness … emotion for her is quite normal, as it is for nearly all women.” (op.cit. p. 386, letter of 24.8.1964) [this quote and the following letters are left in English in Dr. Hecker’s book]

To her last letter, of 25.1.1962, in which she assumed that he controlled the wind-element through breathing exercises, he answered dismissingly on 29.1.1962, saying that the wind-element rather controlled him for the last ten years and disturbed his digestion, so that he could not exercise mindful breathing in and out. This letter was left lying in her kuti for years, until it was discovered after his death.

In the meantime the following had happened. On 5.2.1962 Mrs. Salgado had written to Ven. Ñānavīra: “I have to tell you something very sad. Sister Vajirā has gone out of her head. Please do not answer any of her letters on the Dhamma. Some girls have stayed with her for the last few days and came and told Mrs. Nimalasuriya that she is very bad.”

Upon his letter of 7.2. Mrs. Salgado wrote on 12.2.:

“We went on the 6th and brought sister to Colombo. She ran away in the night from Mrs. Nimalasuriya’s house and was walking along the streets, several followed her and with great difficulty put her into a car. Dr. Nimalasuriya, Dr. Shelton Fernando and their wives along with me forced her into a car and took her to Sulamin Hospital at 2 a.m. … Now she is much better after the treatment; there also, twice she has jumped through the window and roamed about, but the nurse and attendants managed to bring her back. Now Sister Vajirā says that she wants to get into a saree and at times says that she wants to go back to Germany. We are now wondering what to do with her. By this same post I am writing to Rev. Nyānaponika also.”

On 24.2. the Sinhalese Siridhamma wrote to Ven. Ñānavīra, that they had sent rs. 200-300 worth of clothes for Vajirā:

“Although she was speaking of marriage at one stage, prior to her departure, she had said that she would go back to her foster parents and lead a quiet life (single).”

On 26.2. Mrs. Salgado wrote to Ven. Ñānavīra:

“Just a line to inform you that Sister Vajirā left for home on the 22nd. She had recovered but not perfectly normal. She was well enough to go by herself, without anyone else to look after her. The Embassy made arrangements for her trip … she gave up her nun’s life and became a lay woman. She said that she does not want to be a nun again…”

At around the same time, I got three letters from Ceylon: One from Ven. Nyānaponika in Kandy; one from Ven. Nārada in Colombo; and one from the German embassy there. In this way I was informed about the above developments. The embassy wrote that Ms. Wolf had to be repatriated due to her health situation. Her situation had stabilized to relatively normal, but a ship journey could not be taken into consideration, so that I had to transfer the vouched travel costs for the airplane to the attaché at the embassy. They put her on an airplane and telegraphed me the time of arrival at Hamburg-Fuhlsbüttel. On the morning of 24.2.1962 she arrived. I waited for her in the arrival hall and brought her to the car of Paul Debes, who had also brought his daughter Monika along. The four of us drove to Hannover. The drive over the Elbe bridges was full of obstructions because there was work going on everywhere to repair the damage caused by the flood disaster of 17.2.. About her inner flood she only spoke hesitatingly. She had fallen in love with Ven. Ñānavīra and had had the feeling that he had come through the air (wind-element) to her in her kuti. On Sunday 5.3. I went to Hannover where she was staying with Erika v.d. Osten. There she spoke about some more things, part of them she told me directly; part of them I heard through Mrs. v.d. Osten.

On 7.4. she moved from Hannover to Hamburg-Fuhlsbüttel, where a Buddhist nature path practitioner, Else Münster, was living in a suburban house together with her brother. They provided Hanna with a spacious loft room, where she was taken care of. I visited her several times there. She told me that she dreamt of Ñānavīra every night. Because I did not agree with the opinions about the Dhamma which she expressed, I wrote a dismissive letter to her beginning of June. Apparently that caused another crisis. She declared that Ven. Ñānavīra had disrobed, was in London already, and would become King of Ceylon and she the Queen. Yes, that he was already waiting for her in her old house at Heimhuderstrasse. Else Münster quickly decided to take a taxi and bring her there. There she changed her ideas.

While I was on holiday in the Tessin in June-July 1962 she wrote to me that had secretly left the Münster family without saying goodbye and had returned with her suitcase to her foster parents who put her up. That was the beginning of a return to normal. With a lot of effort the foster parents managed to convince her to take up her profession again. And thus she started to work for the textile machine factory Artos in Hamburg on 1.9.1962. Her foster mother died around that time.

End of 1963 I met her and we drove to Rohlfshagen because she wanted to visit Debes one more time, before he went off on his journey to meditate in Burma and Ceylon for more than a year. She had gotten addicted to smoking, had become fat and remarked that she regrettably was only a caricature of herself.

Since I did not hear from her for almost two years, I wanted to visit her in 1964 at her foster father’s. She was there, as she said later, but did not open the door. On 2.7.1965 I tried to visit again, met the foster father on the stairs and thus got in. She said that everything seemed to her so far away; she did no really recall whether we had addressed each other in an intimate and casual or in a distant and formal way [in German “du” or “Sie”, “you” or “you”]. The inner split could only be overcome very slowly; there were hard battles. She did not want to have anything to do with Buddhism, and she had thrown away all the issues of “Buddhistische Monatsblätter” [periodical of Buddhist Society Hamburg]. She did not want to visit Mrs. v.d. Osten, and in any case did not want to have anything to do with women. She maintained that she had not received a copy of Ven. Ñānavīra’s Notes on Dhamma which had been published in the meantime, but she still held him in high esteem. She smoked one cigarette after the other. What she would like to do was travelling and going out.

After he foster father had married a 26 year old woman, whom she did not get along with, she moved to a room in Maschen in 1968, closer to the company she worked for. In 1971 she got a little apartment there and in 1978 her company moved to Maschen, too. Her job was the best therapy for her. She had to get focussed, had to get along with her colleagues and was too tired at night to follow phantasies. Every year she went on a four weeks’ holiday in Bavaria. Once she even went to England. Until 1966 she only wore sarees. When her boss forbade her this, she sewed long dresses for herself, which resembled the Indian ones. Her sewing machine was the only “luxury” in her spartanically equipped apartment without television or telephone. She continued shaving her head and wore a wig. She dismissed requests from Buddhists to meet her. Debes visited her in Maschen one more time.

In 24.3.1986 Samanera Bodhesako had written to her from Ceylon to request permission to publish parts of her letters to Ven. Ñānavīra in the planned book Clearing the Path. She sent me this letter on 8.4. and asked me to inform the Samanero of her agreement, which I did on 11.4. and added that he could cite her as Sister Vajirā. On 20.3.1988 he wrote me that the book was done and sent out. Also that she, too, had received a copy. On 23.6. I answered him that I had read the book with great interest and asked him if he had received a confirmation from her. I did not get a reply to this letter, which also contained some questions and corrections. He had died suddenly in Nepal on 19.8.1988.

On 31.3.1984 Hanna lost her employment at the company for which she had been working for 22 years, because they were reducing personnel. As a compensation she got 32,000 DM [€16,361.35]. She had never had that much money at one time. She gave in to the temptation to drown the shock of being pensioned in alcohol. Then, however, her Buddhist insight did appeal again: should she wait until her money was used up and she would be forced to stop drinking by external causes? For the time being she reduced it. She radically stopped smoking in 1988.

On 14.2.1989 I went to Maschen and visited Hanna. Most important in the two and a half hours of conversation was her statement that she was still a Buddhist. She had not been in Hamburg since 1978, not even for the burial of her foster father who died in 1982, and who supported her financially until his end.

On the evening of 7.12.1991, she had breathing difficulties, opened the windows of her apartment a bit and sat down at her desk. There her heart failed and she was in another world. That’s how she was found two days later. She was buried in nearby Hittfeld.


Revised translation of:
© Hellmuth Hecker:
Lebensbilder Deutscher Buddhisten
Ein bio-bibliographisches Handbuch
Band II: Die Nachfolger
Konstanz, 1997
Section 119. pp. 374-386.
Translation © Path Press, 2008

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Larry King, a man well-known to children


The first alarm went off on June 10, 1985, when the Washington County, Nebraska, Sheriffs Department contacted a Nebraska Department of Social Services (DSS) social worker handling the case of Sean*, Sally* and Steve McArthur*. The children were living in foster care with Jarrett and Barbara Webb of Fort Calhoun.

The social worker wrote up the call:

The Sheriff’s department phoned today and stated they have the McArthur children in their custody and they had picked them up from the Webb home due to child abuse complaint. Sean had welts and scratches over parts of his back which he said the Webbs had beat him with a railroad iron and belt. They also had picked up the Webbs’ son Joey*, age 16. Joey also complained of being beaten by his parents. … Sean said the Webbs have been beating [them] for quite some time and this is not the first time this has happened to them. They were afraid to say anything the other times.…

Jarrett Webb worked for the Omaha Public Power District and was a board member of the Franklin Community Federal Credit Union, headed by Lawrence E. King, Jr. His wife, Barbara, is Larry King’s cousin.

Foster child Sean McArthur and adopted son Joey Patterson* Webb were removed from the Webbs’ custody that month. Other of their foster and adopted children—there were as many as nine in the house at one time—tried to make their break, sometimes alone, sometimes in pairs. In August, Joey’s sister Kimberly Patterson* Webb (age 14) and another brother, Michael*, ran away, but were returned to the Webbs. In November, Nelly Patterson* Webb, 16, fled to the home of her grandmother, Ruby Patterson*.

The Fremont office of DSS reported on the reasons, in a document dated December 18, 1985:

Our office and a Deputy interviewed Kimberly [who had obtained permission to visit Nelly at their grandmother’s] and Nelly separately and together. Both girls stated numerous times that they refuse to go back to the Webbs…. Both girls have stated they have received “whippings” and “beatings” from both Barbara and Jarrett at different times. These started in 1978, approximately eight months after they moved into the Webb home. The girls said they were hit with objects: an extension cord, a belt, a “black thing,” (rubber hose) and a “railroad prop” (a narrow piece of heavy black rubber approximately two feet long with several holes in each end). Before they were struck, they were made to remove their clothing. They were mainly struck on the back or on the behind, but occasionally on the head or face.

Social workers removed Nelly, whose full name was Cornelia M. Patterson* Webb, from the Webb home and placed her with foster parents Ron and Kathleen Sorenson in Blair, Nebraska. Soon after this move, she was interviewed at the Washington County Sheriff’s Office by State Patrol Investigator Jane F. Tooley. Tooley found out that the abuse was not limited to beatings.

Tooley wrote in her report, dated January 30, 1986:

She stated that she had been sexually abused…. Nelly stated that when she was approximately nine or ten years of age, that Jarrett Webb kissed her for a long time and that she pulled away because she couldn’t breathe and it was nasty. She stated that he was french kissing her and she stated that he was slobbering in her mouth…. Nelly stated again that when she was approximately nine or ten years old that on one occasion Jarrett Webb made her take a nap with him in his bed and she stated “he played with all my body parts”… he touched her vagina and that he put his finger inside her vagina…. Nelly stated that when she was 10 and 11 years old, at night time when everyone was in bed, Jarrett Webb called her into his room a couple of times. When she didn’t come into the room he then told her to come in or he would whip her…. She stated that Jarrett Webb pulled the sheet down and pulled her on top of him.… She stated that she could feel his hair against her leg and knew that he didn’t have any underwear on.

When Nelly was 15, she told Tooley, Jarrett Webb punished her by ordering her to undress and lie on the bed, and then beating her with a rubber strap. Next, he made her lie on her back, put her legs in the air, and “he pressed himself between her legs,” and “started ‘humping her’…. He started beating her again with the strap…. He then started sucking on her breasts…. Nelly stated that she started crying and that Webb left.”

When, in February of 1986, the Department of Social Services requested immediate and emergency removal of Kendra* and Michael Webb from the Webb home, it listed eight separate concerns, among them:

2) Repeated allegations of physical abuse told to our Department by six children during separate interviews: a) of being struck for long periods of time while naked, by various objects, including a belt, rubber hose, and the “railroad prop”; b) denial of meals in the home

3) Sexual abuse of Nelly by Jarrett (supported by a polygraph test given to Nelly 1-30-86)

4) The intense concern by the children out of the Webb home for the physical and emotional well-being of the children remaining in the home….

DSS memos show that the Webbs aggressively sought to terminate their status as adoptive parents of Nelly and Kimberly, starting immediately after Nelly’s flight in November 1985. Under DSS rules, this would cut short an investigation into the mistreatment of the girls.

Reversing an adoption was not a routine procedure. “Regarding a relinquishment [of adopted children], the Department does not accept one easily,” noted one DSS social worker in her log of the Patterson Webb case. The Webbs insisted on it. Social workers recorded that in January 1986, Barbara Webb “was crying and carrying on,” inquired about “allegations” the girls were making, and wanted “to get relinquishment over with.”

Negotiations on behalf of the Webbs were conducted by attorney Gary Randall, whose brother Casey Randall was in the orbit of Larry King’s Franklin Credit Union; Nelly and Kimberly referred to Casey as “Larry’s maid.” Gary Randall arranged the relinquishment with the help of the very official who would have handled a criminal prosecution of the Webbs for child abuse, had there been one at that time—Washington County prosecutor Patrick Tripp.

In June 1986, in the face of a pattern of gross abuse of children by the Webbs, the state suspended their foster care license. Prosecutor Patrick Tripp again came to the rescue, deciding not to file sexual abuse charges or any other charges against Jarrett or Barbara Webb.

Instead of investigating her reports about the Webbs’ involvement in pornography and child prostitution, Tripp called Nelly Webb a liar—lie detector tests notwithstanding.

Tripp’s attitude was recorded by Julie Walters, a youth care worker called on to interview Nelly and Kimberly Patterson Webb in March 1986, because they had described abuse of boys residing at Boys Town, the large orphanage west of Omaha, where Walters was employed. In Walters’ fifty-page report on the child abuse described to her by the girls, Tripp figures as an adversary of the children:

When presented with Jane Tooley’s investigation, Pat Tripp, the Washington County prosecutor, said he didn’t believe Nelly and wanted her to take a polygraph test. At his request, Nelly was given four polygraph tests administered by a state trooper at the State Patrol office on Center St. in Omaha. The state trooper, after Nelly’s testing was completed, told Kathleen Sorenson he tried to “break Nelly down” but he was convinced she was telling the truth. He also told Nelly that she “passed” and that he believed her. Although the polygraph tests showed Nelly was not deceptive, Atty. Pat Tripp maintained he still didn’t believe what Nelly said. He said Nelly had fantasized those stories to the point that she believed they were true.

Tripp’s line, that child victims in Nebraska just invent abuses, and that therefore their complaints need not be seriously investigated, would be heard from one law enforcement agency after another, throughout the Franklin case, down to the perjury conviction of victim-witness Alisha Owen.

For Pat Tripp, there was a personal element in this case. He was a “good friend,” according to foster parents cited in a September 1989 report by legislative Franklin committee investigator Karen Ormiston, of two individuals named by Nelly and Kimberly Webb as involved with the Webbs—Fort Calhoun Superintendent of Schools Deward Finch and Fort Calhoun High School principal Kent Miller.

Between late 1985 and June 1986, thanks to Tripp, the Webbs escaped both a DSS investigation and possible criminal prosecution. Shortly after his refusal to file criminal charges in this case, Tripp quit as Washington County attorney. Today he is a prominent lawyer in Omaha.

Well-known as they were, Deward Finch and Kent Miller were small fry compared to another name that appeared in Walters’ report, the same person for whom Nelly and Kimberly said Casey Randall was the “maid”—Larry King. Walters wrote:

While the Webbs were away, the kids snooped through the house. They found: 1. pornographic video tapes in a bag under the Webbs’ bed (which the kids played on the VCR while Webbs were gone)—one tape specifically showing teenagers involved in sexual activity. Nelly and Kimberly knew from eavesdropping that Larry King supplied the Webbs with the video tapes; 2. pornographic magazines in the basement. Once when Sean was suspected of snooping around in the magazines he was not allowed to eat anything at the Webbs’ house for one week; 3. box of a lot of “romantic” novels in Mrs. Webb’s closet (i.e., mothers having sex with their sons); 4. stacks of 8” x 10” (approx.) “photo” envelopes marked “DO NOT BEND” in Mrs. Webb’s closet…; 5. photos of naked white women in Webbs’ bedroom dresser drawer.

Walters’ report also conveys the Webbs’ pricey lifestyle and the involvement of more people, including Larry King, in their activities:

Although at the 3/7/86 hearing, Mr. Webb stated that he earns $32,000/year, the Webbs’ home is furnished quite expensively ($2,000 paintings, crystal, silver, several VCRs, TVs, etc.). Also, Mrs. Webb wears a four carat diamond ring, a full-length fur coat, all custom-made dresses, expensive accessories. When they throw a party it includes caterers and limousines….

Larry [King] attends meetings/parties at the Omaha Girls’ Club… about every other week. He sometimes invited Joey Webb or Nelly by calling the Webbs and telling them to have one of the kids ready in so many minutes. Nelly said they had no choice about attending these functions. She said she attended only once about 2 years ago (age 14) but Joey attended regularly from the time he was in seventh grade (approx. age 12-13) until he left the Webbs’ home (age 16). When Nelly attended she and Larry King went alone in his limo. Other times, Mrs. King and Mr. and Mrs. Webb also attended.

Nelly described these functions as lasting about 45 minutes. She said she attended one held on a Fri. evening about 7: 00 p.m. There were about ten to fifteen older men present and about twenty-five young teenage girls there. The girls all signed a brown notebook Larry King had. Nelly has appeared very frightened and teared up when asked about [document illegible]….

Larry King either called or sent invitations to Nelly, Kimberly and Joey to attend parties at his home which are held about every other week. This began about two years ago. Again, Nelly said the kids had no choice about whether or not they would attend. They were driven over to King’s with Mr. and Mrs. Webb….

Nelly and Kimberly said they talked with boys at those parties who said they were from Boys’ Town…. From [Boys’ Town] year book photos, after examining ’83, ’84 & ’85 yearbooks, Kimberly said [four boys] had all attended some of Larry’s parties during the summers of ’84 and ’85. Nelly was afraid to mention any names but earlier had mentioned a “Brent” (whose picture she didn’t find in the yearbooks), who told her he had left Boys’ Town in ’84. Brent was “flown to another city somewhere” in Larry’s private plane to “work for someone else” after he and Larry had a disagreement….

At the parties there are usually about thirty adults present, male & females, more white than black guests because according to Larry “blacks get ignorant when they drink and tighter with their money and whites spend more money when they’re drunk.” Also present were some prostitutes (ages unknown but not teenagers) and [illegible] ages 16-22, and Nelly and Kimberly—about twenty kids total. If a man was interested in a young lady he held out a folded $50 or $100 bill in front of them and whispered something in their ear. Then they went upstairs or to some other area of the house. Nelly and Kimberly said the prostitutes told them they gave half of the money they got to Larry King. Larry also gave some of the boys at these parties new cars. The sexual activity was not always behind closed doors or confined to the upstairs rooms, and sometimes involved more than two people. Couples engaged in sexual activity were same-sex as well as opposite sex…. The money Joey told Nelly and Kimberly he made “working for Larry” the Webbs took from him supposedly to keep for him….

The girls talked about Larry King’s power to command underage youth to do his bidding:

Larry claims to donate money to Boys’ Town and be on the Board of Directors at Girls Club. Nelly said Larry has gotten Boys’ Town boys and other boys to his home by asking them to do some yard work. If Larry asks the young man to do something and he refuses, Larry might hit him. Nelly said Larry “has a bad temper.” Larry also tells the young men they’ll get hurt.

Julie Walters’ write-up contains the most explosive account by the Patterson Webb girls, which marked the pornography and prostitution network they were caught up in as a scandal of national scope. What they told was so awful, that it screamed for immediate investigation. In the course of attempts by law enforcement personnel and, later on, news media to belittle the children’s testimony, however, this particular item from Nelly’s account would serve the opposite purpose: How can anything she says be believed, the line went, if she says this? The passage in Julie Walters’ handwritten report reads as follows:

Nelly also accompanied Mr. and Mrs. King and [their son] Prince on trips to Chicago, N.Y. and Washington, D.C., beginning when she was 15 years old. She missed twenty-two days of school almost totally due to these trips. Nelly was taken along on the pretense of being Prince’s babysitter. Last year she met V.P. George Bush and saw him again at one of the parties Larry gave while on a Washington, D.C. trip. At some of the parties there are just men (as was the case at the party George Bush attended)—older men and younger men in their early twenties. Nelly said she has seen sodomy committed at those parties. At other parties during Larry’s trips, Larry had local prostitutes (in their 20’s & 30’s) there to entertain his male guests….

At these parties, Nelly said every guest had a bodyguard and she saw some of the men wearing guns. All guests had to produce a card which was run through a machine to verify the guest was, in fact, who they said they were. And then each guest was frisked down before entering the party.

This was not the last time that the name of George Bush would surface in the Franklin affair.

After the Patterson Webb girls raised Larry King’s name, Julie Walters asked some discreet questions about King of Boys Town employees, and of some people in the north Omaha community. Walters summarized what she was told:

“If you mess with him, you’ll get your legs broken.”

“On the outside he has all the appearances of an upstanding citizen; but underneath he’s very dirty.”

“Omaha has a very large underworld and he’s a very powerful man nationally. Maybe he doesn’t have all the connections personally but he knows the people who do.… [King] used to be very active in Big Brothers and took more than an appropriate interest in the young men.”

Walters also recorded information on Fort Calhoun school officials Deward Finch and Kent Miller, whose “good friend” Washington Country prosecutor Pat Tripp was. Finch would later be named by two other victim-witnesses as an associate of Larry King.

Walters wrote:

Kimberly overheard Mrs. Webb tell someone on the phone, “I got him [Finch] all the way. I caught him several times down there with black girls.” Nelly saw Mr. Finch leave the Webb home once as she returned home from school and Kimberly saw him leave the Webb house several times during daytime hours. Kimberly’s first period class at school is a study hall which is located across the hall from the school’s office. She said Mr. Finch would regularly call the Webbs and say, “It’s time for another meeting.” Mr. Finch would interrupt whatever he was doing when the Webbs arrived to meet with them, meeting in the school office sometimes for several hours. At some meetings, Kent Miller, principal of Ft. Calhoun H.S., was also present. Mrs. Webb almost always carried a large Gucci bag (almost the size of a shopping bag) with her into these meetings. Kimberly said Mrs. Webb carried some photo envelopes (from Mrs. Webb’s closet) with her at least once into these meetings, telling Kimberly she was going to show Mr. Miller pictures from their trip.

The Walters report was turned over to law enforcement agencies by March 1986. The DSS logs were also accessible.

Law enforcement officials failed to pursue the many clues and leads provided in these eyewitness accounts by children living with the Webbs, which might have taken them into a cleanout of child prostitution, pornography, and interstate transportation of child prostitutes from Boys Town. While they stalled, the trail grew cold. County Prosecutor Patrick Tripp called Nelly Patterson Webb a liar after she passed four lie detector tests. Nobody was indicted. Jarrett and Barbara Webb went free. And Larry King was invited back to sing the Star Spangled Banner at the Republican National Convention in 1988, as he had done in 1984.

The Franklin Cover-Up

John DeCamp

"They Look Like People": the horror of male loneliness. An extraordinary film about fear, failure, and friendship


In Perry Blackshear’s extraordinary and criminally overlooked 2015 film They Look Like People, two young men desperately attempt to stave off despair and the terror of relentlessly-encroaching psychic obliteration.

They Look Like People could almost pass for “mumblecore,” considering its brevity (a mere 79 minutes), its emphasis on character-driven, often improvised dialogue, its miniscule budget, and its no-name cast. Yet unlike most mumblecore fare, where the operative aesthetic is the very absence of aesthetic, They Look Like People looks and feels deeply cinematic. It bathes the viewer in fear and dread, through the use of grotesque visuals, frightening sound effects, and ominous voiceovers, creating a sense of rising tension and growing apprehension.

Though They Look Like People came out well before the “male loneliness epidemic” became a cultural touchstone, the film is a startlingly apt harbinger of this social crisis. Its two protagonists, Wyatt (MacLeod Andrews) and Christian (Evan Dumouchel), both lead lives of quiet desperation, albeit in very different ways.

Christian was once engaged to a girl named Kat, who appears to have left him recently. He now lives alone in a tiny city apartment on a desultory, nondescript street and works a dreary, nondescript corporate job. In spite of, or perhaps because of these unfortunate circumstances, Christian has passionately embraced a “self-improvement” ethos, and is determinedly willing himself to be optimistic about his future. He works out at the gym, and regularly listens on headphones to audio segments in which a sensual female voice tells him:

“You are a mountain. You are a hundred miles high. You are invincible. You are forever. You are an ocean. Weapons, swords, and knives all flow through you like nothing. You encompass the entire world in your depth. You are a fire. All that your enemies place in your way— betrayal, lies, poison— you devour and become stronger. You are unstoppable, you are holy, you are terrible.

Christian is convinced that he has turned a corner, and become a new man, one who is unafraid to pursue what he wants, one who is truly “dominant.” Yet it is obvious that in many ways, he remains painfully insecure. His efforts to flirt with his attractive work supervisor Mara (Margaret Ying Drake) are often awkward and ineffectual, in spite of Mara’s obvious reciprocity of interest.

Wyatt, on the other hand, faces an even more challenging— one might even say, harrowing— set of circumstances. Like Christian, Wyatt has seen a long-term committed relationship come to a painful end. While it isn’t clear who left whom, Wyatt believes that his ex-girlfriend, Hannah, has transformed into a hideous demon.

In fact, Wyatt has lately come to the conviction that a broad swath of humanity are being taken over by evil beings bent on humanity’s destruction. Not only has he seen it happen, he is getting terrifying phone calls in the wee hours of the morning, in which voices are warning him that the situation has grown dire indeed:

“Trust no one. Trust was no longer an option, once we discovered them. They were at Jericho. They surrounded the temple of Solomon. They were at Golgotha. They were once few, now they are everywhere. Their disguises have begun to fail; this is how we know they must strike soon. Even before you were one of the blessed, who could sense them, you knew they were out there. Suddenly they were right next to you. That is not a soldier with a gun, that is evil. That is not your co-worker, that is a demon. That is not a human, not a neighbor, not a lover, a brother, a mother, a father, a wife. That is a monster. That is your enemy. And that is what you must be ready to destroy.”

(Note: though many reviewers have assumed that Wyatt suffers from schizophrenia, it is important to note that the film never conclusively weighs in on whether his disturbing visions are hallucinatory or real.)

The ominous voiceover heard by Wyatt parallels, both in tone and treble, the hypnotic self-affirmations that Christian hears. Both men are enraptured by the voices that fill their minds; both are obsessed with the “mission” that each has been given. Though Christian is attempting the achievement of domestic dreams (“dominating” at work, finding a wife, having children), Wyatt is preparing for the commencement of all-out apocalyptic mayhem, but both are locked into their own private worlds… until the two men unexpectedly run into one another.

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By coincidence, or perhaps providentially, Christian one day sees Wyatt walking down a street near Christian’s apartment, and rushes up to greet him warmly. The two, we soon discover, are pals from boyhood, though they have been out of touch for a while. Wyatt is uncomfortable at first— he has only come to the city to see if a doctor he knows could possibly help with his condition— but he eventually agrees to spend a few days with his old friend.

After Wyatt accompanies Christian on an awkward would-be double date gone wrong, the two manage to reform their old bond. One night they hang out together, drinking, goofing off, and reenacting silly, long-forgotten childhood games. We begin to perceive that these two men share a deeply-rooted bond.

These moments of humor and levity, strangely, don’t seem out of place or tonally jarring, even in a movie that’s mostly a slow descent into deepening disquietude and alienation; in fact, Christian and Wyatt’s willingness to trust one another in spite of everything they think they know to the contrary, is what ultimately redeems the film’s otherwise grim proceedings.

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Disaster eventually strikes for both protagonists. For Wyatt, of course, it has long been a foregone conclusion that the end is nigh; he has been preparing for such an eventuality for a while. Christian, however, is caught utterly by surprise when his professional life suddenly implodes, for mysterious reasons which are never made clear to him. Given that he has been optimistically projecting a ever-improving future for himself, Christian finds himself reeling on the ropes, like a prizefighter who has been sucker-punched.

Wyatt, meanwhile, is feverishly plotting how to respond to the start of open battle between the demon-parasite race and what remains of humanity. Over the last few days, he has witnessed numerous people, all of whom he thought he could trust, metamorphosing horrifically into monstrous entities. Now he fears the same thing happening to his boyhood friend, Christian, the one person in his life with whom he still feels a bond.

In the film’s final moments, the so recently demoralized Christian opts to put his faith in Wyatt, even though the latter seems increasingly unstable and his claims sound incredible. Wyatt, too, opts to have faith in Christian, even though everything he has experienced tells him to give up on his friend and consign him to oblivion.

It is a triumphant moment for both men, and a victory for humanity.

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They Look Like People is almost impossible to categorize, genre-wise. It is equal parts horror, sci-fi, and paranoid thriller, with a bit of dark comedy thrown in for good measure. Though its “body snatchers” storyline is intense and riveting, the film is most moving in its depiction of Wyatt and Christian’s friendship, which endures against seemingly impossible odds, and redeems a lost, broken, despair-soaked world.

Andy Nowicki is the author of several books, most recently The Insurrectionist, Muze, and The Rule of Wrath, and now the shocking memoir The Secret Life of an Alt-Right ‘Operative.’

https://substack.com/@andynowicki

The witness

 But there is within man also a tiny spectator who takes part neither in action nor in suffering, and who is always cold-blooded and the same. It is his service to see and be a witness, but he is without franchise in the life of man and it is not known why he exists in solitude. This corner of man’s consciousness is lit both day and night, like the doorman’s room in a large building. This heart doorman sits entire days at the entrance into man and knows all the inhabitants of his building, but not a single resident asks the doorman’s advice about his affairs. The residents come and go, while the spectator-doorman watches them with his eyes. His powerless knowledge of everything makes him sometimes seem sad, but he is always polite, distant, and he keeps an apartment in another building. In the event of fire the doorman telephones the firemen and watches further events from without.

While Dvanov walked and rode without memory, this spectator within him saw everything, but it never warned him and never helped him, not once. He lived parallel to Dvanov, but he wasn’t Dvanov.

He existed somewhat like a man’s dead brother; everything human seemed to be at hand, but something tiny and vital was lacking. Man never remembers him, but always trusts him, just as when a tenant leaves his house and his wife within, he is never jealous of her and the doorman.

This is the eunuch of man’s soul. It was to this that he was a witness.

Platonov
Chevengur

Weimar Germany vs Weimerica (bad vs worse)

 

Introducing "Esoteric 1933-ism

"Weimerica" is a term often used to describe the state of moral and spiritual degradation that has overwhelmed much of the West in recent years, with the United States being the undisputed leader of the Western world and the originator of its most nefarious and degenerate trends.

The referent to which it alludes is of course the Weimar Republic, a period in Germany which began after the catastrophic defeat of World War I in 1918, and remained in effect for 15 years, until it was brought to an end by the appointment of Adolf Hitler to the position of Chancellor in 1933.

The Weimar era was notorious for many things in Germany: economic upheaval, political instability, and a general collective psychic disruption due to living in the shadow of the catastrophe of the Great War. But the quality most often connotatively associated with Weimar is the onslaught of decadence.

Prior to the war, Germany was a staunchly conservative constitutional monarchy, which strictly held any public displays of impropriety in check. But after the chaos of late 1918 following the Kaiser’s abdication, the nation’s leadership was forced to sign the November armistice. That opened the floodgates: in the months and years to come, Germany was racked by chaos, turmoil, hyperinflation, and the sporadic sputter of attempted leftist revolutions. As a result, social mores were rapidly relaxed, and the results were often shocking, even horrifying.

Berlin proved to be the epicenter of much disreputable activity, which included but was not limited to the public flaunting of homosexuality, transgenderism, child prostitution, orgies, abortion, and other behaviors which had been forbidden just a few years prior. The nightclub culture of the period-- depicted so memorably in the 1966 Broadway musical "Cabaret" (later made into a movie in 1972)-- specialized in risque and ribald songs and dance numbers, which often openly celebrated aberrant sexuality.

Though some found the new openness “liberating,” it is fair to say that most Germans were not happy with this cultural shift. Yet, as with “wokeness” today, the bitter fruits of this largely unpopular societal transformation proved difficult to root out.

But what could one do? Times had changed. The war had been lost, Wilhelm II had slunk away into exile, his monarchy in ruins, the Versailles treaty had imposed humiliating restrictions on the German population, and a parliamentary democracy-- which nobody had really asked for-- had been installed. Tradition had been flung to the winds, but by whom, exactly, and to what end?

Germans largely felt, during this period, that their nation had been forced into a new phase by forces beyond their control. Changes had been imposed from above, not due to any settled consensus, and certainly not by "the consent of the governed."

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Today in the West, we are faced with a similar situation. There is a sense of things spinning out of control, of our being ruled by unseen and largely unacknowledged forces who seem bound and determined to architect the degeneration of our societies. We are solemnly instructed to count ourselves fortunate not to live under despotic regimes like those that rule China or Russia, where human rights are not safeguarded as they are under Western "democracy," but this line, however superficially persuasive, quickly loses its flavor like chewed up bubblegum when one considers the disingenuousness of the sentiment.

It is true that the West has long enjoyed a higher standard of living than other parts of the world, and for the most part the rule of law obtains— insofar as late-night knocks on the door from the Stasi and coerced visits to the torture chambers of the Lubyanka, after you were overheard speaking ill of Party Comrade X whilst taking a cigarette break at the factory— don't generally happen here.

But an insidious "soft" totalitarianism (sometimes called "polite totalitarianism," though I resist this designation since I since nothing "polite" about it whatsoever) increasingly obtains in the West, whereby not conspicuously toeing the party line of the mandatory ruling ideology leads to the ruination of one's life, through the machinations of "soft" Stasi-like agents such as Human Resources commissars sniffing out objectionable internet content while antifa-affiliated "doxx" the addresses and job positions of intellectual deviants (and their family members). Before one knows it, one's use of Constitutionally-mandated freedom of speech to advance causes deemed “wrong” makes one effectively unhirable, and in some cases, deprived of a bank account.

It is true that dissidents in despotically-inclined non-Western countries generally have a harder time when it comes to facing imprisonment, torture, and other hardships from the state, but it is a sheer farce today to claim that Western countries' rulership work to protect their citizens' ostensible "human rights." As recent events have shown, it now not unusual for UK citizens to face jail time for posting "improper" tweets, and such brazen violations of free speech are the rule, NOT the exception, in Western countries today (the United States still remaining more "classically liberal" in at least this respect).

What is more, citizens of Western countries, which are, ostensibly "democracies," find themselves nevertheless constrained from being able to see their societal preferences met, if those preferences are trumped by the demands of oligarchic bodies, which wield inordinate power and seemingly cannot be vetoed, no matter how thoroughly disliked their edicts are.

The most glaring instance of this is the insistence of mass immigration, which, in tandem with an altogether apathetic disregard for the importance of border security, shows the contempt with which corporate and bureaucratic “elites” regard the well-being of the legitimate citizens of Western nations. It is considered “in bad taste” to draw attention to violence committed by illegal immigrants, and frowned on as “xenophobic” to emphasize the importance of protecting the border. But despite the best efforts of “nudge units” attempting to make people feel like reprobates for having common-sense perspectives regarding immigration (legal and illegal alike), a large number of the population still remain favorable to radical steps being taken to remove the “undocumented” population from the nation.

Even the Weimar authorities did not impose large numbers of cultural alien populations upon the Germans in the 1920s or early 30s. But those same authorities seemed unwilling to put a stop to the dismaying rise of cultural degeneracy spoken of above, a trend which tracks with Weimar going into effect in the first place and can be identified as one of its many disagreeable traits.

The conspicuous degeneracy of late-stage “Weimerica” is, of course, several times worse than that of Weimar Germany. There was nothing happening in Berlin that resembled “drag queen story hour,” nor did the Weimar period feature an actual campaign by establishment-affiliated medical professionals to convince parents to inject their children with hormones and mutilate their genitals, nor was it ever insisted that men pretending to be men should have access to women’s sports/spaces. Such contemporary outrages are, moreover, propped up by the corporate and bureaucratic establishment, who give billions of dollars to further these moral atrocities.

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Still, the parallels between Weimar and Weimarica are compelling enough to cause a person of traditional or simply “normal” beliefs and perspectives to earnestly wish for a “1933” moment, wherein an end is brought to all of this prevalent filth, and decency is finally restored. Whatever one thinks of Hitler or the National Socialist movement, they are at least to be credited for the decisive steps they took in 1933 to put a stop to Weimar forever.

May our own “1933” come soon!

Andy Nowicki is the author of several books, most recently The Insurrectionist, Muze, and Love and Hidden Agendas, as well as the just-published The Rule of Wrath.

https://substack.com/@andynowicki