Murder in Chicago

Chicagofinal

Isn’t it about time someone actually does something about the murders in Chicago?   The statistics prove that the current city administration, police department, and courts are unable to solve this problem.  They have failed the residents of the city, which has turned into a veritable shooting gallery.

I think it is high time the Federal Government step in with the National Guard, on a more or less permanent basis, and lock down the most lethal neighborhoods of Chicago.  The police departments must keep statistics on which neighborhoods have the most murders and perhaps even down to very precise locations (see the site reference below that identifies the most lethal neighborhoods — it isn’t a secret).    The presence of the National Guard in those neighborhoods  would have a dramatic and immediate impact on all the violence.

What better use could be made of the National Guard than to protect American citizens from murder?  And it is not as if the National Guard is so swamped with their other responsibilities.  If the annual murder rate in Chicago were just cut in half, that would mean that 300 citizens would be alive next year who wouldn’t be if we do nothing — yet again.

A couple of other candidate cities for this kind of special treatment include two that, on a per capita basis, are even worse than Chicago — St. Louis and Baltimore.  St. Louis has 65.83 murders per 100,000 residents, while Baltimore has 55.48.  Lest you think the United States is such a safe and secure place to live, St. Louis is actually ranked number 13th and Baltimore 21st among the most dangerous cities in all the world.  Shouldn’t we actually do something about that?

Most Dangerous Cities in the World

Lethal Neighborhoods in Chicago

Where Is Our Leader?

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Venezuela

Rather than sanctions, the United States should consider taking the humanitarian high road and provide Venezuela, a country on the precipice of actual starvation, with food — with no strings attached.  Frankly, we do humanitarian a lot better than we do military.  Wouldn’t it be a nice change of pace if the rest of the world actually respected something we did abroad?  And the farmers in the United States wouldn’t mind a bit if the government bought some of what they have to offer.  We could simply tell the world that, while we don’t agree with the politics of the current regime in Venezuela, we refuse to see people starve in the Western Hemisphere.

North Korea — What to Expect

Crimea

Nuclear Winter

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Amsterdam Canal Reflection

amsterdamcanalreflection

My Story

 

Digital download of the JPG file for this photograph

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9/11 — Coming Down the Stairwell

wtcandbrooklynbridge

I stepped off the elevator on the 71st floor of 1 World Trade Center only seconds before the first airplane hit.   There was one person, a young man, still on the elevator when the doors closed.

The airplane jolted the building in such a sharp fashion that I lost my balance.  I recall having the thought it was pointless to react to the lurch in the building because if the building went over, I was dead anyway.

Only a few feet from the elevator, I was standing near a stairwell entrance, which was situated next to the entrance to my department.  A consultant I knew ran out of the department entrance, dashed to the stairwell door, and opened it hastily.  As he did so, I asked him what he was doing, and he said he had been here in ’93 and was getting the hell out.   Still stunned, I just followed him through the door without saying a word.

As we were the first into the stairwell, we were able to scurry down about 5 flights before the crush of people came in.   The trip down the stairwell from that point on was like a crowded highway that backs up to a slow go and an occasional stop, now and then.  Most of the time, the two rows of people were orderly, but when the lines slowed to a stop, panic set in, and a few people started to yell, but when the lines started up again, they would quiet down, until the next time.

Despite the fumes in the stairwell, enough to make people tear, I think most people were unaware of what had actually happened, and thought instead an accident had occurred – a plane had accidentally flown into the building.  But when we got to around the 20s, three quarters of the way down, there was suddenly talk of a second plane!  We discovered this not because we sensed anything from the second plane’s impact on 2 WTC, but because people had cell phones and the message got through to them.   And so suddenly it was a lot scarier because two planes meant this was no accident.  We were under attack.

Two fire fighters passed us by.  Both were heavily loaded with gear, and were having a hard time with the gear going up all those stairs.  When we got to around the 10th floor, I looked through an open door, and there were many firefighters on this one floor as a kind of staging area, I guess.  The water retardant system had been activated because there was a lot of water on that floor and on the stairwell steps from that point to the bottom.

When we got to the bottom of the stairwell, which ended at an inconspicuous door on the plaza or mezzanine level, there were a number of people guiding us to the down escalator and under the plaza in a complex route that brought us to the up escalator or staircase and out the door next to the bookstore facing Church Street.    This route made a lot of sense as it protected people from falling debris from both towers.  I would be curious to know who – what person – came up with this strategy?  The strategy clearly saved a lot of lives, and demonstrated cool thinking in a desperate situation.  Whoever came up with the strategy deserves recognition for it, yet I have never heard who that person was.

Of course, one cannot say enough about the people who stayed behind, at grave danger to themselves in the underbelly of the complex, to guide the rest of us in our escape, like a human chain, to safety.  They were in grave danger to themselves, indeed, because they were still there when 2 WTC came down upon them.

When I came outside, there was a policeman telling people don’t look up and hurry and don’t stop.  And of course one had an immediate urge to look up, if nothing else to finally really see what in God’s name was going on.  When I did, what I saw was a solid band of red fire high up on 2 WTC, with smoke streaming out the top of this red wall of fire.

My immediate gut reaction was that the fire was too intense for the building to withstand it.  This was no barn fire that was mostly black smoke with occasional specks of red here and there, but a virtual wall of red fire.  So I just wanted to bolt and get away because I instinctively thought the building was doomed — it would come down.

There was a large crowd across Church Street on the same block as St. Paul’s Chapel, and I remember dodging around these people to make my way through this crowd as they pressed forward to get a better view.  These same people were in the bulls-eye when 2 WTC came down, all for the sake of a better view.

I made it to just before City Hall on Park Row before 2 WTC came down.  I remember there was a kind of collective groan from the people around me, so I turned around to see, only to watch 2 WTC collapse, and then a huge cloud of soot burst out from between the buildings in the foreground.

Very scared, I made it all the way to an obscure side street just below Washington Square when 1 WTC came down.    Moments after it came down, I had the strangest feeling of exultation – actually leaping in the air.   Completely involuntary, this exultation, I realized later, was a kind of visceral relief and gladness at having survived, of still being alive.    I had no control over it.  It just swept over me.

I went back to the WTC site recently to step off the distance.  I wanted to know how close a call it was.   How much time had elapsed from when I was still trapped inside the complex to where I stood when 2 WTC came down?  A brisk walk took just four and a half minutes.  But for those four and a half minutes, the photography ebook listed below would never have seen the light of day.

Manhattan, A Photographer’s Journey by Henry Barnard

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“Spirit of Achievement” at Night

cropped-spiritofachievementatnight.jpg

My Story

Digital download of the JPEG file for this photograph.

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Curated Galleries on Flickr

cityabstraction.jpg

Click on the link below to see my curated galleries on Flickr, all with the same theme — Imagination: Photographs in the Mind’s Eye.  When you get to Flickr, click on each gallery and scroll through the selected photographs with a glance at my written explanation why I included each photograph in the gallery.  As a photographer myself, I think it is the most challenging thing to display imagination in a photograph, even though imagination in photographs can take many forms.

Imagination: Photographs in the Mind’s Eye

 

Then and Now

thenandnow

People, A Photographer’s Perspective by Henry Barnard

My Story

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A Speech Like No Other

It was the greatest speech ever given in American history: Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address at the dedication ceremonies at Gettysburg, given on November 19, 1963.   The speaker before Lincoln, Edward Everett, a very famous orator in his own right, droned on for over 2 hours.  After the respectful — and perhaps thankful — applause upon the conclusion of Everett’s speech, Lincoln took the podium.  His speech lasted less than 2 minutes.  When it ended, there was dead silence from the massive audience that had assembled to hear the speeches and pay their respects at Gettysburg.  There was dead silence because no one realized  the speech, so brief and to the point, had actually ended.  Slowly there was hesitant clapping from the audience.  This — silence and confusion — was the immediate and ironic response to the greatest speech ever given in American history.  Of course, all the Northern newspapers picked it up for their next edition, and when those 272 words were actually read by the public, an immense reaction took place that reverberates to this day.  Such is the power of the printed word.

Gettysburg Address Text

Gettysburg Address History

Where Is Our Leader?

LBJ

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LBJ

If you study the JFK assassination and get into the weeds – read many books about it, listen to many YouTubes, and join several Facebook JFK assassination groups to discuss the event – you will inevitably come across quite a bit of material critical of LBJ.   I must admit that, at the time in the 1960’s and until recently, my view of LBJ, apart from his role in the Vietnam War, was a fairly positive one, as he came across on TV as a kind of benign uncle looking out for the welfare of the American people.

There is no question about his stellar record in the civil rights movement.  One could make the argument that JFK was pulled kicking and screaming into civil rights for Afro-Americans, but LBJ jumped in with both feet, and was certainly one of the important leaders of that movement, if not an indispensable one.  The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 would not have happened without him.  As for his declaration of war against poverty, how can any American not tip his hat to a president who is that idealistic and that bold — the goal being a “Great Society” where you have actually eradicated all poverty.  Wow!  Just wow.

But when you begin to delve into the JFK assassination material, a frequent critical commentary you come across immediately concerning LBJ is the assertion that just before he was assassinated, JFK was about to pull the plug on our involvement in Vietnam, but that when LBJ was sworn into office, he reversed  that decision and ordered full steam ahead.  There seems to be documentation that proves that this actually is what happened – that the Vietnam War might have been avoided had JFK lived, but LBJ instead proceeded with the war with a vengeance.  We all now know about the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution that was in response to an event that never actually happened — when you really want war, you become inventive, it seems.

You will find many allegations about LBJ’s use of his political office for graft to enrich himself.  There is no doubt that, like many politicians, he ended up an extremely wealthy man – with assets in excess of what one  would expect him to have amassed based on his various salaries as an office holder, although he could have just made some shrewd and lucrative business decisions to amass said wealth.   But the graft allegations really don’t surprises me or even bother me very much.   American politicians and graft go together like peanut butter and jelly.  In fact, my somewhat cynical view is that graft is just part of the compensation we owe our politicians for doing what is often a nasty and certainly contentious job.  Look at all the abuse and venom we heap upon them, even the good ones.  (I wouldn’t want the job.)

But the one allegation that you will come across that really was surprising to me and kind of shocking, given my view that LBJ was a sort of kindly old man looking out for the country, that is, the image that he managed to project on TV, was that LBJ was indirectly involved in several murders (Henry Marshall, Agriculture Secretary; George Krutelnik, an FBI informant; Ike Rogers and his secretary; Harold Orr, another FBI informant; Coleman Wade, yet another FBI informant; Josefa Johnson, LBJ’s own sister; John Kinser, Josefa’s boyfriend; and, last but not least, President John Kennedy).

It is alleged that several of these murders were carried out by LBJ’s supposed personal hit man, Malcolm (“Mac”) Wallace, who was actually convicted of one murder, sentenced to only 5 years despite the murder being described as “murder with malice,” but the judge in the case — guess this! — suspended even that modest sentence, which is itself kind of astonishing, that is, suspending a sentence for a murder conviction.  All of this legal chicanery in a murder with a conviction when there was talk of the death sentence happened when LBJ was governor — what the governor wants the governor gets.  That LBJ may have had his own sister murdered certainly takes the cake.  (I confess I did not know LBJ even had a sister or that she and her boyfriend had been murdered.)

People who put the murder allegations out there usually point out that the image LBJ projected in public was a far cry from the real person – that the real LBJ had this ferocious, uncontrollable temper that could erupt at any moment, and that in fact the man had strong psychopathic tendencies.    I must admit I was shocked to read about these provocative revelations not once, but over and over again, from many different authors.  I felt like the dopey American who believed, naively, his champion politician was some kind of a saint when in fact he was anything but.  But allegations are a far cry from proven facts, and I really have no way of knowing whether there is a scintilla of truth to any of the murder allegations.  He may not have been guilty of anything more criminal than showing us that scar.  (See the site below for just one reference in regard to the murder allegations — there are many others.)

I won’t go into all the JFK assassination theories related to LBJ — the conspiracy theorists have a field day with him, as he was after all next in line and so had motive, and there’s some credible evidence that he wasn’t all that fond of Jack his boss, Mr. Ivy League as well as Jack’s condescending brother — but let’s just say my view of LBJ, the sweet old man looking out for his country, as projected on TV, has been modified somewhat.

LBJ Murder Conference

Where Is Our Leader?

A Speech Like No Other

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