Rosemary & the USS Growler SSG-577
Saturday, May 04, 2024
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Rosemary in USS Growler SSG-577 - January 2018
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My career in the subject of submarines has been limited even
though I have been in subs many times. I never sailed in one.
While in the Argentine Navy as a conscript, I was seconded to
the US Naval Advisory Group as a translator and aide to Captain USN Onofrio
Salvia. That is when I found out about submarines. My navy had purchased some
old guppy class submarines and I was asked to translate manuals, etc. I boarded
one many times with a US Navy officer and a corresponding one from the
Argentine Navy. My translation skills failed twice in relation to the conning
tower (the vertical part of a submarine) which at the time had been changed to
sail. We ended up calling it la “sail”.
The US Navy had joint Atlantic Ocean operatives called
Operativo Unitas that they shared with the Brazilian and Argentine Navies. It was then
that Captain Salvia told me that I was going to be investigated by the FBI so I
could translate a secret document. I passed with flying colours and the secret
document was put in front of me. It seems that I was supposed to book two
different floors of the downtown Hotel Claridge, one for white non-commissioned
officers and the other for the black non-commissioned officers. I did.
A couple of years before Rosemary died we went to New
York City. This is when I found out her tremendous interest in art and we spent
a full day at the Metropolitan and the next at the Frick and at MOMA. When I
told her that we could visit a submarine she became very excited. The blog on
that event is this one:
USS Growler
The above is a preamble for the lovely essay and photographs
by Kenny Holston for the Thursday NY Times. Here is the paywall-free link.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/30/us/politics/inside-navy-submarine-arctic.html?unlocked_article_code=1.pU0.uXcr.RwFL8SYtNx6z&smid=url-share
Immanuel Kant - A Most Reasonable Man
Friday, May 03, 2024
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Immanuel Kant
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I remember to this day April 8, 1966, because a week later,
I was sitting on a bench (a fave of Jorge Luís Borges) in front of the tiger
cage of the Buenos Aires Zoo, in my summer whites of the Argentine Navy,
reading the Time Magazine that had Is God Dead? on the cover. Time never
followed through (my opinion) with a Is Philosophy Dead? cover.
Today Friday May 3, 2024 I was delivered not only today's NYTimes at my door but also yesterday's as they had missed it. In that Thursday edition I realized more than ever the value of my reading this stellar newspaper in a city (Vancouver) where good newspapers are extinct.
In the Arts page, on the cover there was an article Vision of a World Liberated by Reason by Susan Neiman. Because I am able to give about 10 paywall-free links to the paper I will place it beneath so anybody who may want to tackle Immanuel Kant can.
Immanuel Kant - Susan Neiman
In this beautifully explained essay on the philosopher, I was struck by this pair of sentences, "We are born and we die as part of nature, but we feel most alive when we go beyond it: To be human is to refuse to accept the world we are given."
It was a pleasure to read about philosophy in a newspaper. From 1962 to 1963 I received a good education on the subject from Ramón Xirau. I wrote about it here (below).
Ramón Xirau & my existential angst
I was so happy to read the essay that I wrote an email to Susan Neiman who is an philosopher. She responded a few hours later, proving that there are still people left in this century wanting to communicate.
Dear Alex Waterhouse-Hayward,
I have received some kind letters about my little Kant
essay but yours moved me the most. Thank
you for taking the trouble to write.
I see that you live in Vancouver, where I will be
speaking about my latest book, Left is not Woke, (recently out in Spanish as
Izquierda non Woke) at a conference at SFU in October. The book might interest you, as there is a
lot of Kant in it. Perhaps we will have
a chance to meet.
With very best wishes
Susan
The Engineer, the Dentist, the Artist, the Ophthalmologist & the Art Collector
Thursday, May 02, 2024
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Dr.Simon Warner and my granddaughter Lauren |
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Dr.Simon Warner blog
At my over-ripe age of 81 my health is in pretty good
shape. One reason is that I have an excellent cardiologist, urologist,
rheumatologist, ophthalmologist and dentist.
I will concentrate on the latter two who happen to be on
the same building on Broadway.
The first, Doctor Simon Warner, I have known for many
years. My Rosemary and I had his father as our eye doctor when we first came to
Vancouver. How I came to meet him is in blog in link above.
Besides being a fabulous specialist, Dr. Warner is an art
collector. He has Shadbolts in his reception and other art everywhere else
including a couple of mine!
Thanks to his laser surgery of one of my cataracts I am able
to do the most intricate removal of dust and other nasty details from my plant
scans on my monitor.
Dr. Ben Balevi my dentist happens to not only be a
dentist but he is also holds a Master’s degree in engineering from McGill. I
believe that the latter degree is makes his dental work an engineering
marvel.
On April 30 he checked my upper next to last on my mouth
left molar. Today he performed a cleaning and emptying of my root canals on
that molar. I was there for one hour. It is remarkable how he explains each
step. I was never left in the dark.
But I want to leave evidence that Doctor Ben Balevi is an
artist. Document on top is ample proof.
I told him that I usually gargle (and swallow) a very
good Calvados when I get a toothache. The engineer smiled.
A Toothache - Rick Ouston - John Cruickshank & A Bottle of Calvados
Wednesday, May 01, 2024
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John Cruickshank & my bottle of Calvados
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Last night I had such a terrible toothache that Aleve did
not alleviate. I resorted to a solution that I had tried once before as I
wrote here. I opened a lovely bottle of expensive Calvados and took a swig. I
kept it in my mouth for a while and then I did it again (and yes I did swallow it).
The pain subsided and I was able to fall asleep.
Sandrine Cassini and my terrible toothache
Tomorrow I am scheduled for a root canal at my dentist in
the morning. I had gone to see him a few days ago telling me of my mild but
intermittent pain.
The fact that at age 81 I still have all of my teeth is
possibly due to the fact that my mother spent good money on dentists.
The terrible pain last night made me think of something that
few of us ever experience. That pain made me think of people with diseases like
terminal cancer that they want to die.
I have always believed that our will to live would somehow
circumvent that desire to avoid pain by calling it quits with one’s existence.
That took me to a blog I wrote about a Vancouver journalist
I most admired called Rick Ouston. He wrote an essay on August 22, 2014
defending euthanasia and mentioning that he had bungled his own efforts at
suicide. I knew Ouston, but not well. He was a man who looked seriously depressed.
Malcolm Parry as editor of Vancouver Magazine would hire
Ouston once a year to write about the status of Vancouver newspapers. Ouston
was a thorough reporter.
My Rick Ouston Obituary
Rick Ouston - Where Are You?
Now can it be that the Vancouver Sun published that Ouston
story on Euthanasia?
It had to do that at the time the Editor-in-Chief was John
Cruickshank who I believe was the best editor the Vancouver Sun ever had. It took
guts to publish that Ouston piece.
At one time I had the digital link of Ouston’s piece in one
of my Ouston blog. It is sadly gone. I wonder if our Vancouver Archives or if
our newspapers keep those links saved and stored anywhere.
But I was able to get a copy of Ouston’s essay by my
sometimes good connections. Anybody who has gotten this far should make an
effort to read it. Ouston’s piece represented for me a high point in Vancouver
journalism.
Will it ever return? Where are you Rick Ouston? We need
you.
Choice of death is a personal thing; Assisted suicide: Place
it in the hands of the people, not the doctors or courts
Vancouver Sun
Fri Aug 22 2014
Page: B9
Section: Opinion
Byline: Rick Ouston
Source: Vancouver Sun
The reasons why multi-talented Robin Williams took his own
life will never be fully known. Maybe depression, Parkinson's, money woes, or
some other demon - only he knew, and his voice is now stilled.
But his death begs a public discussion about suicide.
I have long maintained that if ever diagnosed with
Alzheimer's or another dementia, I will take my own life. My reasoning is
personal and purely selfish: What's the point in staying alive if I can't
think? I am beholden to no one, no children of my own, no needy parents, no
debts.
If life is not worth living, what is the point?
But our society prohibits assisted suicide, making it a
crime punishable by jail time. Williams chose to die at his home, leaving his
body to be found, his remains a messy, stark and perhaps surprisingly tragic
discovery.
He had no real choice. Assisted suicide is legal in just a
few U.S. states - as close to us as Washington - but only for people diagnosed
with just a few months to live, usually too weak and addled to take their own
lives. There are some agencies internationally, such as Dignitas in
Switzerland, that people can attend, but travelling there entails a passport,
airports, money, paperwork and other indignities. It strikes me as a waste of
effort to leave the country to do something we're all going to do: die.
The Vancouver Sun on Wednesday carried a frontpage story on
Bowen Island's Gillian Bennett, a brave psychotherapist who committed suicide
Monday after years of succumbing to dementia. She had to surreptitiously
acquire the fatal dose of drugs and lug a mattress over rocks, and police and
the coroner were needed to attend after her death.
Why can't we check into a pampering facility close to home,
with a water view and a fancy meal with an expensive bottle of wine, and simply
drift away to death?
Instead of leaving loved ones to find our bodies and clean
up the mess, staff could do the job. There are people who already deal with
human remains - funeral directors and palliative care professionals, for
example - for whom it would be an unpleasant task, but not one for tears and
sadness.
Assisted suicide would only be available for people after
counselling, a methodically reasoned decision.
Cancer patients at home waiting for death get morphine for
pain, the drugs administered by a trusted person. And if the dosage hastens
their death, no one in authority questions that and there is no legal
retribution. But the onus is still placed on caregivers often forever plagued
with guilt for their actions.
In Canada, there are no legal alternatives for providing
death with dignity and peace.
I'm just a journalist, not a doctor or lawyer or clergyman
or professional ethicist. But I did make my own attempt at suicide last year,
beset by a personal issue that shall remain personal - because that's what
personal is - that I hid in an alcoholic haze. I was too drunk to unhook the
garden hose to connect it to my exhaust pipe, so I swallowed a bottle of Ativan
that had been prescribed for pain relief stemming from an old car accident.
As it turned out, there were not enough pills for a fatal
dose and eventually I fell and bruised my brain and spent days in hospitals.
Because it was alcohol-related and I was too humiliated to reveal the
underlying reasons, I was ordered into alcohol rehab.
I'm happy I didn't die last year because I still have things
to do.
Why all this personal information?
Because our deaths, if we have the choice, are a personal
thing.
I had undergone no counselling, taken no time to soberly
cogitate my death. If anyone had helped, it would have been a crime. The
lawmakers say so.
And that leads me to the second reason I think I have a
right to write these words.
I was abandoned at birth, adopted by a good family and
eventually used what abilities I had to sleuth out my biological relatives
because I was curious to know the fundamental facts of my life. Adoption
records were sealed. It was the law.
I wrote a book on all of this years ago. Then-Minister of
Social Services Joy MacPhail bought a copy of the book, read it, got to the
part where I argued that adoption records should be opened, agreed, shared the
reasoning with her colleagues in the Opposition, and B.C. became the first jurisdiction
in North America to unseal adoption records. Since then, adoptees like me
haven't had to skulk around to find out who and why they are.
Anarchy has not broken out. Some other provinces and U.S.
states have followed B.C.'s lead, mothers get found and life goes on. That
which was once legally not allowed is now allowed. The laws got changed. It
happened with births. It should happen with deaths.
It would take a federal effort. No individual politician or
party wants to be painted as being 'pro-death.' Anyone who shares my thinking
would have to lobby politicians for a change to the suicide law.
Some talk about it as 'physician-assisted suicide.' That
needs to be changed. Most doctors become doctors to help people, not kill them.
This lifeand-death issue needs to be removed from the hands of doctors and
placed in the hands of us all.
Some faiths prohibit people from advocating assisted
suicide. So be it. I'm not advocating mandatory suicide no more than the
abortion debate centres on enforced deaths of the unborn. Some people will
choose to stay alive as long as possible, for their own reasons. They are
entitled to that choice.
I want to die when I'm good and ready to die, not be forced
into a long-term care home when I'm too weak mentally or physically to
successfully protest against it.
So, why hasn't this debate, in a country as socially progressive
as Canada, already been resolved?
Because no one in a position of power or responsibility can
risk the very real possibility of being blamed for a copycat suicide.
Me, I'm just a newspaper editor, responsible for nothing
except typing and spelling. If there is blame for copy-catting because of these
words, blame me.
But for people who share my point of view, I'm merely
asking: Let your federal politicians know how you feel.
How you wish to live. And how you wish to die.
Rick Ouston is an editor at The Vancouver Sun
[email protected]
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