Posts tagged with war

A Historiography of Wikipedia Changelogs

A Historiography of Wikipedia Changelogs

James Bridle’s The Iraq War: A Historiography of Wikipedia Changelogs.

This particular book—or rather, set of books—is every edit made to a single Wikipedia article, The Iraq War, during the five years between the article’s inception in December 2004 and November 2009, a total of 12,000 changes and almost 7,000 pages.

It amounts to twelve volumes: the size of a single old-style encyclopaedia. It contains arguments over numbers, differences of opinion on relevance and political standpoints, and frequent moments when someone erases the whole thing and just writes “Saddam Hussein was a dickhead”

Helium Powered Device

Helium Powered Device

A helium powered device used to capture imagery is staged Aug. 11, 2010, in in Sangin, Afghanistan, during a visit from the senior U.S. Marine Corps leadership of Regional Command Southwest. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Lindsay L. Sayres/Released)

For scale, note the gas canisters in the background and what looks like a fire extinguisher in the platform.

( via Cryptome)

Three Cheers for Dr. Küntscher

Three Cheers for Dr. Küntscher

If you really screw up one of the long bones in your body, and you’re fortunate enough to have access to rich-country doctors, there’s a pretty good chance that those doctors will hook you up with what is euphemistically known as an “intramedullary nail”. Looking at the picture above (of my actual left leg), you might think “intramedullary railroad spike” makes more sense, but doctors really like to go understated with names.

The IM nail is a great invention, though. Femur-explosion outcomes are greatly improved by IM nailing. It turns out that the IM nail process was developed by a German fellow, Dr. Gerhard Küntscher, in 1939. Because of World War II, Dr. Küntscher’s innovation didn’t initially spread beyond Germany. When doctors beyond the boundaries of the Axis finally heard the news, it was carried in the legs and arms of Allied POWs, limping back home.

P-51, Cadillac of the sky

Featuring, of all things, a young Christian Bale playing a young J.G. Ballard.

( via 13)

Bad War

Bad War

Bad War —Hans Holbein the Younger, 1520 (presumably ‘detail from’ but I can’t find any confirmation either way)

If The Art Thing Doesn’t Work Out…

If The Art Thing Doesn't Work Out...

…maybe Mark Lombardi can get a job with the government (humorous aside: the New York Times coverage of this opted for a Cy Twombly ref).

( via The Awl)

Only if it’s from beyond the grave. He died in 2000.

Nuclear Disintegrating Parachutist Canine

Nuclear Disintegrating Parachutist Canine

PETA really hadn’t mobilized their Russian arm in 1935.

( via modern mechanix)

[Insurgent leader] Sarhan told him that he didn’t watch any American movies, that they were products of the devil. [US Army Captain] Cook jokingly asked him if he liked Titanic, knowing it was enormously popular in Iraq. Why, yes, the insurgent confessed. He recounted watching it seven times and crying every time at the ending, as Kate Winslet lets the dead Leonardo DiCaprio slip into the freezing North Atlantic.

Wapo Excerpt of a book about counter-insurgency in Iraq

U-S-A! U-S-A!

No one can resist James Cameron and his moving pictures.

I wonder how this guy feels about Terminator and Aliens.

For Your Next Pettibon Cake Conversion

For Your Next Pettibon Cake Conversion

UNTITLED (GETTING ME OUT THE DOOR)

I’d rather have this one on a cake.

Paleo-Future War Tank

Paleo-Future War Tank

From the December 1939 issue of Amazing Stories and via one of my favorite blogs, Paleo-Future comes this illustration of an imagined ‘land battleship’.

See also in the PF archives: Gigantic Robots to Fight Our Battles and Nazi Paleo-Futurism.

Do you ever check out modern mechanix?

No, but it definitely it’s now in my ‘Archaic Futures’ feeds folder.

The World is Fat and Full of Holes

The World is Fat and Full of Holes

Raymond Pettibon Op Art in the New York Times.

For me, the Crimean War is the “perfect” war. Started for obscure reasons, hopelessly murderous, and accomplishing nothing.

—Errol Morris

The Next Article is About Space Garbage in New Jersey

The Next Article is About Space Garbage in New Jersey

A DynCorp security employee watches over the A.E.F. destroying poppy fields in Uruzgan.

DynCorp traces its origins from two companies formed in 1946: California Eastern Airways, an air freight business and Land-Air Inc, an aircraft maintenance company…

Wankel was in Uruzgan to oversee a poppy-eradication campaign—the first major effort to disrupt the harvest in the province. He had brought with him a two-hundred-and-fifty-man A.E.F. contingent, including forty-odd contractors supplied by DynCorp, a Virginia-based private military company, which has a number of large U.S. government contracts in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other parts of the world. In Colombia, DynCorp helps implement the multibillion-dollar Plan Colombia, to eradicate coca…

Employees of the company were involved in the trading of sex slaves while working in Bosnia. A DynCorp employee, Kathryn Bolkovac, was fired after revealing that Dyncorp employees had frequented brothels where women had been imprisoned. Another Dyncorp employee, Ben Johnson, was also fired after revealing the involvement of some of his fellow co-workers in forced-prostitution rings in Bosnia.[8] At least 13 DynCorp employees have been sent home from Bosnia—- and at least seven of them fired—- for purchasing women or trafficking of women and children, though none have ever faced criminal sanctions…

The eradication team set off early the next morning for their first day’s work. There were nineteen Americans and a hundred Afghans in a convoy made up of twenty-four all-terrain vehicles—similar to small dune buggies—eighteen Ranger pickup trucks carrying Afghan policemen, and four of DynCorp’s white Ford F250 pickups. I rode in a truck driven by David Lockyear, an amiable six-foot-seven-inch Tennessean in his thirties, known as Doc Dave. Lockyear, who had a goatee and was covered with tattoos, was a paramedic from Nashville who joined the Marine Corps after September 11th. (“I was just pissed off, like a lot of people, and wanted to do something,” he said.) He fought in the first siege of Falluja, and in 2007 he went to work for DynCorp. He smoked a Marlboro and held a cup of coffee in one hand as he drove…

As we entered the nearest village, children gathered along the track waving and holding their hands out, and some of the DynCorp men tossed them gray plastic packages. “Halal M.R.E.s,” Sherepita explained. “The kids love them.”…

Beyond the camp, at each point of the compass, Nepalese Gurkhas hired by DynCorp maintained sentry positions in foxholes and in sandbagged machine-gun nests on the roofs of trucks…

The Gurkhas were designated by British officials as a “Martial Race”. “Martial Race” was a designation created by British officials to describe “races” (peoples) that were thought to be naturally warlike and aggressive in battle, and to possess qualities like courage, loyalty, self sufficiency, physical strength, resilience, orderliness, hard working, fighting tenacity and military strategy. The British recruited heavily from these Martial Races for service in the colonial army.

Gurkhas served as troops under contract to the East India Company in the Pindaree War of 1817, in Bharatpur in 1826 and the First and Second Anglo-Sikh Wars in 1846 and 1848…

The Taliban’s Opium War

( via newyorker, wikipedia)

Why the Strong Lose

What is not in dispute is that all major failed US uses of force since 1945—in Vietnam, Lebanon, and Somalia—have been against materially weaker enemies. In wars both hot and cold, the United States has fared consistently well against such powerful enemies as Nazi Germany, Imperial Japan, and the Soviet Union, but the record against lesser foes is decidedly mixed. Though it easily polished off Milosevic’s Serbia and Saddam’s Iraq, the United States failed to defeat Vietnamese infantry in Indochina, terrorists in Lebanon, and warlords in Somalia. In each case the American Goliath was militarily stalemated or politically defeated by the local David. Most recently, the United States was surprised by the tenacious insurgency that exploded in post-Baathist Iraq, an insurgency now in its third year with no end in sight.

Don’t worry, this is not the beginning of a series of political Kosian posts, it’s an interesting article from the awesome PARAMETERS.

The clothing store of Messrs. Brooks, Bros.,

The clothing store of Messrs. Brooks, Bros.,

“During the draft riots, crowds targeted places that represented the war effort, the Republican party, and/or social privilege. Brooks Brothers clothing store was known both as a purveyor of clothes to the upper classes and a government war contractor. In this illustration, the distant perspective makes the crowd of men and women seem industrious but not particularly menacing.”