Monday, March 31, 2014

Every nation denied A-Bomb by America should fall on its knees and thank God (and Washington DC)

The biggest single attraction of the A Bomb for America, circa 1945, was how expensive it was.

So expensive that only America could seem to afford it.

A de facto economic atomic monopoly.

Only America couldn't afford it, could it ?

The Path not Taken : Pax Penicillia ,1945

How different our world would have turned out to be if the selfless and open morality of the Manhattan Yellowmagic project had been the path 1945 America had continued down.

Instead it chose to turn to the selfish secrecy of the Manhattan Yellowcake project as its reigning ethos.

Japanese human germ warfare experimentation , too, becomes 'Born Secret' in the Yellowcake Pax Americana

In 1945, two possible approaches to implementing the Pax Americana lay before America : the selfish secrecy of the Manhattan Yellowcake project or the selfless openness of the Manhattan Yellowmagic project.

An early test of 1945's Pax Americana was how American's scientific establishment would handle news of Japan's truly horrific germ warfare efforts from its UNIT 731.

my Dalhousie University Bicentenary / Bicentennial (1818-2018) project : Martin Henry Dawson and his selfless penicillin

As an alumnus of Dalhousie University (Halifax Canada) , which will be two hundred years young in 2018 , I have long wanted to honour its 200 years of achievements in an unique way.

When the amazing wartime penicillin story of Dalhousie graduate Dr Martin Henry Dawson (1896-1945) fell into my lap in 2004 , I felt a thorough exploration of it would be a wonderful contribution to the bicentenary/ bicentennial celebrations.

Here, I felt , is truly someone who exemplified the "selfless service to greater humanity" that the university tried to instil in all its students and staff.

Sunday, March 30, 2014

The SOFT POWER War : 1945-1992

In 1945-1946, the USSR was too weakened by the recent war to want to fight another big war right away - and all of America should have known it.

At least some of America's top leadership did understand.

Meanwhile the USSR understood that , despite Hiroshima, nothing had really changed in terms of fighting and winning big wars against opponents with large territories.

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Atomic warfare treated differently from Chemical and Germ warfare because of its commercial potential

The western Allies spent more on chemical and germ weapons than they ever did on atomic weapons - yet they never used them.

But surprisingly, the only thing that left and right wing historians of the decision to drop the Bomb agree upon is that part of the reason why it was dropped was the fear that Congress would wonder why a $ 2 billion war-ending weapon was never used to prevent massive American soldier casualties in any invasion of Japan.

But billions were also spent on germ and chemical warfare weapons and they too would have ended the war quickly.

So why weren't they used ?

Why was it unacceptable to kill Japanese babies by gas poisoning or germ toxin poisoning , but acceptable to kill them by boiling them alive and by radiation poisoning ?

Friday, March 28, 2014

Yellow Magic , not Yellowcake , marked the shift from Pax Britannica to Pax Americana

I argue that Pax Britannica lingered on into the end of WWII , but as soft culturally-economic power, not hard military- economic power.

The British brand had a lot of strength against the America brand - it still had a lot of moral capital.

Not the least because Britain had stood all alone defending the world's Four Freedoms while isolationist America had yawned like a bored bystander watching a schoolyard bully beat up a pre-schooler.

Winston Churchill had led that fight but in the Fall of 1942 - unknown to most - his party, the Tories, had thrown away most of the global good will , all in an instant.

Tragically for Pax Americana , "Could we keep the Bomb a secret ?" misheard as "Should we keep the Bomb a secret?"

Recipe for a world tragedy :


In one bowl : top American scientists , privy to the details of the Manhattan Project and well aware of the long ongoing world-wide scientific quest for the atom's inner secrets.

In the other bowl : the top American political leadership, extremely well versed in conventional military thought , economic hardball and winning elections (but who knew rather less than zero about the current hot topics in the scientific world.)

Mix the two at a top secret meeting and stand back.

FDR's 'Freedom of Thought', it turns out , is "BORN SECRET" : Pax Yellowcake, 1946

From early 1941 to early 1946 is only five years but that was long enough to kill FDR's "Freedom of Thought" stone dead.

The McMahon Act said that whole classes of thoughts, even if they are thought uniquely by one person inside their head - or assembled from various information already in the public domain - are born secret and to be known only by the government.

1984's Thought Crimes had arrived in America , not in Orwell's Britain , and arrived 38 years early !

This is what happens when Pax Americana is built around the deluded groupthink (Pax Yellowcake) that the atom bomb was ever an intellectual secret and could ever remain so.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Observing the rise of Pax Americana doesn't begin to explain HOW it rose...

What a difference one lifetime can make


One of the key wartime leaders of WWII was Marshal Petain of Vichy France.

When he was a young child , Europe had four times as many people as all of the Americas - when he died, almost a century later , the Americas were well on their way to having as many people as all of Europe .

They will soon have twice as many people as all Europe.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

1940's "Destroyers for Bases" exchanged on the neutral ground of Halifax - midway between Potomac and the English Channel

To assure both a still isolationist America and an uneasy British Conservative electorate , the 1940 'destroyers for bases' deal had to be consummated at a place both parties felt equally at home in : Halifax, Nova Scotia.

WWII's non-Triumph of the Will-ful scientist : Norden bombsights , Atomic radiation and Synthetic penicillin

If Man's mental Will inevitably Triumphs over Nature, WWII is no place to offer proof :


For example , Mother Nature's salmon, eels, butterflies , swallows et al seem to navigate great distances far far more accurately than WWII pilots using Newtonian physics' Radar and Norden Bombsights.

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

In 1945, 2/3 of the UK didn't vote Labor - or didn't vote

Only one third of the potential electorate actually went out and cast a vote for Atlee's Labor Party.

Why write about someone dead seventy years ago ?

Why I write about Henry Dawson :

HENRY DAWSON's story is actually about all of us.

In fact ten billion of us , so far, since 1940.

 All of us enjoying better health because of a single selfless act of Agape: a dying Manhattan doctor putting the saving of ten other lives above his own life. 

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Gladys Hobby, penicillin pioneer, on the arithmetic of the enemy "PERSISTERS" of the First Strike Doctrine

Gladys Hobby, the 1940s penicillin pioneer, was a mere bacteriologist, albeit with an excellent grasp of elementary school arithmetic but not someone with the higher math that qualifies one to 'plan' (sic) the world's nuclear weaponry levels.

By contrast, the nuclear boys all seemed to have had excellent higher math skills but to have no intuitive sense of elementary school arithmetic at all !

Friday, March 21, 2014

Memo to Nazi nuclear spies : read the student newspapers ...

ADDENDUM :


I wrote this post in haste on my way out the door and re-read this morning - at leisure. So :

I didn't mean to imply that Alex Wellerstein was only interested in how secret the WWII Bomb was but rather that he is interested in the various (usually negative) affects secrecy had and is still having on nuclear weapons and nuclear energy issues around the world.

And I wondered about the accurate spelling of Norman F Ramsay's last name - it is really "Ramsey" and he ultimately won a Nobel prize and headed the team set with actually dropping the Bombs over Japan.

Of greater interest to me,  he thought a Canadian-made Lancaster would be a far better Bomb dropper than the American-made B-29 , which at that time of the war was almost more lethal to its air crew than the enemy.

Americans would probably would have marched off quietly to the Nazi ovens rather than admit the Canadians built better airplanes than themselves - so this idea was a total non starter.

General Groves had been well coached by his ultimate bosses, Bush and Conant , on the need for an all American Bomb , (after the other Allies had provided most of the ideas and much of the materials needed to make it work.)

My revisionist point being that the Ally cum commercial and scientific rival the Americans really seemed most worried about was the British Commonwealth - not the USSR.

********************

Alex Wellerstein is a historian and blogger (RESTRICTED DATA) intensely interested in examining whether nuclear bombs were ever as secret as general opinion holds them to be.

His blog is highly informative and great fun to read.

As part of my overall interest in whether 'secrecy' is ever truly possible or easy, I am casually interested in instances when nuclear secrets were revealed inadvertently , despite heavy security efforts to contain them.

But I must admit that my real interest in secrecy is whether the other Manhattan Project, wartime penicillin, was ever as secret as it too is reputed to be.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

University precincts : from the safest Republican polls to the safest Democratic polls - as science accepts Nature as dynamic, not static

In FDR's day, the safest polling districts for rock-ribbed Republicans were around the universities - and this was something generally repeated all over the world.

Tenured professors of the physical and social sciences in particular were once among the most politically conservative of all voters.

Well !!!!!!

Today of course the situation is completely reversed.

Why ?

1945 Nobel prize for FAILURE in Medicine to Fleming and Florey

Admittedly , complaining about the Swedes and their awarding of Nobel prizes is a bit like shooting fish in a barrel.

But their famous 1945 rewarding of a Nobel prize in medicine to some of the pioneers of penicillin has to rate near the top for ineptitude.

First ever use of penicillin IN humans vs first ever use ON humans

ON vs IN 

Alexander Fleming should be credited only for the first ever use of penicillin ON humans : penicillin-the-antiseptic.

The first ever use of penicillin IN humans , penicillin-the-antibiotic , should be rightly credited to Martin Henry Dawson.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Which PAX AMERICANA : 1945 America's moral descent AND ascent

At the very beginning of WWII, America's leadership wwas convinced that, morally, only the Norden Precision Bombsight would allow it to win at war with minimum civilian casualties for the other side.

But by 1945, America's leadership had decided that its new chief weapon was to be a weapon of mass terror and mass destruction, The Bomb.

Its only truly unique capability was its ability to burn alive all the residents of a large city at one go.

And with only America possessing it, America could become God's terrifying Avenging Angel over the whole world .

From plan A's Norden precision killing to plan B's Yellowcake mass killing, it is easy to see a steep moral fall in America's moral leadership.

Sunday, March 16, 2014

WWII : when Massachusetts ran the whole world

The secretive team that ran the OSRD and ran the Manhattan Project and ran America's go-it-alone atomic bomb foreign policy that ruled the postwar world were not elected officials of course.

(We are talking America , after all.)

They were instead five white protestant native-born well paid male scientists, further linked together in a consensual intellectual circle jerk by all having very strong Massachusetts-based academic connections.

The most powerful figure in wartime America vs an unknown dying doctor

It wasn't a fair fight : the unknown dying doctor won.

It was a classic Hollywood-type story of powerless, selfless , agape-good triumphing over all-powerful evil of the most banal kind.

Yellowcake (and Yellow Magic) Diplomacy : Plan B of a Plan B

It never was supposed to end up like the way it all did in 1945.

The original Plan A for America, from 1938 to late-1942, was to rely on the Norden Bombsight and the Sulfa Drugs to see America safely through any dangerous faint echoes from a possible European war.

Both inventions failed to work out anywhere as well in the field as they had been touted they would work by their starry-eyed promoters.

So, from late-1942 to mid-1943, there was an improvised Plan B.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

The Jekyll and Hyde Manhattan Projects : Yellowcake or Yellow Magic ? (Pax Americana 1945)

Many US cities are much better than New York at symbolizing various facets of America but none is capable of symbolizing, all by itself , what the rest of the world sees as both the best and the worst aspects of America.

It truly is Janus Manhattan ; truly is Jekyll and Hyde Manhattan.

Equally part Gordon Gekko and part Emma Lazarus.

Thursday, March 13, 2014

"Seven Days To Noon" and "The Third Man" : atomic diplomacy vs penicillin diplomacy

"The Third Man" and "Seven Days To Noon" were filmed so long ago they are old enough to be old age pensioners,  but these two gripping films remain classics of postwar british cinema and fine time capsules into the mindset of western civilization post-1945.

Seven Days is an allegory about American 'go-it-alone' atomic diplomacy while the Third Man , Harry Lime , acts as a stand-in for Josef Mengele in a film allegory that sees the ultimate expression of evil being the murdering of innocent children by the doctors they trust - in this case , a corruption of penicillin diplomacy.

Janus Manhattan 1945 , part 2 : FDR's WPB restores the human fabric ...

If is not just ordinary Americans who find America's political system 'inside the Beltway' to be overly complex and confusing.

Outsiders - some as presidents with hands on nuclear red buttons and some as terrorists with hands on cellphone detonator buttons - find the daily mass/mess of signals coming out of the Beltway totally confusing.

Perhaps never more so than during FDR's 12 year reign when he closely mimicked Adolf Hitler's policy of setting up competing powerful bureaucracies and letting the strongest and most determined claw and elbow its way to the top.

Janus Manhattan 1945 , part 1 : FDR's OSRD rends the human fabric ...

Memo to basic scientists :

General Leslie Groves doesn't deserve your bad press, for the same reason that Vannevar Bush doesn't deserve your good press.

It was Bush, the head of the wartime OSRD (and reputed to be the most powerful un-elected man in Washington) who carved in stone America's selfish postwar determination to keep the atomic bomb and atomic energy a secret American monopoly -- General Groves was merely following Bush's orders.

I repeat - it was a scientist, one of your own, who carried on the old Republicans' policy of selfish Isolationism (albeit in a new guise).

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

'Millions of Lives Lost' : because first penicillin article not peer-reviewed ...

Alexander Fleming's very first article on penicillin, supposedly a masterwork of basic science , had a fatal flaw - for itself and for untold millions of innocent patients between 1928 and 1943.

Fleming submitted it for publication, even though he hadn't done a fundamental test that every potential new anti-bacterial drug should have performed upon it, before any sort of valid scientific judgement can be passed.

Fleming , in a pique of hubris , rushed to judgement , prematurely and unfairly, on his new child - penicillin - and his erroneously wrong assessment almost strangled it before it was even born.

Fleming had totally failed to test how penicillin actually worked (or not) inside a real living body 'protecting' that body from a real disease.

Penicillin (and its many kin in the beta lactam family) will probably always remain, on balance, the world's best ever bacteria killer to be discovered.

However most of its advantages are also the source of its odd quirks cum grave disadvantages.

(For completeness, I will mention - in passing - that penicillin is a broad spectrum killer of many of humanity's most dangerous bacteria and that it originally didn't really work when taken orally.)

Now onto its really unusual features.

It is extremely extremely non-toxic for any drug , let alone a lifesaver, (only a tiny fragment of one percent of us are dangerously allergic to it - and this not an issue of toxicity , per say anyway.)

It is non-toxic partly because it diffuses extremely readily.

A failure to diffuse readily was a sometimes-fatal-to-the-patient flaw in its rivals the sulfa drugs.

A diffuse drug also kills better by reaching into the tiniest of places in a body to kill bugs hiding out there.

It diffuses well partly because it is reluctant to bind to most body bits - this reduces its potential for creating new toxic compounds and ensures all its killing power is saved for the bugs.

But a drug that diffuses well and doesn't bind to other chemicals also leaves a body very quickly - penicillin's biggest flaw.

And penicillin does not kill rapidly on contact like say sulfuric acid kills instantly on contact and it is (relatively speaking) a slow bacteria killer, or so it seemed at first.

But this is actually a bonus, not a bug , as computer programmers say.

It is rather stand-offish and only acts upon bugs that are actively growing ( ie actively killing us) and so does not waste its killing powers upon harmless bugs that co-exist with us and reproduce slowly.

Nor, as I have said, does it waste its strength by binding onto our own various body bits and creating dangerously toxic new compounds in the process.

So, if injected into the blood stream of a healthy young living being, penicillin will be seen leaving the body very soon afterwards via the urine, seemingly long before it has time to kill all of a bunch of normally reproducing bacteria.

As Fleming suspected from his basic science studies and so put into his dismissive 1929 report.

With the result that Fleming claimed penicillin as had absolutely no value as a life-saving antibiotic.

He thought penicillin could only work as an antiseptic - ie , useful when poured into body cavities or wounds that are 'unconnected' (relatively speaking) to the body's blood and kidney systems.

But we know in fact - from real life experience - that penicillin-the-antibiotic can knock the deadliest bugs off their feet in really sick people - clearly Fleming went badly, badly, badly wrong.

What's the explanation for penicillin's unexpected 'in-sick-bodies' success ?

Well, for a start, in seriously sick people the body systems slow down and penicillin rarely leaves as fast as in healthy young people - so penicillin can hang about longer to work its magic.

Sickness also causes inflammation that lets penicillin cross body barriers that normally bar it in healthy people.

And if penicillin is constantly dripped slowly slowly into a muscle instead of being rapidly shoved all at once into a vein (by IV injection) it will have a much longer time to work its magic before leaving via the urine.

And when Fleming said penicillin was a slow killer he really meant it took a while to kill all of his bacteria sample.

But penicillin actually begins killing some of the rapidly reproducing bacteria at once (and remember that rapidly reproducing bacteria is the best single definition of a really dangerous, as opposed to a relatively benign, infection).

Inside a real living body with its own anti-bacteria defences, even slowing that rapid bacteria growth a little helps breaks their stride and often the body can finally catch its breath and kill the bug mostly by itself.

(This is believed to be the reason that in the early days, incredibly tiny amounts of penicillin seemingly 'stopped' all-out bacterial infections that were judged certain to kill the patient in a few hours.)

Because penicillin was reluctant to bind to blood serum or pus, while it stayed only a relatively short time in the body even when slowly dripped into a muscle, it was also 'all work and no play' during its short shift on duty.

By contrast, the hard to diffuse sulfa drugs hung about for hours but wasted most of their strength binding uselessly to pus and such instead of hindering our bacterial foes.

All of this was determined years after the fact, in part via basic science research.

But for a real life clinician MD ( ie a front line ward doctor) this basic science work was a  luxury - merely icing on a cake.

She or he simply had to learn how to improve lives - now - with a new medical tool without necessarily knowing fundamentally how it actually worked.

A medical tool can remain forever a big 'black box' to both doctors and basic scientists and yet improve the lives of millions.

For example, for years I helped give mental patients ECT "shock treatment" and saw it as the only thing that really improved their individual lives - even though we didn't know then - and don't know now - how it actually works.

Exalting "basic science" is a vastly overdone disease.

Frequently it really means "exalt those academic scientists who don't work helping people" over "honouring their lesser brethren who actually do dirty their hands helping humanity directly with applied science".

Because real families tend to feel a lot more grateful to the frontline doctors saving their mother at midnight than they do to back room lab scientists working a nine to five regular shift.

This tends bugs the basic scientist no end and they over-compensate by claiming an exalted role for basic science in laying a foundation for all applied science.

History fails to support this claim , by the way.

Doctors Fleming and Florey , the two best known penicillin pioneers, shared a fatal common revulsion for the clinical side of being an MD - they much preferred being in the lab and away from people suffering.

(Today, they would be just plain PhDs without the humbuggery of pretend MD licenses --- but back then non-MDs got no respect in medical science or biochemistry.)

Their revulsion was fatal for penicillin patients because much of the drug's behavior in sick patients (its only really useful quality) simply could not be predicted from its activity in Fleming's test tubes or in Florey's healthy young lab animals.

Dawson , by contrast, liked being with patients and simply did his 'basic' penicillin research while stuffing what little penicillin he had into very sick people and closely watching the results.

He learned its basic nature while also saving lives and he did so steadily from 1940 to his death in 1945.

But far as we know, Florey never did ever stick a single needle of penicillin into a patient and Fleming is really on record of doing so only in August 1942.

Peer Review and Alexander Fleming 


So what does this all have to do with 'peer review' ?

I do not believe that the editors of the journal that accepted Fleming's first penicillin article actually put it out to a realistic peer review.

If it had been , at least one of the reviewers would have called for a basic 'protection test' ( seeing if penicillin could protect from a disease in an animal and then perhaps in a human patient) before urging the accepting of the article for publication.

Peer review is much criticized today - but who doesn't wish that it had been applied, in full strength , in 1929 to Fleming's article ?

If a basic protection test had been tried - and seen to work - penicillin would probably been rapidly put into clinical practise by 1930 ( remember that before 1936 and the sulfas , there were no anti-bacterial drugs).

And yes - it need to be much better known that one of the editors who so shoddily accepted Fleming's article was Dr Florey !

Because Florey and his many powerful partisans have made so much of Fleming's failure to try a basic protection test upon penicillin.

But editor Florey failed to request one in 1928 and failed to do such a test himself for 12 (twelve) more years - doing so only after his underling Ernst Chain dared to try something similar in March 1940.

Wartime penicillin is often described (by the British mostly) as a twin triumph : British science and American industry.

I think in the case of this refusal of both Florey and Fleming to do a simple protection test with penicillin for 12 wasted years , British science was hardly shown at its best...

Janus Manhattan 1945 : Atomic ISOLATIONISM & Penicillin's NEW DEAL

Janus Manhattan Island had something for everyone in 1945.

The spirit of ISOLATIONISM , last seen going under in the wake of Pearl Harbour, was back stronger than ever , albeit in a new Easter bonnet.

For God's America had decided its role was no longer to stand above and away from a wicked, wicked European-dominated world.

Rather it was to become God's avenging angel , benevolently ruling over a badly fallen world , with a velvet fist in a nuclear glove.

Monday, March 10, 2014

FLOREY-FLEMING feud dreamed up by a bunch of bored press agents in a bar , to cover fact that both Brits screwed up penicillin

Who, besides atheists and the BBC,  produces hagiographies any more ?

BBC FOUR's "BREAKING THE MOULD" is - intellectually - filmed through reverential gauze, with blessed petroleum jelly on the lens for added good measure, only this time it is penicillin pioneer Howard Florey it is busy beatifying when earlier BBC types did the same for  another penicillin pioneer, Alec Fleming.

A matter of redress , the producers claim.

But actually, the supposed FLOREY-FLEMING rivalry and highly public "feud" , on matters where it really counted for the lives of the dying millions, never ever existed.

It always had more than a whiff of Hollywood press agent handiwork about it - a feud dreamed up by a menage a trois of Hedda Hooper, Louella Parsons and Walter Winchell.

Success is a meal eaten alone : Survival is shared together ...

Janus Manhattan, 1939-1945 , indeed.

How on earth to conform two wildly variant images of Manhattan (and America) that originated in the same place and time (the eighty acre spread in upper Manhattan between the Nash Building and the Lutheran Hospital , in the summer of 1943) ?

The selfish secrecy of the atomic Manhattan Project , as America schemed to keep The Bomb from even its closest allies.

Set this against the same America's selfless sharing of the penicillin Manhattan Project with the whole world - even with former enemies !

Summer '44 : Dodgers stiff , but Brooklyn shines in extended roadtrip : Omaha, Utah, Juno , Gold & Silver : more than just a tree grows green in Brooklyn ...

I am not saying such a headline ever appeared in a Brooklyn newspaper after it was learned that 90% of the penicillin that saved so many lives on D-Day was the naturally green stuff grown in the Brooklyn plant of Pfizer  --- but won't it be a great succinct prose poem if it had ?

Monday, March 3, 2014

Did Joshua Lederberg learn about Dawson's DNA transformation from Gladys Hobby ?

It has always been a bit of a mystery .

"Only re-Connect" : Henry Dawson and the Human Fabric

In 1928-1929, (Martin) Henry Dawson fell upon an explanation for something the Era of Modernity definitely felt needed explaining.

How, in the name of Darwin , if the bacteria were so small, weak and stupid , had they survived on the Earth dozens of times longer than their next nearest (and much larger and much more complex) rivals ?

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Allied+Axis+Neutrals' moral war against 'social medicine for all' overshadows the minor military war amongst themselves

Just like the fog of night for murderers , the fog of war is a wonderful time for bureaucrats and politicians to do all the bad things they lacked the courage to attempt in peacetime.

WWII can be seen as a continuation of a mid-Victorian battle.

REAL chemists finally gave us natural penicillin - while wannabe chemists wasted decades on synth penicillin

One of the saddest ironies of the fifteen wasted years before the world got the best lifesaver ever known - penicillin - was that it was real chemists who finally delivered natural penicillin in time for D-Day and to save the millions under threat of epidemic deaths in the aftermath of WWII.

Let us then honor them - names like Glaxo's Harry Jephcott , Pfizer's John L Smith and the WPB-OPRD's Larry Elder.

By contrast, it was chemist manques - chemist wannabes - who wasted decades, millions of human lives and millions in taxpayers' money in a hubris-fueled chase after the mirage of man-made penicillin.

Friday, February 28, 2014

Scarce British penicillin , 1943 -1944 -1945 : a CHOICE or a failure ?

Churchill's electoral defeat in July 1945 was ensured in late September 1942.

To prove that it really did reject the soon to be released Beveridge Report, the British (Conservative Party-dominated) government's all-powerful Ministry of Supply (MOS), together with representatives of the academic-military-civil servant medical science establishment, met on that date to set the British Commonwealth's production levels for penicillin for the remainder of the war.

(And first let us remind ourselves, because today's English academics - save only David Edgerton  - never do , that the civilian and military populations of the 1940s British Commonwealth cum Empire were larger than those of America.)

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

"Weft over Warp : Re-connecting the human fabric" (the OTHER Manhattan Project, 1939-1945)

So there is my book title + subtitle (and elevator pitch) all rolled up tight in as few words as possible.

And accompanied by a cover illustration.

Weft over Warp is ....

....the agape triumph of the other Manhattan Project over the atomic Manhattan Project ; the triumph of selfless sharing over selfish secrecy ; the triumph of the actual penicillin of veterans over the virtual penicillin of chickenhawk shirkers ...

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

PREFACE

Preface to "WEFT OVER WARP : the annual spirited telethon against Stone Heart disease" 

"WEFT OVER WARP" is the story of the other Manhattan Project, but in pointed contrast to the better known one , this time it is the story of the come-from-behind moral triumph of selfless sharing over selfish secrecy.

Enjoy learning how Manhattan's 'selfless penicillin project' acted as a badly needed weft to wartime's badly frayed human fabric , working to help re-connect all the war's stone-hearted warps...

Penicillin's "Third Man" : the synthetic triad of Fleming, Florey and MERCK ...

Three individuals' beliefs in the superiority of human chemists over natural chemists drove the fifteen year effort to delay the use of life-saving penicillin until it had become a patented man-made synthetic analogue : Alexander Fleming, Howard Florey and George Merck.

Fleming and Florey got Nobel prizes for their unsuccessful efforts to delay the use of this wonderful lifesaver --- Merck had to be content with the cover of TIME.

Man-made penicillin was to be literally that : something manufactured by people of the male gender with no females nurturing penicillium flasks and no fungi to be charmed into giving off their natural penicillin.

Monday, February 24, 2014

Saving the Dying : the very chemical Moderns vs the very natural postmoderns

A patient is rapidly dying of an overwhelming massive bacterial infection in a big city hospital.

All the doctors (along with the patient and their family) have only two choices of what to inject (and only a few hours to do so) if they hope to save the patient.

Door A is a relatively new man-made chemical produced in a former paint factory.

It must be given in massive doses and it has frequent serious side effects and it only slows the rate of reproduction of the few bacteria that it does affect.

Door B is an all-natural anti-bacterial agent that has been around for millions of years,  needs only tiny amounts to be effective , is completely non-toxic and kills a wide variety of bacteria stone cold.

Which medicine would tend to be picked up and used based on the limited amount of information I have given ?

In 1942 ?

In 2012 ?

Famine : a break in the human weft

Even when lack of food, like James Joyce's famous snow, is "general over Ireland" it is never been (to date) general over all the world.

A caring world puts all its energy to rushing food from when it is plentiful or at least sufficient to where it is in very short supply, so that while many may be hungry, at least they are not starving.

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Baby Patricia Malone did die , a few months after her plight made PENICILLIN world famous overnight

In May 1944, Charles Davis, one of the reporters from the Hearst newspaper that got the initial penicillin to Patty's bedside in August 1943, brought readers across America up to date on Patty after his editor won the Pulitzer prize for reporting for the paper's efforts.

He revealed that six weeks after she was mere hours from death, she was released from the Lutheran Hospital, and I think the photo reveals she indeed does look radiant in her new bonnet.

But exactly three months later, (Davis says two months but I am going from death records for the only 2 year old named Patricia Malone dying in NY in late 1943) her weakened heart gave out and she died without any media attention.

A sad ending to a story I have been chasing for a long long time.

Friday, February 14, 2014

Weft over Warp : weak over strong OR connecting over stand-offishness OR both ?

Both.

I love puns and word play and my blog and musical project are called "Weft over Warp" because those three little words allow me to fully encapsulate the unexpected outcome of WWII.

In making fabric, the threads that can be thought of as the vertical members are called the warp.

They are very strong , to stand the strain of being stretched on the loom and they never ever touch each other so they can be correctly viewed as being the stand-offish threads.

By contrast, the weft are those threads that horizontally connect all the standoffish warp members - vital to holding the fabric together.

That's all they do : 'only connect'.

They are also quite weak as thread goes and yet essential in holding the fabric together ---  indeed their very weakness give the cloth extra flexibility , which also helps it survive as fabric.

So now let us look at the concept of "Warring upon the Weak", as applied to  WWII.

That concept has been generally (and erroneously) limited to the Nazi project (Aktion T4) to kill off those mentally and physically handicapped among the German population.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

The pioneering SBE-Penicillin patients : a guess at their socio-economic status

Many of the patients with invariably fatal subacute bacterial endocarditis who were treated with penicillin in those early pioneering war years were housewives in their child-bearing years or were children.

These occupations, by themselves, don't give us much hint of their social status and family income.

But we do get hints here and there of the typical jobs of the employed adults among the group.

Allies : tell the NAZIS how to synthesis Penicillin --- but for God's Sake don't tell'em that it pulled kiddies back from the grave !

Probably the most widely available Allied scientific journal around the world during WWII was THE LANCET.

The fear of death being common to dictator and democrat, socialist and fascist alike, all leaders and elites welcomed the hints for prolonging life that the world's leading medical journal might provide even (or particularly) in wartime.

So in April or May 1943, a Nazi or Japanese diplomat in any neutral country could easily get a look at the March 27th 1943 copy of THE LANCET from some friendly doctor and see in it a lead editorial article all about the great progress made in the chemical synthesis of the natural antibiotic penicillin.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

George M Conant - penicillin patient number three ??

Penicillin pioneer Dr Martin Henry Dawson personally treated about three dozen endocarditis patients with penicillin before he died in April 1945.

For virtually all of them we know a little bit - while of a few we know virtually nothing.

For the most, those after November 1942, we know their age at admission, gender, race, hints of their occupation and marital status and of course a bit of their past medical history and a good deal of the course of their penicillin treatments, including precise dates.

But their personal and family names are reduced to initials for first and last names.

And after January 1944, we can do longer be sure they came from streets within a mile or two of Columbia presbyterian hospital - now they could well come from as far away as near by states like New Jersey or Connecticut etc.

Gladys Hobby tried to put names behind these later patients in the early 1980s and even mentioned the first and last names of a few people she met who were still alive and didn't mind their names ending up in a book.

We do know the first and last names of Dawson's first two SBE patients, the last name of his third but nothing of his next two SBE patients - except they were men and died between the Spring of 1941 and the Spring of 1942.

We know a bit about the first of Dawson's three acute bacterial endocarditis patients - but no name.

In January 1941, Dawson's third SBE patient was a Mr Conant - he did not survive we are led to assume - for sure the penicillin failed to arrest his bloodstream infection level.

The first two patients were young males and referred to by their first and last name.

But calling someone "Mr" Conant sounds as if he is older and more middle class - but not likely to be too old or he'd be dead already from SBE.

And too well off or he be unlikely to be in a public ward rather than a private room.  And probably from New York City proper.

The New York City death records do show a male Conant dying May 31 1941 in Manhattan (where Dawson's hospital was located).

His name was George M Conant and he was 40, born in about 1902 and perhaps lived in Middletown Orange County New York State with his wife Marabelle and his three young daughters Dolores, Edith and Gloria.

We will see ....

Eleanor Evelyn Chaffee and Eleanor C Hahnel share same birthday and year - and same boss

Eleanor Chaffee's birth certificate says April 6 1916 , as does Eleanor Hahnel's birth date on her death certificate.

Eleanor Chaffee worked for years with Doctor Karl Meyer, only to be replaced suddenly by Eleanor Hahnel.

I'd say a marriage intervened between ....


Penicillin Baby little Patty Malone

A published report says that two and a half year old Patty Malone died a few weeks after first receiving some history-changing penicillin in an Manhattan hospital on August 11th 1943.

However I found a photo showing her leaving hospital looking great 6 weeks later.

Today I came across a partial record for a two year old named Patricia Malone who did die in December 21st 1943 in a Manhattan hospital, ie possibly Patty's life was only prolonged for 4 1/2 more months.

It could be our penicillin baby- I checking it out - if so , a very unhappy ending for her two parents and bigger sister ....

Patient One of the Age of Antibiotics - Aaron Alston ?

Aaron was a young black man suffering from invariably fatal SBE heart disease when on October 16th 1940 he received the world's first antibiotic needle from Dr Martin Henry Dawson at NY's famous Columbia Presbyterian hospital.

He received some more penicillin the next few days and again beginning New year's Eve 1941 but died Jan 25th 1941.

His fellow patient in this historical event, a young Jewish man, Charles Aronson, was still alive the last time his doctor checked, which was in November 1945....

Forget honouring Dr Dawson - he won't want it.

But in 2015, 75 years after this historical event, shouldn't the US Post Office issuing a stamp honouring these two very brave pioneers of the age of antibiotics ?


Sunday, February 9, 2014

"You can't end a war, begun in selfishness, by piling on more selfishness" - Martin Henry Dawson

Dawson didn't believe the Allies could hope to sustain a moral coalition to end Hitler, Mussolini and Tojo's war of selfishness by piling on their own examples of selfishness.

Wefting the Human Fabric

Without the human wefts among us, I doubt the human species would live on Earth for very long - we are too inclined to be self-centred, self-satisfied, selfish,  greedy and violent.

No  'Type As' or 'Alpha Males', the wefts may 'only connect' but in doing so they hold the human fabric together ...


The annual spirited Telethon against Stone Heart disease

An annual telethon (put on by spirits from the past) to prevent the re-occurrence of Stone Heart disease ???!

Is it a fund-raising telethon for research on the calcified (stone) formations on heart valves that leads to often-fatal SBE  endocarditis?

Or  a telethon to prevent the return of post-modern Humanity to being mean and selfish and stone hearted , ie 'modern' ?

Or both ......

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Exploiting eugenic purity and war scarcity for profit : the MERCK story

A culture (the Modern Era 1870-1960) that successfully convinced itself that eating whole wheat bread mother made herself in her own kitchen was unsafe and that white bread made in a factory a hundred miles away was much safer  is obviously crazy enough to fall for pretty well anything and everything.

Hitler and Mussolini and Stalin aside, it also fell hard for the idea of extending the false promises of eugenic purity to everything.

Rejecting mama's fresh from the oven bread was just a pre-game warm-up.

The totally unexpected wartime triumph of 'selfless penicillin'

I like to claim that my thesis found in "Weft Over Warp" takes a very different and controversial take on WWII.

(But of course, authors - and above all, historians - are expected to claim their work says something totally new and totally provocative.)

So here it goes : I think you will agree that our conventional view of WWII focuses on its act of evil - as if to say it was six years of unrelenting evil sandwiched between two longer periods of peace and good will.

My take is that before, during and after WWII , the modern world was so dominated by selfishness and self-centredness that it was the unnoticed norm and that what now really stands out about WWII, 75 years after the event,  were the rare -bright/shining/unexpected - examples of noble selflessness.

Friday, February 7, 2014

The unexpected triumph of Selfless penicillin over Selfish penicillin : weft over warp

Martin Henry Dawson and Howard Walter Florey represented the weft and the warp of the wartime penicillin saga : selfless penicillin over selfish penicillin.

Florey's team agreed enough with George W Merck's team to want wartime penicillin only made in quantities enough to give the Allies a surprise military advantage over the Axis.

No penicillin for Neutral nations, for Axis and Occupied civilians or Allied POWs , very little for Allied civilians or for Allied wounded considered to be unfit to return to battle or war munitions work.

Florey wanted the commercial success and scientific prestige of penicillin to go to Oxford University and England and probably the ICL chemical firm ; Merck  to America and the Merck drug company and the American OSRD agency.

Both wanted penicillin to be like the earliest success of Florey's mentor's Mellanby and Merck's own firm : fooling the public into believing that patented synthetic Vitamin C made by chemists with PhDs was better and safer than eating a raw impure - grown by peasants - orange.

So they strongly strongly opposed Dawson teaching ordinary doctors to grow raw - crude - natural penicillin in their hospitals and curing patients with it.

They wanted penicillin's fame and money to go to one person, one university, one country, one firm, one side in the war, to the scientific elite only , to men chemists only over women natural penicillin growers - on and on and on.

Selfish - consistently- and on so many levels.

Dawson wanted all in the wartime world to know how to grow natural Public Domain penicillin  and to do so - now ! - to save all sorts of lives all over the world - particularly saving the lives of the so called "handicapped" that the Allies and Axis were equally determined to throw under the bus during the war.






Monday, February 3, 2014

Chandler cribs Joyce : the last paragraphs of THE DEAD and THE BIG SLEEP

I'm just sayin' :

If you can't sense the deep and soulful connection between these two very famous last paragraphs , than you really have no ear for poetry in the English language.

And yes, I hope the last paragraphs in my epilogue to WEFT OVER WRAP also successfully evokes both THE DEAD and THE BIG SLEEP's last paragraphs too ....

Friday, January 24, 2014

Distinguishing tenet of the selfish is their belief that reality can be easily managed - and thus easily managed by themselves alone

Scientists who tend towards Natural Philosophy have an undying faith that an (as yet invisible) simplicity lies just below reality's highly visible surface complexity.

Natural History oriented scientists (such as Martin Henry Dawson) don't believe reality is at all simple or can be easily managed at all - let alone easily managed by small groups alone acting alone.

Rather it can, at best , be survived , and that by humanity working together.