Jun. 23rd, 2011

vanillafluffy: (Clipper)
If you could travel back in time and ask any deceased political figure (famous or infamous) a single question, who would you choose, and what would you ask?

I would ask his name---so I could confirm that it was Adolf Hitler I was shooting dead. (Circa 1907, long before history would miss him.)

Conceivably, I could be stuck in that past, because that *would* assuredly change the future: time travel might not exist. It would be interesting to see what did and didn't happen next. There probably wouldn't be concentration camps, but would there still be a war? If Germany had been led by someone who wasn't afflicted with mental health problems and magical thinking, someone rational, how would that have changed the results? A truly rational leader wouldn't have gone to war at all, but if he had, he would probably have been smart enough *not* to have multiple fronts. Going after Russia while simultaneously taking on the rest of Europe = bonehead move.

I imagine returning to a discernably different future. Not necessarily better or worse in terms of my day-to-day life, but a bunch of subtle differences. There would have been a ripple effect. If all those German rocket scientists hadn't defected, would there have been an atomic bomb? Nuclear energy? The Cold War? If they hadn't had to fight the Germans, how much stronger would the Soviet Union have been after the war? If they hadn't annexed East Germany and all those republics and their resources, how much shorter might the Cold War have been?

When you think of all the benefits we've gotten from the space program (instituted to keep up with the Soviets), it's significant. I'm not saying we wouldn't have gotten to where we are eventually, but not at the same accelerated pace. I suspect we wouldn't have as many satellites---no 400 channels and nothing on, no wireless internet---internet? What's that? Computers talking to each other? That's just crazy---computers are those gigantic things that take up a whole room, regular people don't own them! You're having heart palpitations? I hope someone's gotten around to developing EKGs and all the other monitoring that harks back to the telemetry readings they did on astronauts. Nobody's ever heard of an iPod, but look at my cool new transister radio!

Another manifestation of the ripple effect---thanks to America's success in WWII, we've spent the last 70 years acting as the world's police. What if that war hadn't happened? Would we have stuck our noses into Korea? Vietnam? The Middle East?

One question. One bullet. If only.

.
vanillafluffy: (Clipper)
If you could travel back in time and ask any deceased political figure (famous or infamous) a single question, who would you choose, and what would you ask?

I would ask his name---so I could confirm that it was Adolf Hitler I was shooting dead. (Circa 1907, long before history would miss him.)

Conceivably, I could be stuck in that past, because that *would* assuredly change the future: time travel might not exist. It would be interesting to see what did and didn't happen next. There probably wouldn't be concentration camps, but would there still be a war? If Germany had been led by someone who wasn't afflicted with mental health problems and magical thinking, someone rational, how would that have changed the results? A truly rational leader wouldn't have gone to war at all, but if he had, he would probably have been smart enough *not* to have multiple fronts. Going after Russia while simultaneously taking on the rest of Europe = bonehead move.

I imagine returning to a discernably different future. Not necessarily better or worse in terms of my day-to-day life, but a bunch of subtle differences. There would have been a ripple effect. If all those German rocket scientists hadn't defected, would there have been an atomic bomb? Nuclear energy? The Cold War? If they hadn't had to fight the Germans, how much stronger would the Soviet Union have been after the war? If they hadn't annexed East Germany and all those republics and their resources, how much shorter might the Cold War have been?

When you think of all the benefits we've gotten from the space program (instituted to keep up with the Soviets), it's significant. I'm not saying we wouldn't have gotten to where we are eventually, but not at the same accelerated pace. I suspect we wouldn't have as many satellites---no 400 channels and nothing on, no wireless internet---internet? What's that? Computers talking to each other? That's just crazy---computers are those gigantic things that take up a whole room, regular people don't own them! You're having heart palpitations? I hope someone's gotten around to developing EKGs and all the other monitoring that harks back to the telemetry readings they did on astronauts. Nobody's ever heard of an iPod, but look at my cool new transister radio!

Another manifestation of the ripple effect---thanks to America's success in WWII, we've spent the last 70 years acting as the world's police. What if that war hadn't happened? Would we have stuck our noses into Korea? Vietnam? The Middle East?

One question. One bullet. If only.

.
vanillafluffy: (Scenic)
I miss summer vacations. When I was a kid, Lake George (upstate NY) was a recurring destination. We stayed at a variety of motels over the years...ate at an assortment of restaurants. (I couldn't really tell you about any of the restaurants, though, since in those days all I ever ordered was a hamburger.) Aside from swimming in the lake, we'd go into town in the evening...typial little resort town with a bunch of souvenir shops on the main drag. There was a spin-art booth, which I loved to do, right across from a place called The Trading Post, where I enlarged my collection of Breyer horses (still have some of them!).

Down the block was an ice cream parlor, right next to an arcade. Yes, they had arcades before the advent of video games! Mostly pinball, some skee ball, stamping pennies with The Lord's Prayer...they even had a booth where you could record your own 45 record. I tried it once---the resulting disk is around here somewhere.

There were a bunch of attractions. Fans of the Daniel Day-Lewis version of The Last of the Mohicans may remember mention of Ft William Henry...the movie was filmed in the Carolinas, but the real fort is on the shores of Lake George. Although these days it's got a mini golf course with a thirty-foot tall Paul Bunyan next to it.

My particular favorite was Gaslight Village, a now-defunct amusement park with a "gay 90s"* theme. The 1890s are an era I wouldn't mind visiting. In those days, gals with my figure were prized! Anyway, Gaslight Village had Victorian-style architecture and what was billed as the oldest carousel in America and I loved wandering around looking at the exhibit of ladies' fashion and the arcade.

We'd go back to the motel, and no matter how warm it might have gotten during the day, at night it would cool down enough to need a blanket. Sounds wonderful!

0=0=0=0=0=0=0=0=0

*So-called for the general merriment of the times, nothing to do with anything slashy.


.
vanillafluffy: (Scenic)
I miss summer vacations. When I was a kid, Lake George (upstate NY) was a recurring destination. We stayed at a variety of motels over the years...ate at an assortment of restaurants. (I couldn't really tell you about any of the restaurants, though, since in those days all I ever ordered was a hamburger.) Aside from swimming in the lake, we'd go into town in the evening...typial little resort town with a bunch of souvenir shops on the main drag. There was a spin-art booth, which I loved to do, right across from a place called The Trading Post, where I enlarged my collection of Breyer horses (still have some of them!).

Down the block was an ice cream parlor, right next to an arcade. Yes, they had arcades before the advent of video games! Mostly pinball, some skee ball, stamping pennies with The Lord's Prayer...they even had a booth where you could record your own 45 record. I tried it once---the resulting disk is around here somewhere.

There were a bunch of attractions. Fans of the Daniel Day-Lewis version of The Last of the Mohicans may remember mention of Ft William Henry...the movie was filmed in the Carolinas, but the real fort is on the shores of Lake George. Although these days it's got a mini golf course with a thirty-foot tall Paul Bunyan next to it.

My particular favorite was Gaslight Village, a now-defunct amusement park with a "gay 90s"* theme. The 1890s are an era I wouldn't mind visiting. In those days, gals with my figure were prized! Anyway, Gaslight Village had Victorian-style architecture and what was billed as the oldest carousel in America and I loved wandering around looking at the exhibit of ladies' fashion and the arcade.

We'd go back to the motel, and no matter how warm it might have gotten during the day, at night it would cool down enough to need a blanket. Sounds wonderful!

0=0=0=0=0=0=0=0=0

*So-called for the general merriment of the times, nothing to do with anything slashy.


.

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