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#21
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SIMPLE FACTS
What you refer to as "cold war rhetoric" I view as the simple facts. -- John Savard "That's your mistake right there. Judgements derived from false premises will also be false. -- Karpov apologist David Kane Phil Innes makes an interesting point about what occurs today as opposed to Soviet times. One notes, though, that the Red Square demonstration in August 1968 (if memory serves, at Lobnoye Mesto, but I could be wrong),against the Soviet attack on Czechoslovakia was the first known demonstration of the kind in decades, just as the great coal miner strikes in the summer of 1989 were the first major labor actions in over 60 years. My point re the Czech demonstration is that virtually no one for more than a half century imagined that such a gesture could ever have substantive meaning. The very idea of demonstrating disappeared for more than a generation. And then, one day, Pavel Litvinov (the son of Maxim Litvinov, Stalin's foreign minister during the phony Collective Security years of the 1930s) Larisa Bogoraz, poetess Natalya Gorbanevskaya (later to be tortured brutally in Soviet mental asylums) and three or four others unfurled banners and sat down, waiting for what would come. What would come came within minutes, but it did not include summary execution of the demonstrators and their families. Instead a trial, long sentences that were written beforehand and so on. But the world took note that if the Soviet state did not exactly blink and certainly did not wink, it nodded. Nothing would be the same thereafter. Ut was the beginning of the celebrated dissident movement. A Spassky was on the side of those people in Red Square. A Karpov, whatever his interior convictions, had no doubt that as a Caissic godyonesh, to employ Korchnoi's favorite word for the man, he was a Brezhnev boyo. A fascinating historical footnote is provided by Bertram Wolfe re Maxim Litvinov, who probably died a natural death, though a Jew and likely in bad odor with Stalin after he was dropped as foreign minister in favor of Molotov in preparation for signing the Non-Aggression Pact with Germany on August 23(?), 1937. Years later, Litvinov had a rare private moment in the Kremlin with CBS news correspondent Richard Hottelot. Litvinov, who was near the peak of the Soviet hierarchy, proceeded to beg Hottelot to tell American leaders that Stalin was intent on conquering Europe and the world. For Greg Kennedy's edification, Bertram Wolfe is the author of "Three Who Made a Revolution" which is still in print more than a half century after it first appeared. It is still the best single volume history of the lives of Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin. The book is one of those that I would have Greg read, if he were of a mind to undertake serious independent study. Which, alas, he is not and, by this point in his life is is likely never to be. Yours, Larry Parr Chess One wrote: "David Kane" wrote in message ... "help bot" wrote in message ... Mr. Kane's point was that (he says) the Soviets' *routine practice* was to deny such emigration requests as those by family members of defector Victor Kortchnoi. Now, while I don't know about such things, I do know that Mr. Parr studiously avoided addressing that issue, instead doing another of his ad hominem dances, with both feet flying this way and that. It must be concluded then that Mr. Kane struck a nerve. The bigger point really was that no rational person could expect a chessplayer to influence the emigration policies of the Soviet government. No rational person would credit any objective sense whatever to Soviet Government. We wanted the best, but it turned out as always. - Viktor Chernomyrdin, - Russian prime minister, 1992-1998. But David Kane might appreciate the particular sensitivity displayed by all totalitarian regimes to the // appearance // of things, in contradistinction to the difficulty of reporting what actually goes on in closed societies, which is to contrast the appearance with the practice. If Mr. Parr's commentary related to either individual pressure put on chess players, or to other individuals whose intelligence and ability was valued by the Soviet State, then his is /not/ an exceptional point of view. In chess one would only have to read Boris Gulko's testimony to understand that specifically; not only was the Russian champion duffed-up by KGB but his wife was also beaten. It is getting that news out of the country which is the difficult bit - not just the anecdote, but records establishing its extent and probity. Therefore while it is unusual to have then found such samizdat in the West, almost all such records as Gulko's, each made independently of each other, and necessarily without knowledge of each other; these records all accord with each other. I think to perhaps innocently blame the reporter for inventiveness, or some such thing, is an attitude that is relieved by knowledge after even a little study. The Evans and Parrs of this world are simply not capable of dealing with facts which get in the way of their simplistic stories. JUST ANOTHER MASSACRE The stories are simple. They are often brutal, so brutal that it is hard to believe that, for example, even in the post-Soviet era one's own head of state will appear on camera smiling and shaking hands with the perpetrators of repression, and make 'simplistic' statements expressing their feelings they could 'do business' with them. On February 5, 2000, the mass murder of civilians took place during a passport inspection by sub-units of the Ministry of Defence and the Ministry of the Interior of the Russian Federation in the village of Novye Aldy, Zavodskoi District, Grozny. This was reported by; - T. A. Murdalov - Investigator for Especially Important Matters, - Office of the North Caucasus Prosecutor General of the Russian Federation. Those refer to OMON units. The issue was not further investigated because of jurisdictional 'problems' of troops from Petersburg and Ryazan, and in 2002 "it came quietly to rest." says Andrew Meier, who continued his report in Black Earth with... ...Not long after the dead in Aldy were reburied for the final time, Yuri Dyomin, Russia's chief military prosecutor, told an audience of Western human rights advocates in Moscow that he regretted "the time I have wasted" investigating reports of abuses "based on disinformation." He went on to accuse Chechen refugees of spreading // skazki //, fairy tales. This ended the affair for catch-phrase Western apologists of the Regime in the post-Soviet era, since it was just another [unexplained] massacre, despite contravening Article 3 of the Geneva Convention, on internal conflicts. And that Mr. Kane, I suggest to you is emphasis //post// Soviet era. Those who reported things even earlier gained less attention in the West, since for many people, such behaviors by a state were literally 'unbelievable.' Phil Innes |
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#22
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wrote in message ... One reckons that nearly every reader on this forum knows that Kanester inverted truth when calling Larry Evans an apparatchik of the USCF. He has been an independent contractor, never a USCF employee. One has to laugh. When faced with an unpleasant reality, Parr comes up with the defense that Larry Evans was not technically "on the payroll" but rather an independent contractor! I stand corrected. LOL Of course, that detail has little to do with anything, and does not resurrect the Evans mythology (of someone bravely takes on a corrupt establishment) that Parr has been assigned with promulgating. GM Evans, a player I admire and an author of chess works of which I am a satisfied customer (believe it or not, he actually wrote about chess at one time!), chose to make his chess name writing for the USCF's "government" periodical. As such, his survival was not related to excellence or even competence, but rather his skill in negotiating the political winds of the federation. He's done that in admirable fashion - and I don't deny that in part that relates to having a group of loyal followers, mostly of the Sam Sloan variety. Of course, when CL made it mandatory for every article to have a red-baiting angle, Evans complied with his wild, fact-free allegations - often contradicting his own prior writings. But I will grant that Parr does have a point in that the USCF does not speak with a single voice and at times he's been at odds with certain factions within the organization. Perhaps the wily politician is a more apt image than apparatchik, which emphasizes conformity above all else. |
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#23
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On Apr 26, 5:28 pm, " wrote:
Now we come to the crux of the matter. Despite good-faith efforts and even the challenger's apparent folly, Kasparov is not absolved from his pledge to give Shirov a title shot for $2 million as announced to the world at Linares in 1998. Kasparov put his trust in a person who proved unreliable, but he also put his credibility and prestige behind the WCC (which went the way of his GMA and PCA). These facts can't be evaded. It turned out, perhaps, that he unwittingly treated himself more shabbily than he did Shirov. I still believe Kasparov has a debt of sporting honor to play Shirov. If he should do so, you can rely on me to celebrate in bold type and capital letters. As it stands, however, Shirov never got paid for beating Kramnik or a title shot -- both are Kasparov's obligation. Sorry, but I disagree with your analysis. Garry Kasparov did not refuse to play a match with Shirov. Kasparov was ready and willing to play. Shirov refused to play because he wanted more money. One of the reasons more money was not available was that Kasparov had easily beaten Shirov many times and Shirov had never beaten Kasparov. Nobody gave Shirov any chance at all to beat Kasparov in a match. Thus, sponsors were unwilling to put up much money for such a match. None of this was any fault of Kasparov. The prize fund being offered Shirov was generous in spite of these problems. I believe that the amount offered was $250,000. This is more than the amount initially offered for the Kamsky Tapolov Match more than ten years later. Shirov was a fool not to take the $250,000. The claim that Kasparov had a moral obligation to pay Shirov out of his own pocket has no basis. Sam Sloan |
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#24
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On Apr 29, 12:12*pm, samsloan wrote:
On Apr 26, 5:28 pm, " wrote: Now we come to the crux of the matter. Despite good-faith efforts and even the challenger's apparent folly, Kasparov is not absolved from his pledge to give Shirov a title shot for $2 million as announced to the world at Linares in 1998. Kasparov put his trust in a person who proved unreliable, but he also put his credibility and prestige behind the WCC (which went the way of his GMA and PCA). These facts can't be evaded. It turned out, perhaps, that he unwittingly treated himself more shabbily than he did Shirov. I still believe Kasparov has a debt of sporting honor to play Shirov. If he should do so, you can rely on me to celebrate in bold type and capital letters. As it stands, however, Shirov never got paid for beating Kramnik or a title shot -- both are Kasparov's obligation. Sorry, but I disagree with your analysis. Garry Kasparov did not refuse to play a match with Shirov. Kasparov was ready and willing to play. Shirov refused to play because he wanted more money. He only wanted what was promised to him, and guaranteed by signed contract. One of the reasons more money was not available was that Kasparov had easily beaten Shirov many times and Shirov had never beaten Kasparov. Quite irrelevant to the ethical problem. And there are plenty of cases where the challenger has won a world title match despite having a poor record against the champion beforehand. For example, Capablanca was +0 -1 =2 vs. Lasker before 1921, Alekhine was +0 -5 =7 vs. Capablanca before 1927, Euwe was +3 -6 =8 vs. Alekhine before 1935, Smyslov was +2 -7 =10 vs. Botvinnik before 1954, and Fischer was +0 -3 =2 vs. Spassky until 1972. Nobody gave Shirov any chance at all to beat Kasparov in a match. Thus, sponsors were unwilling to put up much money for such a match. Quite irrelevant to the ethical problem, which stems from the fact that Shirov was indeed promised much money. The prize fund being offered Shirov was generous in spite of these problems. I believe that the amount offered was $250,000. This is more than the amount initially offered for the Kamsky Tapolov Match more than ten years later. Shirov was a fool not to take the $250,000. Nonsense. The final offer to Shirov was nothing like $250,000 -- as I recall, it was closer to $50,000, peanuts considering the work involved in preparation, the expense of paying seconds, etc. And in any event even $250,000 would be insultingly low compared to initial promise of a $2 million purse.. The initial contract called for Shirov to be paid $200,000 if the match was cancelled -- but Rentero simply refused! What nerve! Utter faithlessness. The claim that Kasparov had a moral obligation to pay Shirov out of his own pocket has no basis. Somebody sure as hell had a moral obligation to pay Shirov something. If not Kasparov, then certainly Rentero. |
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#25
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"Jürgen R." wrote in message ... schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... On Apr 28, 1:10 pm, Jürgen R. wrote: The clock will soon have stricken 12 for chess journalists without a command of the irregular verb forms. I believe "stricken" is quite proper here. I've seen hundreds of TV and movie courtroom scenes where an attorney says "I move that statement be stricken from the record." By the same token, a rule may be stricken from the books. Fowler: 'stricken' - this archaic p.p. of strike survives chiefly in particular phrases, & especially in senses divorced from those now usual with the verb; then gives examples: poverty-stricken, etc. Jurgen finds the right point: there are several points. Even English usage various considerably over time. The original word in 'English' is from A. Sax; STRICAN; with the usual sense of 'to go directly'. In fact from the normative verb form there are given some 21 definitions of the word - earlier spelled STREKE. Earliest rendition I can find is from the Anglo Saxon: He sall noght eftyr hys lyfes ende Weende strycke to purgatory, Bot even to helle withowten mercy. // Hampole, MS Bowes, p. 105. STRICAN: to go rapidly in a straight course ASTRICAN: to strike, to smite D. strijken; to stroke G. streichen; Icel. strykja; to stroke, to flog ['stroke' is a derivative] In England there is also STRETT; a straight way, and even STRAIT; meaning /to straighten, to puzzle/ [as if to say, to straighter one's thoughts or ideas]. It is a fascinating observation that many "Americanisms" are actually older than current English ones; since the early 1600's American English often recorded words which were latterly superceded in England itself. Receding a thousand years there is also: STRAKE: to go; to proceed, 'to strake about, circumcere,' [MS Devonsh. Glossary] The stormes straked with the wynde, The wawes to-bote bifore and bihynde. // Cursor Mundi, MS Coll. Trin. Cantab. f. 12. An original sense can also be that of latter usage - as in the 1960's people were called 'straights' in exactly the same way as here below [severe, straight-laced, strict]: Of his ordres he wol streit, and he was in greete fere For to ordeini eni man bote he the betere were. // Like of Thomas Beket, ed. Black, p. 14 I think the sense of strike with a meaning to eliminate from consideration is of British Naval usage, as in, to strike the colors is to cease resistance, to contest no more, and this is relatively late, circa 1700. Phil Innes However, it is possible that English and American usage differ sufficiently to make 'stricken', as used in the original quote, acceptable to many. |
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#26
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"David Kane" wrote in message . .. wrote in message ... One reckons that nearly every reader on this forum knows that Kanester inverted truth when calling Larry Evans an apparatchik of the USCF. He has been an independent contractor, never a USCF employee. One has to laugh. When faced with an unpleasant reality, Parr comes up with the defense that Larry Evans was not technically "on the payroll" but rather an independent contractor! I stand corrected. LOL Not the point I took, which was that Larry Evans was independent of employment and also the need for a few hundred bucks a month, since he is a millionairre. Of course, that detail has little to do with anything, and does not resurrect the Evans mythology (of someone bravely takes on a corrupt establishment) that Parr has been assigned with promulgating. Who else has bravely done so? There are few truly independent voices. The inverse of Larry Evans is Jerry Hanken, eg. GM Evans, a player I admire and an author of chess works of which I am a satisfied customer (believe it or not, he actually wrote about chess at one time!), chose to make his chess name writing for the USCF's "government" periodical. As such, his survival was not related to excellence or even competence, but rather his skill in negotiating the political winds of the federation. He's done that in admirable fashion - and I don't deny that in part that relates to having a group of loyal followers, mostly of the Sam Sloan variety. My opinion is that people use their own judgement rather more than an weighted attention from Sloan, who, after all, is only known to chess politicians and the reader of the New York Times, if that is a distinction worth making? Of course, when CL made it mandatory for every article to have a red-baiting angle, Evans complied with his wild, fact-free allegations - often contradicting his own prior writings. These facts, you know, like judgement at chess, are not always communicable to those with not the slightest sence of the culture addressed. Soviet bashing is relatively easy, since there are now plenty of facts to support it, in fact, to assume innocent action from a Soviet-era figure would be the exception, and facts would be required to explicate that person from the system. Korchnoi was certainly such an exception to corruption to the degree that he could still exist in the SU and say anything at all. A bit later Boris Spassky was the same. They both got the hell out of there. Gulko was merely a refusenik and was persecuted for his religion and culture. Are there ex-Soviets chess players in the West who actually contest this as a basis? But I will grant that Parr does have a point in that the USCF does not speak with a single voice and at times he's been at odds with certain factions within the organization. Perhaps the wily politician is a more apt image than apparatchik, which emphasizes conformity above all else. Like in the SU, non-conformity is treated the same way - by being frozen-out; by being ostracized by the burocratic class in chess who rather like it the way it is. Phil Innes |
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#27
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On Apr 29, 2:32 am, "David Kane" wrote:
Mr. Kane's point was that (he says) the Soviets' *routine practice* was to deny such emigration requests as those by family members of defector Victor Kortchnoi. Now, while I don't know about such things, I do know that Mr. Parr studiously avoided addressing that issue, instead doing another of his ad hominem dances, with both feet flying this way and that. It must be concluded then that Mr. Kane struck a nerve. The bigger point really was that no rational person could expect a chessplayer to influence the emigration policies of the Soviet government. That's true, but what if the government sometimes makes exceptions to their usual policies? Well, of course this has a serious drawback in that the "criminal" is in essence rewarded for having defected. The Evans and Parrs of this world are simply not capable of dealing with facts which get in the way of their simplistic stories. Not all their stories are of a simple nature, but those two certainly cannot deal with any facts which don't neatly "fit" into their bizarre fairyland world. For instance, having long cast Gary Kasparov as a hero who fights a never-ending battle for Justice, they must painfully struggle to somehow deal with the man's cheating poor little Judit Polgar with his infamous take-back. Nutters don't have it so easy as you might think... . -- help bot |
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#28
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KENNEDY'S NEW LIE
Not all their stories are of a simple nature, but those two certainly cannot deal with any facts which don't neatly "fit" into their bizarre fairyland world. For instance, having long cast Gary Kasparov as a hero who fights a never-ending battle for Justice, they must painfully struggle to somehow deal with the man's cheating poor little Judit Polgar with his infamous take-back. Nutters don't have it so easy as you might think... . -- Greg Kennedy As this writer noted when this thread began: I realize that setting the record straight won't do much good when it comes to the "bots" of this world because they will just continue inventing new lies. This thread is about Shirov, but that doesn't stop Greg from changing the header or the subjet to beat dead horses. As soon as one charge is refuted (Evans is USCF apparatchik -- then Kane withdrew it and instead called him a wily politician) a new one pops up. One would fill a book refuting all of their fabrications. I will answer David Kane later. Needless to say, contrary to Greg's new lie, GM Evans did report on the Polgar-Kasparov incident in his newspaper column as well as in his new book, giving both sides of the story. THIS CRAZY WORLD OF CHESS by GM Larry Evans (page 266) Touch Move! April 25, 2005 Chess is perfect. People aren’t. The rules of the game are clear, concise, and consistent. If you touch a piece, you must move it. If your hand quits the piece, the move stands. If your hand is still on it, then you can change your mind and move it elsewhere. But move it you must. Enforcing touch move in the heat of battle isn’t always easy. A case in point was the first encounter in 1994 between Judit Polgar, then 17, and world champion Garry Kasparov, then 31, at a major tournament in Linares, Spain. After a tough fight Polgar threw in the towel because 47 Kg1 e2 49 Re1 Qd4 49 Kh1 Nf2 50 Kg1 Nh3 51 Kh1 Qg1! 52 Rxg1 Nf2 leads to smothered mate. Afterwards she complained that Kasparov took back a move. At first he played 36...Nc5 but then saw it refuted by 37 Bc6 and instead he placed the knight on f8. [Note: As it turns out, his initial 36...Nc5 probably didn't lose -- LP] Since the rules specify that a protest must be lodged during play, nothing could be done after the game was over. "I didn’t want to cause unpleasantness during my first invitation to such an important event," she explained. "We were both in severe time pressure. I was also afraid I would be penalized on the clock if my protest was rejected." "Kasparov did not take his hand off the knight, so he had a perfect right to change his move," said the chief arbiter. "My conscience is clear. I have the feeling my hand was still on it," added Kasparov. Yet we all know the naked eye can be fooled. A camera crew was filming the game and a replay revealed that Kasparov removed his hand for exactly ¼ of a second! Deliberate foul or did he try to change his grip in order to reverse direction? Who can say for sure? His enemies promptly called it cheating. But Robert Solso, a noted cognitive psychologist, said that a time span of 250 milliseconds might be too short to make such a conscious decision. POLGAR vs. KASPAROV Sicilian Defense, 1994 1 e4 c5 2 Nf3 d6 3 d4 cxd4 4 Nxd4 Nf6 5 Nc3 a6 6 f4 e6 7 Be2 Be7 8 0–0 Qc7 9 Qe1 Nbd7 10 a4 b6 11 Bf3 Bb7 12 Kh1 Rd8 13 Be3 0–0 14 Qg3 Nc5 15 f5 e5 16 Bh6 Ne8 17 Nb3 Nd7 18 Rad1 Kh8 19 Be3 Nef6 20 Qf2 Rfe8 21 Rfe1 Bf8 22 Bg5 h6 23 Bh4 Rc8 24 Qf1 Be7 25 Nd2 Qc5 26 Nb3 Qb4 27 Be2 Bxe4 28 Nxe4 Nxe4 29 Bxe7 Rxe7 30 Bf3 Nef6 31 Qxa6 Ree8 32 Qe2 Kg8 33 Bb7 Rc4 34 Qd2 Qxa4 35 Qxd6 Rxc2 36 Nd2 Nf8 37 Ne4 N8d7 38 Nxf6 Nxf6 39 Qxb6 Ng4 40 Rf1 e4 41 Bd5 e3 42 Bb3 Qe4 43 Bxc2 Qxc2 44 Rd8 Rxd8 45 Qxd8 Kh7 46 Qe7 Qc4 White Resigns help bot wrote: On Apr 29, 2:32 am, "David Kane" wrote: Mr. Kane's point was that (he says) the Soviets' *routine practice* was to deny such emigration requests as those by family members of defector Victor Kortchnoi. Now, while I don't know about such things, I do know that Mr. Parr studiously avoided addressing that issue, instead doing another of his ad hominem dances, with both feet flying this way and that. It must be concluded then that Mr. Kane struck a nerve. The bigger point really was that no rational person could expect a chessplayer to influence the emigration policies of the Soviet government. That's true, but what if the government sometimes makes exceptions to their usual policies? Well, of course this has a serious drawback in that the "criminal" is in essence rewarded for having defected. The Evans and Parrs of this world are simply not capable of dealing with facts which get in the way of their simplistic stories. Not all their stories are of a simple nature, but those two certainly cannot deal with any facts which don't neatly "fit" into their bizarre fairyland world. For instance, having long cast Gary Kasparov as a hero who fights a never-ending battle for Justice, they must painfully struggle to somehow deal with the man's cheating poor little Judit Polgar with his infamous take-back. Nutters don't have it so easy as you might think... . -- help bot |
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#29
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On Apr 29, 8:31 pm, " wrote:
The rules of the game are clear, concise, and consistent. If you touch a piece, you must move it. If your hand quits the piece, the move stands. If your hand is still on it, then you can change your mind and move it elsewhere. But move it you must. While I don't agree with Mr. Evans regarding the "concise" part, he at least seems to be familiar with the basic rules of chess. Since the rules specify that a protest must be lodged during play, Nonsense. The proper thing to do is recognize that Mr. Kasparov is a low-down good-for-nothing cheater, and then treat him accordingly. "Kasparov did not take his hand off the knight, so he had a perfect right to change his move," said the chief arbiter. Unbiased sources told a very different story. One had it that the arbiter claimed he could not "see" the infraction, because he was standing behind Mr. Kasparov (a GK "backer"?). "My conscience is clear. I have the feeling my hand was still on it," added Kasparov. Okay, make that dirty, low-down, good-for-nothing, *lying* cheater. Yet we all know the naked eye can be fooled. Ah, I knew there would be a "twist" in the plot. As with the Fox spin-zone, if you remove the spin, you are left with nothing but dead air. A camera crew was filming the game and a replay revealed that Kasparov removed his hand for exactly ¼ of a second! Deliberate foul or did he try to change his grip in order to reverse direction? Who can say for sure? The subject is changed to this or that, deftly avoiding the actual cheating. It makes no difference if anyone can guess GK's motive, nor the length of time it took to enact the cheating, nor what color the sky may be when viewed from outer space. A typical Larry Evans ploy is to ignore the facts, and change the subject to something else; in fact, I'm a bit disappointed that he failed to attack Judit Polgar's character or religion. The old man seems to be slipping. His enemies promptly called it cheating. Ah, now THAT'S more like it! Ad hominize the folks who want the rules to be enforced, even upon faves like GK. The problem, you understand, is not that GK is a cheater-- no sir! It's that he has "enemies" who stalk him, just waiting for a chance to point out when some errant camera may try and make it appear that he did something wrong-- which he never ever could. Apparently, to the Evans ratpack, Gary Kasparov is a sacred cow-- almost like Bobby Fischer. He can do no wrong, and if Judit Pogar gets run over, well, she ought not to have gotten in his way... . -- help bot |
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#30
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THE GOD THAT FAILED
It is generally known that he got involved with Petra Leeuwerik very soon after his defection, and that he divorced his wife shortly after she moved to the West in 1982. It is also well known That Korchnoi is a difficult character -- impolite, unsophisticated, paranoid, definitely not somebody easily made into a hero. -- Jurgen Juergen is a throwback to a simpler, more evil time. His attack on Korchnoi was standard fare among pro-Soviet types in the 1930s and 1940s. The idea was always to find imperfections and shortcomings on the part of defectors so as to discredit their message. Perhaps the most famous instance of this ploy was in the case of Victor Kravchenko, who wrote the 1946 bestseller "I Chose Freedom." The attacks on him in the communist and fellow-traveller press were legion. Finally, the French communist newspaper, L'Humanite, charged that Kravchenko's very powerful book was written by an OSS agent named Sim Thomas. There was a libel trial that became a major cultural cause celebre. On one side you had the likes of Andre Malraux and Albert Camus, who had moved away from Stalinism decisively, and in the other camp you had Sartre, Duclos and others of that ilk. The Soviets brought in witnesses from the USSR, including Kravchenko's wife. Kravchenko's lawyer eviscerated these people on the witness stand, and Kravchenko won his libel suit decisively. Decades later, a new edition of "I Chose Freedom" appeared in French, with an admiring introduction written by the editor of "L'Humanite" who initially libelled Kravchenko. The editor admitted his role in the falsehood. Over the years he had become yet another recruit to that army of intellectuals who regretted following, the party line as in the title of the eponymous book of essays by former Communists called "The God that Failed." Juergen would have been among those screaming about Kravchenko's imperfections. KENNEDY HITS HEAD ON NAIL "Nutters don't have it so easy as you might think" -- Greg Kennedy. Based on Greg Kennedy's testimony about his tribulations working in an Indiana factory and his cri de coeur that he coulda been a contendah, the man has certainly hit his own head on the nail. For several years Greg complained about a faulty spellchecker, and he kept telling us that he would one day become a real power player on this forum after finding a better electronic crutch. Another theme that kept him going was that he coulda been anotha Bobby, if he had grown up in Brooklyn rather than in the cultural wasteland, as he described it, of Indiana. Greg moaned that others such as yours truly and Larry Evans were writing all of the books and winning the awards. He coulda done that, too, if he had not been deprived in Indiana. He coulda been a contendah, maybe a champ. But Indiana made him an assembly-line working chump instead of a champ.. Another Greg theme was that he would one day read history and refute what this writer offered here and elsewhere. Readers of this forum have sampled his erudition, and perhaps you will agree with Greg himself that living in Indiana prevented him from reading history. Our response has always been that Indiana is not a cultural wasteland, possessing numerous large university libraries as well as, no doubt, many impressive new and used bookstores. The knowledge was there if Greg had been willing to pursue it during his youth. As he once wrote, he read Ratman or some such comic books instead, which were more accessible, say, than Xenophon. If one accepts Greg's testimony, he has never had it easy and suffered mightily and experienced emotional and intellectual sorrows,through no fault of his own. "Nutters don't have it so easy as you might think." Greg is telling us that while he may not know much about Pope Urban II or anything else much further back than last week, he has finally gained self-knowledge. He has finally hit his head right on the nail. And so it goes. Yours, Larry Parr help bot wrote: On Apr 29, 8:31 pm, " wrote: The rules of the game are clear, concise, and consistent. If you touch a piece, you must move it. If your hand quits the piece, the move stands. If your hand is still on it, then you can change your mind and move it elsewhere. But move it you must. While I don't agree with Mr. Evans regarding the "concise" part, he at least seems to be familiar with the basic rules of chess. Since the rules specify that a protest must be lodged during play, Nonsense. The proper thing to do is recognize that Mr. Kasparov is a low-down good-for-nothing cheater, and then treat him accordingly. "Kasparov did not take his hand off the knight, so he had a perfect right to change his move," said the chief arbiter. Unbiased sources told a very different story. One had it that the arbiter claimed he could not "see" the infraction, because he was standing behind Mr. Kasparov (a GK "backer"?). "My conscience is clear. I have the feeling my hand was still on it," added Kasparov. Okay, make that dirty, low-down, good-for-nothing, *lying* cheater. Yet we all know the naked eye can be fooled. Ah, I knew there would be a "twist" in the plot. As with the Fox spin-zone, if you remove the spin, you are left with nothing but dead air. A camera crew was filming the game and a replay revealed that Kasparov removed his hand for exactly ? of a second! Deliberate foul or did he try to change his grip in order to reverse direction? Who can say for sure? The subject is changed to this or that, deftly avoiding the actual cheating. It makes no difference if anyone can guess GK's motive, nor the length of time it took to enact the cheating, nor what color the sky may be when viewed from outer space. A typical Larry Evans ploy is to ignore the facts, and change the subject to something else; in fact, I'm a bit disappointed that he failed to attack Judit Polgar's character or religion. The old man seems to be slipping. His enemies promptly called it cheating. Ah, now THAT'S more like it! Ad hominize the folks who want the rules to be enforced, even upon faves like GK. The problem, you understand, is not that GK is a cheater-- no sir! It's that he has "enemies" who stalk him, just waiting for a chance to point out when some errant camera may try and make it appear that he did something wrong-- which he never ever could. Apparently, to the Evans ratpack, Gary Kasparov is a sacred cow-- almost like Bobby Fischer. He can do no wrong, and if Judit Pogar gets run over, well, she ought not to have gotten in his way... . -- help bot |
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