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#12
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#13
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#14
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wrote: wrote: GM Larry Evans was one of the two most popular writers in Chess Life according to every CL survey ever taken of the readership. He was fired because the powers that be wanted to rid the magazine of its single independent voice. The editor played ball to get the job and lied to GM Evans. Used to be most popular. A lot of us got tired of the same old Fischer rehash. In the four articles that you cite, three were about Fischer and the other was about a man that hlped a philosphy enslave most of the world and terrorized the rest. Evans was stuck in the past and could not break out. Yes, but trying to convince someone like Larry Parr -- who is also stuck in the past -- is like arm-wrestling Arnold Schwartzennegger. People like these are blinded to their own handicap, and perceive the whole world as being the real problem. In view of the utter hopelessness of trying to get one of these guys to snap out of it, I have come to accept the fact (as I see it), that only time can solve their problem. I foresee a similar problem with the USA as a whole (not just in chess) being superceeded eventually by China, at least economically. War is one possibility. Bitter resentment, moaning and groaning inevitable. -- help bot |
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#15
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"help bot" wrote in message oups.com... wrote: wrote: GM Larry Evans was one of the two most popular writers in Chess Life according to every CL survey ever taken of the readership. He was fired because the powers that be wanted to rid the magazine of its single independent voice. The editor played ball to get the job and lied to GM Evans. Used to be most popular. A lot of us got tired of the same old Fischer rehash. Can I suppose that these are the same people too tired to write about chess themselves? The 'Fischer rehash' was what shook the mighty Soviets to their core, and brought chess to the USA in such large numbers that USCF went from 10,000 members says Horrowitz, to 60,000 in 5 years. In the four articles that you cite, three were about Fischer and the other was about a man that hlped a philosphy enslave most of the world and terrorized the rest. Evans was stuck in the past and could not break out. In that case he shares the same opinion as some east-Bloc writers, who compare all the players around during the Fischer boom, and the quality of their play with todays drawzzz. Those were the days when you had to beat most of the other best players in the world to engage in a match with the world champion, and when the result wasn't decided by one game of rapid chess. Yes, but trying to convince someone like Larry Parr -- who is also stuck in the past -- is like arm-wrestling Arnold Schwartzennegger. That is not such a specific comment that can be answered, but if the comparison is the Current World Champion playing Fritzzzz, and, say, a match between Evans and Taimanov with Che Guevarra and Castro looking on; or Reshevsky vs Tal; or even a chance encounter between Botvinnik v Keene [Keene won their game, and laugh I think its fair to say scared himself!] then these are the comparisons. People like these are blinded to their own handicap, and perceive the whole world as being the real problem. In view of the utter hopelessness of trying to get one of these guys to snap out of it, I have come to accept the fact (as I see it), that only time can solve their problem. I foresee a similar problem with the USA as a whole (not just in chess) being superceeded eventually by China, at least economically. War is one possibility. Bitter resentment, moaning and groaning inevitable. There we are, argue for your limitations and sure enough, they will be yours. I would have thought that the country with the first and towering world genius of chess, Morphy; then the country with the strongest team at chess for a decade in the 1930's when international competition became viable; and then the thunder and lightning of a Fischer, would need reminding that someone put them all TO SLEEP! And falling asleep in the world is a bad American habit caused by physical isolation. Let us, for all love, not also engage in intellectual isolation, evn from our own past. It is well said that America is the sleeping giant of chess, and rather than it being all over, chess here is only newly born ~ and I never heard of a country that likes games more than this one. Phil Innes -- help bot |
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#16
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Chess One wrote: GM Larry Evans was one of the two most popular writers in Chess Life according to every CL survey ever taken of the readership. He was fired because the powers that be wanted to rid the magazine of its single independent voice. The editor played ball to get the job and lied to GM Evans. Used to be most popular. A lot of us got tired of the same old Fischer rehash. Can I suppose that these are the same people too tired to write about chess themselves? Common ad hominem technique noted. (But why stop here? Why not "shoot the messenger" outright, and be done with him?) The 'Fischer rehash' was what shook the mighty Soviets to their core, and brought chess to the USA in such large numbers that USCF went from 10,000 members says Horrowitz, to 60,000 in 5 years. Wrong. At the time of the above-mentioned growth surge, Fischer was anything BUT rehash! His story was fresh, new. Still in shrink-wrap even. Try to keep up, my boy. In the four articles that you cite, three were about Fischer and the other was about a man that hlped a philosphy enslave most of the world and terrorized the rest. Evans was stuck in the past and could not break out. In that case he shares the same opinion as some east-Bloc writers, who compare all the players around during the Fischer boom, and the quality of their play with todays drawzzz. I like that one. Drawzzz. It's high time I started coming up with new ideas like this one. Maybe I'll patent it. Special thanks to IM Innes for "inspiring" me. :D Those were the days when you had to beat most of the other best players in the world to engage in a match with the world champion, and when the result wasn't decided by one game of rapid chess. Yes, but trying to convince someone like Larry Parr -- who is also stuck in the past -- is like arm-wrestling Arnold Schwartzennegger. That is not such a specific comment that can be answered, but if the comparison is the Current World Champion playing Fritzzzz, As so often happens, IM Innes has lost the thread. We had been discussing a man called Botvinnik, and the comment above related to him being the first WC to have faced frequent, *mandatory* matches against the most dangerous challengers -- quite unlike his predecessors. This was all in connection with a commentary which maintained that MB had no claim to the status of "best of all time", due to such items as his drawn matches and ultra-narrow wins. I veered off into a generalized comment regarding how it seemed pointless to try and convince Mr. Parr of *any* rational take on these matters. It had nothing whatever to do with WC Kramnik voluntarily playing Deep Fritz. It had to do with trying to convince a braindeader by using something called reason, which they don't ever seem to comprehend. and, say, a match between Evans and Taimanov with Che Guevarra and Castro looking on; or Reshevsky vs Tal; or even a chance encounter between Botvinnik v Keene [Keene won their game, and laugh I think its fair to say scared himself!] then these are the comparisons. This makes no sense to me, but then I was on the original thread, while IM Innes has ventured into the wild unknown, alone and unarmed. People like these are blinded to their own handicap, and perceive the whole world as being the real problem. In view of the utter hopelessness of trying to get one of these guys to snap out of it, I have come to accept the fact (as I see it), that only time can solve their problem. I foresee a similar problem with the USA as a whole (not just in chess) being superceeded eventually by China, at least economically. War is one possibility. Bitter resentment, moaning and groaning inevitable. There we are, argue for your limitations and sure enough, they will be yours. I see it a bit differently. As I see it, the real limitations belong to such stubborn nincompoops as LP, and I am merely noting the fact. :D I would have thought that the country with the first and towering world genius of chess, Morphy; then the country with the strongest team at chess for a decade in the 1930's when international competition became viable; and then the thunder and lightning of a Fischer, would need reminding that someone put them all TO SLEEP! But who? I mainly feel sleepy when replaying the games of Nimzowitch, who some call a "hyper"-modern. Yet to me he is dull and boring. His games, I mean. Not him personally. For all I know, he could have been a great guy, who simply failed to comprehend real chess. And falling asleep in the world is a bad American habit caused by physical isolation. Canada? Mexico? Iran? Japan? We have plenty of next-door neighbors. You seem to vastly underestimate our dominion! Isolationism is dead; we now practice world domination (or at least *think* we do). Let us, for all love, not also engage in intellectual isolation, evn from our own past. I don't see the Evans ratpack as being "isolated" from things intellectual, really; I see them more as being incapable of rational thought, and that in turn is what separates them from intelligent thought. (Is this splitting hairs?) It is well said that America is the sleeping giant of chess, Who said this? And why are they not aware of how silly it sounds, to the better-informed? My view is that China and India are the most likely "sleeping giants" of chess, due in part to the size of their populations relative to others (like us for instance). and rather than it being all over, chess here is only newly born ~ and I never heard of a country that likes games more than this one. Okay, but one day you may read about a small country named China, and about how its people *love* games, and about how this can be capitalized upon by astute investors. Oh, and I should also mention cellphones; they love cellphones, and because they outnumber us a bazillion to one, there is vast opportunity here as well. -- help bot PS: Psssst: Buy CHL (cellphones) and NTCY (games). China is growing three times faster than the USA, and what's more, they have been "supporting" our record level national debt by massive buying of U.S. Treasuries. Who is sleeping here? We are quite "busted", my friends. |
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#17
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"help bot" wrote in message ups.com... Chess One wrote: GM Larry Evans was one of the two most popular writers in Chess Life according to every CL survey ever taken of the readership. He was fired because the powers that be wanted to rid the magazine of its single independent voice. The editor played ball to get the job and lied to GM Evans. Used to be most popular. A lot of us got tired of the same old Fischer rehash. Can I suppose that these are the same people too tired to write about chess themselves? Common ad hominem technique noted. (But why stop here? Why not "shoot the messenger" outright, and be done with him?) How can it be ad hominem, when there are no people mentioned, in fact, they don't even mention their own names nevermind chess topics, they only mention people with names, and revert the topic to personalities. The 'Fischer rehash' was what shook the mighty Soviets to their core, and brought chess to the USA in such large numbers that USCF went from 10,000 members says Horrowitz, to 60,000 in 5 years. Wrong. At the time of the above-mentioned growth surge, Fischer was anything BUT rehash! His story was fresh, new. Still in shrink-wrap even. Try to keep up, my boy. Perhaps there is something in the Fischer-boom that stands outside Fischer's personality, and which those people not too tired to notice, continue to point out? Unless of course we have learned everything there is to know about Fischer and what promotes chess. But I don't think so, since the membership needle has hardly moved since, and only one from three adult rated players is currently active in chess, that's just 10,000 players, the same as it was pre-Fischer-boom. Chess was a bit different then, and Fischer very very active in it, appearing and playing all over the place, especially simuls which as you know contact and presumably encourage [?] large numbers of players to actual do it! In the four articles that you cite, three were about Fischer and the other was about a man that hlped a philosphy enslave most of the world and terrorized the rest. Evans was stuck in the past and could not break out. In that case he shares the same opinion as some east-Bloc writers, who compare all the players around during the Fischer boom, and the quality of their play with todays drawzzz. I like that one. Drawzzz. It's high time I started coming up with new ideas like this one. Maybe I'll patent it. Special thanks to IM Innes for "inspiring" me. :D You will need to study actual players to supplement your inspiration. The current Russian Superfinals has the men scoring 13 from 30 decisive games, but! The women socred 30 from 40 decisive games. Therefore, are draws a gender problem related to males? Discuss... Those were the days when you had to beat most of the other best players in the world to engage in a match with the world champion, and when the result wasn't decided by one game of rapid chess. Yes, but trying to convince someone like Larry Parr -- who is also stuck in the past -- is like arm-wrestling Arnold Schwartzennegger. That is not such a specific comment that can be answered, but if the comparison is the Current World Champion playing Fritzzzz, As so often happens, IM Innes has lost the thread. We had been discussing a man called Botvinnik, and the comment above related to him being the first WC to have faced frequent, *mandatory* matches against the most dangerous challengers [[except of course, Russian ones, and presumably I lost that thread since it wasn't mentioned]] -- quite unlike his predecessors. This was all in connection with a commentary which maintained that MB had no claim to the status of "best of all time", due to such items as his drawn matches and ultra-narrow wins. I veered off into a generalized comment regarding how it seemed pointless to try and convince Mr. Parr of *any* rational take on these matters. That word rational is from 'ratio', meaning to measure, and thus gain proportion - against whom do you measure Botvinnik? It had nothing whatever to do with WC Kramnik voluntarily playing Deep Fritz. Which was my comparison, what was yours again? It had to do with trying to convince a braindeader by using something called reason, which they don't ever seem to comprehend. If reason be having the conviction to follow logic through to its conclusion, and may be seen to be so, then it does not rely on convincing by rhetoric, as much as by a demonstrated process. Which of those did he not fail to appreciate? and, say, a match between Evans and Taimanov with Che Guevarra and Castro looking on; or Reshevsky vs Tal; or even a chance encounter between Botvinnik v Keene [Keene won their game, and laugh I think its fair to say scared himself!] then these are the comparisons. This makes no sense to me, but then I was on the original thread, while IM Innes has ventured into the wild unknown, alone and unarmed. It must have been the veering during your rational take - as if to say, these were the things against which you measure Botvinnik's achievements - but such veerings were risible, it seems! People like these are blinded to their own handicap, and perceive the whole world as being the real problem. In view of the utter hopelessness of trying to get one of these guys to snap out of it, I have come to accept the fact (as I see it), that only time can solve their problem. I foresee a similar problem with the USA as a whole (not just in chess) being superceeded eventually by China, at least economically. War is one possibility. Bitter resentment, moaning and groaning inevitable. There we are, argue for your limitations and sure enough, they will be yours. I see it a bit differently. As I see it, the real limitations belong to such stubborn nincompoops as LP, and I am merely noting the fact. :D Well, these are your own precepts against which you conclude the end of the USA. I suppose there is even some truth in them, if nothing happens to change the picture - but that's where I came in with a similar analogy to what seemed inevitable about Soviet chess, then this outlaw lone-wolf Fischer ruined their whole schtick! I would have thought that the country with the first and towering world genius of chess, Morphy; then the country with the strongest team at chess for a decade in the 1930's when international competition became viable; and then the thunder and lightning of a Fischer, would need reminding that someone put them all TO SLEEP! But who? I mainly feel sleepy when replaying the games of Nimzowitch, who some call a "hyper"-modern. Yet to me he is dull and boring. His games, I mean. Not him personally. For all I know, he could have been a great guy, who simply failed to comprehend real chess. All pioneers must seem boring to people who follow the same trail on the old-pensioner's climate controlled tour bus, you look out the window and they have enclosed the wilderness as a park, and there is not the slightest danger of anything happening to you to keep you awake, unless of course, you set off into it without a map to re-discover it yourself - which is another form of being there, called curiosity. And falling asleep in the world is a bad American habit caused by physical isolation. Canada? Mexico? Iran? Japan? We have plenty of next-door neighbors. You seem to vastly underestimate our dominion! Isolationism is dead; we now practice world domination (or at least *think* we do). Let us, for all love, not also engage in intellectual isolation, evn from our own past. I don't see the Evans ratpack as being "isolated" from things intellectual, really; I see them more as being incapable of rational thought, and that in turn is what separates them from intelligent thought. (Is this splitting hairs?) You somewhat miss the point. Just like the pioneers above, you won't understand Evans until you get off the bus and walk out into the trailess way yourself - otherwise its easy from your armchair to feel absolutely nothing at all, and those who don't feel also have nothing to think about that is their own experience. Vicarious experience is quite different, and unless you have been anywhere, you can only understand the easy bits. It is well said that America is the sleeping giant of chess, Who said this? I did. And why are they not aware of how silly it sounds, to the better-informed? Kasparov said it too. But he said that although it seemed true to him, it felt silly talking to the dead. Karpov also said it, but as you might imagine, far more diplomatically, and only referred to the American chess establishment as 'frozen'. My view is that China and India are the most likely "sleeping giants" of chess, due in part to the size of their populations relative to others (like us for instance). and rather than it being all over, chess here is only newly born ~ and I never heard of a country that likes games more than this one. Okay, but one day you may read about a small country named China, and about how its people *love* games, and about how this can be capitalized upon by astute investors. Fischer wasn't 'capitalised upon' by astute investors, and chess here happened anyway. Oh, and I should also mention cellphones; they love cellphones, and because they outnumber us a bazillion to one, there is vast opportunity here as well. Antropology tells us that even though Chinese people want to be like American middle-class people, the world can only support one country behaving like Americans, since there are not enough resources in it for two to do so. Besides, there isn't enough room in China for all the Chinese to spread out, or even feed themselves. US is only busted if it stays asleep and doesn't change its OWN behavior, instead of trying to change that of others. Its still true that almost everyone wants to be an American if they could swing it, [after all, the whole world contributed its own sons and daughters to create the place] and if the current crop of Americans fell asleep in their Easy-boys in front of the TV, then new Americans will come to do the work, and also to remind each other that in a real sense America is the World's country, and to start to behave in a way consistent with that responsibility. Of course, if sleep is preferred, you are in the right of it. Phil Innes -- help bot PS: Psssst: Buy CHL (cellphones) and NTCY (games). China is growing three times faster than the USA, and what's more, they have been "supporting" our record level national debt by massive buying of U.S. Treasuries. Who is sleeping here? We are quite "busted", my friends. |
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#18
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"Evans scored well in surveys dating back to the 1980s into the 1990s" - Larry Parr (10 Apr 2006 06:17:06 -0700) _ "Wrote GM Evans in the June 2000 issue of Chess Life: 'This is as good a time as any to mention that the focus of this column is shifting to general topics since many readers have chess computers that answer analytical questions in a jiffy.'" - Larry Parr (25 Aug 2001 09:59:39 GMT) |
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#19
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Chess One wrote:
GM Larry Evans was one of the two most popular writers in Chess Life according to every CL survey ever taken of the readership. He was fired because the powers that be wanted to rid the magazine of its single independent voice. The editor played ball to get the job and lied to GM Evans. Used to be most popular. A lot of us got tired of the same old Fischer rehash. Can I suppose that these are the same people too tired to write about chess themselves? Common ad hominem technique noted. (But why stop here? Why not "shoot the messenger" outright, and be done with him?) How can it be ad hominem, when there are no people mentioned, in fact, they don't even mention their own names nevermind chess topics, they only mention people with names, and revert the topic to personalities. Dear IM Innes, the concept of ad hominem requires no mention of names. On the contrary, it is simply the low method of arguing "to the person", which is precisely what is seen above, where you responded to a criticism of GM Evans by attacking the *person* or persons who dared to question the current status of GM Evans' column's popularity. (The only rational alternative description of what you did above is tossing out insults, in lieu of making some intelligent remark on the subject under discussion, and I know you would never stoop to that.) The 'Fischer rehash' was what shook the mighty Soviets to their core, and brought chess to the USA in such large numbers that USCF went from 10,000 members says Horrowitz, to 60,000 in 5 years. Wrong. At the time of the above-mentioned growth surge, Fischer was anything BUT rehash! His story was fresh, new. Still in shrink-wrap even. Try to keep up, my boy. Perhaps there is something in the Fischer-boom that stands outside Fischer's personality, and which those people I sense another ad hominem attack comming. [Duck!] not too tired to notice, continue to point out? Unless of course we have learned everything there is to know about Fischer and what promotes chess. Excellent technique. You have now *changed the subject* away from GM Evans' rehash column, to something more interesting. Well done. But I don't think so, since the membership needle has hardly moved since, and only one from three adult rated players is currently active in chess, that's just 10,000 players, the same as it was pre-Fischer-boom. Is this an attempt to "justify" GM Evans' rehashing of all things Fischer? It sure smells like it. Chess was a bit different then, and Fischer very very active in it, appearing and playing all over the place, especially simuls which as you know contact and presumably encourage [?] large numbers of players to actual do it! Good. You have managed to stick with your changed subject (i.e. "changing the subject") consistently. This is a promising technique vs. the ignorant. In the four articles that you cite, three were about Fischer and the other was about a man that hlped a philosphy enslave most of the world and terrorized the rest. Evans was stuck in the past and could not break out. In that case he shares the same opinion as some east-Bloc writers, who compare all the players around during the Fischer boom, and the quality of their play with todays drawzzz. I like that one. Drawzzz. It's high time I started coming up with new ideas like this one. Maybe I'll patent it. Special thanks to IM Innes for "inspiring" me. :D You will need to study actual players to supplement your inspiration. Nonsense. I am going to begin churning out chess books, like IM Schiller. All I need are a few snazzy buzzwords like "drawzzz", a huge database of GM games, and a computer. The current Russian Superfinals has the men scoring 13 from 30 decisive games, but! The women socred 30 from 40 decisive games. Therefore, are draws a gender problem related to males? Discuss... No. In all likelihood, the problem is that these stronger Russian males have taken to trying to win games via opening prep, and when it fails (as quite often happens), they prefer not to fight but rather to return to the drawing board. My guess is those 30/40 decisive games were not wins against male GMs. The "draw death" you describe tends to trickle down from the higher levels; weaker players seem to rely less upon prep and more upon fight. Those were the days when you had to beat most of the other best players in the world to engage in a match with the world champion, and when the result wasn't decided by one game of rapid chess. An exception being Frank Marshall, who managed to play matches against players he couldn't beat if his life depended upon it! (Just to see what would happen, I transported back in time and just as I expected, the result was a clean score -- 8-0! But I had expected to win, not lose by this score. Oh well. At least he didn't embarass me with one of those Q-g3!!! thingies. Having lost fair and square, I paid up by showering the board with newly minted, brightly shining pennies, which some fool mistook for gold pieces!) Yes, but trying to convince someone like Larry Parr -- who is also stuck in the past -- is like arm-wrestling Arnold Schwartzennegger. That is not such a specific comment that can be answered, but if the comparison is the Current World Champion playing Fritzzzz, As so often happens, IM Innes has lost the thread. We had been discussing a man called Botvinnik, and the comment above related to him being the first WC to have faced frequent, *mandatory* matches against the most dangerous challengers [[except of course, Russian ones, and presumably I lost that thread since it wasn't mentioned]] Is this a clouded reference to the "throwing" of games by other Russian players, or his lack of participation in Russian tourneys after gaining the title? Who did you want him to play -- Stein? Kortchnoi? -- quite unlike his predecessors. This was all in connection with a commentary which maintained that MB had no claim to the status of "best of all time", due to such items as his drawn matches and ultra-narrow wins. I veered off into a generalized comment regarding how it seemed pointless to try and convince Mr. Parr of *any* rational take on these matters. That word rational is from 'ratio', meaning to measure, and thus gain proportion - against whom do you measure Botvinnik? Almost everybody. Unlike so many others, GM Botvinnik did not duck his competition. Instead, he lost a match, then won the title back from them. It had nothing whatever to do with WC Kramnik voluntarily playing Deep Fritz. Which was my comparison, what was yours again? Mine was the one I already described in some detail. Perhaps if you wanted to change the subject altogether the best way would be to start a new thread, or at the very least, not place your non-response in as though it were a response. Just a thought. It had to do with trying to convince a braindeader by using something called reason, which they don't ever seem to comprehend. If reason be having the conviction to follow logic through to its conclusion, and may be seen to be so, then it does not rely on convincing by rhetoric, as much as by a demonstrated process. Which of those did he not fail to appreciate? IMO, the word "conviction" most often appears where reason is tossed out the window, and something else is placed in its stead. (See Matt Nemmers and the war in Iraq, for instance.) As for [I am guessing you meant] Larry Parr, he has the conviction part down, and all the rhetoric you could ever hope for, but his logic skill is appalling. and, say, a match between Evans and Taimanov with Che Guevarra and Castro looking on; or Reshevsky vs Tal; or even a chance encounter between Botvinnik v Keene [Keene won their game, and laugh I think its fair to say scared himself!] then these are the comparisons. This makes no sense to me, but then I was on the original thread, while IM Innes has ventured into the wild unknown, alone and unarmed. It must have been the veering during your rational take - as if to say, these were the things against which you measure Botvinnik's achievements - but such veerings were risible, it seems! Incomprehensible, and most likely, intentionally so. I gather that your point is something to do with GM Evans writing about historical events listed above, but this ducks the issue we had been discussing, which related more to the term "rehash", and how some Chess Life readers may have gotten tired of eating the same old Fischer-casserole every night. There is a famous quote which says that variety is the spice of life. Now where is the *variety* in rehash-stew? People like these are blinded to their own handicap, and perceive the whole world as being the real problem. In view of the utter hopelessness of trying to get one of these guys to snap out of it, I have come to accept the fact (as I see it), that only time can solve their problem. I foresee a similar problem with the USA as a whole (not just in chess) being superceeded eventually by China, at least economically. War is one possibility. Bitter resentment, moaning and groaning inevitable. There we are, argue for your limitations and sure enough, they will be yours. I see it a bit differently. As I see it, the real limitations belong to such stubborn nincompoops as LP, and I am merely noting the fact. :D Well, these are your own precepts against which you conclude the end of the USA. Not the end of the USA; just the end of her economic world-dominance. Yet the blow to our egos is such that this distinction may not matter much. :D I suppose there is even some truth in them, if nothing happens to change the picture - but that's where I came in with a similar analogy to what seemed inevitable about Soviet chess, then this outlaw lone-wolf Fischer ruined their whole schtick! Not really. His interruption was fairly brief, as he lacked staying power. In some discussions of Sammy Reshevsky, it is often claimed that he was somehow cheated by the Russians, that he had some immense talent, etc. And then there is GM Fine, who some have touted as a strong threat to the Soviets at some particular moment in history. And of course there was Bent Larson, who stole first place in some big international events, though never the title of world champion. Be that as it may, the Russian hegemony continues to this very day (Deep programs notwithstanding), with only brief interruptions. I would have thought that the country with the first and towering world genius of chess, Morphy; then the country with the strongest team at chess for a decade in the 1930's when international competition became viable; and then the thunder and lightning of a Fischer, would need reminding that someone put them all TO SLEEP! But who? I mainly feel sleepy when replaying the games of Nimzowitch, who some call a "hyper"-modern. Yet to me he is dull and boring. His games, I mean. Not him personally. For all I know, he could have been a great guy, who simply failed to comprehend real chess. All pioneers must seem boring to people who follow the same trail on the old-pensioner's climate controlled tour bus, you look out the window and they have enclosed the wilderness as a park, and there is not the slightest danger of anything happening to you to keep you awake, unless of course, you set off into it without a map to re-discover it yourself - which is another form of being there, called curiosity. Oh, come on. Nimzowitch gets so much of the credit for the hypermodern style, yet he was not yet born when this style was already being practiced by his forerunners. I think Nimzowitch's games are boring because they are longwinded, manuevering affairs, where it appears he was waiting for a blunder as opposed to seeing the prize and going directly up to snatch it, like say, Morphy. As for curiosity, I believe those who preceded Nimzo- witch are the ones who truly explored with no maps. I recall another thread in which there was a contest of sorts between a couple of antagonists who each wished to prove they had the superior games database. Every time some example of hypermodernism was shown by one, the other reached back still further to unveil an even older game which trumped it. Every one of these examples was collected from published sources, which players like Nimzowitch would have been able to read. And falling asleep in the world is a bad American habit caused by physical isolation. Canada? Mexico? Iran? Japan? We have plenty of next-door neighbors. You seem to vastly underestimate our dominion! Isolationism is dead; we now practice world domination (or at least *think* we do). Let us, for all love, not also engage in intellectual isolation, evn from our own past. I don't see the Evans ratpack as being "isolated" from things intellectual, really; I see them more as being incapable of rational thought, and that in turn is what separates them from intelligent thought. (Is this splitting hairs?) You somewhat miss the point. Just like the pioneers above, you won't understand Evans until you get off the bus and walk out into the trailess way yourself - otherwise its easy from your armchair to feel absolutely nothing at all, and those who don't feel also have nothing to think about that is their own experience. You seem to be "justifying" again. If GM Evans' rehash problem is the result of emotional sentimentality, that is not going to change anything. The criticism that he just rehashes Fischer and lives in the past, is IMO, valid. This is why I think he ought to write chess books, so those for whom this is fresh material can buy them, while those for whom it is "rehash", the same old Fischer-casserole leftovers year after year, can get some fresh food for a change. I'm not saying that Joel Benjamin -- or whoever took his spot -- is going to be any better. Just that GM Evans does live in the past, that he is very negative toward chess today, and that I don't expect this will ever change. Negativity (as opposed to the "last independent voice" hype) is not something which will promote chess. Vicarious experience is quite different, and unless you have been anywhere, you can only understand the easy bits. I am all for GM Evans writing endlessly about his personal experiences with regard to GM Fischer. But do it in a book. This is 2006 for crying out loud. The world keeps on turning, even if GM Fischer dies tomorrow. As in the Beatles song, life goes on (with or without GM Evans). It is well said that America is the sleeping giant of chess, Who said this? I did. You're biased! And why are they not aware of how silly it sounds, to the better-informed? Kasparov said it too. He is a nincompoop. GM Kasparov will do or say practically anything. How about something more substantive? But he said that although it seemed true to him, it felt silly talking to the dead. Karpov also said it, Yes, yes, I know. He said "I'm scared of Fischer!" "I will go down in history as a chicken. Bwaaak!" but as you might imagine, far more diplomatically, and only referred to the American chess establishment as 'frozen'. That simply meant that GM Kamsky was in school, and for the time being, inactive. :D My view is that China and India are the most likely "sleeping giants" of chess, due in part to the size of their populations relative to others (like us for instance). and rather than it being all over, chess here is only newly born ~ and I never heard of a country that likes games more than this one. Okay, but one day you may read about a small country named China, and about how its people *love* games, and about how this can be capitalized upon by astute investors. Fischer wasn't 'capitalised upon' by astute investors, and chess here happened anyway. You are lost in a fog of delusion. Bobby Fischer was not how chess "happened" in this country. Rather, it was because chess was already happening that he got an opportunity to play and to learn. Look at any map. You will see the city called New York. Now, this city happened to already be the center of strong chess here, and only because BF's family moved there and not some place like say, Kansas, that he was given an opportunity to play *frequently* and have strong coaching. Rather than attribute his great chess skill to some kind of magic, you ought to consider the objective facts as to what came first, and what was the result. God help you if your heart gives out when you learn that the Russians themselves acted as his coaches, in the sense that he read their chess magazines and studied their games and annotations! Oh, and I should also mention cellphones; they love cellphones, and because they outnumber us a bazillion to one, there is vast opportunity here as well. Antropology tells us that even though Chinese people want to be like American middle-class people, the world can only support one country behaving like Americans, since there are not enough resources in it for two to do so. Besides, there isn't enough room in China for all the Chinese to spread out, or even feed themselves. China doesn't have to become imperialistic like the USA in order to surpass us economically. They can -- and already do -- take control of vital resources around the world, even in Canada, for example. Think of it like this: there is going to be a chess match next week: Vermont vs. New York state. Who should win? Assuming you don't play, the New Yorkers have a vast statistical advantage, due to superior numbers. US is only busted if it stays asleep and doesn't change its OWN behavior, instead of trying to change that of others. Its still true that almost everyone wants to be an American if they could swing it, [after all, the whole world contributed its own sons and daughters to create the place] and if the current crop of Americans fell asleep in their Easy-boys in front of the TV, then new Americans will come to do the work, and also to remind each other that in a real sense America is the World's country, and to start to behave in a way consistent with that responsibility. We could change the way we behave, but we would still be vastly outnumbered. The only "winning move" would be to think so far ahead that we ourselves exploit the problems of China as a developing power. For example, they have serious pollution problems, and an American company could conceivably solve it. But the population disparity and their apparent advantage in terms of work ethic and education ultimately leaves us a piece down. Of course, if sleep is preferred, you are in the right of it. In the thick of it? -- help bot |
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"help bot" wrote in message ups.com... Chess One wrote: GM Larry Evans was one of the two most popular writers in Chess Life according to every CL survey ever taken of the readership. He was fired because the powers that be wanted to rid the magazine of its single independent voice. The editor played ball to get the job and lied to GM Evans. Used to be most popular. A lot of us got tired of the same old Fischer rehash. Can I suppose that these are the same people too tired to write about chess themselves? Common ad hominem technique noted. (But why stop here? Why not "shoot the messenger" outright, and be done with him?) How can it be ad hominem, when there are no people mentioned, in fact, they don't even mention their own names nevermind chess topics, they only mention people with names, and revert the topic to personalities. Dear IM Innes, the concept of ad hominem requires no mention of names. You have become an auto-didactical obsessive? Or are you trying to ensure that you are ignored by anyone who knows what they are talking about. I didn't even read the rest. PI |
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