1. Oh, my God!
Oh, my God. Please, God.
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2. Please, God. Oh, my God!
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3. SOBBING
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4. Oh, my God, please, don't...
Please, God, please.
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5. SOBBING
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6. I don't want to be in this tunnel.
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7. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
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8. DISTANT SIRENS, RUMBLING
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9. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
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10. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
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11. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
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12. Oh, my God! Please, God, please.
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13. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
Please let me out of here.
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14. Please, God.
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15. Please, God,
please let me out of here.
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16. Please, God, please.
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17. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
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18. FIRE CRACKLES
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19. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
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20. Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
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21. Oh, my God. What am I doing?
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22. One of the most complex systems
ever created
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23. was the pattern of detonations
inside the atomic bomb
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24. that began the chain reaction.
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25. The scientist who created it,
a physicist called John von Neumann,
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26. said that there was only
one thing as complex...
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27. ..it was the world's climate.
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28. Like the bomb, it was
a mass of different forces
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29. moving around a central globe.
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30. Von Neumann then used
an early computer
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31. to build a model that simulated
the world's climate system.
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32. His aim was to use it to predict
and manipulate the weather
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33. as a weapon with which
to attack the Soviet Union.
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34. But what he began
had another consequence.
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35. In 1961, a scientist called
Edward Lorenz
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36. made a mistake which revealed
something that astonished him.
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37. Lorenz had built his own computer
model of the world's climate.
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38. Then, one day, he ran a programme
that he had run many times before,
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39. but missed out
one tiny piece of data -
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40. a change at the fourth
decimal point.
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41. For 30 days,
everything went as before,
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42. but then, suddenly, the computer
began to predict weather conditions
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43. never seen before on the planet.
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44. Other scientists said that
his model was at fault.
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45. But Lorenz ran it again and again,
with tiny variations,
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46. and each time, it led to different,
often very strange futures.
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47. He began to wonder
whether the world's climate
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48. was not the stable,
self-correcting system
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49. that other scientists believed...
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50. .. that it was unstable,
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51. and that one tiny change
somewhere in the world
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52. could tip the whole system
from one state into another.
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53. In America, in the 1960s,
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54. there was a man who was convinced
that there was something frightening
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55. hidden under the surface
of the new modern suburbs.
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56. Behind what looked like
a confident individualism
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57. that was rising up
throughout America,
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58. there were really hidden fears
eating away at people from inside.
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59. Oh, these are gorgeous!
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60. Look! Salt and pepper.
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61. There were feelings of anxiety,
loneliness and emptiness.
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62. And he was convinced he could make a
lot of money out of these feelings.
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63. He was called Arthur Sackler.
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64. Sackler had trained
as a psychiatrist
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65. but in the 1950s
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66. had turned to advertising drugs
and medicines to doctors.
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67. And more and more of the doctors
he talked with
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68. told him about people
from the suburbs
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69. coming to them with vague feelings
of anxiety and fear...
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70. .. something the doctors didn't know
how to deal with.
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71. And in 1963,
the company Hoffman LaRoche
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72. hired Sackler to promote
a new drug called Valium.
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73. He offered it to the doctors
as an extraordinary new way
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74. to treat these inner anxieties,
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75. and he said it wasn't dangerous
or addictive.
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76. Valium became an amazing success.
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77. By 1971, it was the most
widely prescribed medication
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78. in the western world.
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79. Hoffman's plant in New Jersey turned
out 30 million pills in 15 hours -
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80. enough to satisfy global consumption
for just five days.
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81. Valium had touched on something
inside human beings,
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82. but nobody knew what it was.
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83. The new wave of feminists pointed
out that far more women than men
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84. were taking Valium.
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85. They said the drug was being used
to blot out the feeling
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86. that millions of women were having
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87. that there was something badly wrong
with their lives.
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88. That when they did what
they were supposed to do,
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89. it didn't bring the happiness
they had been promised.
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90. And I thought to myself,
well, I...
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91. There's got to be
a better way for me,
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92. and I went about it
in the way that I wanted to.
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93. I did what I wanted, regardless
of what society was saying.
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94. And then, it all kind of
caved in on me.
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95. And I just figured,
well, you know, what's the use?
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96. And so I ended up
in the state hospital.
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97. But now that I'm on the road back,
I found if I...
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98. I don't see there is any solution,
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99. because if I act the way
society tells me to act,
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100. and do abide by the rules, my life
is fine and everybody's happy.
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101. But Arthur Sackler suspected
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102. that the drug had touched
on something much deeper,
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103. that the women who spent their days
alone in their new suburban homes
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104. were in a kind of laboratory
of the future.
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105. They had discovered
before anyone else
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106. the underlying weakness
with the new individualism -
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107. that you were free,
but you were alone.
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108. Women told researchers,
"I feel empty somehow,"
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109. or, "I feel as if I don't exist."
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110. And Sackler knew
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111. more and more men were also
beginning to take the drug.
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112. The women had just got there first.
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113. PLUCKS MELODY
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114. SINGS TRADITIONAL SONG
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115. The Dream Of The Red Chamber
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116. is the most famous novel
in China's history.
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117. It was written 250 years before
in the 18th century.
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118. It tells the story of the rise
and fall of two powerful families.
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119. As their power declines,
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120. the characters begin to find
that the line between reality
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121. and a dream world gets blurred.
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122. They slip back
and forth between the two.
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123. Jiang Qing, the wife of Mao Zedong,
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124. had always been fascinated
by The Dream Of The Red Chamber...
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125. .. because it seemed to show that
it is the power of a ruling class
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126. that shapes the very nature of
reality itself.
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127. And it was that idea that had driven
her in the Cultural Revolution.
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128. She had wanted to create
a mass force
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129. powerful enough to change
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130. the very way millions of
Chinese people saw the world.
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131. But suddenly, Mao Zedong
had turned on her.
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132. He brutally dismissed all her ideas
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133. and she began to realise that
maybe he had been using her.
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134. That Mao had used the mass frenzy
that she had created
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135. simply as a way of
getting rid of his enemies.
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136. It meant that everything that
she had created -
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137. the epic operas and ballets,
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138. that promised a new kind of reality
in the future -
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139. had just been flimsy illusions
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140. to disguise what had really been
a brutal struggle for power.
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141. And now, Mao had sent
the Red Guards,
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142. who had been
the source of her power,
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143. off to the distant
deserts and mountains.
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144. Jiang Qing was increasingly alone,
and frightened,
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145. because Mao was turning on
all those who had helped him
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146. in the Cultural Revolution.
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147. He tricked the head of
the People's Army, Lin Biao,
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148. into plotting a coup.
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149. Mao sent troops to arrest Lin,
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150. but he and his family managed
to escape on a plane.
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151. But the plane ran out of fuel
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152. and crashed in the desolate
mountains of Mongolia.
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153. Jiang Qing was terrified
that she would be next.
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154. She mounted anti-aircraft guns
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155. on the roof of her house
in the party compound.
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156. She ate meals at random times
to avoid being poisoned.
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157. And she suspected the nurse
who gave her sleeping pills
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158. of being an assassin.
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159. Jiang Qing's own sense of reality
was beginning to dissolve.
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160. But she also realised that,
with Lin Biao destroyed,
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161. she now had a much greater chance
of taking power when Mao died.
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162. In 1967, the Russians launched
a space flight
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163. to celebrate the 50th anniversary
of the Revolution.
Copy !req
164. It was called Soyuz 1.
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165. Everything seemed to be
going normally
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166. but the astronaut knew that
something terrible
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167. was likely to happen.
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168. He was called Vladimir Komarov.
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169. Komarov's best friend was
the Soviet hero Yuri Gagarin,
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170. who had made the first human flight
into space.
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171. As they prepared for the launch,
Copy !req
172. Gagarin had inspected
Komarov's spacecraft.
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173. He discovered hundreds of faults
in its construction.
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174. He told Komarov what he had found,
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175. that the spacecraft was
a deathtrap.
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176. Gagarin tried to get
the launch stopped,
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177. but the Communist Party leaders
refused.
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178. "The launch had to go ahead,"
they said,
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179. "to celebrate
the anniversary of the revolution."
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180. Komarov went, but on one condition.
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181. If he died, his body should be
displayed in an open coffin.
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182. Things went wrong from the start.
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183. The spacecraft lost power.
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184. Komarov tried to manually guide it
back to Earth.
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185. But then the parachutes
failed to open.
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186. An American listening post
on the Russian border
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187. recorded Komarov's final cries
of rage
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188. as he plunged to his death
on the plains of Kazakhstan.
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189. PANICKED YELLING
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190. BEEPING
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191. Komarov's remains were put
into an open casket
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192. at the space headquarters.
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193. It was his revenge.
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194. It showed in a shocking way
how the power of the Soviet leaders
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195. was crumbling,
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196. and how deeply the communist dream
had become corrupted.
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197. Eduard Limonov grew up in Ukraine
in the 1950s.
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198. His father worked
in a lowly position
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199. in the Ministry
of Internal Security.
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200. They were in charge of watching
and reporting on people,
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201. to make sure that everyone was
a good communist.
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202. Limonov admired his father
as a Soviet hero.
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203. And often, his father would travel
to Siberia by train for his work.
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204. TRAIN WHISTLE
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205. One evening after his father
had been away,
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206. Limonov went to the station
to meet him as he returned.
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207. But his father didn't appear.
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208. Limonov searched,
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209. and found another train hidden away
in the sidings.
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210. He watched dozens of men
in handcuffs
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211. being taken off the train
and put into trucks.
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212. Each one was called out
by a man with a clipboard.
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213. The man was his father.
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214. Later that night, Limonov
overheard his father tell his mother
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215. that all the men were being sent
to a prison to be shot
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216. because they were against
the system.
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217. Limonov realised that there was
another
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218. violent hidden reality
in the Soviet system
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219. that reached everywhere,
even into his own family.
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220. And he decided
he would be against the system.
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221. He would become a dissident.
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222. TRAIN WHISTLE
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223. This coal train is symbolic of much
of the dilemma of Appalachia.
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224. Until very recently,
the companies that mine the coal
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225. owned all the mining communities.
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226. They owned the mines themselves,
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227. the tipples, the company towns,
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228. the streets, the houses, the stores,
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229. the commissaries, the hotels,
the hospitals.
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230. They even had their own brand
of money, scrip,
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231. which circulated only
in company commissaries and stores.
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232. This created a population
that was totally dependent.
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233. And the dependency lasted
for more than 40 years.
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234. Abruptly, a few years ago,
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235. the company no longer needed
its mining men,
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236. it needed mining machines.
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237. So the company withdrew its
paternalism
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238. in each of the mining valleys.
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239. Millions, hundreds of millions,
Copy !req
240. even billions of dollars' worth of
coal have gone out of these valleys.
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241. Appalachia has produced,
essentially, two crops of people -
Copy !req
242. the rich, who have followed
the coal,
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243. and the poor, who have stayed here,
in the Appalachian valleys.
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244. TRAIN WHISTLE
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245. Harry Caudill was a lawyer
in the giant coal-mining area
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246. that stretched across the
Cumberland Mountains in Appalachia.
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247. He had spent his life
representing the miners -
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248. taking on and fighting
those who owned the mines.
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249. But now he had realised that
something fundamental was happening.
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250. The power of the miners
all around him
Copy !req
251. was beginning to dissolve
and collapse.
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252. He wrote a book called
Night Comes To The Cumberlands.
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253. He described how coal had not only
brought wealth and power
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254. to those who owned the mines,
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255. but also to the miners themselves.
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256. It gave them power because it
brought thousands of them together.
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257. And together, they could block
the coal from leaving the valleys.
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258. It gave them enormous
collective power,
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259. out of which,
organised labour had come.
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260. For 40 years, they had
mounted strikes and blockades
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261. and fought violent battles with the
private armies of the mine-owners.
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262. And out of that had come
strong leaders,
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263. who had used the collective power
to change society for the better.
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264. In 1946,
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265. the United Mine Workers of America,
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266. under the leadership of
John I Lewis,
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267. who is generally regarded as
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268. the greatest labour statesman
in American history,
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269. undertook to raise the medical
standards of this area.
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270. Lewis had a very dramatic
confrontation
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271. with the American coal operators
at Pittsburgh.
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272. "You have," he said,
"made dead more than half a million
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273. "of your fellow citizens.
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274. "The product you sell in the markets
of the world
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275. "is drenched with the blood
of your workmen.
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276. "It is salted with the tears
of their widows and orphans."
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277. And he said, "Beginning today,
beginning immediately,
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278. "and at this bargaining table,
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279. "you will begin to redress
this old injustice."
Copy !req
280. The United Mine Workers Health
and Welfare Fund came into existence
Copy !req
281. the following year.
Copy !req
282. It was comparable in many respects
Copy !req
283. to the National Health Service
in Great Britain.
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284. CLOCK TICKS
Copy !req
285. But now, Caudill realised that
that power had gone.
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286. First, the machines had come
Copy !req
287. and replaced thousands of workers.
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288. Helpless to save their jobs,
they now lived in growing poverty,
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289. supported only by welfare.
Copy !req
290. And then there was
the other fossil fuel - oil.
Copy !req
291. Oil was now rising up
to replace coal.
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292. And more and more of it came from
the Middle East.
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293. In countries like Saudi Arabia,
the Western oil companies
Copy !req
294. had created their own managed
communities.
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295. But these communities
were for the managers,
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296. who lived a dreamlike existence
in the middle of the desert.
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297. Their golf courses created by
rolling crude oil into the sand...
Copy !req
298. .. while the workers were controlled
by authoritarian governments.
Copy !req
299. They were no threat.
Copy !req
300. And across the world,
the oil industry
Copy !req
301. was a scattered, diffused network,
Copy !req
302. where there was never any chance
of enough workers
Copy !req
303. coming together to create
a critical mass...
Copy !req
304. .. out of which would come
collective action.
Copy !req
305. But at that very moment,
something was revealed
Copy !req
306. in another remote part of the world
Copy !req
307. that was going to lead to
a realisation that fossil fuels
Copy !req
308. could not only change the nature
of power,
Copy !req
309. they could also change
the whole structure of the planet.
Copy !req
310. On the top of the world, below
the surface of a giant ice cap,
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311. a city is buried.
Copy !req
312. Camp Century is buried below
the surface of this ice cap.
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313. Beneath it, the ice descends
for 6,000 feet.
Copy !req
314. In this remote setting,
Camp Century is a symbol
Copy !req
315. of man's unceasing struggle
to conquer his environment.
Copy !req
316. Camp Century pretended to be
a scientific base.
Copy !req
317. In reality, it was a disguise
for Project Iceworm.
Copy !req
318. 600 nuclear missiles
were going to be hidden
Copy !req
319. in hundreds of miles of tunnels
under the ice,
Copy !req
320. targeted at Russia.
Copy !req
321. But as a part of the disguise,
Copy !req
322. climate scientists,
working with army engineers,
Copy !req
323. began to drill hundreds of feet down
into the ice
Copy !req
324. and bring up ice cores.
Copy !req
325. The ice sheet had been built up
layer by layer
Copy !req
326. over hundreds of thousands of years.
Copy !req
327. That meant that it had within it
a frozen record of the past.
Copy !req
328. What the scientists found
in the cores astonished them.
Copy !req
329. That 11,000 years before, there had
been a sudden cataclysmic shift.
Copy !req
330. The world's temperature had changed
by ten degrees in just centuries.
Copy !req
331. Other ice cores then confirmed this.
Copy !req
332. That in the past, there had been
repeated, sudden changes,
Copy !req
333. both heating and cooling,
Copy !req
334. of the world's climate at speeds
that no-one thought possible.
Copy !req
335. This piece of ice
records a spectacular cooling.
Copy !req
336. In fact, it's a quite new discovery
for us
Copy !req
337. that the Earth can turn so cold
so fast.
Copy !req
338. What was the reason?
Copy !req
339. We don't think
that volcanic eruptions did it.
Copy !req
340. Maybe it was due to enormous
breakout of Antarctic ice.
Copy !req
341. The problem is, could that happen
again to us right now?
Copy !req
342. Or could we accidentally provoke
such a catastrophe?
Copy !req
343. We must find the reason
for this natural event long ago.
Copy !req
344. They believed that
what the ice cores showed
Copy !req
345. was that the idea
which dominated science,
Copy !req
346. that the world's climate
was a stable,
Copy !req
347. self-correcting system, was wrong -
Copy !req
348. that it could suddenly shift
into a completely different state...
Copy !req
349. .. which would have
extraordinary consequences.
Copy !req
350. WIND GUSTS
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351. WIND WHISTLES
Copy !req
352. Richard Nixon came to power
Copy !req
353. because he had harnessed
a new force.
Copy !req
354. He called it the silent majority.
Copy !req
355. They were the people in the suburbs
Copy !req
356. that were rapidly growing
around every city in America.
Copy !req
357. But it was a fragile power base,
Copy !req
358. because it wasn't like
the old collective power
Copy !req
359. that had driven political parties
in the past.
Copy !req
360. It was millions of individuals
Copy !req
361. who not only felt isolated
and alone,
Copy !req
362. but also increasingly fearful
of the chaos in America
Copy !req
363. as a result of the Vietnam War.
Copy !req
364. We were sitting in the living room
watching the Miss Ohio pageant,
Copy !req
365. and all of a sudden,
I heard a smack at the front
Copy !req
366. and I run out and heard something
hit a window here in the back.
Copy !req
367. And I tore around the driveway here
Copy !req
368. and I looked all over,
but I didn't see a thing.
Copy !req
369. I didn't see one guy.
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370. You know, you can put up with
this crap just so long
Copy !req
371. and then - pow! -
somebody's going to get it.
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372. MUFFLED SPEECH
Copy !req
373. There are those who say, "How do we
answer those who engage in violence?
Copy !req
374. "How do we answer those
who try to shout down a speaker?"
Copy !req
375. And my answer is,
don't answer in kind.
Copy !req
376. It's time for the great
silent majority
Copy !req
377. just to stand up and be counted!
Copy !req
378. Nixon promised to represent
the silent majority.
Copy !req
379. But the truth was that
he was also uncertain,
Copy !req
380. and frightened, too, just like them.
Copy !req
381. Nixon had been to see a psychiatrist
about his feelings of dread.
Copy !req
382. He told the psychiatrist
Copy !req
383. that when he looked in the mirror
in the morning,
Copy !req
384. it was as if there was no-one there.
Copy !req
385. He was also suspicious and paranoid.
Copy !req
386. Nixon was convinced that there was
a conspiracy,
Copy !req
387. by what he called the liberal
establishment, to destroy him.
Copy !req
388. In 1971, he told his aides to start
what he called, the enemies list.
Copy !req
389. It included dozens of
liberal journalists, academics
Copy !req
390. and even film stars.
Copy !req
391. Nixon had a tape machine running
all the time in the White House.
Copy !req
392. And on it, he left a record
of this paranoia.
Copy !req
393. But Nixon soon found that the chaos
created by the Vietnam War
Copy !req
394. was also going to stop him
delivering the new, stable America
Copy !req
395. that he had promised.
Copy !req
396. The cost of the war was huge,
and America was deeply in debt.
Copy !req
397. In 1971, it forced Nixon to give up
Copy !req
398. one of the great symbols
of America's global power -
Copy !req
399. the control of all
the world's currencies.
Copy !req
400. Ever since the Second World War,
Copy !req
401. the value of all currencies
in the world
Copy !req
402. had been fixed to the dollar.
Copy !req
403. They were backed by the gold
reserves held in Fort Knox.
Copy !req
404. But then, overnight,
Nixon let that go.
Copy !req
405. And suddenly, there was no
fixed value for any currency
Copy !req
406. anywhere in the world.
Copy !req
407. What was that mark, John?
Copy !req
408. 8.38-8.43.
Copy !req
409. 8.38-8.43, I can deal with you
in sterling mark.
Copy !req
410. And dollars? Just a second.
Dollars, Chris?
Copy !req
411. 2.44.59. 2.44.59 dollar sterling.
Copy !req
412. There was immediately confusion
as banks around the world
Copy !req
413. struggled to come to terms
with the new reality.
Copy !req
414. They set up new,
improvised dealing rooms
Copy !req
415. buying and selling currencies
Copy !req
416. as, minute by minute,
they went up and down in value.
Copy !req
417. But then President Nixon
did something
Copy !req
418. that seemed to show he still had
power to change the world.
Copy !req
419. He went to China.
Copy !req
420. His arrival was broadcast live
in America.
Copy !req
421. Journalists compared it
to the moon landings
Copy !req
422. because Nixon was going to a giant,
mysterious country
Copy !req
423. that had been cut off from the rest
of the world for decades.
Copy !req
424. And he was going to bring
it into the modern global system.
Copy !req
425. By now, Mao could hardly walk.
Copy !req
426. The Americans had sent
medical equipment ahead
Copy !req
427. in case of an assassination attempt
on Nixon.
Copy !req
428. But the Chinese took it and used it
instead to resuscitate Mao.
Copy !req
429. The meeting lasted for only an hour.
Copy !req
430. Mao went back to bed
and Nixon didn't see him again.
Copy !req
431. Instead, he went with Mao's wife,
Jiang Qing,
Copy !req
432. to see one of her
revolutionary operas.
Copy !req
433. On the surface,
Jiang Qing seemed confident.
Copy !req
434. But underneath, she realised she
could be destroyed at any minute.
Copy !req
435. It wasn't just Mao.
Copy !req
436. By now, the whole system
of authority in China
Copy !req
437. was beginning to fall apart.
Copy !req
438. As many of those in power realised
that the revolution had failed.
Copy !req
439. CAST SING
Copy !req
440. But while Jiang Qing
was preoccupied with real enemies,
Copy !req
441. Nixon, sitting next to her,
had now become obsessed
Copy !req
442. with plotting to destroy
his imaginary enemies.
Copy !req
443. He had set up a conspiracy,
based in the White House.
Copy !req
444. It was run by a group of
ex intelligence agents,
Copy !req
445. and they were already planning
to bug, burgle
Copy !req
446. and blackmail Nixon's opponents.
Copy !req
447. Behind his smile, he was preoccupied
with plotting and scheming.
Copy !req
448. Jiang Qing and Richard Nixon
Copy !req
449. were two of the most powerful people
in the world at that moment.
Copy !req
450. But what they shared was a sense
that power
Copy !req
451. was now slipping from their grasp.
Copy !req
452. While the new force that Nixon
had unleashed - money -
Copy !req
453. was eating away at the idea
that there was a fixed,
Copy !req
454. predictable system that
any politician could control.
Copy !req
455. Because the bankers had realised
that currencies could be traded
Copy !req
456. globally, like any other asset.
Copy !req
457. And what that had created was
a fluid, constantly-changing reality
Copy !req
458. that no-one was fully in control of.
Copy !req
459. Try 35.42, then!
Copy !req
460. Hello? 35.42.
Copy !req
461. It dropped 100 points.
We don't know why.
Copy !req
462. It just dropped down in points when
everything else was staying still.
Copy !req
463. Right, 30 other way! 30 other way!
Copy !req
464. Change it! Change!
Copy !req
465. THEY SING
Copy !req
466. CHILDREN SING
Copy !req
467. SINGING CONTINUES
Copy !req
468. Eduard Limonov had now left Ukraine
and come to Moscow.
Copy !req
469. He became part of what was called
the underground -
Copy !req
470. writers and painters
who saw themselves
Copy !req
471. as the opponents of the regime.
Copy !req
472. Limonov became a poet.
Copy !req
473. And one night, at a party,
he met a girl
Copy !req
474. who he fell passionately in love
with.
Copy !req
475. She was called Yelena Shchapova.
Copy !req
476. And together, they became
a glamorous couple
Copy !req
477. in the underground world.
Copy !req
478. But what Limonov began to discover
Copy !req
479. was that most of the dissidents
did not have a clear idea
Copy !req
480. of what alternative they wanted.
Copy !req
481. They, too, were trapped
by the Soviet ideology.
Copy !req
482. The most famous dissident
was Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.
Copy !req
483. He was secretly writing a novel
Copy !req
484. that was going to expose the horror
behind the communist facade.
Copy !req
485. It was called The Gulag Archipelago.
Copy !req
486. But in the novel, Solzhenitsyn
also confronted the fact
Copy !req
487. that, faced by the failure
of the revolutionary dream,
Copy !req
488. it was now difficult to believe
in anything.
Copy !req
489. That maybe ideology itself
was the problem.
Copy !req
490. The evildoers in Shakespeare,
he said,
Copy !req
491. killed just a few dozen
in their struggle for power.
Copy !req
492. But then came the belief
that you could find a theory
Copy !req
493. that would create an ideal world.
Copy !req
494. The agents of the Inquisition,
he said, invoked Christianity.
Copy !req
495. The great empires, like Britain,
Copy !req
496. justified it by the idea
of civilisation.
Copy !req
497. The Nazis did it by race.
Copy !req
498. And the revolutionaries,
both in France and in Russia,
Copy !req
499. justified it by equality,
brotherhood
Copy !req
500. and the happiness
of future generations.
Copy !req
501. But in every case, he said,
Copy !req
502. thousands, and often millions,
were killed.
Copy !req
503. Solzhenitsyn's book
contained a damning conclusion,
Copy !req
504. which was going to be one of
the foundations
Copy !req
505. of the counter-ideology
that dominates the world today.
Copy !req
506. It said that the only way to escape
from that horror
Copy !req
507. was to stop trying
to change the world.
Copy !req
508. Stop trying to reshape reality.
Copy !req
509. Instead, the safest thing to do
in the future
Copy !req
510. was to believe in nothing.
Copy !req
511. Limonov scorned Solzhenitsyn.
Copy !req
512. He saw him as part of
an older generation
Copy !req
513. trapped by their literary elitism.
Copy !req
514. Ever since his time in Ukraine,
Copy !req
515. he had been fascinated by
what he saw as the real outsiders.
Copy !req
516. Those who refused in any way
to be a part of the Soviet system.
Copy !req
517. Above all,
the thousands of criminals
Copy !req
518. who lived most of their lives
in the Russian prisons.
Copy !req
519. They were called the Vory v Zakone -
thieves in law.
Copy !req
520. They had their own codes
and hierarchies
Copy !req
521. that were expressed in the
complex tattoos on their bodies.
Copy !req
522. The tattoos also expressed
their fundamental belief
Copy !req
523. that in a society where ideology
controlled the minds of everyone,
Copy !req
524. the only way to step
outside the system
Copy !req
525. was through violent crime.
Copy !req
526. A singer called Arkady Severny
Copy !req
527. had secretly recorded
what were called prison songs.
Copy !req
528. Songs from the Vory v Zakone
inside the jails,
Copy !req
529. that attacked not just the Soviets,
Copy !req
530. but the whole Russian empire.
Copy !req
531. MAN SINGS IN RUSSIAN
Copy !req
532. MAN SPEAKS RUSSIAN
Copy !req
533. MAN SPEAKS RUSSIAN
Copy !req
534. But then, at the start of 1974,
Copy !req
535. the Soviet leaders discovered
what Solzhenitsyn had been writing.
Copy !req
536. They debated whether to shoot him,
Copy !req
537. but decided instead to expel him
to the West.
Copy !req
538. They also decided to take
the opportunity
Copy !req
539. to get rid of some of the other
dissidents, as well.
Copy !req
540. Eduard Limonov and Yelena
were summoned to KGB headquarters
Copy !req
541. and told that they were being sent
to New York.
Copy !req
542. While many of the leading
criminals, the Vory v Zakone
Copy !req
543. were taken from the prisons and put
on planes to New York, as well.
Copy !req
544. The Soviets told the Americans
that they were another group of Jews
Copy !req
545. who were being allowed to emigrate.
Copy !req
546. I bet you can't hit me.
Why don't you try?
Copy !req
547. GUNFIRE
Copy !req
548. Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!
Copy !req
549. You're going to miss.
You're going to miss. Yes, you are!
Copy !req
550. Most of the Russian criminals
set up home in Brighton Beach,
Copy !req
551. just outside New York.
Copy !req
552. They created their own organisation,
called the Potato Bag Gang.
Copy !req
553. It was the start of the
modern Russian mafia in America.
Copy !req
554. Limonov and Yelena
Copy !req
555. were helped by Russian emigre
writers and artists
Copy !req
556. already in Manhattan.
Copy !req
557. And they soon became
a glamorous couple,
Copy !req
558. invited to parties by rich Americans
Copy !req
559. who wanted to meet
Soviet dissidents.
Copy !req
560. But the New York
Limonov had arrived in
Copy !req
561. was not the city of his dreams.
Copy !req
562. Much of it was falling apart
Copy !req
563. with gangs burning down whole
buildings for insurance claims.
Copy !req
564. But a strange, unreal mood
spread through the ruins.
Copy !req
565. Well, this morning, on our way
into work, we had a report that
Copy !req
566. the police had located a carcass
Copy !req
567. in a street on 172nd and Bryant.
Copy !req
568. It turned out to be a, er...
stripped carcass of a gorilla.
Copy !req
569. It was headless and the, er...
fur was removed,
Copy !req
570. the skin was removed.
Copy !req
571. South Bronx!
Copy !req
572. There was also a mood of paranoia
spreading through America.
Copy !req
573. Nixon's own paranoia had been
exposed by the Watergate scandal.
Copy !req
574. But in its wake, all kinds of
other revelations came out,
Copy !req
575. of dark secrets
in the political world
Copy !req
576. that had been kept hidden
from the people.
Copy !req
577. That for 20 years, the CIA
had been planning assassinations
Copy !req
578. and overthrowing leaders of foreign
governments all around the world,
Copy !req
579. using poisons and specially-made
secret weapons.
Copy !req
580. Don't... don't point it at me!
Copy !req
581. Does... does this... does this pistol,
er... fire the dart?
Copy !req
582. Yes, it does, Mr Chairman.
Copy !req
583. And a special one was developed
which would be able to
Copy !req
584. enter the target without perception.
Copy !req
585. As a murder instrument,
Copy !req
586. that's about as efficient
as you can get, isn't it?
Copy !req
587. Yes.
Copy !req
588. The uncertainty even infected those
Copy !req
589. who had previously ridiculed
all conspiracy theories.
Copy !req
590. Six years before, Kerry Thornley
had begun Operation Mindfuck.
Copy !req
591. He and his friend Greg Hill
had planted fake conspiracy theories
Copy !req
592. in the press
and in underground magazines,
Copy !req
593. alleging that the Illuminati
Copy !req
594. were the secret organisation behind
all the assassinations in America.
Copy !req
595. Their aim was to make people see
how absurd all such theories were.
Copy !req
596. But one day in New York,
Copy !req
597. Thornley thought that he recognised
a picture
Copy !req
598. of one of the Watergate burglars
on a magazine stand.
Copy !req
599. He was certain he had met him
20 years before in New Orleans.
Copy !req
600. Back then, Thornley had been friends
with Lee Harvey Oswald.
Copy !req
601. They had met when they were Marines
together.
Copy !req
602. Thorney had then lived
in New Orleans,
Copy !req
603. the same city that Oswald had lived
in before the assassination.
Copy !req
604. And he had met people there
Copy !req
605. who later became suspects
in the Kennedy conspiracy.
Copy !req
606. Thornley had always seen these
as coincidences,
Copy !req
607. but in the new mood, he started
to doubt.
Copy !req
608. I had met Guy Banister, a figure,
a suspect in the Garrison probe,
Copy !req
609. I had met Clay Shaw two weeks
before the assassination
Copy !req
610. and a discussion of my book
about Oswald,
Copy !req
611. The Idle Warriors was involved.
Copy !req
612. I had even worked in a restaurant
where Oswald
Copy !req
613. had lived in his youth
with his mother right upstairs
Copy !req
614. in the same building.
Copy !req
615. So there were meaningful
coincidences
Copy !req
616. and meaningless coincidences,
Copy !req
617. but I could not explain
all these weird coincidences.
Copy !req
618. But at the same time, the fake
conspiracy theories that Thornley
Copy !req
619. had been spreading into American
culture with Operation Mindfuck
Copy !req
620. ever since the late 1960s,
started to be believed as well.
Copy !req
621. Because the real conspiracies
were so extraordinary.
Copy !req
622. Stories about the Illuminati and
a plot to create a new world order
Copy !req
623. began to get mixed up
with revelations
Copy !req
624. about brainwashing and secret mind
control programmes run by the CIA.
Copy !req
625. The line between the reality
of political corruption
Copy !req
626. and a dream world of conspiracy
theories
Copy !req
627. started to get blurred in America.
Copy !req
628. But the sense of uncertainty,
and a feeling that systems
Copy !req
629. might be out of control,
was also creeping into other areas.
Copy !req
630. A group of climate scientists
had begun to argue that the world
Copy !req
631. might be on the edge of another
dramatic change.
Copy !req
632. That there might be
a cataclysmic crisis coming.
Copy !req
633. WIND WHISTLES
Copy !req
634. And that the reason this time
was human activity.
Copy !req
635. In the 1970s, there seemed
to be dramatic shifts happening
Copy !req
636. in the climate.
Copy !req
637. In regions near the equator
Copy !req
638. there were droughts and famines,
Copy !req
639. but in the Arctic regions,
it was getting colder.
Copy !req
640. Something was happening,
but no-one knew what.
Copy !req
641. One group said that there was going
to be a dramatic cooling
Copy !req
642. because the dust and smoke spreading
around the world
Copy !req
643. was blocking out the sunlight.
Copy !req
644. A man-made dust pall is spreading
over the Earth.
Copy !req
645. This dust blots out the sun
and causes cooling
Copy !req
646. on a worldwide scale.
Copy !req
647. Not all scientists agree
with this theory.
Copy !req
648. I hope it's wrong myself,
but there is no doubting
Copy !req
649. its seriousness
for if this is correct,
Copy !req
650. millions of people will be
destined for chronic famine.
Copy !req
651. But others said the very opposite
was about to happen.
Copy !req
652. There was more and more
carbon dioxide being pumped
Copy !req
653. into the atmosphere.
Copy !req
654. That would trap the heat,
but the world would grow hotter.
Copy !req
655. And the key force behind
that was the hydrocarbon - oil.
Copy !req
656. In the mid 1970s, oil was
about to play a crucial role
Copy !req
657. that would increase the uncertain
mood that today has come to dominate
Copy !req
658. Western societies -
Copy !req
659. a feeling
that we are somehow surrounded
Copy !req
660. by global systems, both natural
and those made by humans themselves,
Copy !req
661. that are beyond control.
Copy !req
662. Systems so complex and unpredictable
that they make a mockery of the idea
Copy !req
663. that national governments
can shape and control the world.
Copy !req
664. 100 years before,
coal had done the same.
Copy !req
665. It had brought millions of people
into the new industrial cities
Copy !req
666. where they worked for the men
who owned the vast wealth
Copy !req
667. that the coal had created.
Copy !req
668. And that money was so powerful that
it seemed to control everything -
Copy !req
669. not just people's lives,
but politics as well.
Copy !req
670. But slowly, out of that, came
a challenge to that power,
Copy !req
671. based on the workers organising
together.
Copy !req
672. And from that came the idea
of mass democracy.
Copy !req
673. That the role of politicians
Copy !req
674. was to represent the mass
of the people against the powerful.
Copy !req
675. But now oil was about to start
something
Copy !req
676. that was going to undermine
that idea.
Copy !req
677. This is King Faisal of Saudi Arabia.
Copy !req
678. He's going to have a great deal to
say in the next few years
Copy !req
679. about the way you live.
Copy !req
680. He rules over a desert kingdom
of six million people.
Copy !req
681. In this decade of the oil shortage,
Copy !req
682. he's one of the most powerful men
in the world.
Copy !req
683. Under these sands,
there are proved deposits
Copy !req
684. of 160 billion barrels of oil.
Copy !req
685. Starting in 1973, the Arab
countries, led by King Faisal,
Copy !req
686. decided to use oil as a weapon.
Copy !req
687. They wanted to force America
to stop supporting Israel.
Copy !req
688. They did with oil just what
the miners had done with coal
Copy !req
689. in the past.
Copy !req
690. The Arabs blocked supplies
Copy !req
691. and then suddenly raised the price
four times.
Copy !req
692. It was a dramatic exercise of power.
Copy !req
693. And it caused chaos in the American
economy.
Copy !req
694. As a friend of the
United States,
Copy !req
695. we are deeply concerned
Copy !req
696. that if the United States does not
change its policy in the Middle East
Copy !req
697. and continues to side with Zionism,
then I'm afraid, such course
Copy !req
698. of action will affect our relations
with our American friends
Copy !req
699. because it will place us in an
untenable position in the Arab world
Copy !req
700. and vis a vis the countries which
Zionism seeks to destroy.
Copy !req
701. For almost three decades, we have
Copy !req
702. been the richest, most powerful
nation on Earth.
Copy !req
703. Now, a nation of six million warns
us we must change our foreign policy
Copy !req
704. if we want full gas tanks.
Copy !req
705. It had a dramatic effect.
Copy !req
706. Money suddenly poured
into the Arab world.
Copy !req
707. Within three years, Saudi Arabia
had more foreign currency
Copy !req
708. than Japan, Germany and the United
States put together.
Copy !req
709. But the Arab governments
had no idea what to do
Copy !req
710. with this vast new wealth.
Copy !req
711. So they turned for help
to the Western banks.
Copy !req
712. The banks realised that they could
take these petrodollars and turn
Copy !req
713. them into a new kind of
international currency,
Copy !req
714. free of all government control.
Copy !req
715. And soon, politicians from all
around the world were coming
Copy !req
716. to the new headquarters of the
Western banks
Copy !req
717. to elaborate signing ceremonies
Copy !req
718. where they borrowed billions
of the petrodollars.
Copy !req
719. And that global financial system
that President Nixon had created
Copy !req
720. by accident a few years before,
Copy !req
721. now became a giant force -
Copy !req
722. one that held the destiny of
millions of people in its hands
Copy !req
723. and politicians became increasingly
convinced they couldn't control.
Copy !req
724. And the money started to take charge
of politics once again.
Copy !req
725. But it was only the beginning,
because another component
Copy !req
726. was about to be fitted into
this growing new system of power.
Copy !req
727. In China, as Mao approached death,
Copy !req
728. Jiang Qing was still determined
to take his place as the leader.
Copy !req
729. But there was one person who is
equally determined to stop her.
Copy !req
730. He was called Deng Xiaoping.
Copy !req
731. Deng was one of the original
revolutionaries
Copy !req
732. and he had been sidelined
during the Cultural Revolution.
Copy !req
733. But now, Deng believed that if Jiang
Qing was allowed to take power,
Copy !req
734. it would be a disaster
for China and the country
Copy !req
735. could splinter into civil war.
Copy !req
736. An anonymous poem appeared
on a wall in Tiananmen Square.
Copy !req
737. It was obviously addressed
to Jiang Qing.
Copy !req
738. "Lady X," it said, "you are insane.
Copy !req
739. "To be empress is your ambition.
Copy !req
740. "Instead, take this mirror and see
what you are really like.
Copy !req
741. "You deceive your superiors
and you delude your subordinates.
Copy !req
742. "Yet for types like you,
good times won't last."
Copy !req
743. Then Mao died.
Copy !req
744. Jiang Qing came on her own,
dressed in black.
Copy !req
745. She was already preparing to take
power with three others
Copy !req
746. of the leadership.
Copy !req
747. They were called the Gang of Four.
Copy !req
748. But another group backed by
Deng Xiaoping set out
Copy !req
749. to destroy them.
Copy !req
750. Wall posters went up all across
China attacking the Gang of Four,
Copy !req
751. claiming that as well as being
corrupt,
Copy !req
752. they were really working for the CIA
to undermine China.
Copy !req
753. When Jiang Qing came to Tachai,
Copy !req
754. there seemed to be no end
to her whims.
Copy !req
755. Now she wanted her room sprayed
with perfume.
Copy !req
756. Then she wanted more carpets
on the floor and for curtains,
Copy !req
757. she wanted to have special ones
of a particular dark colour.
Copy !req
758. Jiang Qing and company demanded
complete quietude.
Copy !req
759. No-one should laugh or talk loudly.
Copy !req
760. Planes at a nearby airport
had to stop their sorties.
Copy !req
761. People had to be sent uphill to beat
the woods to drive the birds away.
Copy !req
762. And four weeks after Mao's death,
army units came in the middle
Copy !req
763. of the night and arrested
Jiang Qing.
Copy !req
764. She was put in an underground cell,
Copy !req
765. next to the refrigeration unit
that was holding Mao's body.
Copy !req
766. She later tried to commit suicide
Copy !req
767. by hitting her head against
the wall.
Copy !req
768. So the soldiers covered
the walls with rubber.
Copy !req
769. Within 18 months, Deng Xiaoping
defeated all other rivals
Copy !req
770. and he took power in China.
Copy !req
771. The first thing he did was wipe
the past everywhere.
Copy !req
772. In Shanghai, the giant sign that
said, "Long live the victory
Copy !req
773. "of Chairman Mao's
Revolutionary Road" was taken down.
Copy !req
774. While outside the Department
of Public Tranquillity in Beijing,
Copy !req
775. which in reality was the
headquarters of the secret police,
Copy !req
776. the thoughts of Chairman Mao
were also removed.
Copy !req
777. Deng then set out to create
a new kind of revolution.
Copy !req
778. He was going to bring capitalism
into China,
Copy !req
779. but the state would control
and manage the whole system.
Copy !req
780. His aim was simple.
Copy !req
781. Money would replace
the old revolutionary dreams -
Copy !req
782. it was less dangerous.
Copy !req
783. But he was going to use
it to restore China's power.
Copy !req
784. Deng Xiaoping knew that in the
19th century,
Copy !req
785. the British had used drugs
to control the Chinese.
Copy !req
786. They had brought opium to China.
Copy !req
787. It led to what the Chinese called
the century of humiliation.
Copy !req
788. Now, Deng was determined to reverse
that, to reassert China's power.
Copy !req
789. You couldn't use drugs
Copy !req
790. because the Americans already
had their own drugs.
Copy !req
791. Instead, he was going to use
the mass mobilisation
Copy !req
792. of the Chinese people to invent
Copy !req
793. another force that would be
the equivalent of opium.
Copy !req
794. A kind of mass consumerism never
seen before in the world -
Copy !req
795. driven by goods so cheap that
Copy !req
796. everyone in the West would
want them.
Copy !req
797. Whole cities were going to be built
in China that made just one
Copy !req
798. kind of product.
Copy !req
799. They would be shipped
in vast quantities to the West.
Copy !req
800. You gave up on utopian ideas
about the future
Copy !req
801. and didn't believe in anything
any longer,
Copy !req
802. apart from the money.
Copy !req
803. And his allies in this would be
the Western banks
Copy !req
804. and their new system of
global lending.
Copy !req
805. Because the banks would lend
millions of people in the West
Copy !req
806. the money to buy the Chinese goods,
Copy !req
807. just like they had been lending
to governments all around the world.
Copy !req
808. It was going to be the
perfect system.
Copy !req
809. Eduard Limonov was now all alone
in New York.
Copy !req
810. He had published an article
attacking the other emigres,
Copy !req
811. so they all dropped him.
Copy !req
812. Then Yelena, the woman he loved more
than anything else in the world,
Copy !req
813. met a photographer who promised
to make her a model.
Copy !req
814. He seduced her and she left
Limonov.
Copy !req
815. Without love or money,
Limonov became destitute.
Copy !req
816. He lived in the cheapest hotel
Copy !req
817. surrounded by prostitutes
and drug addicts.
Copy !req
818. And he spent his days and nights
wandering the city alone...
Copy !req
819. GLASS BREAKS
Copy !req
820. The call car, yeah.
Copy !req
821. .. while all around him
Copy !req
822. the newly powerful banks
were building
Copy !req
823. their headquarters
among the old ruins.
Copy !req
824. Then one day in Central Park,
looking at the people
Copy !req
825. all around him, Limonov decided
that he was going to write a novel,
Copy !req
826. but one that would have him
as the central figure.
Copy !req
827. It would be about the real
experience of America,
Copy !req
828. not the fake democracy.
Copy !req
829. In the book, he described
watching Americans in a cafe
Copy !req
830. where he was working as a waiter.
Copy !req
831. "It is they," he wrote, "who have
introduced a plague into this world.
Copy !req
832. "The plague of money, the disease
of money, the plague of buying
Copy !req
833. "and selling is their handiwork.
Copy !req
834. "I hate this system, and I am not
ashamed that my hatred has sprung
Copy !req
835. "from my wife's betrayal.
Copy !req
836. "I clear away your leftovers
while my wife fucks
Copy !req
837. "and you amuse yourself with her,
Copy !req
838. "for the sole
reason that there is an inequality.
Copy !req
839. "She has a cunt for which there
are buyers, you,
Copy !req
840. "and I don't have a cunt.
Copy !req
841. "I'm going to blow up your world."
Copy !req
842. The book, called It's Me, Eddie,
gave a picture of a new reality
Copy !req
843. that Limonov saw emerging
from under the surface
Copy !req
844. of America's everyday life.
Copy !req
845. People think they are free,
but really they are becoming
Copy !req
846. like simplified robots,
following the rules of money,
Copy !req
847. limited to satisfying only those
desires that can be bought and sold.
Copy !req
848. Every publisher he sent it to
refused to publish it.
Copy !req
849. But there was another person
at the very top of America
Copy !req
850. in the White House itself
who was also about to expose
Copy !req
851. a frightening reality underneath
the surface of the society.
Copy !req
852. In 1978, the president's
wife, Betty Ford, revealed
Copy !req
853. that she had become addicted
to Valium.
Copy !req
854. An addiction that she said
had taken her into a strange state
Copy !req
855. where even her sense of time
had become dislocated.
Copy !req
856. As I look back, it was December,
Copy !req
857. about a year ago when I realised...
Copy !req
858. .. that there were some sort of
Copy !req
859. blank spots where I had
Copy !req
860. a hard time putting...
Copy !req
861. ..events in their separate slots
Copy !req
862. in time.
Copy !req
863. To me, it was marvellous
Copy !req
864. and beautiful, but to the family,
Copy !req
865. I was beginning to show signs
Copy !req
866. of overmedication.
Copy !req
867. Betty Ford's admission had
a dramatic effect.
Copy !req
868. In its wake, stories began to pour
out of people all across America
Copy !req
869. who were also addicted to Valium.
Copy !req
870. It seemed that there was a private,
hidden world of anxiety
Copy !req
871. behind the public faces
that affected millions of people.
Copy !req
872. But Arthur Sackler, who in
the 1960s had promoted Valium
Copy !req
873. as beneficial and non-addictive,
was unrepentant.
Copy !req
874. And the company that he and his two
brothers had started
Copy !req
875. was about to develop a new drug -
Copy !req
876. a synthetic form of opium
called OxyContin.
Copy !req
877. And that was going to deal with
the next wave of anxiety
Copy !req
878. that would hit America.
Copy !req
879. Over the next 20 years,
as more and more factories closed
Copy !req
880. because of the cheap goods coming
from China,
Copy !req
881. millions of people in the
communities would take OxyContin...
Copy !req
882. .. because it made them feel safe,
Copy !req
883. in a bubble,
Copy !req
884. protected from the growing
uncertainties around them.
Copy !req
885. LIFT BELL DINGS
Copy !req
886. And Harry Caudill,
Copy !req
887. who had represented the miners
in Appalachia,
Copy !req
888. became certain that the anger
under the surface there
Copy !req
889. was going to grow.
Copy !req
890. "One day," he said, "it would
break out and infect
Copy !req
891. "the whole of America."
Copy !req
892. How are you, Mrs Melchor? All right,
thank you. How are you?
Copy !req
893. In 1990, he discovered he had
Parkinson's, and he shot himself.
Copy !req
894. While Kerry Thornley had become
convinced that the coincidences
Copy !req
895. in his past were not coincidences -
Copy !req
896. that the CIA had somehow
manipulated him to set up
Copy !req
897. Operation Mindfuck, but he had
no idea why, he had become lost.
Copy !req
898. 20 years before,
Copy !req
899. he and his friend Greg Hill had been
early individualists.
Copy !req
900. They believed
that they could shape reality
Copy !req
901. the way they wanted.
Copy !req
902. But now, faced with the revelations
about how intricate and complex
Copy !req
903. power had become in the modern
world, they felt powerless and lost.
Copy !req
904. Thornley had retreated into
a dream world of conspiracies,
Copy !req
905. while Greg Hill had become
an alcoholic and was equally lost.
Copy !req
906. He wrote a letter to Thornley
about how he had come
Copy !req
907. to believe in nothing.
Copy !req
908. "It is not injustice
that overwhelms me now," he wrote,
Copy !req
909. "but my sheer damn inability
Copy !req
910. "to know anything with any deep
level of certainty.
Copy !req
911. "When despair is deep enough,
even death seems pointless.
Copy !req
912. "Now I live without justice.
Copy !req
913. "I don't know why.
I just live it.
Copy !req
914. "So be it."
Copy !req
915. And Eduard Limonov would finally
get his novel, It's Me, Eddie,
Copy !req
916. published in Russia.
Copy !req
917. It would cause a sensation
and its dark vision of the reality
Copy !req
918. behind the rhetoric of American
democracy is going to influence
Copy !req
919. an entire generation in Russia.
Copy !req
920. It was the generation to whom
the Americans would then try
Copy !req
921. and sell the idea of democracy.
Copy !req
922. All the talk of democracy, the book
told them, was just a sham.
Copy !req
923. Really, it was all about the money.
Copy !req
924. Starry Eyes
by Cigarettes After Sex
Copy !req