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Phone: (417) 624-4442
Address: 2108 S Main St, Joplin, MO 64804
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90,000 shutdown of the revolution reactor. Third project. Volume III. Special forces of the Almighty
1970s: shutdown of the
revolution reactor
The rink of the revolution of the sixties seemed to be rushing forward at full speed, and some few years separate America from the realization of the dream of Antonio Gramsci and the Frankfurt School. It seemed that capitalism was about to collapse thanks to the cultural revolution, planned by leftist intellectuals and carried out by Timothy Leary. The Reds will soar over the United States to the music of the Beatles and Led Zeppelin, and God knows what other banners, and portraits of Mao, Lenin, Trotsky and Che Guevara will be hung on the skyscrapers of Manhattan covered with slogans and graffiti …
And suddenly the revolution ends as if on cue! It comes to a halt like a reactor with slow rods lowered into it. Timothy Leary goes to jail. The Beatles break up. Dying from drugs Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and Jim Morrison from the Doors. Leftist intellectual books are no longer published. Young people cut their hippie hair, shave their beards and return to normal bourgeois life – they study, make a career in corporations, get married. These people are integrating into the post-industrial society. Well, except perhaps the most incorrigible ones. LSD falls under the strictest ban. And, it seems, America emerged from the crisis, having only strengthened.
Do not think, reader, that everything is over. The reactor is still not completely shut down. Drug addiction, though now illegal, is growing and spreading. Both terrorism and the drug mafia rise on it. Rock music is developing, but now it is falling into currents. And if one strikes into Satanism, then the others into social protest or into aggressive white nationalism. However, fate, which turned out to be too smart, is no longer needed: it is simply discarded, and now it exists in the form of a relic, going into the most frank “black fate” with the worship of the forces of Evil. Now different music sounds – thoughtless, degrading with each generation. In the 2000s, it will be a hammering rhythm, incoherent words-mantras and techno-noises. The degradation of culture continues. The industry of vice develops, sexual pleasures become more and more sophisticated, and the family perishes as an institution. In general, the process is underway – but now in the form of smoldering, and not a forest fire.
However, the revolution is over. And that was precisely the second American revolution, no matter what they say. Such is the history of the Recoding America: Realities of Illusion project, which began in 1943.
This text is an introductory fragment.
CHAPTER 22 DIESEL-ELECTRIC “SHARKS” OF THE THIRD ROME. DEATH “TANGO” AND “BLACK HOLES” IN THE OCEAN. The US IS LAGGING. ON THE EVE OF THE BIRTH OF THE NEW SUPER SWORD OF THE EMPIRE: STIRLING VS REACTOR.
FORESIGHT FROM 1938 YEARS.
CHAPTER 22
DIESEL-ELECTRIC “SHARKS” OF THE THIRD ROME. DEATH “TANGO” AND “BLACK HOLES” IN THE OCEAN. The US IS LAGGING. ON THE EVE OF THE BIRTH OF THE NEW SUPER SWORD OF THE EMPIRE: STIRLING VS REACTOR. FORESIGHT FROM 1938.
1
The United States relied entirely on nuclear submarines. We released in
Cultural and ideological “core of the reactor”
Cultural and ideological “core of the reactor”
In conclusion, we will talk about how Russia was a regulator in cultural and ideological processes as well. Everything is on the surface here. The Yankees used the Russians to promote liberalism. Like, look: over there is communism. Hedgehog
4. The Theory of Permanent Revolution and World Revolution. Lenin against Marx, Trotsky for Lenin
4. Theory of the Permanent Revolution and the World Revolution. Lenin against Marx, Trotsky for Lenin
Lenin went, it seemed, to the unthinkable: due to the special specifics of Russia, the driving force and leader of the revolution, which by all indications should have been bourgeois, he declared
1970
1970
How they pushed the “old people”
(Lyudmila Belousova / Oleg Protopopov)
In mid-January 1970, another championship of the Union in figure skating was held in Kyiv. Today, it is even difficult for a young reader to imagine the popularity that accompanied this sport in
.
1970
1970
1970. May
1970 May
The cult of Brezhnev begins. Vysotsky in a hospital bed. Premiere of the blockbuster “Liberation”. Why Marshal Zhukov never forgave Marshal Konev. Mironov with Shirvindt in the role of “highlanders”. The country is listening to Vysotsky’s songs. Shostakovich is on the mend. Drunken Brawler
21. The era of Calvary and the French Revolution. Thermidor as a human attempt to stop himself by means of revolution
21. The era of Calvary and the French Revolution. Thermidor as a human attempt to stop himself by means of revolution
“Historical man, in general, is always ready to change himself. The chain of events into which it is embedded and the inheritances to which it is subject stimulates
M, 1970. S. 442.
M, 1970. S. 442.
132 Russian wealth. 1884. No. 12. P. 698. 133 Tolstoy L.N. Full coll. op. T. 63. S. 275. 134 Ibid. T. 85. S. 242. 135 Bondarev T.M. Diligence… S. 64. 136 Tolstoy L.N. Full coll. op. T. 64. S. 137. 137 Ibid. T. 86. S. 115. 138 Ibid. T. 64. S. 149. 139 Russian case. 1888. No. 12. 140 Tolstoy L. N. Full coll. op. T. 64. S. 149.
1970
1970
AUGUST. So, August, the tenth number. Star city, Moscow region. I, engineer-captain Vasily Sergeevich Lesnikov, after graduating from the Kyiv Higher Air Force Engineering School, arrived for further service at the Yuri Cosmonaut Training Center
§ 16. The Far East and Southeast Asia in the 1940s-1970s: wars and revolutions
§ 16. The Far East and Southeast Asia in the 1940s-1970s: wars and revolutions
Civil War in ChinaImmediately after the start of the Cold War, the countries of the Far East turned into an arena of fierce struggle between supporters of communist ideas and the pro-Western path
1970
1970
Rozhintsev A. Four sides of the world …
4.
Sociological theories of revolution and Russian revolutions
4. Sociological theories of revolution and Russian revolutions
Based on a generalization of world experience in political sociology, several explanations are proposed for the origin of revolutions, depending on which factor is considered relatively more important – psychosocial,
04/22/1970
04/22/1970
– When Khrushchev read out the report at the 20th Congress, I was already completely on the sidelines. Not only in the ministry… They tried to stay away from me. They will report only at meetings… 04/19/1977—The question is often asked: why did you not speak out against Khrushchev at the 20th Congress? Your group?—I am
if a dinosaur walked around St. Petersburg…
Alexander Averyanov biologist, specialist in extinct and modern vertebrates. Described more than a hundred new species. Head of the laboratory at the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences (St. Petersburg), professor of the Russian Academy of Sciences, professor of St. Petersburg State University. Participated in more than 40 paleontological expeditions in Russia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and other countries.
Averyanov’s research has been supported by state grants more than once. For example, the projects “Evolution of the Late Cretaceous biota of Central Asia” (2014–2018) and “Dinosaurs and related vertebrates of the Mesozoic of Russia” (2019–2021) were supported by a grant from the Russian Science Foundation.
– The most fantastic discovery I made at the age of five. It was the discovery of the world of the past. In the children’s room, instead of wallpaper, my parents hung geographical maps, I looked at them and learned geography well. Then the parents brought a UNESCO magazine – an issue dedicated to the past of a person. There were pictures depicting how the continents moved. This struck me. After all, I just learned how they are now located, but it turns out that this was not always the case – the continents were moving! I really wanted to know about the past. I studied human evolution, and then this direction of interest disappeared: too much information. It’s impossible to know everything. I concentrated on ancient animals.
Color, sound and games
Let’s imagine that right now in St. Petersburg, next to the building of your institute, there is a living dinosaur. How would he help scientists?
The worst thing we understand is how they were painted. Unlike mammals, dinosaurs could distinguish five colors, so color was very important to them. It is clear that she was bright, like birds. This is known for certain about some dinosaurs. In China, prints are found with perfectly preserved covers, feathers and pigment capsules. The color itself cannot be restored, but we can judge it by the size of the capsules. There are dinosaurs, quite a few, for which very reliable reconstructions have been made. But what most of them looked like, we have a very vague idea. For example, diplodocus was long thought to have a smooth back, and recently it was discovered that they had a dermal ridge! And if earlier they were depicted as some kind of gray sausages, now there are a lot of reconstructions where they are variously colored. But for now, it’s fantasy, unfortunately.
Can we find out what the voice of the dinosaurs was?
There were such parasaurolophus – duck-billed dinosaurs with bone ridges on the skull. It is believed that these combs served as resonators. Parasaurolophus made trumpet sounds – they have been restored, you can listen on the Internet. And the rest… They probably screamed, but the reptiles are not very talkative, the main thing for them is their eyesight.
Were dinosaurs smart?
Yes, some of them were very smart. In the late Cretaceous period, a group of dinosaurs appeared, they are called troodontids. They were warm-blooded and covered in feathers, had binocular vision, huge brains, specialized in eating mammals and were able to adapt to a nocturnal lifestyle. They are found in the northern latitudes, that is, they have also adapted to the cold climate. It would take another 10-20 million years, and they would have eaten all the mammals. But a meteorite fell. If not for him, perhaps, on the basis of these troodontids, an intelligent organism would have arisen, there are such reconstructions. They were so smart that they could easily become sentient beings like humans. Maybe even smarter than him – at least they would have seen better.
Why did dinosaurs happen to see better than us mammals?
Dinosaurs and mammals arose at the same time, in the Triassic period, 200 million years ago, that is, we are the same age as dinosaurs. Mammals were already warm-blooded, and dinosaurs were cold-blooded, very predatory and very vicious. Our ancestors were in great danger, dinosaurs could simply devour them all. But mammals found a way out: they went into the darkness, adapted to a nocturnal lifestyle. Being warm-blooded, they could be active at night, while dinosaurs were resting and sleeping at that time. They just didn’t overlap. Therefore, now three-quarters of mammals are nocturnal animals. For this I had to pay with the loss of color vision. Now most mammals see only two colors, monkeys three, and reptiles and birds five. But on the other hand, our ancestors acquired a unique hearing and, most importantly, a sense of smell. There are ten thousand genes in the genome of animals that are responsible for distinguishing smells.
What did dinosaurs do besides hunt, sleep and walk?
They were still playing, all highly organized animals play among themselves. They could run like dogs—carnivorous dinosaurs certainly could, but so could sauropods. They could play catch-up, for example. We understood this by looking at modern animals. Remember how two puppies behave when they are nearby – they are constantly playing. It is believed that this is how they learn new forms of behavior. I think that dinosaurs played most of the time when they didn’t eat or sleep.
Did dinosaurs have a hierarchy?
Yes, definitely. At least in carnivorous dinosaurs, but, unfortunately, we do not know for sure. Some of them hunted together, and this is impossible without a clear social hierarchy. I once saw footage from a helicopter hunting wolves for reindeer. It was amazing. The wolves seemed to be placed in stages, like runners in a relay race: the first drove the deer to the place where the second was waiting, the latter replaced it and drove further, to the third. It’s necessary to come up with something like that, not every person will guess! Dinosaurs could have something similar, they were clearly no more stupid. But, unfortunately, this is the nature of the past: we do not know everything about it, we will never know something, a huge amount of information has been lost forever. What we know about the past is crumbs, fragments, and we are trying to make a more or less clear picture out of these fragments.
Why love them
Why are ordinary people, not scientists, so interested in dinosaurs, especially children?
Firstly, they are huge, there is nothing similar in modern fauna. A thirty-ton sauropod is amazing. Secondly, this is a huge variety of life forms … Special interest in dinosaurs arose after the release of the film “Jurassic Park”, a real dinosaur mania began. Now there is a generation of scientists who watched this film in their childhood. It is coolly made – the dinosaurs were like living ones. After that, the BBC released the film Walking with Dinosaurs, which also fueled interest in this topic.
And you? What got you interested in dinosaurs?
Oddly enough, I’m not a fan of dinosaurs. This is such an injustice – there are a lot of people who want to deal with dinosaurs and do not. And I never really wanted to, I’m interested in science, paleontology. And it doesn’t make much difference whether they are dinosaurs or other animals. Ancient mammals are no less interesting to me, and modern ones too.
Your Ph.D. thesis is dedicated to modern hares, and your doctoral thesis too. Where did dinosaurs come from?
I have been working at the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences for more than thirty years. It is believed that zoology does not study fossil animals, only modern ones. Although dinosaurs can be considered modern, because birds are their very close relatives, direct descendants. I didn’t think I’d be doing dinosaurs. But in 1995 my teacher, Lev Nesov, died. And I got his material – about a thousand bones in excellent condition. I began to disassemble and study them, since there were no specialists. I had to learn everything myself.
Did zoological experience help in any way with fossil animals?
Of course! In my opinion, paleontology, contrary to popular belief, is not a geological science, but a biological one. A biologist understands better that these are not just bones, but parts of the body – with nerves, blood vessels. And it is also important that biologists better understand variability. When I worked with hares, I studied thousands of skulls and observed enormous variability, for example, associated with age. It was once in one magazine – scientists found the skull of a tiny pterosaur and wrote: here, they say, so small, but already an adult. Why, however, was not explained. Then it only turned out that in the lagoon where these pterosaurs lived, there were strong winds. Young animals were blown away, and they fell. And adults could resist the winds and returned. It was such a selective selection based on age.
Do you have a favorite dinosaur species?
Well, I have described many dinosaurs, more than anyone in Russia. The first one is my favorite, of course. This is a Siberian psittacosaurus, now it is painted on the coat of arms of the Chebulinsky district of the Kemerovo region. New taxon.
Which dinosaur excites you the most right now?
This is, of course, a goose. It is known only from one find from Russia. It was discovered by an expedition of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences and St. Petersburg University in 2021 on Lake Goose in Buryatia. I was not there, but I am engaged in the description of these findings. The goosesaurus has unique features not found in other sauropods. Looks like it’s a new dinosaur. It is difficult to judge its size from one vertebra, but it was clearly quite large, at least 25 meters in length. But the main thing is that he, apparently, belongs to a new group of sauropods, unknown to science. If this is confirmed, the idea of the evolution of this group will change.
One tooth for several tons
Is it difficult to find dinosaur remains in Russia?
You know, in paleontology for some reason it is customary to say not “remains”, but “remains”. The word “remains” can only be used in relation to modern animals, and to fossils – “remains”, although this is a bit illogical. As for dinosaurs in Russia, the search sites are selected according to geological maps: we look at where there are deposits of the periods when dinosaurs lived. But you need to know how naked they are, accessible. In our country, almost all of Siberia is covered with continental deposits of that time, but there is taiga, outcrops are accessible only along the river banks. It is in Central Asia that you can go for a walk and find dinosaur bones under your feet.
Were there expeditions that surprised you? For example, did you find many more bones than you expected?
This often happens in paleontology. There is some kind of outcrop – an ordinary person may not see anything, but a paleontologist will find a whole scattering of bones. In Shestakovo, in Western Siberia, it happened like this: a geologist found a complete skeleton of a Psittacosaurus back in the last century and brought it to Moscow. Soon the place was forgotten for almost fifty years. And then a scientist from the Paleontological Institute worked there and saw a jaw on a stone. This was the first discovery of a Mesozoic mammal in Russia. We realized that the place had potential, and began to work – to wash the rocks on sieves. Now it is one of the richest locations in Russia. Then they found something else there, not along the river, but near the road. And there are whole skeletons of psittacosaurus! We found ten skeletons of different ages: both very small and large – two meters, the largest psittacosaurus. We have another large location in Blagoveshchensk, in the Amur Region. There, too, at first individual bones were discovered, then large-scale excavations began – and here is the result: hundreds of hadrosaur skulls, several complete skeletons.
We read that on one of your expeditions you sifted rocks and eventually found only one bone for several tons. Where does such tenacity come from?
It must have been a tooth, because the rock is sifted for rare items such as mammalian teeth. We worked in this way both in Uzbekistan and in Transbaikalia. Teeth are worth the effort!
Let’s say you find a dinosaur skeleton. What’s next?
It needs to be excavated, it will require a team of skilled excavators… In general, dinosaurs require serious logistics.
As far as we understand, you do excavations in the summer, but what do you do in the winter?
We study what we unearthed. Bones often have to be dissected. Now we have a special room for dissection in the storage facility; machines, extractor hood – everything is as it should be. This is a very time-consuming process – a complete skeleton can take years to dissect.
What does “dissect” mean in terms of paleontology? It’s a medical term.
When doctors need to dissect something – a bone, say, or a nervous system – they remove everything superfluous, such as muscles, with a scalpel. It’s the same in paleontology: you take a special dissecting needle and clean the bones of sand.
Do you clean them on site?
Yes, but not completely, it is a laborious process. Usually the bone is cleaned – so, more or less, so that there is less weight, covered with wet newspapers and poured with plaster. The gypsum hardens, is hemmed from below, the bone is turned over – the same is done on the other side. It turns out a pie. In English it is called jacket. We recently had one such weighing more than a hundred kilograms. They were taken to the university and dissected there. Then they created a three-dimensional model of the vertebra, and I studied it at home.
Do you like studying bones on the computer?
It’s easier than moving your spine. They are fragile, so once again it is better not to touch.
What new methods have appeared in paleontology?
Primarily computed tomography. What was the problem? The internal structure of skulls and skeletons remained unexplored, because for this it was necessary to break the specimen, and they are unique. Computed tomography made it possible to see what was inside and make a three-dimensional model. A colossal breakthrough has occurred in paleontology, many museum specimens have been studied. I also use this method at home.
Do you get bored when you work at home?
You know, I’ve never been bored in my life. I don’t know what “boring” means. I always have something to do.
We mean do you miss expeditions?
No. Sometimes I even dream about them, but sometimes I want to do something else.
Hunting and Gathering
What impresses you most about your work?
The task of scientists is to cognize the world around them – other people and even animals do this. But they stop at some stage, while scientists do not – they extract knowledge that was previously unknown. This happens all the time in paleontology. Here you are walking through the desert, stumbling over a snag, but this is not a snag – but, for example, a dinosaur skull. It happened to me once. You dig up the skull, find out it’s a new species, and realize you’re the first person to know about it. This feeling is incomparable.
Does the ability to look back millions of years change your outlook on life? Maybe you are less worried about some problems?
People experience stress because of short-term events. If you look at the whole of human history, there have been many terrible things. And if you think on a scale of millions of years, then you understand that this is just a small episode, insignificant from the point of view of the evolution of life. So yes, with such a job, stress is not terrible. There are times when things don’t work out. I was tormented with this goosesaurus, I didn’t fully determine it, but now I understand that this is a new group. But in general, scientific work saves from any stress. After all, what can you do in life? You can work in a company, build a career, you can travel. Clerks often lack adrenaline, they go to play sports. A lot of people just want to make more money. But you know… there was such a billionaire Andrew Carnegie, a steel magnate, a very rich man. He bequeathed his money to charity. These funds were used to build many institutions, including paleontological ones. Excavations of diplodocus have been carried out, one is even named after him – Carnegie’s diplodocus. And Carnegie left not so much for his daughter. When my daughter was asked if she was offended, she answered: why would I need more? This is a rare position, usually the main thing is to buy a yacht. So, science is the only worthy occupation in life. You are not working for someone, but you are in the business of increasing the amount of human knowledge.
If not for paleontology, then what?
I would probably study human history. For example, I collect antique coins. Some people collect fossils, but there is a rule: you can’t collect what you do professionally, otherwise you can confuse your collection with a scientific one. Collecting, collecting is one of the basic human instincts. Once upon a time it was very important for a person: to walk, collect, study.