Year: 2022

  • Fwd: EPISODE 534 NO PLACE FOR REASON AS ONE MAN JEOPARDIZES THE WHOLE WORLD



    Begin forwarded message:


    From: ALAN SKEOCH <alan.skeoch@rogers.com>
    Subject: EPISODE 534 NO PLACE FOR REASON AS ONE MAN JEOPARDIZES THE WHOLE WORLD
    Date: February 25, 2022 at 9:08:44 PM EST
    To: John Wardle <jwardle@rogers.com>, Marjorie Skeoch <marjorieskeoch@gmail.com>, Alan Skeoch <alan.skeoch@rogers.com>, “Sam M.” <amisam007@hotmail.com>, danbowyer007@gmail.com


    Note: My story for today may best not be printed John…think about it.
    Your thoughts…Marjorie, John, Sam, Dan, Owen?  I am only sending this copy
    to the five of you…need your opinion.  I do not want to spread terror
    which is what is happening on the other side of the world right now.
    Maybe best to drop the story.

    EPISODE 534     NO PLACE FOR REASON AS ONE MAN JEOPARDIZES THE WHOLE WORLD

    alan skeoch
    Feb. 25,2022

                      George C/ Scott goes mad in Dr. Strangelove and takes joy in triggering a nuclear war.  Here he simulates a B52 Norad nuclear bomber.  We are on the verge.


    Most often when I see Vladimir Putin on Television he seems impassive…no sign
    of emotion.  No smile…no frown…just like an inanimate Russian folderol doll.

    But tis week his mask was dropped.  He threatened any nation that interfered with
    his invasion of Ukraine with devastation “like you have never seen before’.  A chill
    went up my spine.  Was Putin talking about nuclear retaliation? Was he prepared
    to launch World War Three?  Was he insane? His face was contorted in anger…in hatred
    …and he vented with lips curled like a madman in an asylum.  Insane.

    That word.  Insane.   That word has resurrected my greatest fear. A war with nuclear weapons.
    An unwinnable war that will bring about a dark age like no other.   This possibility…
    The chance that a  madman would get access to the nuclear codes.  That was
    the possibility made into a film called Dr. Strangelove where an American officer
    went nuts and sent flights of B52 Norad nuclear bombers on a direct attack on
    the Soviet Union.  The presence of Peter Sellars, a comedian, in the war rooms
    made for very dark humour.  Just a movie!  Just fantasy!  To me it was real and
    scared me deeply.  Could never happen!  Lots of checks and balances. Really?

    Yet here we are on Feb. 25, 2022, where a madman holds the firing button of
    such a war.  

    The United Nations has made a feeble attempt to stop the lunacy but they could
    not get past the Russian Veto in the Security Council.  Sane heads do not
    seem able to prevail.  Some Security Council.!  Some Security!

    Here we are.  Leaderless.  Surrounded by leaders who cannot lead.
    Not their fault really.  How can any leader do anything to suppress the madness
    of this one man…one very angry man who has access to that button…one man who has descended into hell
    and wants to take us all with him.

    Even the Pope cannot help us. God,  He tried,  He met with the Russian ambassador,
    Nothing resulted.  God,  if there is a god, we need divine intervention.

    alan skeoch


  • EPISODE 533 THREE HORSE HITCH IN CENTRAL OHIO…AMISH FARM LIKE FILM WITNESS


    THREE HORSE HITCH

    HERE is something you will likely never see.   three horse hitch pulling a square bailing machine…normally pulled
    by a 45 horsepower tractor or even larger tractor.  In this case three heavy horses with the Amish driver sitting
    on a makeshift seat.  Pictures  taken in central Ohio near Zanesville a few years ago.

    About 30 years ago, perhaps even longer, we spent a few week ends getting pictures of 
    the Amish at work.  They never got angry as long as they were not asked to pose.

    With all the tension in the world right now I thought this would be soothing.

    alan




    EPISODE 533    THREE HORSE HITCH

    alan skeoch
    Feb. 2022





    IF you prefer something sinister, imagine driving your buggy along a 60 mph highway when this red cs
    leapt onto your backside.

  • EPISODE 531 THE HOLODOMOR : MASS STARVATION IN UKRAINE 1932 – 1933 CAUSED BY JOSEPH STALIN

    EPISODE 531   THE HOLODOMOR : MASS STARVATION IN UKRAINE 1932 – 1933 CAUSED BY JOSEPH STALIN


    alan skeoch
    Feb. 23 2022





    1933 eviction of a Kulak (peasant farm) and her daughter from her home with limited possessions.  To face death from starvation likely.  From Donets region of Ukraine

    UKRANIAN CONTACTS IN MY LIFE

    Kent Farrow sent me a message yesterday.  “Alan, could you write an Episode on Ukraine that would help readers
    understand what is happening…roots of what is happening…”  The Russian invasion of Ukraine has begun
    and jeopardizes world peace. That much we all know.  For those of us who are non-Ukrainian the whole Russian-Ukrainian
    history is largely unknown.   

    Kent’s request is flattering.  My ability to explain briefly the root origins of the conflict is listed because the 
    roots are deep and long…roots that twist and turn.  My knowledge is limited and I hesitate to even begin because
    the attempt will prompt responses from scholars far more informed than I am.

    My high school years at Humberside Collegiate were shared by a large emigrant Ukrainian population of students
    whose parents were Canadian refugees post 1845.  I got to know them well.  One of my best friends was Jim Romaniuk
    whose father was a slaughter house worker at the Toronto stock yards and whose mother was a fine
    intellectual.  The Romaniuks were assimilated Ukrainian Canadians.  Jim smiled and laughed a lot.
     Warm  hearted, gregarious, We were both second string team members in Grade 11.  I was super nervous.
    Would I do the right job?  Coach Burford looked along the second string bench and there was Jim with
    his hand up and finger pointing down at me. “Put Al on, coach.”  That was Jim…always looking out for the other guy
    in a nice way.

     He rarely if ever talked about
    Ukraine but I knew some facets of the dark history after reading a book titled “Documents
    of the Expulsion” which described the horrific flight of many Ukrainians fleeing westward as the Russian army
    was biting  st the heels of the collapsing German army in 1945..  This was not pretty stuff to read. I do not recommend
    the book as relaxed evening literature.

    A large number of our high school football team were Ukrainian Canadians like Bob Cwirenko whom
    I still associate with on our alumni group from the 1950’s.  His parents were part of that flight.  Many
    did not make it to the western refugee camps.  Bob Cwirenko became an engineer and played football
    for SPS (U. of T.)  He played outside corner backer and I got him once with a good cross body block
    and was surprised to hear “nice block Al”.  So many memories.

     I even learned a few words in Ukrainian so I could
    ask a Ukrainian girl to a school dance and she accepted.  ‘Dobre’

    My teaching career at Parkdale College was also touched by Ukrainian Canadians.  The most memorable
    to me was Taras Prociw.  He was a very gentle, kind and thoughtful scholar whose parents were part of
    a much earlier wave of Canadian Ukrainians in the wave period 1891 – 1914.  Taras was deeply aware of the 
    Ukrainian nationalism that caused some of our students to practice with wooden guns for the eventual
    liberation of Ukraine from the Soviet Union.  Taras was part of the great wave of Ukrainians who settled
    the Canadian west only his family took an urban route by settling in West Toronto.

    There were other Ukrainian contacts as well. Amusing . Like Big Bill Mashtalar who took me joy riding in his
    father’s new Oldmobile 98 one evening.  We cruised through High Park in the dead of night with our lights
    out searching for lovers.  Stupid thing  to do but teen ager can be stupid.  Perhaps you did not know
    that.  Our idea was to flash our lights on romantic liaisons.   It did not work out very well. The first flash
    revealed a bunch of tough guys drinking beer.  
    “What the hell?  Wo are those sons of bitche with the light…let’s get them.”   A chase resulted that
    I will never forget.  We raced down the spine of High Park to the Queen Elizabeth Highway and then
    accelerated westward chased by the beer drinkers.   Fortunately Bill had the Olds 98 and we pulled
    away…and lucky there were no cops.  Why tell you this?   Just to establish that I had lots of Ukrainian
    friends.   And I met some tough Ukrainian guys as well. One inside linebacker from St. Mike’s U. of T. team loved to knee me in
    the mouth rather than trying to get our quarterback until my friend Ed Jackman kicked him in the balls. I played for Victoria
    College at the time my mouth was hamburger.  Growing up in Toronto was like that in the late 1950’s.

    Later that year Bill Mashtlar asked me if I wanted to go to a camp.   The word camp sounded like fun so
    we drove with his parents to a Ukrainian social camp on the north side of the Dundas Highway where 
    it crosses 16 mile Creek.  The camp life involved a lot of singing snd dancing … laughing, eating, perhaps
    a little adult drinking.   Very friendly to me for I only knew a few words of Ukrainian so they spoke English.
    I did not know at the time that the camp was a socialist Ukrainian camp.  Not religious.  Socialists.
    That experience helped me to crush the anti-communist attitudes that were sweeping Canada
    in the 1950’s.  These were not bad people.

    Still later I became aware of another Ukrainian camp on the south side of the Dundas Highway at
    16 mile Creek.  This camp had a Ukrainian church at its centre…I am not sure if Orthodox or Catholic.
    One of my fellow teachers st Parkdale was the daughter of a Ukrainian priest whose followers and
    other attended this camp.  Both camps…socialist and religious…did not like each other as
    near as I could determine.  I became aware however that Ukrainian history was very complex.
    And that Ukrainian nationalism was strongest in the camp on the south side of Dundas.
    “Why did the Ukrainians build their social camps opposite each other?”  I have no idea.  What
    I did discover however was that unity was tenuous.

    Ukrainians are part of the warp and weave of our society.  Well over 1 million people.  The
    Ukraine itself has a population of 40 million.

    Now to get back to the request from Kent.  Basic question. The history is very complicated. 
    NASTY, violent, unforgiving, horrific, unending.  Let me
    select one event that explains the Ukrainian point of view.  There are many other causes 
    of course.  But I am not writing a history of Ukraine.  I am trying to present a fact that might
    be on the minds of Ukrainians as events unfold today in 2022…ninety years later.

    Dateline: 1932
    Location.  Ukraine
    Participants”  Joseph Stalin,  Ukrainian kulaks (farmers)
    Results.   Horrific

    THE HOLODOMOR…STARVATION BY HUNGER



    EXCERPT BY ANNE APPLEBAUM 

    KULAK grain being confiscated.  Seed Grain gone.  Future crop gone.  Starvation on the way


    THE HOLODOMOR…’EXTERMINATION BY HUMGER’
    (Excerpt from book by Anne Applebaum titled Red Famine)

    Holodomor, man-made famine that convulsed the Soviet republic of Ukraine from 1932 to 1933, peaking in the late spring of 1933. It was part of a broader Soviet famine (1931–34) that also caused mass starvation in the grain-growing regions of Soviet Russia and Kazakhstan. The Ukrainian famine, however, was made deadlier by a series of political decrees and decisions that were aimed mostly or only at Ukraine. In acknowledgement of its scale, the famine of 1932–33 is often called the Holodomor, a term derived from the Ukrainian words for hunger (holod) and extermination (mor).

    Causes of the famine

    The origins of the famine lay in the decision by Soviet leader Joseph Stalin to collectivize agriculture in 1929. Teams of Communist Party agitators forced peasants to relinquish their land, personal property, and sometimes housing to collectivefarms, and they deported so-called kulaks—wealthier peasants—as well as any peasants who resisted collectivization altogether. Collectivization led to a drop in production, the disorganization of the rural economy, and food shortages. It also sparked a series of peasant rebellions, including armed uprisings, in some parts of Ukraine.


    The rebellions worried Stalin because they were unfolding in provinces which had, a decade earlier, fought against the Red Army during the Russian Civil War. He was also concerned by anger and resistance to the state agricultural policy within the Ukrainian Communist Party. “If we don’t make an effort now to improve the situation in Ukraine,” he wrote to his colleague Lazar Kaganovich in August 1932, “we may lose Ukraine.” That autumn the Soviet Politburo, the elite leadership of the Soviet Communist Party, took a series of decisions that widened and deepened the famine in the Ukrainian countryside. Farms, villages, and whole towns in Ukraine were placed on blacklists and prevented from receiving food. Peasants were forbidden to leave the Ukrainian republic in search of food. Despite growing starvation, food requisitions were increased and aid was not provided in sufficient quantities. The crisis reached its peak in the winter of 1932–33, when organized groups of police and communist apparatchiks ransacked the homes of peasants and took everything edible, from crops to personal food supplies to pets. Hunger and fear drove these actions, but they were reinforced by more than a decade of hateful and conspiratorial rhetoric emanating from the highest levels of the Kremlin.

    From famine to extermination

    The result of Stalin’s campaign was a catastrophe. In spring 1933 death rates in Ukraine spiked. Between 1931 and 1934 at least 5 million people perished of hunger all across the U.S.S.R. Among them, according to a study conducted by a team of Ukrainian demographers, were at least 3.9 million Ukrainians. Police archives contain multiple descriptions of instances of cannibalism as well as lawlessness, theft, and lynching. Mass graves were dug across the countryside. Hunger also affected the urban population, though many were able to survive thanks to ration cards. Still, in Ukraine’s largest cities, corpses could be seen on the street.


    The famine was accompanied by a broader assault on Ukrainian identity. While peasants were dying by the millions, agents of the Soviet secret police were targeting the Ukrainian political establishment and intelligentsia. The famine provided cover for a campaign of repression and persecution that was carried out against Ukrainian culture and Ukrainian religious leaders. The official policy of Ukrainization, which had encouraged the use of the Ukrainian language, was effectively halted. Moreover, anyone connected to the short-lived Ukrainian People’s Republic—an independent government that had been declared in June 1917 in the wake of the February Revolution but was dismantled after the Bolsheviks conquered Ukrainian territory—was subjected to vicious reprisals. All those targeted by this campaign were liable to be publicly vilified, jailed, sent to the Gulag (a system of Soviet prisons and forced-labour camps), or executed. Knowing that this Russification program would inevitably reach him, Mykola Skrypnyk, one of the best-known leaders of the Ukrainian Communist Party, committed suicide rather than submit to one of Stalin’s show trials.


    HOLODOMOR BASIC FACTS



    Genocides against non-russians: Holodomor, Ukraine
    Let me take the wife too, when I reach the cemetery she will be dead.&quot;  Stories of Holodomor survivors | Euromaidan Press
    There were few pictures taken of the Holodomor.  Best kept from western eyes that were distracted by their own Great Depression. In this
    photo a Kulak family  tried to hide their seed grain by burying it in barrels  Usng probing rods officials found the grain and confiscated any other
    food the family had.  Usually the homes of these so called wealthy Kulaks were taken as well and their farms joined into large collective farms.
    Kulaks died in great numbers.   Some managed to flee to the west earlier but by the 1930’s flight was impossible.  They were ordered to
    stay where they lived…with no food.



    THE HOLODOMOR  BASIC FACTS

    The term Holodomor (death by hunger, in Ukrainian) refers to the starvation of millions of Ukrainians in 1932–33 as a result of Soviet policies. The Holodomor can be seen as the culmination of an assault by the Communist Party and Soviet state on the Ukrainian peasantry, who resisted Soviet policies. This assault occurred in the context of a campaign of intimidation and arrests of Ukrainian intellectuals, writers, artists, religious leaders, and political cadres, who were seen as a threat to Soviet ideological and state-building aspirations.

    Between 1917 and 1921, Ukraine briefly became an independent country and fought to retain its independence before succumbing to the Red Army and being incorporated into the Soviet Union. In the 1920s, Soviet central authorities, seeking the support of the populace, allowed for some cultural autonomy through the policy known as “indigenization.”

    By the end of the 1920s, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin decided to curtail Ukraine’s cultural autonomy, launching the intimidation, arrest, imprisonment and execution of thousands of Ukrainian intellectuals, church leaders, as well as Communist Party functionaries who had supported Ukraine’s distinctiveness.

    At the same time, Stalin ordered the collectivization of agriculture. The majority of Ukrainians, who were small-scale or subsistence farmers, resisted. The state confiscated the property of the independent farmers and forced them to work on government collective farms. The more prosperous farmers (owning a few head of livestock, for example) and those who resisted collectivization were branded kulaks (rich peasants) and declared enemies of the state who deserved to be eliminated as a class. Thousands were thrown out of their homes and deported.

    In 1932, the Communist Party set impossibly high quotas for the amount of grain Ukrainian villages were required to contribute to the Soviet state. When the villages were not able to meet the quotas, authorities intensified the requisition campaign, confiscating even the seed set aside for planting and levying fines in meat and potatoes for failure to fulfill the quotas. Special teams were sent to search homes and even seized other foodstuffs. Starving farmers attempted to leave their villages in search of food, but Soviet authorities issued a decree forbidding Ukraine’s peasants from leaving the country. As a result, many thousands of farmers who had managed to leave their villages were apprehended and sent back, virtually a death sentence. A law was introduced that made the theft of even a few stalks of grain an act of sabotage punishable by execution. In some cases, soldiers were posted in watchtowers to prevent people from taking any of the harvest. Although informed of the dire conditions in Ukraine, central authorities ordered local officials to extract even more from the villages. Millions starved as the USSR sold crops from Ukraine abroad.

    The USSR vigorously denied that the Holodomor had occurred. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Communist Party, secret police, and government archives that have become accessible to researchers support the conclusion that the famine was caused by Soviet state policies and was indeed intentionally intensified by Soviet authorities.








    Starving orphan children: Ukraine 1933




     The term Holodomor (death by hunger, in Ukrainian) refers to the starvation of millions of Ukrainians in 1932–33 as a result of Soviet policies. The Holodomor can be seen as the culmination of an assault by the Communist Party and Soviet state on the Ukrainian peasantry, who resisted Soviet policies. This assault occurred in the context of a campaign of intimidation and arrests of Ukrainian intellectuals, writers, artists, religious leaders, and political cadres, who were seen as a threat to Soviet ideological and state-building aspirations.

    Between 1917 and 1921, Ukraine briefly became an independent country and fought to retain its independence before succumbing to the Red Army and being incorporated into the Soviet Union. In the 1920s, Soviet central authorities, seeking the support of the populace, allowed for some cultural autonomy through the policy known as “indigenization.”

    By the end of the 1920s, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin decided to curtail Ukraine’s cultural autonomy, launching the intimidation, arrest, imprisonment and execution of thousands of Ukrainian intellectuals, church leaders, as well as Communist Party functionaries who had supported Ukraine’s distinctiveness.

    At the same time, Stalin ordered the collectivization of agriculture. The majority of Ukrainians, who were small-scale or subsistence farmers, resisted. The state confiscated the property of the independent farmers and forced them to work on government collective farms. The more prosperous farmers (owning a few head of livestock, for example) and those who resisted collectivization were branded kulaks (rich peasants) and declared enemies of the state who deserved to be eliminated as a class. Thousands were thrown out of their homes and deported.

    In 1932, the Communist Party set impossibly high quotas for the amount of grain Ukrainian villages were required to contribute to the Soviet state. When the villages were not able to meet the quotas, authorities intensified the requisition campaign, confiscating even the seed set aside for planting and levying fines in meat and potatoes for failure to fulfill the quotas. Special teams were sent to search homes and even seized other foodstuffs. Starving farmers attempted to leave their villages in search of food, but Soviet authorities issued a decree forbidding Ukraine’s peasants from leaving the country. As a result, many thousands of farmers who had managed to leave their villages were apprehended and sent back, virtually a death sentence. A law was introduced that made the theft of even a few stalks of grain an act of sabotage punishable by execution. In some cases, soldiers were posted in watchtowers to prevent people from taking any of the harvest. Although informed of the dire conditions in Ukraine, central authorities ordered local officials to extract even more from the villages. Millions starved as the USSR sold crops from Ukraine abroad.

    The USSR vigorously denied that the Holodomor had occurred. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Communist Party, secret police, and government archives that have become accessible to researchers support the conclusion that the famine was caused by Soviet state policies and was indeed intentionally intensified by Soviet authorities.




  • EPISODE 540 “NEVER BE HOSTAGE TO FORTUNE”, Crooky said …APPLIED TODAY WHEN BARN COLLAPSED Feb. 18, 2022

    EPISODE 540     “NEVER BE HOSTAGE TO FORTUNE”, Crooky said …APPLIED TODAY WHEN BARN COLLAPSED  Feb. 18, 2022

    alan skeoch
    Feb. 18, 2022


    BARN LOOKS INTACT.  LOOK CLOSER…TOP WELD HAS SNAPPED.  ROOF HELD UP BY RACKS INSIDE BARN,  HEAVY TRUSSES
    HAVE BENT AND DROPPED.


    ROOF TRUSSES COLLAPSED, WELDS SNAPPED, ROOF CAVED IN AND ONLY SUPPORTED BY RACKING INSIDE BARN.  ALL
    WILL EVENTUALLY FALL FARTHER.     ALL CAUSED BY HEAVY WET SNOW FROM SUDDEN VIOLENT STORM  feb. 18, 2022.



    WITH REGARD TO THE LOSS OF MY BARN AND CONTENTS

    Background:  On the night of Feb. 18, 2022, a sudden snowstorm dumped heavy
    snow on our farm.  One building could not handle the weight and collapsed.  The building
    is packed tooth to yowl with historic artefacts many of which are used by the movie 
    industry.   Interior racking is currently holding up parts of the barn but not for long.
    Am I devastated.?  No, I will get by.

    I am not the only person in the world with troublesl.  Mine are minuscule really so do not get
    the feeling I am swimming in self-pity.  No one was hurt.  I cannot imagine the results of an injury were 
    that to occur.  A teacher of mine long ago, Evan Cruickshank, head of history at Humberside and Parkdale
    Collegiates once said to me:  

    “Alan, never be hostage to fortune.”

    Think about that line.  Never let the things in this world that you may acquire … never be a prisoner
    to them.   I have never forgotten that line.  It has served me well.  I was flattered when finishing
    university by the offer of a job from “Crooky” at Parkdale C. I.  He said the same ting that another
    mentor of mine, John Ricker, said.   “If you come to Parkdale, you will never leave.”  Also true.
    Good advice which I took to heart.

    Bottom line:  The Barn and its contents do not own me.

    alan

  • Fwd: EPISODE 538 PREDICTIONS OF WORLD IN 2050 BY GRADE TEN STUDENTS IN YEAR 2000…

    Note: My stories may be disrupted for a few days.

      The huge snowfall has collapsed one of our barns which is loaded with our ancient machines.

    We will be saving what we can while we can.  Life always catches ua just when things seem to be getting better.  The pandemic is less
    threatening and the long winter is winding down.  The truck convoy is over.  We expected relief. We should have kept our guard up.  Nothing goes smoothly all the time.
    Maybe I can make a story out of the disaster.

    alan

    Millennium Prophecies: Predictions For The Year 2000 And Beyond: From The  World&#39;s Greatest Seers And Mystics by Stephen Skinner


    EPISODE 538    PREDICTIONS of WHAT WORLD WOULD BE LIKKE IN 50 YEARS.. BY GRADE TEN STUDENTS IN YEAR 2000…


    Alan skeoch
    Feb. 17, 2022

    To celebrate the end of the second millennium in year 2000, the Toronto Board of Education
    asked me to gather some Grade Ten students together to construct a special Millennial book
    titled  “A DAY IN THE LIFE….”   In Part of the book these students their thoughts on what the world would be
    like 50 years from the year 2000.  

    Below are their thoughts.   Some of the things they forecast have already happened less
    that 25 years into the future.  Some happenings they produce are joyful.   Some are frightening.
    Some are ridiculous (done so deliberately as 15 year olds are prone to do).

    Fear of climate change, global pandemics, massive pollution, species extinctions, etc. …negative
    feelings about the future are present.in the predictions.  But there are also predictions that are 
    comforting, particularly the prediction of a future where we will take care of our planet much better
    than the past.


    1950s High School Dance | Fashion, Fashion teenage, High school dance

    WHAT WAS CANADA LIKE IN 1950?  FIFTY YEARS IN THE PAST.

    WHAT would I hav written if a teacher asked me to look into the future.  What would you have written.
    I think our outlook on life is the result of the times in which we live.  For most of friends the times were good


    A Boeing B-52 bomber flies above the clouds with contrails flowing... News  Photo - Getty Images


    Initially I felt my Grade Ten experiences were all joyful…school dances, football, basketball, drama club
    Yearbook, etc.   But there was a dark place in my mind back in 1954 that was underscored every afternoon
    as I watched the vapour trails of B52 NORAD bombers fly North Westerly from Maine to North Dakota.
    I was scared and even constructed a silly bomb shelter in our cellar and gave mom instructions to fill
    the laundry tubs with water the moment a nuclear attack was imminent.  My shelter food was basically
    a dozen cans of tomato soup and some pork and beans. Quaker Oats in a tin so mice would not get it.
    Some dried fruit and a few chocolate bars which were soon eaten before any attack.


    Cold War Nuclear Fallout Shelters Were Never Going to Work - HISTORYCold War Nuclear Fallout Shelters Were Never Going to Work - HISTORY

     No stove.  One bed which was an old sofa.
    The cellar windows were boarded up because we had no bricks.  And I did not tell anyone because 
    there was only room for mom, dad, Eric and me.  Selfishness…the dark cloud.  IF an atom bomb
    was dropped on Toronto City Hall then our house would be outside the area of total annihilation hence
    the air raid shelter might help us survive.  That was not true.  The Hydrogen nuclear bomb, if dropped
    on Toronto City Hall would annihilate us along with our school and friends.  So the ir raid shelter
    was forgotten except for the cans of tomato soup.  I do not remember if I put a can opener in the 
    supply chest.

    But really that fear was pushed to the back of my brain…so far back that by the 1960’s the fear was gone.
    THERE was a lot of joy in the 1950’s and 60’s…outweighed the fears.   They really were Happy Days.



    As you read these predictions try to do two things.  One:  Are the students overwhelmingly optimistic
    or pessimistic?  Two:   What was on your mind when you were in Grade Ten.  Do you remember?

    alan

    PREDICTIONS:  WHAT WILL THE WORLD BE LIKE 50 YEARS FROM NOW (YEAR 2000)?






    Below are the predictions of Toronto 15 year old students 


    Microchips imbedded in flesh would replace need for money on TTC.

    Cleaner energy sources will replace fossil fuels in cars because there is
    no way to survive without cars.

    There will be petroleum shortages and cars will be forced to use solar power or electricity.

    The air will be filled with flying vehicles.  Transportation on the ground by car would
    only be used by poor people.

    Cold fusion will be used to power our vehicles

    Cars will operate on voice command.

    Vehicles will travel underground in tunnels.

    Hydrogen will power cars.

    Human beings will go to the farthest reaches of space only to fine that we are, in Fact, alone.

    The world wil be united under a single currency

    Technology will replace people in jobs resulting in massive unemployment

    In 50 years we will no longer carry cash but use a card instead.

    In 2050 Kuwait’s oil will be gone plunging the world into extreme poverty

    People will start to prefer ‘no name’ brands amid a general distrust of corporations

    The rich will get richer and the poor wil get poorer…ghettoes will get larger.

    The Canadian dollar will be replaced by U.S. currency

    The world economy will falter and another world war will break out

    Toronto  will continue to sprawl swallowing up cities Markham and Durham.

    Toronto will in 50 years look like a huge piece of ice…glass and aluminum
    skyscrapers.

    Vacant land on waterfront will be hard to find.

    Work hours will be cut to five hours per day ro reduce unemployment

    The aging population will move back to cities and suburban houses will be abandoned

    Pollution  will be terrible….air quality reduced and garbage floating and sinking on and
    into Lake Ontario.

    Three hundred storey apartment buildings for those who can afford

    poorer housing, poorer food, poor people,

    No school  blackboards.  Big screens operated by push buttons

    In 50 years schools will no longer be necessary because children will be schooled
    at home on computers.  As a result children will lack the skills needed to interact with each other.’

    Every student will have his or her own computer in the classroom

    No need for schools.  In the future children will swallow a knowledge pill which will transfer
    all necessary information to their brains.

    Fewerr students will enter university because of increasing difficulty learning the latest
    technologies.

    There will be teachers in the classrooms but their role will be to explain computers.

    Computerized classrooms will have around 200 students.

    Books will become electronic

    Canada will become a world leader

    Face recognition and retinal scanning will be the way we are identified

    Women may go back to being housewives with large families

    Household chores will be done by computers.

    Democracy will be abolished and fascist governments will rule the world.

    New laws will limit peoples’ freedom

    The human population will exceed 15 billion

    Women will be considered the dominant sex.

    50 years from now there will be  perfect pace.

    Colonies will be built on other planets

    Gene therapy will become widespread enhancing immune systems, intelligence
    and strength.

    There will be more need for psychiatrists and psychologists as technology
    tyrannizes our lives and replaces human contact.

    There will be cures for every disease including AIDS and cancer.

    There will be much more mixed race breeding

    Men will be able to give birth

    Scientists will come up with a method to control overpopulation.

    New diseases will appear and wipe out legions of living things.

    Public nudity will be legalized

    Common cold will become much more infectious

    Maybe there will be no world at all.  Maybe it will have ended by the apocalypse of a third world war.
    On the other hand disease might wipe out whole populations within days or even hours.

    Medical science will have difficulty catching up with new diseases.

    People will live longer

    Mutations will change human beings.

    Cryogenic freezing will successfully prevent death.

    Animal lovers will present thousands of species from becoming extinct.

    In the near future a human will be cloned, sparking a huge mortal and ethical debate.

    In just 25 years, not 50 years, our environment will be in horrendous shape.  Many
    animals will become extinct.  There will be far fewer trees due to deforestation, a lack 
    of raw materials and fuels such as natural gas and oil, and an even larger hole in the ozone layer.

    The world will toon be overpopulated, and this will lead to drought, mass disease, lack of food
    and squalid living conditions.

    Severe climate change is going to alter our food production

    Scientists will figure a way to live comfortably in the Arctic regions.


    Rapid urbanization of the world will cause cities to not  have enough food and
    farms will need to triple their production.

    New power plants will provide cleaner energy

    There will be a nuclear disaster that will create deformities in plants and animals

    Concern over increasing pollution will startle world government into massive and successful
    efforts to clean up our planet.

    Solar energy will be our main power source

    The Great Lakes will dry up…disaster.

    The theory of continental drift will be proven correct because Britain wil be 30 km off the coast
    of Newfoundland.

    Biologicsl weapons could destroy most of the earth’s wild and human populations.

    A detonated nuclear bomb will act as a warning 

    Z00s wil become essential for preserving and protecting growing numbers of
    endangered species.

    The Toronto Maple Leafs will win two Stanley Cups in next 50 years.

    The moon will become a retirement resort with golfing.  Many golf balls will
    be lost in space.

    Due tp danger of sports injuries all sports will be simulated by computer with no human
    players allowed.

    AND SO THEY SPOKE…REMEMBER THESE PREDICTIONS WERE MADE IN YEAR 2000…
    MANY ARE ACCEPTED AS NORMAL TODAY.    

    alan