Shipyard worker Lonnie Young during WWII (Courtesy of Connie Young Yu)
The demands of wartime production enabled Chinese Americans to move into the American workforce in large numbers. For the first time Chinese American women took on jobs as welders, riveters, burners and flangers.
[via: fuckyeahapihistory]
(via ziatroyano)
WATCH: Stunning Sand Art Performance on Ukraine’s Got Talent by Kseniya Simonova
Simonova portrays a family story on the cusp of World War II in this incredible sand art performance.
(Source: youtube.com)
Army Day!
This vintage World War II advert for Cannon Towels rocks some serious homosocial vibes. There is even the marginalized woman on the “outside” of the group that symbolically mitigates a totally gay reading.
(I’m in a homosocial analytic space after having watched Scott Caan’s proto-bromantic film Dallas 362 last night)
[Daniel W.K. Lee]

Katha Pollitt, in the current (June 28, 2010) issue of The Nation, begins her column recounting how World War II was “the last time Americans accepted the challenge of sacrifice in pursuit of common goals.” War had necessitated rationing, conservation, war bond purchasing, and other efforts that showed an awareness for a bigger, collective “good.” Since then, and now, after (during?) The Great Recession, while millions are still unemployed or under-employed, while the budget hawks in the government nickels and dimes itself out of effective reform that could revitalize our economy and our nation, while consumers self-righteously fume at BP’s environmental destruction, but fail to acknowledge their own fuel thirst that has created the demand for off-shore oil drilling, have Americans become so accustomed to wanting more while contributing less that when a new “national sacrifice” is in order, it is not only seems to be a politically disastrous position, but the existing inequities of our society get replayed and reinforced?
We must start by looking honestly in the mirror, revisit the ideas of fairness and equality, and refocus on that collective good, as Pollitt fantastically does here:
I would gladly pay higher taxes to prevent layoffs of teachers, cops and firemen; to improve our schools and universities; keep libraries open; expand public transportation; and put unemployed people to work repairing our tattered infrastructure, building public housing, maintaining our parks, staffing childcare centers. And what about that green technology Obama used to talk about—wind power, solar power, high-speed trains? There is no shortage of important work that needs to be done, and the costs of not doing it are very high. Unfortunately, the same leaders who fear asking us to sacrifice by paying higher taxes have no qualms about spending the money we already give them—and borrowing more—to pay for wars, war toys and prisons, while organizing the tax structure around the greed of corporations and the richest sliver of the population. The lavishing of treasure to pay for our militarized, increasingly unequal society is the sacrifice most of us are already making. Is it any wonder that people respond to calls for sacrifice with defensiveness and cynicism?
Adding to the difficulty of selling the public on sacrifice is that the salesman is usually a very rich and successful person who will barely feel the pinch of the policies he proposes. “Americans have become masters of ‘sacrifice avoidance,’ ” intones Eliot Spitzer in his Slate column. This immensely wealthy man, who spent more than $100,000 on prostitutes and thereby cost New York its best shot in a generation at a functioning state government, tells me to read the Gettysburg Address and be inspired to “a greater sense of national purpose”?
Multimillionaires who argue for raising taxes should start by proposing taxes on themselves that would actually lower their standard of living. Until then, they’re not really sharing the sacrifice they want to impose on the rest of us.
Is it a wonder that so many think Americans are the greediest people on earth?
“Marines on Beach, Saipan, 1944” by Peter Stackpole
American photographer Peter Stackpole was one of the first staff photographers of LIFE magazine. This image was taken at Saipan in the Mariana Islands during the Pacific campaign during World War II. The invasion of the island turned out to be the most costly in terms of lives lost. As encouraged by Emperor Hirohito, over 10,000 Japanese civilians committed suicide in the last days of the battle to take the offered privileged place in the afterlife. In total, about 22,000 Japanese civilians died as well as at 30,000 Japanese troops. American casualties totaled 2,949 with 10,364 wounded, out of 71,000 who landed.
Re-prints from 1995 by Time Life available for purchase at CLAMPART.
[via:wehadfacesthen]
The above photo by William Vandivert is a never-before-published photograph of Hitler’s bunker that he had shared with Eva Braun, his longtime companion, in the final days of their lives and of the Third Reich.
Vandivert was the first Western photographer to gain access to Hitler’s Führerbunker (translation: “shelter for the leader”) after the fall of Berlin, and a handful of his pictures of the bunker and the ruined city were published in LIFE in July, 1945. A few of those images are re-published here; most of the pictures in this gallery, however, have never been published before. Above: A new view of a photograph that appeared, heavily cropped, in LIFE of Hitler’s command center in the bunker, partially burned by retreating German troops and stripped of valuables by invading Russians.
Photo: William Vandivert
Apr 23, 2010
To think Conservatives want to cut education spending, perhaps go down to school 4 days a week or get rid of senior year of high school during all this budget-hawking, how much more stupid could America afford to get? Sarah Palin, you are great example of a future driven by “common sense” that we must avoid.
(via ihatethismess)