Caio

@eish4shards
1 Followers
16 Following
22 Posts

Soviet Music, Socialist Realism, Linux, Hacking

#socialistrealism, #sovietmusic

Without tiling wm / with tiling wm.

I spent more time creating this than I care to admit. What is worse: my friend pointed out that I could have done it in a tiling wm and just take a screenshot.

West Fertilizer Company

In the early hours of the evening on the 17th of April, 2013 in the small city of West, Texas...smoke was seen emanating from the West Fertilizer Company building. In 20 minutes there was a massive explosion that levelled the facility and its surroundings, killing 15 people and injuring hundreds more. How this came to be, represented a failure of regulations, planning and grandfathering on every level.

I feel like the unknot should be called a "not".

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unknot

Unknot - Wikipedia

Morrison provides no documented proof that Prokofiev’s travel restrictions were part of a grand deception. Like many other "scholarly" works, The People's Artist is anti-communist propaganda with footnotes — not serious historical analysis. #Prokofiev #SovietMusic #History

In summary:

✓ Prokofiev was allowed to travel for over a decade.
✓ He chose to become a Soviet citizen, subjecting himself to its laws.
✓ His passport exchange was not unusual.
✓ His travel status change was not unexpected, given the political situation of 1938

No evidence supports claims that he was "trapped" by a long-term Soviet plan.

More context: 1938 was the height of the Yezhovshchina—the mass purges led by Yezhov’s NKVD. If Prokofiev’s travel status changed, it may have been due to shifting security policies rather than a long-term plot to "trap" him. Morrison provides no evidence to the contrary. By 1940, Prokofiev’s planned U.S. tour was canceled because he couldn’t obtain a travel permit. By 1941, Prokofiev was evacuated to the Caucasus, like many other artists.
Morrison claims Soviet authorities "invented excuses" to explain his status change from allowed to travel to disallowed, but he provides no evidence, except for an anecdote of Lina sarcastically complaining about waiting in line for bureaucratic matters in Moscow. But so what?
Since 1936, Prokofiev had chosen to settle in the USSR permanently, meaning he became a Soviet citizen. Prokofiev knew since at least 1926 that he’d have to give up his "Nansen" passport (a passport issued by the League of Nations to stateless refugees). His diary entry from January 20, 1926 confirms this.
In 1938, he exchanged his external passport for an internal Soviet passport. Morrison tries to make a big deal out of it, but this was completely standard. A Soviet decree from April 22, 1931 disallowed dual citizenship. Another from 1932 required Soviet citizens to to obtain an internal passport. Prokofiev and his wife, Lina, would just have to abide by the same rules as any Soviet citizen.
The same letter was sent to Stravinsky, Borovsky and Prokofiev (leading Russian musicians living abroad). Prokofiev was the only one of the three to accept the invitation. He traveled in and out of the USSR multiple times between 1927 and 1938 while maintaining an international career. There’s zero evidence that the Soviet government secretly planned to revoke this right later.