Thursday, February 19, 2026
1942 FDR ordered the detention and internment of all Japanese Americans on the West Coast
1945 The invasion of Iwo Jima
2025 Amid deteriorating relations between both countries, President Donald Trump called Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy a "dictator" and said he has done a "terrible job" while warning "he is not going to have a country left" soon.
In bed at 9, awake at 5:45, up at 6. 34/44/33.
Morning meds at 11 a.m.
Text to CBG:
I have to beg your forgiveness for making you my interlocutor for a running commentary on THEO OF GOLDEN, but it’s become clear to me that I’m kind of a lonely old man who has outlived the rest of his family and most of his friends, like the old man John Prine wrote and sang about in “Hello In There.” You turned me on to Levi’s great novel and the novel has turned me into a Grand Rememberer, needing someone to share some thoughts with, and you’re “It.” Forgive me. I just finished chapter 31 in which Tony the bookkeeper shared thoughts and memories over a bottle of brandy and Tony shared his memories of Vietnam. His were particularly gruesome and certainly worse than mine, but I was struck by some of his judgments, like the thought that, in a sense he never left Vietnam, or Vietnam never left him. On a handful of the cars I see at the VA Medical Center on my many visits, I see a bumper sticker that reads: “Lest We Forget...Not Everyone Who Lost His Life In Vietnam Died There... Not Everyone Who Came Home From Vietnam Ever Left There." To this day I experience guilt and shame over participating in that evil American enterprise. I still wear my dog tags that I wore over there, but mostly like the albatross in the Ancient Mariner. Another thought he voiced was about common guilt for our world in which so much evil and suffering is tolerated. He didn’t quote Solzhenitsyn, but could have: “Gradually it was disclosed to me that the line separating good and evil passes not through states, nor between classes, nor between political parties either -- but right through every human heart -- and through all human hearts. This line shifts. Inside us, it oscillates with the years. And even within hearts overwhelmed by evil, one small bridgehead of good is retained. And even in the best of all hearts, there remains ... an unuprooted small corner of evil.” And of Hannah Arendt who, more than once, professed shame at being human, a member of a species capable of doing what our species has done and keeps doing. Thoughts like these still haunt me as a ferkrimpter old man, and this novel seems to trigger all of them, but I’ll keep reading, and learning from them. Thanks again.
Caren Goldberg:
I love hearing your thoughts about it. And while you may feel lonely I think your strong ability to relate to many of the characters in the book means that you are not alone in your feelings. Although the characters may be fictional the feelings are real.
Charles Clausen:
You’re right , of course, and i do find myself wondering how Allen Levi acquired such insight in human beings, into human nature. I think he’s lived in Georgia all his life, except for a couple years studying literature in Scotland. He’s never married, nor raised a family, which he had in common with his younger brother and whom he venerated much as I venerate Kitty. I believe he never served in the military, especially not in a war zone. I have to wonder where he acquired such insight and wisdom, but wherever it came from, I am glad he shared it in this novel (which I was surprised to learn was self-published!)
Facebook entry:
Charles D. Clausen shared a memory.
It has now been 81 years since my father and about 70,000 other Marines and Navy hospitalcorpsmen landed on Iwo Jima. I've written about it often, especially in my old age. I think about it today as two aircraft carrier task forces approach Iran, and as the threats of military action against Greenland/Denmark, Panama, Mexico, and of course Venezuela linger in everyone's memory, threateningly. And I can never forget that the man who makes and has made the threats never served in uniform or experienced anything like what the men on Iwo Jima experienced, nor those who served in America's too many other wars. He plays with the lives of our fighting forces as if they were all toy soldiers which he moves around a world map, while the world wonders how Americans could have bestowed such power on such a man.
1 Year Ago
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Charles D. Clausen is thinking about Iwo Jima
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Today is the 80th anniversary of D-Day in the Battle of Iwo Jima. I think about it every year because my father was one of the 70,000 Marines who climbed down cargo nets to ride in landing craft to the island where 5,931 of them were killed in action, died of wounds or were missing in action and presumed dead. An additional 209 deaths occurred among the Navy corpsmen and surgeons assigned to the Marines. I was 3 years old. I chose this photograph, rather than Joe Rosenthal's 'iconic' photo of the flag raising on Iwo Jima's Mount Suribachi because it gives a much truer picture of the slaughterhouse that Iwo became over the next 36 days. I think of my father's days on Iwo Jima and my 234 days in South Vietnam when I hear our current commander-in-chief, whose alleged 'bone spurs' kept him out of SVN, talk of using our military to seize control of the Panama Canal Zone and Greenland. He also originally claimed that he might us our military in clearing the Gaza Strip of Palestinians so the US could "own" it and turn it into "the Riviera of the Middle East." How low we have sunk in my lifetime.





