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#MartianInvasion (aka Nightmare in October)

Orson_Welles_1937

#MartianInvasion

#GroversMillConspiracy

It was late at night and the warm  smell of the flame scorching the top of the pumpkin drifted through the air. It  was that quiet time when the excitement was over, the roads emptied of cars and  trick-or-treaters, and you sat in the darkness with only the grinning gourds  staring back at you.

That  was when my family would turn on the radio to hear our local station’s annual  rebroadcast of The War of the Worlds. I would pull out a treat (or two)  from my bag and listen to the crackling airwaves and the music drifting from the  Meridian Room in the Hotel Park Plaza.

As  a child, I didn’t really comprehend the entire plot. I only knew it was an eerie  tradition that held in me rapt attention. It wasn’t until I got older that I  began to appreciate the intensity and creativity of Orson Welles masterful  reworking of H.G. Wells classic novel. When we began studying it in a college broadcast class, I was  surprised to find most of my classmates were not familiar with it. To them, it  was something from antiquity they’d only heard about in  passing.

One  Halloween, a few years after the 9/11 attacks in 2001, I listened to it again. I  expected it to bring back fond memories… the sweet smell of dried leaves as I  hesitantly approached a lit porch covered with fake spider webs. Instead, I  listened in much the same way many people did during its original airing on  October 30, 1938. I was alarmed at a program I’d heard dozens of times. The  broadcast hadn’t changed… I had. To my ears, the aliens were no longer  invaders from Mars, but a euphemism for anyone intent on creating terror and  panic in America.

The  locations mentioned were disturbing. The alien machine was “half buried in a  vast pit” that reminded me of another pit I knew all too well. Chills ran down  my spine as I listened to the announcer say:

I’m  speaking from the roof of the Broadcasting Building, New York City. The bells  you hear are ringing to warn the people to evacuate the city as the Martians  approach. Estimated in last two hours three million people have moved out along  the roads to the north, Hutchison River Parkway still kept open for motor  traffic. Avoid bridges to Long Island . . . hopelessly jammed. All communication  with Jersey shore closed ten minutes ago. No more defenses. Our army wiped out .  . . artillery, air force, everything wiped out. This may be the last broadcast.  We’ll stay here to the end. People are holding service below us in the  cathedral.

Followed  by a hauntingly familiar play-by-play:

…Smoke  comes out . . . black smoke, drifting over the city. People in the streets see  it now. They’re running towards the East River . . . thousands of them, dropping  in like rats. Now the smoke’s spreading faster. It’s reached Times Square.  People trying to run away from it, but it’s no use. They’re falling like flies.  Now the smoke’s crossing Sixth Avenue . . . Fifth Avenue . . . one hundred yards  away . . . it’s fifty feet . . .

It  no longer seemed to be a make-believe story about an attack from outer space.  Instead it sounded like a prophetic warning about an event that would happen  over sixty years later. Of course it wasn’t Martians that changed our word on  9/11, but terror did come from the skies in the form of giant metal  machines.

With their daily news filled with horror stories coming out of  Europe, and the world teetering on the brink of war, was it any wonder that some  listeners in 1938 didn’t think someone simply got the whole “alien” thing wrong  and we were, in reality, being invaded by some foreign power — like Germany?  While the Munich Agreement had recently been signed, a United Press story on  October 14th saw the former chairman of the War Industries Board, Bernard  Baruch, calling for steps to strengthen America’s land forces. He decried the  events in Munich a “humiliating peace” imposed by Hitler. After meeting with  President Roosevelt he said, “Our country… is in a very desperate condition  for national defense;” a fact he said was known to everyone except the American  people. The next national defense budget was going to provide larger  appropriations for the army, in large measure due to a Munich Agreement that had  the opposite effect than putting to rest the fear of war. If the American people  hadn’t known how unprepared they were to fight a foe, they knew  then.

How  many of us nowadays, when hearing breaking news reports of a tragedy or some  impending doom, are skeptical of the details and the sources?  How many of us will believe the validity of an event only after we’ve heard it  on that one television channel or website that we trust? With all our advances  in technology and a 24/7 news cycle, are  we ever really sure what is happening even a few miles from  home?

The  uncomfortable prognostication of The War of the Worlds is sandwiched  between equally uncanny revelations. At the beginning, Welles narration  states:

Yet  across an immense ethereal gulf, minds that to our minds as ours are to the  beasts in the jungle — intellects vast, cool and unsympathetic, regarded this  earth with envious eyes and slowly and surely drew their plans against  us.

At  the end, the Professor Pierson tells us:

It  may be that the destruction of the Martians is only a reprieve. To them, and not  to us, is the future ordained perhaps.

Who  now regards this country with envious eyes, and is slowly and surely drawing  their plans against us? Is the threat not from some extraterrestrial force or  foreign power — but from within? Do we know for whom the future is  ordained?

A  Martian invasion doesn’t feel that far-fetched anymore. Beyond man’s inhumanity  to man and the world inching closer to nuclear war, in a few short years we’ve  witnessed events that have shocked our psyche: earthquakes that tilted the  earth’s axis and raised the sea floor;  the deadliest tsunami in recorded history; a devastating nuclear disaster for  which the world was woefully unprepared; and a city brought to its knees by a  meteor — a random event that allows for no rehearsal.

In  these anxious days, The War of the Worlds can still be listened to with  as much trepidation as when it first aired; perhaps more so. It will forever  serve as a watershed case exposing the influence of mass  communication. Those confused souls who panicked decades ago were no more  vulnerable than the technologically sophisticated peopleof today. Despite  repeated warnings that the work was a dramatization, one can envision Twitchy  reporting huge numbers of #MartianInvasion and  #GroversMillConspiracy.

Or  perhaps it has, like Welles said, “no further significance than as the holiday  offering it was intended to be.” You be the  judge.

Published in: http://www.americanthinker.com/2013/10/a_nightmare_in_october.html#ixzz2js9pXr7x Follow us: @AmericanThinker on Twitter | AmericanThinker on Facebook

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Steve Kogan
Steve Kogan
10 years ago

Dear Susan Harris,

Midway through your absorbing essay “A Nightmare in October,” I was surprised and delighted by the conjunction of our thoughts regarding H. G. Wells’ The War of the Worlds in relation to Islamic jihad.

In a serial essay on the German historian Oswald Spengler for The Brussels Journal several years ago, I wrote that “the danger signs were already clear to Spengler in 1933 when he remarked on the penetration of the Islamic drive in Africa ‘as far as the Zambesi in Nyassaland. Where a Christian school stood yesterday, a mosque stands tomorrow . . . and the Christian priest is suspected above all because he represents a white ruling race, against which Mohammedan propaganda, political rather than dogmatic, directs itself with cool decision.’ A similar jihadist drive persists to this day, only this time directed ‘with cool decision’ on a planetary scale. Like other passages in The Hour of Decision, this thumb-nail sketch of an alien and hostile intelligence has even greater force now than it did in its time, yet it also catches a mood of anxiety that was in the air at the turn of the century and eerily recalls the penultimate line in the opening paragraph of H. G. Wells’ The War of the Worlds: ‘Yet across the gulf of space . . . intellects vast and cool and unsympathetic, regarded this earth with envious eyes, and slowly and surely drew their plans against us.'”

In my experience, it is rare to find discussions of literary classics in political commentary, which made me appreciate all the more your personal account and your sensitivity to Wells in light of modern history.

Sincerely,
Steve Kogan