I started Netflix’s new series “Transatlantic.” Contrary to what you might think, it’s not the story of a transgender love boat, though I’m sure Netflix is working on that.
It’s about Varian Fry’s heroic efforts to evacuate Jews from Hitler’s…
2/9
…Europe.
Transatlantic is an elegant, expensive period piece full of lush French vineyards and charming villas. There’s even time for romance.
In some ways, the series forges new territory, injecting some levity into an otherwise heavy topic. This isn’t Schindler’s List.
3/9
Distance from the actual events affords filmmakers some creative license, and to this extent I do not object.
They don’t make light of the Holocaust nor of the war itself. Instead, they’ve almost given this topic its own version of “The Great Escape,” making the victims…
4/9
…heroes.
Almost.
Creative license can go too far, perverting history and its heroes, and that’s what Netflix has done here.
Bowing—or should I say ‘bending over’?—in #Budweiser fashion to the gay times in which we live, Netflix made Varian Fry a homosexual.
While…
5/9
…many other characters in this series are fictitious, Varian Fry, an American, was as real to WW2 as Winston Churchill or Ernie Pyle. But it seems that the homosexual lobby decided WW2 needed some gay heroes, and since it is well-known that Ike and FDR liked the ladies, a…
6/9
…lesser known figure was chosen to carry the gay banner forward.
Only it never happened.
Not only was Fry not a homosexual, he was a twice-married father of three. The book upon which Transatlantic is based established the gay legend for Fry.
Predictably, The New York…
7/9
…Times brushed off this historical inconvenience as trivial.
History is full of inconveniences for those wishing to rewrite it. For example, did you know that many of the early Nazis were notorious homosexuals? William Shirer (see excerpt from “The Rise & Fall of the…
8/9
…Third Reich” below) and others made this connection long ago. I’m waiting for that Netflix series.
There’s a moral obligation on those who would tell the stories of history’s heroes and victims that they do it with care and integrity.
So, let it be hereby known that…
9/9
…Robert the Bruce was the real “Braveheart,” not William Wallace;
80% of men on the Titanic died while only 25% of women perished (and neither Jack nor Rose were among them)—
—and Varian Fry was a hero and he was not, according to both wives and his biographer, gay.
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If the American Left has a hit list—and they do—their Top 5 Most Wanted would be (in no particular order):
• Trump. This one is obvious. Ann Coulter said Democrats don’t fear Trump. I like Ann. But in this she is spectacularly wrong….
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Unrelenting media attacks and the weaponizing of the Department of Justice against him screams otherwise. I mean, I had barely left Mar-a-Lago last spring when the FBI decided to send their storm troopers in on a (literal) panty raid. (Yup, Melania’s. Because we all know…
3/
…that’s where you hide nuke codes.)
• Ron DeSantis. Younger than Trump, charismatic, beautiful family, media savvy, politically astute, and a true conservative, he’s the heir apparent.
Where Trump is a force of personality, DeSantis combines that quality with a moral…
AUDREY HALE, DEMOCRATS, & THE MAKING OF A TERRORIST: 🧵
On July 7, 2005, I boarded a flight from Kiev, Ukraine to London.
I arrived at Heathrow to the news of a tragically successful terrorist bombing in London that would become known as the “7/7 Bombings.”
4 Muslim…
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…youth had carried out the attack that killed 52 and injured some 700 others. 3 of the 4 were born in Britain. The fourth was a naturalized British citizen and convert to Islam.
All had been radicalized, not abroad as many supposed, but in London mosques. Under the…
3/
…steady influence of Muslim clerics who taught them to hate their homeland and feel nothing but a pitiless contempt for the British people, the 4 became precisely what their teachers intended them to be: weapons against the “infidel” West.
ANECDOTES & OBSERVATIONS FROM THE LAST 3 MONTHS ABROAD: 🧵
It might be useful to say at the outset that I’m no novice to world travel. I’ve been in more than 60 countries, six continents, high society and lowest of the low. At one moment I might be sipping champagne along the…
2/
…Champs-Élysées, the next I might be hiding from Boko Haram in Africa.
The point is, I don’t simply read the headlines from an armchair in NY or DC & react to them. I am set apart from others because I am usually speaking to you from the perspective…larryalextaunton.com
3/
…of someone who was/is there.
This was my first trip to Europe since being stuck there when the pandemic began. In that short interval much has changed. At that time, Europe’s China virus policies were much more severe than most of America.
THE BEST MOVIE YOU CAN WATCH TO UNDERSTAND THESE TROUBLED TIMES: a 🧵
We live in an age of progressive moral degeneracy, political violence, an unsettling trend toward all forms of government tyranny, and, as I have argued elsewhere, the rise of a new fascism.
How are we…
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…to make sense of it?
They teach you in scuba diving to watch your bubbles when disoriented. They always go up. Never down or sideways. Up. We need bubbles in times of moral disorientation.
Abby Mann’s screenplay turned 1961 film “Judgment at Nuremberg” gives off bubbles.
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The film stars everyone who was anyone at the time:
Spencer Tracy
Burt Lancaster
Marlene Dietrich
Richard Widmark
Judy Garland
Maximilian Schell
Montgomery Clift
Even a young William Shatner appears.
Nominated for 11 Oscars, the film depicts the period near the end…