Shapes Of Things
By Mitch Berg
A Japanese fleet attacks Pearl Harbor, sinking much of the US battle fleet. They also seize the Philippines and much of the East Indies.
But they miss the aircraft carriers – which lead a devastating riposte at the head of a US response fuelled by America’s unparalleled economic and idustrial might that drives the Japanese back to home waters and, eventually, vanquish them.
History?
Well, sure. But it’s also the plot of a work of “fiction” – the 1925 cult classic The Great Pacific War by Hector Bywater. The book lacked some of the technological changes that affected the war that followed half a generation later – but it got the broad strokes right.
It was, of course, a work of fiction, albeit prescient. On the other side of the world, it was a work of non-fiction, Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler, released about the same time, that had people around the world going “If only we’d paid attention” – long after it was too late to do anything about it.
You have the opportunity to do what the readers of The Great Pacific War and Mein Kampf couldn’t, this Saturday on the Northern Alliance Radio Network; see into our future and, maybe, given a certain amount of wisdom and a lot of energy, change things.
Ed and I will be talking with Ezra Levant about his battle with the Alberta “Human Rights Commission“, and its’ portents for Western civilization.
And unlike so much punditry about the collapse of the civilization we so treasure, it’s coming to you while you can still do something about it.
Tune in. Listen. Be outraged.
Let that outrage turn into something else.




