Flashback: When Reason Tore Down the Berlin Wall
As the world celebrates the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, let's enjoy a little trip in the Reason wayback machine:
These photos come courtesy of Lou Villadsen, wife of Reason founder (and current Reason Foundation director of transportation policy) Bob Poole, who recounts the events that led up to Reasoners taking mallet and chisel to the newly vulnerable Berlin Wall:
When the Wall came down, we were already planning our first trip to Germany for the Mont Pelerin Society meeting in Munich (1990), including visiting Berlin and other places. We assumed we'd have to jump through whatever hoops required to visit East Berlin. So it was luck that we had the opportunity to bring home our own pieces of the Wall.
When we arrived in Berlin—no longer the Divided City—we discovered that people were cutting pieces off the Wall, so of course we stopped at a local hardware store and bought a chisel and mallet, found a convenient spot and Bob started chopping. (I took a couple of swings of the mallet just to say I'd done it, but he did all the work.) We ended up with a gallon Ziploc bag of chunks of concrete, which we then lugged all over Germany.
This was the day we'd planned for our East Berlin visit, hence the carefully-chosen shirts. There were still Russian military all over East Berlin and the division (quality of life) was still stark. We ate lunch in a hamburger place in East Berlin. Well, they called what we ate "hamburger" but I think it was mostly sawdust.
We also rented a car and drove around in East Germany for a day, at the end hoping that we would make it back across to the West before the gas tank was empty -- there simply were no places to get gas, even on the main highways. Few things have looked as good to me as the huge service station just over the border: fuel for us and the car, and clean restrooms.
Bob Poole chimes in with a helpful note for those who covet his sharp duds:
The shirt I wore, from the San Diego libertarian group, was worn by people who played a game called "Over the Line." I have no idea what the game consisted of.
For more on the Berlin Wall anniversary, check out Anthony Fisher's videos on this week's festivites in Germany:
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UN President J. Edgar Hoover once said "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country."
How many communist dictatorships have fallen since the Gillespie/Welch axis of Beltway kosmotarian hipness took over reason? Things really were better when Postrel was in charge.
I don't see Nick disarming mines in the Korean DMZ. Get on it.
This is because he's too busy interviewing Krist Novoselic. And by "interviewing," I mean asking dull, leading questions and then immediately interrupting him.
Hugh just misses the cold war. He always wanted to live the plot of Cloak & Dagger. And also D.A.R.Y.L. because he's always wanted to be a real boy.
Who doesn't want to live the plot of Cloak and Dagger?
Your...your mom?
That's probably true. Her idea of excitement is taking a different route to the store.
I can't deny it. But is it weird that when I have fantasies about Cloak & Dagger, that I always picture myself as Dagger?
The wall may be gone, but the spirit lingers.
I can't find that wonderful shirt online, guess I'd have to get it printed at a specialty t-shirt store.
Joshua fit the battle of Jericho
and the walls come tumblin' down
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IsEmF9urYDk
Also:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4cG2hmW4gc
I guess "Chisel the State" doesn't look as good on a tshirt.
That's private property.
It wasn't when it was part of the wall, but it is now.
I can help Bob out on Over The Line. Fundamentally a drinking game played on the beach with a ball and bat. Oh and crucially, Miss Emerson.
In the version I knew of, the line was a suspended line like a clothesline, not a line in the sand.
"The shirt I wore, from the San Diego libertarian group, was worn by people who played a game called "Over the Line."
I was in San Diego at the time.
Rules of the game were kinda beside the point back then. It was drunken debauchery and girls in bikinis (sometimes less).
It was a pretty libertarian scene. People basically taking over Fiesta Island and sayin' "to hell with the law".
Last time I was in Ocean Beach, it still had that kinda vibe.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q_PqJC5_80o
OVER THE LINE!
This is not Nam, Bob, there are rules.
Everyone knows AL Gore tore down the Berlin Wall.
Who the fuck covets anything from the 80's but that chick from Cherry Pie?
Anarcho-text printed on the back of a fucking green polo shirt? Acid-tripping preppies come up with the craziest shit. I don't envy the creature wearing this felonious assault on fashion but I'd probably wear the damn thing only because it is so goddamn awful.