Archive Link (archive.ph)
Kaczynski, who is commonly known to Americans as “Uncle Ted,” is believed by many to be one of the greatest minds of the 20th century, and one of the most fundamentally American philosophers. He had been unjustly imprisoned since 1996, when he was arrested for various activist activities.
Anglin's obit writing is always worth reading.
He opens on a jokey note, downplaying Kaczynski's "activist activities", but later turns to more sincere reflections. It touches on his upbringing, his genius, his influences, what he experienced with regards to MKULTRA, and finally a discussion of his philosophy.
Frankly, it's a great obit and the kind of treatment I think Uncle Ted deserves.
The site seems to be on the fritz lately. Don't forget you can use the .onion link on the sidebar with the tor browser if the clearnet isn't working.
[Archive Link](https://archive.ph/EdlTp)
>Kaczynski, who is commonly known to Americans as “Uncle Ted,” is believed by many to be one of the greatest minds of the 20th century, and one of the most fundamentally American philosophers. He had been unjustly imprisoned since 1996, when he was arrested for various activist activities.
Anglin's obit writing is always worth reading.
He opens on a jokey note, downplaying Kaczynski's "activist activities", but later turns to more sincere reflections. It touches on his upbringing, his genius, his influences, what he experienced with regards to MKULTRA, and finally a discussion of his philosophy.
Frankly, it's a great obit and the kind of treatment I think Uncle Ted deserves.
The site seems to be on the fritz lately. Don't forget you can use the .onion link on the sidebar with the tor browser if the clearnet isn't working.
(post is archived)