Kasparov's tribute to Bobby Fischer from 'TIME' magazine

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  • #31
    Re: Re : Kasparov's tribute to Bobby Fischer from 'TIME' magazine

    Originally posted by Lawrence Day View Post
    Leave chess out of it. An innocent person experienced breach of trust. He was tortured by police. The police act illegally. His determined efforts to use the justice system to provide justice failed. Post-traumatic stress disorder is predictable. Disillusion is a normal reaction. The racist babbling is just a symptom. It was the cops and the system that broke him.
    I believe this is the experience to which you are referring. Its quite a tale, and probably true given the level of emotion he writes with.
    Last edited by Alex Toolsie; Tuesday, 30th December, 2008, 08:29 AM.
    OzChess - Australia's Chess Forum - Upcoming Chess Tournaments, Game Analysis, Chess Politics, & Australian Chess News
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    • #32
      Re: Re : Re: Re : Kasparov's tribute to Bobby Fischer from 'TIME' magazine

      Originally posted by Jean-Pierre Rhéaume View Post
      Karpov and especially Petrosian are two of my chess "idols" :) especially the soft Tiger.
      It would be nice if you could tell us more about "Petrosian vs the Elite". I've never heard about this book before.

      JPR
      http://astore.amazon.ca/chesfedeofca...ail/0713490497

      My only complaint is that (like a lot of chess books) the binding fell apart.

      An interesting historical sideline in the introduction goes into the 1962 Curacao Candidates tournament where Petrosian won the right to face Botvinnik for the world crown. Fischer did poorly and then (in typical fischer a$$hole fashion) went on a tirade in Sports Illustrated. 'Petrosian himself never quite dispelled the Fischer-induced cloud of suspicion which surrounded his victory in Curacao' (quote from p9).

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      • #33
        Re : Re: Re : Re: Re : Kasparov's tribute to Bobby Fischer from 'TIME' magazine

        Originally posted by Jason Lohner View Post
        http://astore.amazon.ca/chesfedeofca...ail/0713490497

        My only complaint is that (like a lot of chess books) the binding fell apart.

        An interesting historical sideline in the introduction goes into the 1962 Curacao Candidates tournament where Petrosian won the right to face Botvinnik for the world crown. Fischer did poorly and then (in typical fischer a$$hole fashion) went on a tirade in Sports Illustrated. 'Petrosian himself never quite dispelled the Fischer-induced cloud of suspicion which surrounded his victory in Curacao' (quote from p9).
        This book is certainly a must read-study marvel :)

        I will get that book ASAP.

        Thank you for the link.

        And happy New Year.



        JPR

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        • #34
          Re: Re : Re: Re : Kasparov's tribute to Bobby Fischer from 'TIME' magazine

          Originally posted by Jason Lohner View Post
          in Sports Illustrated.
          This magazine wrote the farewell to Bobby with the full-page photo ;)

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          • #35
            Re: Re : Kasparov's tribute to Bobby Fischer from 'TIME' magazine

            "Fischer only got the press because he was American." Not so. You obviously aren't old enough to remember the Cold War, which was going strong in 1972. Had the Soviets not been the enemy, and had their superiority in chess not been so important to them, what Fischer did would not have meant a fraction as much. And if Fischer had come from Canada, England, West Germany, or any other developed country in the free world, his victory over Spassky would have still been the biggest thing ever in chess.

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            • #36
              Re: Kasparov's tribute to Bobby Fischer from 'TIME' magazine

              His candidate match against Taimanov was held in Vancouver. I found only one photo (on internet) with both players linking to this match;
              http://www.bobby-fischer.net/bobby-f...k-taimanov.jpg

              Who is the third person? Any idea where was the photo made? (The book on the table should be about "Match of the Century". The table looks damaged).

              Russians vs Fischer mentions that about 200 spectaculars were in the playing hall.

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              • #37
                Re: Re : Kasparov's tribute to Bobby Fischer from 'TIME' magazine

                Originally posted by Jim Foster View Post
                "Fischer only got the press because he was American." Not so. You obviously aren't old enough to remember the Cold War, which was going strong in 1972. Had the Soviets not been the enemy, and had their superiority in chess not been so important to them, what Fischer did would not have meant a fraction as much. And if Fischer had come from Canada, England, West Germany, or any other developed country in the free world, his victory over Spassky would have still been the biggest thing ever in chess.
                I'm old enough to remember the tail end of the cold war and I still stand by my statement that If Fischer wasn't American then there would have been very little press.

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                • #38
                  Re: Kasparov's tribute to Bobby Fischer from 'TIME' magazine

                  Let me say this about that!

                  When I was covering the Fischer - Spassky match
                  for the Toronto Star, I was often asked who was the better player.
                  I always gave the following answer:
                  "Here we are standing at the foot of a 200 foot cliff and as we look up we see two men standing overhead. One is six feet tall the other is 6 feet 1 inch. You tell me who is taller."
                  Now I see someone 500 feet below the top of the cliff saying Fischer was nothing special! :D
                  You've got to be kidding!!

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                  • #39
                    Re: Re : Kasparov's tribute to Bobby Fischer from 'TIME' magazine

                    Originally posted by Lawrence Day View Post
                    Leave chess out of it. An innocent person experienced breach of trust. He was tortured by police. The police act illegally. His determined efforts to use the justice system to provide justice failed. Post-traumatic stress disorder is predictable. Disillusion is a normal reaction. The racist babbling is just a symptom. It was the cops and the system that broke him.
                    This type of police behaviour goes on every day in virtually every city in North America as does corruption and miscarriages of justice in the justice system. In other parts of the world it can be much worse. Kasparov was arrested and beaten by the police as part of a crackdown on Putin's political rivals. His sanity seems intact.

                    Fischer was psychologically fragile and probably mentally ill before the Pasadena police got a hold of him. Such fragility and mental illness probably made him a target in the first place.

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                    • #40
                      Re: Kasparov's tribute to Bobby Fischer from 'TIME' magazine

                      After reading the full Fischer account of what happened at the Pasadena police station, he could have short circuited things by asking to see a lawyer, even a court-appointed one.

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                      • #41
                        Re: Re : Kasparov's tribute to Bobby Fischer from 'TIME' magazine

                        Originally posted by Vlad Drkulec View Post
                        This type of police behaviour goes on every day in virtually every city in North America as does corruption and miscarriages of justice in the justice system. In other parts of the world it can be much worse. Kasparov was arrested and beaten by the police as part of a crackdown on Putin's political rivals. His sanity seems intact.

                        Fischer was psychologically fragile and probably mentally ill before the Pasadena police got a hold of him. Such fragility and mental illness probably made him a target in the first place.
                        If you are going to make comparisons you have to realize that in 1981 Fischer believed in the American justice system. He thought he was one of the "good guys" and was surprised by his so-called arrest. To call a lawyer and fight the charges was the way it was supposed to work, but before the charges were laid this option was not available. No doubt he could have told the cops that he was the chess champion and would be writing about the incident and he would have received much different treatment than he did. But he would also have had to change addresses to avoid paparazzi and real, not imaginary Soviet spies. Besides that, one is not supposed to have to be a celebrity to obtain justice. Nowadays, after so much has gone wrong with the U.S.A., it is easy to say people shouldn't have had faith in the system, but that process took a lot of time and in Fischer's case, actual physical duress.

                        If you have no illusions then you can not be disilliusioned. Certainly Kasparov had no illusions about the modern Russian system. Nor was he hiding his chess identity; he was flaunting it. His protesting-without-a-permit act was more like civil disobedience and being arrested was not a surprise. In fact it looks like a publicity stunt in furtherance of the political objectives of George Soros, neoconservative Americans and the Wall Street Journal. Most Russians think Kasparov's politics are goofy. Gangster capitalism is not a synonym for democracy and post-Yeltsin they elected Putin to protect themselves from it.

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