Wings #4
Carissa Wolfe
1. It is clear to see how experiences with aviation could
have created this “dangerous world” outlook in many prominent minds of the
Interwar and World War II era. However, the theologians and world leaders that
the author chose to pinpoint were ironically, not even alive to witness the
invention of the plane. I believe the reason for their irrational fear of
flight was quite simply, the unknown. Exploring history will reveal countless
fears of concepts and inventions that are quite tame. We also know that
power-hungry religious and political leaders misused and misquoted scripture,
withholding access from the less privileged, in order to form a hierarchy. When
in fact, many of the things they claimed to be evil or able to disprove the
Bible were not, and did not. In the same way, people like Saint John
Chrysosotom and Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz distorted the concept of flight by
saying it would bring “divine judgment” or by saying that God was against it
(respectively).
On the other hand, the insight of other historic figures into
the problems flight would cause is commendable. Certainly the fear that you
could be bombed at any moment is legitimate. As is the reality that the
destruction wrought by aerial bombers is more violent and widespread than that
of any weapon before it. I think these people were able to see into the hearts
of man and discover our wickedness. They recognized that no power on earth
could contain it, so that once the technology was available, we would destroy
ourselves (356-357).
5. Prior to World War I planes had never been used in
war. In World War I aircraft were used
primarily for surveillance and carrying supplies, although aerial combat did
exist, it played less of a role than the ground forces. World War II however,
brought aerial warfare to the forefront of both offensive and defensive
tactics, beginning with the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. With so many
countries involved in the war, the field of aviation was pushed to its limits.
Intercontinental flights became commonplace and the design of planes evolved to
support these long flights. The fact that this kind of travel was possible
opened the doorway to “total war”. Civil war and wars between two countries
became a thing of the past, and people could sense these changes occurring. It
could be predicted that if one country had a problem, other countries would get
involved. The allegiances that were formed across the globe required the
transport of people and materials both during and after the war. Countries needed supplies that could no longer
be purchased from the opposition. The military began making these
intercontinental flights on a regular schedule, and thus, the transition into
international air commerce was made (400-401).
8. Between 1938 and 1944 the United States increased the
number of military aircraft produced per year from 1.8 thousand to 96.3
thousand. It is no coincidence that these years bridge the span of WWII.
Increases in the production of military aircraft can be seen in the other major
war powers, but none as drastic at what occurred in America. America had always
been known to produce the best planes, but did not produce many. Despite the
isolationist position that the U.S. government took during the early war years,
it is evident that they continued to prepare a very good defense. However, the
future of aviation depended on the income from military planes, which sold for
twice as much as civil aircraft. Other countries already involved in WWII were
spending money on their own ventures rather than purchasing from the U.S. In
1938, just after the Munich conference, President Roosevelt established a
preparedness program that included a strong air force. Roosevelt clearly sought
to maintain a good relationship with France and Britain by allowing them to
insect and fly American aircraft. This special treatment resulted in both
countries purchasing aircraft for enormous sums. The wages from their
expenditures thrust the United States’ aviation industry into an economic boom.
This provided jobs and allowed women to enter the workforce in large number, in
order to meet demand. These factories required space that only support from the
federal government could obtain. Two of these programs were the Reconstruction
Finance Corporation and the Defense Plant Corporation. The facilities and
reputation that came about as a result of WWII paved the way for the future of
aerospace and defense in America (429-433).
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