Well he’s correct in a way - in 1962 Philip K Dick wrote a novel called Man In 
The High Tower - several of his books have already been made into movies and 
television shows. He was mainly into extremely speculative, futurist 
Science-Fiction - Total Recall, Bladerunner, A Scanner Darkly - all from his 
pen. 

He dealt heavily with Gnostic ideas, hidden knowledge and spiritual notions of 
early christianity, the divine veil - he wrote some very strong material. There 
are reports that he had "mental health issues” though who knows what that means 
- I don’t know anyone who doesn’t, but he was definitely not a neo-NAZI, 
philosophically - you can gather this from his writing, particularly in his 
Exegesis <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Exegesis_of_Philip_K._Dick>  where 
he describes his contact with VALIS - Vast Active Living Intelligence System - 
he had other things on his mind. 

In short, i think the described proliferation of the alternate histories in the 
early 60s, and again now coincide with release and re-release of his novel - 
which was inspired by Ward’s novel using the same idea, that the other side had 
won the war, with the American Civil War…

PKD was a great mind and singular poet, his loss is sad for artists. 

Hope you don’t mind me replying personally, don’t want to cause anyone to 
splash noise on the list because they feel compelled to disagree with me out of 
spite or annoyance or whatever, 

hope you’re well, 
JC

 - 

----
Joshua Case
jwc...@gmail.com <mailto:jwc...@gmail.com>

“International tensions. Mounting international tensions. First there were 
states of precautionary alert, then there were enhanced readiness centers. This 
was followed by maximum arc situational preparedness. We can measure the 
gravity of events by tracing the increasingly abstract nature of the 
terminology. One more level of vagueness and that could be it."

> On Feb 21, 2017, at 1:47 AM, Cecilia Tanaka <cecilia.tan...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> SS-GB: why the renewed obsession with alternative Nazi histories?
> 
> http://theconversation.com/ss-gb-why-the-renewed-obsession-with-alternative-nazi-histories-73157
>  
> <http://theconversation.com/ss-gb-why-the-renewed-obsession-with-alternative-nazi-histories-73157>
> 
> "The Nazis are, once again, a subject of considerable cultural obsession. 
> From The Man in the High Castle to the BBC's new adaptation of SS-GB, 
> counterfactual Nazi nightmares are very much in vogue. This has happened once 
> before, points out Sam Edwards – such alternative histories also proliferated 
> in the 1960s. So what's behind their return?"

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