Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space

"A community’s physical form, rather than its land uses, is its most intrinsic and enduring characteristic." [Katz, EPA] This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging.

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

International Spy Museum: Counter-example concerning elected official involvement in historiography

Given that the most important college course I ever took was about Latin America--I say the course started me on the path of learning to think for myself, as it challenged my basic "good American" beliefs in military intervention, multinationals, and the inherent "goodness" of US foreign policy; one of my jokes about the National Museum of American History is that it could be restaged around the interpretation of the history of American Imperialism.

But I don't think that would go over that well with Congress and the Executive Office of the President.

The previous entry, "National Archives photo "retouching" is another example of the tension between National Ideology and Memory and Inquiry in the funding of national museums, archives," discusses the recent incident with accurate interpretation of history and events at the National Archives.

The word "Trump" was blurred out in this retouched image used as part of an exhibit at the National Archives. Original image by Mario Tama, Getty Images.

But I was primed to write about that incident because early last week I came across a different and surprisingly article about the International Spy Museum, and criticism of its exhibits on the CIA and torture ("Spy Museum will revamp torture exhibit after Congressional backlash," Washington Business Journal, as originally reported on by BuzzFeed News, "The Spy Museum Is Now Planning To Overhaul Its Controversial Torture Exhibit").

The Spy Museum is a private museum--originally it was a for profit venture but now it's a nonprofit.  It recently relocated to a site at L'Enfant Plaza ("Will Tourists Follow the International Spy Museum to L'Enfant Plaza," Washington City Paper), and it is one of the only admissions-based museums in DC that seems to be able to compete with the free museums ("D.C.'s paid museums retool to boost attendance," WBJ).

But in this case, (Democratic) members of the Senate Intelligence Committee:
... in December wrote that the the exhibit “misrepresents the CIA’s torture program, sanitizing depictions of how techniques were applied and suggesting that torture is effective in terrorist attacks,” the senators wrote on Dec. 18, according to a letter published by BuzzFeed. The letter went on to point out that the 6,700-page Senate Intelligence Committee investigation on the program showed that it was not effective.
It's a rare instance of an action by Congressmembers calling for a more accurate representation of  history, events, and evidence-based research, rather than to sanitize it.


Labels: ,

2 Comments:

At 2:40 PM, Anonymous charlie said...

offtopic, retail rents in the US

https://on.ft.com/36grRCj

 
At 2:01 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

Good piece. Thank you.

You've been mentioning this broad issue for awhile, and what it will do to commercial property valuations and the effect on government revenues/budgets.

There was an article in the Real Deal (sometimes appears in my Google news feed) about a property that had 100% rental, but all the tenants were shutdown, just stuck in having to pay rent, and to break the agreements, which were enshrined in the overall mortgage, they had to go into special servicing. It is a high profile SoHo property. (SoHO has another issue, apparently it's mostly illegal to have retail uses, leftover from the arts-loft zoning).

Companies are going to have to be willing to take on non credit tenants.

And, properties are going to have to be revalued, with the retail proportion of the property being valued less.

... before I used to argue that just divvying up CAM etc. by s.f. put more of those costs onto the retail tenants in an office building. The concierge and other services weren't there for the benefit of the retail spaces.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home