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Queen of the Pirates

The content below is from Episode 85 of the Who’d a Thunk It? Podcast.

This week’s episode is all about Pirates! ARRRGH!

RECOMMENDATION SEGMENT

  • One Piece
    • One Piece is an anime series.
    • I know I recommend anime stuff a lot on here and I realized I’ve never fully explained what anime is…
      • It is Defined as: a style of Japanese film and television animation, typically aimed at adults as well as children.
      • They typically start out as Manga or Japanese comic books. So it is only natural that I am obsessed with the genre since I’ve been in love with American Comic books since as long as I can remember.
      • But Japanese Manga and Anime are different. They don’t just aim for the child audience and because their culture is so different they have a completely different feel to them.
        • I’ve always said that Japanese storytelling doesn’t rush things. I’m always impressed with how Japanese writers wield the element of suspense.
    • This anime, One Piece, ties in nicely with this episode’s main event AND this is one of the longest running animes of all time.
      • One Piece began on October 20th 1999 and it is still going. There are still episodes coming out now.
      • One Piece is about a poor kid who lives on an island. He is a simple guy who loves to eat meat, and wants to become king of the pirates.
One Piece Color Walk Art Book, Vol. 2: Eiichiro Oda, Eiichiro Oda:  9781421541136: Amazon.com: Books

NOW FOR THE MAIN EVENT

  • Back in Episode 73 I covered Mansa Musa: the African King who was the wealthiest person in history.
    • Today’s episode is about the most successful pirate in history, because pirates are cool. Her name was Ching Shih – Also known as Zheng Yi Sao or simply “Madame Zheng”
    • This is a true story.
  • Our story starts on a floating whore house… they were called Flower Boats … how nice
    • Yes that is a boat brothel. Where the signs read “if the boat is a rockin’ don’t come a knockin'” but in Chinese.
    • Apparently Ching Shih was very *cough* skilled at her job because she first is noted in history in the year 1801 when she made such an impression on the local captain Zheng Yi that he chose to marry her.
      • At first this sounds like a Pirate version of the Knight in Shining armor story where the fair maiden was left to a life of prostitutions until her hero arrived to take her away. But that isn’t how things played out.
      • Ching Shih (now Madame Zheng) wasn’t just a free-loafing captains wife. She got to work.
See the source image
See the source image
Flower Boat on the Pearl River
See the source image
Another flower boat
  • But let’s take a quick side step to explain the geo-political climate of the the Guangzhou area (where Madame Zheng and Captain Zheng Yi met).
    • You see Guangzhou was a bit of a hazardous place.
      • Aside from the floating sex businesses that Madame Zheng found work there was casual piracy.
      • The fisherman of Guangzhou took up arms and looted passer-by vessels in the off season. They had to feed their families… even when there were no fish.
      • So there were already amateur level pirates in the area
    • Then in the late 1700’s there was a peasant uprising in nearby Vietnam.
      • There were these 3 brothers from the village of Tây Sơn who started an uprising against the Confucian dynasty ruling over Vietnam. The Tây Sơn rebellion really shook things up in Guangzhou area.
      • You see the Tây Sơn brothers were victorious in overthrowing the government, but quickly found themselves up against an invasion from China and fending off the very government they had just beaten once.
        • In a desparate attempt for support they hired the Guangzhou fisherman pirates to raid their enemies as much as they could. They became privateers for the new Tây Sơn dynasty.
      • This new cause strengthened the Guangzhou pirates such as Captain Zheng Yi and his new wife Madame Zheng.
      • Instead of rag tag pirates, they were motivated by a greater cause than to just fill their own stomachs.
  • But in 1802 the Tây Sơn Dynasty was overthrown. It only lasted for 13 years.
    • This meant the pirate bands of Guangzhou such as the Zheng pirates could no longer seek refuge in Vietnam, as they no longer had a friendly government there.
    • And here is where the truly unique occurred. Rebellions happen, dynasty rise and fall, but very rarely do individual criminals band together.
      • Instead of scattering and going back to amateur fisherman pirates, the Zheng pirates joined up with the rest of Guangzhou pirates.
      • They then met up with rival Cantonese pirates and made a terrifyingly strong pirate alliance.
      • at the height of their power they had about 70,000 sailors, 1,000 smaller vessels, and 800 large junks.
        • A junk is a type of Chinese sailing ship with fully battened sails
      • This large pirate alliance was divided up in to 6 different fleets marked by different colored flags
    • Unlike other Privateers such as pirates in the Carribean, the Zhengs were acting with a large unified pirate force that did NOT have to answer to any government or kingdom. They made their own rules.
  • At this point the Zhengs were riding high.
    • not literally as they were pirate sailors so the highest they ever got was like a couple dozen feet off of sea-level, but you know what I mean. They were successful as hell.
    • But one day Captain Zheng died.
      • Zheng Yi died suddenly in Nguyễn Vietnam in 16 November 1807, sources varied as he died in a typhoon or in an accident, falling overboard and some even pointed at his wife, or his new heir.
  • Whether Madame Zheng was to blame for her husband’s death we will never know. That is lost to history and left to the speculators.
    • What we do know is that she kicked ass. She didn’t let all of her and her husband’s hard work go to waste. She used her diplomatic prowess and unique charm to keep the confederation together and eventually under her singular rule.
    • She simply pointed out that it was in the captains’ best interests to stick together and remain the formidable fighting force it had been instead of divide itself and be conquered.
    • Then she picked Zhang Bao (ol’ Captain Zheng’s right hand man and protege) to be the commander of the the Red Flag Fleet.
      • The red flag fleet was the strongest of all colored flag fleets.
      • It wasn’t long until Zhang Bao was doing more then commanding Madame Zheng’s strongest fleet… the two were bumping uglies on the regular and before long they even made it official and got hitched.
      • You can see why some historians believe Madame Zheng and/or Zhang Bao had somethign to do with Captain Zheng’s death. The guy died and it didn’t take long before his wife was in control of his entire estate and banging his best friend… but those could just be coincidence.
Mistress Ching is a character who appears in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End. She is a blind woman who serves as the Pirate Lord of the Pacific Ocean. This character was inspired by Madame Zheng.
  • Although her rags to riches story and massive amount of power she wielded was enough to be written down in the history books, it wasn’t simply that Madame had so much power that makes her stand out. It was HOW she wielded it.
    • This seemingly pleasant little woman knew how to keep her men in line with strict military discipline. She cracked the whip and for it her men both feared and respected her.
    • Madame Zheng wrote down laws for her massive pirate empire.
      • Any captured females were to be spared of sexual assault
        • -that may seem like a no brainer to us today, but but to early 19th century pirates living outside the law that was practically unheard of-
      • However, pirates under Madame Zheng were permitted to marry captured women… just so long as they didn’t abuse them or commit unfaithful acts, lest yee be sent to Davey Jone’s Locker!
    • Although her method of ruling was uncommon for the times, it did work. Their success spoke to that.
      • The red flag fleet alone attained 200 cannons and 1,300 guns under the Madame’s rule.
      • Out of the 135 military vessels that patroled Guangdong Province, the red flag fleet sunk 63… that is nearly half the of their enemy force. These weren’t just pesky criminals, they were an enemy force to be respected and feared by military adversaries.
      • It was common for military commanders charged with apprehending Madame Zheng to stay ashore and sink their own vessels rather than face the ruthless Madame Pirate of the Red Flag Fleet.
Guangdong | Province, History, Map, Population, & Facts | Britannica
  • Madame Zheng’s Red Flag Fleet was so successful in raiding towns and markets that they started to look to racketeering as their next financial conquest.
    • The Madame had proven before that she could use politics and diplomacy to get large masses to do as she pleased. It wasn’t long until the Red Flag Fleet had offices all over the Guangdong province.
      • these offices squeezed the surrounding communities for protection money and were ALWAYS on time paying their master Madame Zheng.
    • Now the Red Flag Fleet had overwhelming control over both sea and land of the area. They had basically created their own state.
      • her fleet didn’t only stand up to the Chinese government, but within just 1 day was able to escort 5 American scooners to safety to nearby Macao, capture a Portugese brig, and blockade a naval mission from Thailand.
      • The Red Flag Fleet didn’t just patrol the south china sea. They were WORLD WIDE.
      • Madame Zheng taunted the world’s super powers with her badass fleet of battle hardened and business savvy pirates.
        • Hell, she probably ran her empire better than most world governments at the time.
    • I bet living in this little unofficial state of hers wasn ‘t all that bad you know. Yeah you’d be living in an organized crime government,
      • but I’m a bit of a Libertarian anyway so I already feel like I’m living in a state controlled by organized crime sometimes.
      • And at least there wasn’t hardly any freelance crime. Remember how they punished rape and domestic abuse?
        • A crime that is punished with death on the spot within a community is a crime that happens VERY little.
  • By 1810, Madame Zheng was still pretty well off as a pirate, but there was trouble brewing.
    • the foundation that the South China Sea Pirate Confederation was founded on was started to crumble.
    • Where the 6 fleets of different colors would once respect one another’s boundaries, now they started to grow greedy and forget what made them powerful to begin with.
    • Madame Zheng’s Red Flag Fleet started to get in to too many scuffles with the Black Flag Fleet and it worried Madame Zheng
    • But she wasn’t without options.
      • About this time the Chinese Government made an offer that they had made before. In desparation they asked Madame Zheng to surrender, but this time they offered amnesty.
    • With a smile on her face she accepted their offer… but only on her terms.
      • That very year of 1810 the entire confederation was dismantled… peacefully.
      • Zhang Bao (Madame Zheng’s now husband) got off with a fat retirement plan of 120 of his own personal Junks and went on to be an officer of the Chinese navy.
        • Being a pirate himself for so many years and now being asked to take down pirates, Zhang Bao was very good at his new job. he rose through the ranks fo the Chinese Military.
        • Madame Zheng reaped the benefits of Zhang Bao’s prestigious naval title
    • When Zhang Bao died in 1822, Madame Zheng returned to her home town of Guangzhou where she showed her son her old stomping ground on the Flower Boat… Just Joshin’ ya. She didn’t do that.. not as far as we know. that would be kind of messed up.
      • No, she opened up a boss-ass casino and sat back collecting all the profits.
      • Where most pirates die horrific and violent deaths at the hands of disasters out at sea, executions by various world governments, or at the hands of their fellow swash bucklers, Madame Zheng died a most enviable death.
      • She died peacefully as a successful business woman survived by her son.
        • she was 69…. nice

CREDIT

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Operation Wandering Souls

The content below is from Episode 82 of the Who’d a Thunk It? Podcast

ANNOUNCEMENT

  • Welcome Who’d a Thunkers!
    • You made it back for another Who’d a Thunk It? Fright Fest Episode.
    • This is the 3rd episode of October 2021 where all episodes of this particularly spooky month have topics based on the macabre!
    • I hope you are ready. Strap in!

RECOMMENDATION SEGMENT

-don’t worry… no spoilers here- I really want you to watch this for yourself!

Midnight Mass - Rotten Tomatoes
  • Midnight Mass
    • It hard for me to put in to words just how much I love this limited series.
    • Director and Creator Mike Flanagan knocked it out of the park once again with this 7 episode story. It will take you on a roller coaster ride!
    • The first episode beautifully establishing the run down but still hopeful small island town while listening to Neil Diamond. Then by the end of the series you’ve watched many a very deep and engaging existential monologues and enjoyed some of the most exciting horror scenes to have ever been on a television series.
      • The final scene of the show coupled with the final song was so moving I cried. Which I totally did not expect to do at all, but it calls for it.
    • The setting, soundtrack, writing, and premise were all so well done that I have to say it beats out my now 2nd favorite works of Mike Flanagan’s, that being Season 1 of Haunting of Hill House.
      • That show felt so fresh and engaging it revived my love for the horror genre.
      • And while looking in to Mike Flanagan for this recommendation I found out he directed the Shining sequel movie Dr. Sleep. Shannon and I saw that in theaters and it was a fun film.
      • Bravo Mr. Flanagan. I’m excited to see what you come up with next.
What Makes 'Midnight Mass' One of the Best New Shows of the Year - The  Ringer

NOW FOR THE MAIN EVENT

  • The 2nd Indochina War started in November of 1955 and lasted until April of 1975.
    • The conflict was in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. It was officially fought between North Vietnam and South Vietnam.
    • In March of 1965 President Johnson launched a three-year campaign of sustained bombing of targets in North Vietnam and the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Operation Rolling Thunder. The same month, U.S. Marines landed on beaches near Da Nang, South Vietnam as the first American combat troops to enter Vietnam.
      • I once knew a Vietnam Veteran named Howard. He was a retired marine in his late 60’s and I was 16. I met him at my first ever job renting out rowboats and canoes on a Pennsylvania state park lake, Lake Pinchot.
      • We both made minimum wage. It was my first job and it was Howard’s last.
      • Looking back now I think I took Howard’s company for granted. I’d like to think he is still around somewhere, but the old man smoked like a chimney, drank like a fish, and by his own admission only ever ate steak and potatoes, so chances are Howard met his maker years ago.
      • I know that’s a blunt way to talk about someone, but that is just how Howard was. That’s how he himself talked about life. He was a dirty old man who hit on all the young girls at the lake, girls young enough to be his granddaughter. He never was without his Vietnam Veteran hat. Now that I’m older I realize he was one of the most interesting people I have ever met.
      • I like Howard a lot but it was clear to everyone the man had his demons. He didn’t try to hide them. He spoke very little of his service and I knew better than to ask about it. But what details he did share horrified me.
The True Story Behind an Iconic Vietnam War Photo Was Nearly Erased — Until  Now - The New York Times
  • Back in 2003 The New York Times reporter John Kifner was covering a story surrounding some Vietnam veterans.
      • “Quang Ngai and Quang Nam are provinces in central Vietnam, between the mountains and the sea. Ken Kerney, William Doyle and Rion Causey tell horrific stories about what they saw and did there as soldiers in 1967.
      • The fighting was intense and the results, the former soldiers say, were especially brutal. Villages were bombed, burned and destroyed. As the ground troops swept through, in many cases they gunned down men, women and children, sometimes mutilating bodies — cutting off ears to wear on necklaces.
      • They threw hand grenades into dugout shelters, often killing entire families.
      • Mr. Doyle said he lost count of the people he killed: ”You had to have a strong will to survive. I wanted to live at all costs. That was my primary thing, and I developed it to an instinct.'”
The Vietnam War, Part I: Early Years and Escalation - The Atlantic
  • In the midst of this kind of chaos the US military resorted to many different tactics to combat their enemy. One tactic was psychological. It was called Operation Wandering Souls.
    • The name of the Operation: Wandering Soul came from the Vietnamese holiday of the same name.
    • A WordPress blog called Vietnam Travel & Visas For Indians writes:
      • Also known as the Trung Nguyen, the holiday takes [place] every 15th day of the 7th lunar month in the Buddhist calendar. The Wandering Soul’s Day is basically the Buddhist version of the All Soul’s Day of the Christian religion.
      • According to Vietnamese belief, each person has two souls, the material soul, and spiritual soul. The material soul is known as Via while the spiritual soul is Hon. Once a person dies, his soul will be taken into a tribunal in hell to be judged. After the judgment is rendered, the soul will either go to heaven or hell, depending on how the person behaved while still on Earth.
      • Locals believe those sinful souls can still be saved from hell by the prayers of the living relatives, which is done during the 1st and 15th of every month. During the Wandering Souls, locals believe that this is the best time for the relatives of the deceased to pray and ask forgiveness on behalf of these sinful souls. It is their belief that the gates of hell will be opened during the sunset and the souls would fly towards it hungrily and unclothed. Some souls would head home to their homes and villages, which is why relatives would cook plenty of food and place on their altars.
      • Those whose souls don’t have any home to go to or the ones that have been forsaken by the living would be wandering helplessly into the air of black clouds and over rivers, from one tree to another. Basically, these “wandering souls” are the ones who are in need of prayer the most. This is why locals would place additional altars filled with offerings in some public places.
    • The American Military caught wind of this holiday and sought to exploit it. For decades after the war families searched for missing Vietcong soldiers. It was a common sight to see Vietnamese mothers scouring the jungles for their lost sons. They mourned their loss and worried for their sons’ souls. They hoped to find their lost bones, wash them, and re-burry them as such is their tradition.
    • The US Military estimates that some 300,000 soldiers are still uncounted for.
Ken Burns Vietnam War Film Glosses Over Huge Civilian Toll
  • The US used the Wandering Souls holiday by pleading to the Vietnamese north over the radio and by dropping leaflets out of planes that said:
    • “Comrades, demand that the communist party stop its war of aggression in the south so that no more innocent souls have to join the already great number of innocent souls now wandering in this war-torn country of the south.”
  • On February 10th 1970, Vietcong soliders had been hiding deep in the forest of the Hau Niga Province in South Vietnam. When all the sudden a shrill loud noise is heard. It was being blasted from the Chamberlain Fire Support Army Base.
  • The following recording is of a “Wandering Soul.” Its official title is Ghost Tape Number 10.
    • It was created by the US Amry’s 6th Psychological Operations Battalion in cooperation with the US Navy and is meant to sound as if a dead Vietcong soldier is wandering through the Vietnamese jungle at night.
    • The American military used this tactic because they found out the Vietnamese believe the souls of their unburied comrades would wander aimlessly forever in pain and suffering.
    • At first you will briefly hear musical tones. This is supposed to be music from a Buddhist funeral. And then the soldier speaks…
  • The dialogue heard in the recording was first the voice of a small girl calling out “Daddy, Daddy! Come with me. Come home. Daddy!”
    • Then in reply the Vietcong ghost answers “Who is that? Who is calling me? My wife? My daughter? Your father is back home with you, my daughter! Your husband is back at home with you my wife. But my body is gone. I am dead, my family. Tragic… how tragic.” and he goes on to tell all his friends and family that he is now dead and that he is in hell. He says how senseless his death was. He pleads with his friends to give up and be reunited with their own loved ones to avoid the regret he is feeling now. “Go home! Go home friends before it is too late!”
  • To our ears this recording is obviously fake.
    • But this was over 50 years in the past. People weren’t quite as used to hearing altered audio as we are today.
      • Engineers gathered for weeks in a studio located in Saigon to record this tape and south Vietnamese voice actors were hired to play the soldiers. They did their recordings in an echo chamber.
    • That being said, most American troops didn’t think Operation Wandering Soul would be believed by the enemy. They thought the Vietcong would see right through their deception.
    • Whether it was believed or not, the audio did manage to terrify troops on both sides of the conflict.
      • And can you blame them.? In a pitch dark jungle in the midst of a war I imagine even the fakes of of horrors would still manage to creep you out.
      • The US played these tapes in the trees near enemy troops for HOURS.
      • Even if the Vietcong didn’t believe the ruse, they did believe that their souls might be cursed to wander forever in pain as that was their religion. So they might not think it was an actual wandering soul crying out, but it did remind them that they might end up that way.
      • Near by civilians who heard the tapes often were fooled by it. They didn’t understand the technical side of the tapes and were already a superstitious people.
  • There were other tapes
    • One tape started with women and children crying. Then an announcer pleading to the Viet Cong to throw down their arms so that no more children would die for communism. Then the cries turned to laughter and the announcer urged the Viet Cong to return to their families and to not ignore the laughter of their children.
    • Another tape titled “No Dose,” implying that no solider could sleep while it played, featured a child saying to his mother “you miss daddy. I miss daddy too. Why doesn’t he come back? He must not miss you. He has left us mother.”
    • These tapes werent just played in the jungles. The US also strapped speakers to helicopters and played it from the air.
      • These speakers were in the way and made it so the helicopter couldn’t return fire to the enemy. And EVERY time these tapes were played the Vietcong fired at the source. So the US would send a gunship with the helicopter carrying the speaker and open fire at the first sign of a enemy fire.
      • Sometimes the tapes were played with another piece of audio equipment known as the laugh box. This played a shrill laughing sound over the tapes and even creeped out the pilots setting it off.
  • Was the operation affective?
    • The extent of the operation’s success is unknown. The Viet Cong usually returned fire upon encountering the recordings, exposing their general positions to U.S. patrol groups within audible range to hear the gunfire over the loudspeakers. While occasionally helpful to U.S. scouts in a reconnaissance manner (i.e. during low visibility), the Viet Cong’s aforementioned responses thus nullified the intended outcome of the operation.
    • So no, it wasn’t that affective.
      • Some think Operation Wandering Souls even motivated the enemy to keep on fighting. They became even more determined to destroy their enemy who would play such psychological tricks.
      • Plus, as soon as the tapes were played they were fired upon and some US soldiers were in the line of fire from that.
    • Local farmers and merchants who worked near where the tapes had been played refused to return to work. They perceived the recordings as black magic.
    • The US military outside of the 6th Psychological Batallion was opposed to the operation.
      • Their opinions were reinforced when many a US soldier was kept awake at night by the sounds of their own country’s psychological weapon.
    • Another psychological tactic was used by the US when they dropped leaflets of a US General describing how he had won a battle against the North Vietnamese enemy, but allowed the enemy to retrieve their dead and carry their wounded to safety.
      • In contrast this operation used the carrot and not the stick. The result was that the North Vietnamese were more likely to surrender peacefully. This operation was regarded as the more affective psychological operation in Vietnam by some psychological operations members.
  • What do I think?
    • My initial reaction to hearing about Operation Wandering Souls was that of shame. I thought “how dare the US resort to such low tactics!”
      • But I quickly realized that opinion was based in a thick layer of hubris. I have no idea what war is like. I have no idea what all was done by each side apart from what the reports say.
      • Compared to the middle ages, Operation Wandering Souls is damn near harmless
        • During the Middle Ages, victims of the bubonic plague were used for biological attacks, often by flinging fomites such as infected corpses and excrement over castle walls using catapults. Bodies would be tied along with cannonballs and shot towards the city area.
    • So although Operation Wandering Souls may seem terrible to us, it was a essentially a bloodless tactic. Terrifying, creepy, and all together messed up… but bloodless.

CREDIT

Time mark – 2:40