Certain well-documented events mentioned in this
novel actually did occur, and some circumstances relevant to the
subject matter really did exist! For example...
- There really was a CF-105 Avro Arrow, designed, built and
flown by Avro Canada, out of its Malton, Ontario facilities,
between 1955 and 1959! The pages of two of the most
prestigious flight-related magazines of that time gave
testimony to the reality of this remarkable Canadian
technological achievement in flight.
- In its October 21, 1957 issue, the prominent air
industry's Aviation Week magazine stated that the
Avro Arrow "has given Canada a serious contender for the
top military aircraft of the next several years.... The
Arrow's power, weight and general design leave little doubt of
its performance potential."
- Another influential magazine, Flight, in
its October 25, 1957 issue, referred to the Avro Arrow as
"the biggest, most powerful, mostd expensive and
potentially the fastest fighter that the world hs yet
seen."
- At least as of April 2003, visitors to the Canadian
Aviation Museum in Ottawa could still see a display of the
remnants of a truncated, blowtorched Avro Arrow cockpit and
nosewheel section, being supported on a stand, positioned
almost at the very rear of the public display area. However,
to also see two reclaimed-from-scrap wing tips of
an Arrow (not the entire wings, merely the tips), a
viewer would have to walk about seventy feet over to the
right and behind the cockpit/nosewheel display, and then peer
behind and over other, possibly much less significant
Canadian and foreign-built aircraft, to get just a glimpse
of the very tops of the two wingtips of an
Avro Arrow.
- There are several hours of archival film footage, as well
as hundreds of vintage photos that document the development,
production and flight tests of the Avro Arrow. These films
would make a fascinating component of a future filmed version
of this novel.
- There actually existed in Canada, in the year 2004, a
primarily federal government-mandated universal healthcare
system that continued to aim at providing free medical
coverage for virtually every adult and child in the country.
However, over many years, this health care system has been
under attack and has been significantly weakened by certain
decisions and actions carried out by elements of the federal,
and some provincial governments, and their associated
bureaucracies.
- By the early 2000s, the major healthcare companies in the
United States reportedly had annual revenues of over
$230,000,000,000, i.e., 230 billion dollars,
which incidentally, exceeded the combined revenues of the top
U.S. aerospace and defense contractors in those years.
- In 2001, the revenue of the largest healthcare
company in the U.S. nearly matched that of Microsoft,
the most successful computer software company on the planet.
The reader is invited to closely examine the year-end data
provided in American business magazines in order to more truly
appreciate what is at financial stake in the intense battle to
increasingly privatize the Canadian - and to preserve and
expand the for-profit American - healthcare systems.
- As of 2004 there existed several works, including books,
plays and films, presenting non-ficctional as well as
fictional material, most of which speculated upon the real
reasons behind the shutting down of the Arrow program. The
Avro Arrow Manipulation novel, however, is the first to
present a fictional hypothesis about a direct relationship
between what happened to the Arrow, and what has -and
continues to- happen to the Canadian healthcare system.
In the name of fairness and truthfulness, it should hardly
be necessary to state that, of course, most people (including most
businesspersons, politicians, lobbyists, and workers of all
sorts) are honest and ethical; that most institutions (including
most legislative bodies, insurance companies, hospitals, HMOs,
PPOs, and other healthcare-related organizations) are also
honorable, ethical, and aboveboard, and consistently demonstrate
that their primary concern is to serve their clients or patients,
and that only after putting those clients' or patients'
needs first, are they interested in making a profit for their
executives and shareholders.
Similarly, it should be obvious to most Americans and
Canadians that most other types of businesses (including energy
companies, telecommunications companies, financial services,
media conglomerates, accounting and pharmaceutical
companies) attempt to operate with the highest degree of
integrity, and that they exhibit through their corporate and
individual executives' actions, that they care at least as much
about their clients, customers, and subscribers, as they do about
their personal remuneration and their companies' financial bottom
lines.
This novel, published first in 2004, and set primarily
in 2009, involves many fictitious events, circumstances, persons,
institutions and businesses who are just as obviously not related
to the fine, upstanding persons, politicians, institutions,
and healthcare and pharmaceutical businesses mentioned
above.
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