R.I.P., Bobby Fischer

trysail

Catch Me Who Can
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Bobby Fischer was one of the heroes of a generation of Americans. In a field long dominated by Russian grandmasters (and in which Russia continues its dominance), Fischer demonstrated that they could be beaten. Almost needless to say, he was an iconoclast of the first order and an unquestionable genius in his field of endeavor.

There's nothing that's quite as humiliating as losing a game of chess. It is a game of pure logic. Pitting one's intellect against an opponent, a loss can make one feel hopelessly exposed and naked.
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Troubled chess icon Bobby Fischer dies at 64
18/01/2008 16:33 REYKJAVIK, January 18 (RIA Novosti) - U.S.-born former world chess champion Bobby Fischer has died in Reykjavik, Iceland, at the age of 64, Icelandic national media reported on Friday.

No cause of death was given by the hospital where he died on Thursday. The controversial chess legend had been in hospital since November, when he was treated for a kidney problem.

Fischer had moved to Iceland in 2005 after having lived in Japan in seclusion from the world media for many years. He was a constant and fierce critic of the U.S. government and subsequently gained Icelandic citizenship.

The man who called the 9/11 attacks on the U.S. "wonderful news," first came to public attention in 1972 after beating the Soviet Union's Boris Spassky in a World Championship Match that took place in Reykjavik during one of the tenser periods of the Cold War.

Fischer's victory was a priceless propaganda coup for the U.S., ending decades of international domination of the sport by the U.S.S.R. and turning the new world chess champion into an instant national hero.

In 1992, Fischer and Spassky played a rematch in the former Yugoslavia, under strict UN sanctions at the time. He was later charged with breaking a UN embargo and a warrant was issued for his arrest by U.S. authorities. The game, billed as "Revenge Match of the Century" ended in a second victory for Fischer.

Despite having Jewish parents, Fischer was well-known for his anti-Semitic and anti-Israel views. After the 9/11 attacks on the U.S. he famously said in an interview: "Nobody cares ... [that] the U.S. and Israel have been slaughtering the Palestinians for years," adding that the U.S. would have to be "destroyed" if it failed to change its foreign policy.

© 2005 RIA Novosti
 
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Damn, it makes me feel old to see that troubled enfant terrible of my youth pass, and see that he was all of 64.

RIP, Master. :rose:
 
Bobby Fisher was one of the great chess players of all time. He come out of nowhere and fought for decent purses and playing conditions for his fellow chess players.

His personal politics were very strange. Honor him as a chess player.
 
he was a genius, and in later years, somewhat of a crank in politics, probably out of mental illness. he was homeless for long periods, and the patriotic Americans gloating over the his 'cold war' wins against the commies did fuck-all to give him a scrap of bread.

the US government exerted huge pressures on him, for reasons of minor importance, to either stay away forever or return and go to prison;

since when is it a crime to play "unauthorized" chess matches in countries where travel is "unauthorized"??

only Japan and Iceland moved to save him. and the US, because of treaties, was able to continue to hound him in Japan, causing him eventually to renounce citizenship and accepts Icelan's offer of it.

i suspect our 'libertarians' are mostly going to ignore this one.
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There is a full bio at:

http://www.chess-poster.com/great_players/fischer.htm

On some key incidents with the US governement.

On September 1, 1992, Bobby Fischer came out of his 20 year retirement and gave a press conference in Yugoslavia. He pulled out an order from the U.S. Treasury Department warning him that he would be violating U.N sanctions if he played Chess in Yugoslavia. He spit on the order and now faces ten years in prison and a $250,000 fine if he returns to the United States. In addition, he must forfeit his $3.65 million to the U.S. Treasury and forfeit 10% of any match royalties earned.

On September 30, Bobby Fischer began his rematch with Boris Spassky in Sveti Stefan, Yugoslavia. The match was organized by banker Jedzimir Vasiljevic. On November 11, Fischer won the match with 10 wins, 5 losses, and 15 draws. He received $3.65 million for his winnings and Spassky received $1.5 million.


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http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/asiapcf/08/21/fischer.japan/index.html


No relief for chess legend Fischer

Saturday,

August 21, 2004 Posted: 2:18 AM EDT (0618 GMT)


TOKYO, Japan -- A Japanese court has dismissed a request to halt deportation proceedings [instigated at the request of the US] against fugitive chess legend Bobby Fischer, his lawyers say.

Fischer, 61, is wanted in the United States for allegedly violating international sanctions against the former Yugoslavia by playing a 1992 chess match there with old rival Boris Spassky.

Fischer was detained in Japan last month when trying to travel on an invalid American passport, and has been battling a deportation order to the United States.

The Tokyo District Court rejected the request to have Japanese immigration officials halt procedures to deport him, his legal team said in a faxed statement late Friday.

Fischer's lawyers immediately filed an appeal with the Tokyo High Court, calling the decision unjust and unreasonable.

In live remarks from a Japanese detention cell, Fischer told a Manila radio station Friday that the U.S. embassy in Japan had agreed to pay him a visit so that he could renounce his U.S. citizenship, Reuters news agency reported.
 
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My father and Bobby Fischer went to middle school together. He remembers Bobby as an isolated child, sitting alone at lunch time, always drinking out of a milk carton through a coffee straw.

I've never met a grandmaster, although I am acquaintances with a few FMs, and then there's Mrs. Oblimo (CM). I've seen what chess can do. That's why I've always viewed the (very) hateful things he said with pity, not rage.

Chess broke his mind.
 
There is a very interesting thing involved with the death of Bobby Fisher.

The most famous Russian chess magazine and perhaps the most famous chess magazine in the world has a number, not a name. The number is the number of squares in a chess board. It is also the age of Bobby Fisher at his death.

64
 
I had dinner with him once. It took him two hours to pass the salt!
 
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