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In article <eu33c7$8qk_002@s943.apx1.sbo.ma.dialup.rcn.com>, jmfbahciv@aol.com writes:
Poland (it wasn't that easy to leave then) but wittness the Western
intelligentsia admiring Mao during the 60s and Castro till today.
denied all evidence of Stalin's brutality after WWII, and there was
plenty of evidence present. It was all dismissed as "ravings of
reactionaries". Then, when after Stalin's death Kchruschev disclosed
what was going on over there, there was a wave of suicides among
Western intelligentsia.
Mati Meron | "When you argue with a fool,
meron@cars.uchicago.edu | chances are he is doing just the same"
I don't know if the visiting group had some people from after the warIn article <j5UMh.26$25.102@news.uchicago.edu>,
mmeron@cars3.uchicago.edu wrote:
In article <eu0a9t$8qk_001@s798.apx1.sbo.ma.dialup.rcn.com>,
jmfbahciv@aol.com writes:
In article <2a614$460283f9$4fe7109$10420@DIALUPUSA.NET>,
"nonsense@unsettled.com" <nonsense@unsettled.com> wrote:
jmfbahciv@aol.com wrote:
In article <1ae0f$45f817db$4fe71d4$28690@DIALUPUSA.NET>,
"nonsense@unsettled.com" <nonsense@unsettled.com> wrote:
The answers we've seen over the months seem to me in
retrospect to have been rather linear with a lot of
semi-concealed "they're just like us" worldview. With
that premise being wrong, all that follows is as well.
hmmm...I don't think that is the key but it is an important
ingredient.
It is the starting point for understanding. IMO if
someone doesn't "get" this, they don't have any chance
at all.
Sure. I'm working on the part that comes before the desire
to understand appears.This seems to be the affliction
of a great number of people...or I've just begun noticing :-(.
Dammit, we don't even appreciate the difference between
the Russian mind (semi-oriental) and ours. The US and the
CIA have, for many decades, been accused of all sorts of
underhanded stuff. Still, no one has tied together
anything like the recent anti-leader dieoffs we can
clearly see happening. Factually we consider the Russians
"just like us" and clearly they're not.
I've done some reading to try to figure out their mindset because
part of the Middle East mess invoved that mindset. I'm currently
reading a book about a kibbutz; I was floored because I did not
know that USSR was used as a model and admired very much in
the beginnings of the social experiment. I had not figured out
the ramifications of USSR "supporting" Israel in the beginning.
Until Israel became part of the cold war gambits.
I've done some reading about that. The time I'm reading about is
in the 1950s. And it doesn't help that the author is both male
and seems to be enthralled with the socialist concept, and a
city slicker. For instance, he seems to think that their work
day from 6ish to 17:30 was a long day for farm work. He should
have visited some US farms.
What doesn't make sense is that these people admired the Russian
philosophy. If some of the group came from Poland, or talked
to people from Poland and/or Russia, I don't see how they
could admire Stalin.
You've a "time frame failure" here.
I tried not to commit that error.
These people came from Poland
during the 20 and 30s.
Right.
Way before 1945 and the Russian occupation of
Poland. It was very common for young people from all places that
didn't get a direct taste of Soviet rule to admire Stalin at that
time. Especially young people from the inteligentsia.
The author spent 9 months on this kibbutz in the early 1950s.
One of their holidays was still dedicated to Stalin and Lenin.
The visiting work groups had to have some people from Poland
who had first hand experience with Stalin's heavy hand.
Poland (it wasn't that easy to leave then) but wittness the Western
intelligentsia admiring Mao during the 60s and Castro till today.
Yes.I suppose habit is difficult to change.
conflicting with their beliefs. The Western European intelligentsiaIf a society bases its
tenets on humans rather than invisible gods, acknowledging
that the humans are nasty and wrong would destroy the coherence
of the group.
Yes, exactly. Humans will go to enormous lengths to deny evidence
denied all evidence of Stalin's brutality after WWII, and there was
plenty of evidence present. It was all dismissed as "ravings of
reactionaries". Then, when after Stalin's death Kchruschev disclosed
what was going on over there, there was a wave of suicides among
Western intelligentsia.
When your life my depend on it, of course they won't be mentioned.snip
I consider it a function of basic survival. It you don't
cheat, you don't get basic things such as food, plumbing,
and clothes.
Exactly.
What I can't figure out is how do one keep one's kids from
saying stuff when they're young. Or would politics and
criticism not even be mentioned in the home?
I went to the library yesterday to try to find the two Gogol
books. I did rescue a Gogol book, but it's short stories.
The only ones I could find was only available as fucking e-books.
I now know why they've been dumping all the paper books. Two
weeks' ago I rescued astronomy and ornithology books. The
week before that was textiles and crafts and some ecology
and a lot of practical wiring and fixing books.
This country is insane.
Lets say "disturbed".
Mati Meron | "When you argue with a fool,
meron@cars.uchicago.edu | chances are he is doing just the same"