Looking for someone to read? (Guy Gavriel Kay)


Ever have a post suddenly decide that it was actually going to be about something else?

I was originally going to do a you’ll-like-this-guy – A Song for Arbonne is brilliant, you’ll love everything that he does, buy everything that he wrote – but never mind that now: read this article about the recent Russian poll of the greatest Russian ever. (Stalin in third, Lenin in sixth):

It would feel self-indulgent to launch a jeremiad about how very, very evil Lenin and Stalin and their system were. The novelist Martin Amis did this in a book a little while ago, Koba the Dread, which is essentially about his own belated discovery of that truth. And how his father, Kingsley Amis, and godfather, Robert Conquest (who exposed the atrocities of the Great Terror for the west) had been … right all along while Amis and his college chums had been proclaiming the glories of the Soviet Union and Mao’s China in the 1960s. It was nice to see Amis fils getting around to getting it right, but the tone of shocked baby-boomer awakening bordered on the amusing.

No, it seems to me there’s another point, a narrower focus to be sought here, and it comes from – unsurprisingly – Alexander Solzhenitsyn, whose The Gulag Archipelago, smuggled out to the west thirty-five years ago, documented the abomination of the Soviet internment camps with a terrifying mixture of Biblical prophet and meticulously detailed scientist. (Solzhenitsyn, who did more to expose the reality of Lenin and Stalin and the Soviet empire to the world than anyone else who ever lived, and did so with unfathomable courage, did not surface anywhere near the top of the balloting, by the way.)

Here’s the issue that seems necessary to register after considering this vote: in The Gulag Archipelago Solzhenitsyn makes the point that as of 1966 some 86,000 Germans had been convicted in Germany for Nazi crimes. But what about in the Soviet Union – the Gulag, the enforced starvations, the Terror? “In our own country (according the reports of the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court) about ten men had been convicted.” (The italics are his.) And he asks, “What kind of disastrous path lies ahead of us if we do not have the chance to purge ourselves of that putrefaction rotting inside our body?”

Read the whole thing: Kay makes the what would be hopefully obvious (but probably isn’t, to too many people) point that failure to contemplate and face the evils of the Soviet Union is no way to ensure that they would never occur again. And when awareness is absent, one goes to reflex for one’s reaction. And now I guess that I’ve explained Putin.  They don’t want to go back to communism, but they don’t want to confront what their elders did in its name, and so they can’t really feel happy with democracy, which is confrontation in almost-primal form.  So… find a man willing to take up again the old, old myths, and follow him.

How soon before they call him the Little Father?

Moe Lane

PS: And we’re giving them gussied-up Staples buttons as diplomatic gifts. God save the Mark.

Crossposted to Moe Lane.


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Looking for a documentary to watch?

Addison (Diary) Friday, March 6th at 6:10PM EST (link)

For God, Tsar, and the Fatherland

it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses

The blurb...

Addison (Diary) Friday, March 6th at 6:13PM EST (link)

Mikhail Morozov is a Russian patriot, good Christian and successful businessman. He owns Durakovo – the “Village of Fools” – 100 km southwest of Moscow. People come here from all over Russia to learn how to live and become ‘true’ Russians. When they join the Village of Fools, the new residents abandon all their former rights and agree to obey Mikhail Morozov’s strict rules. “What we have here is a society that respects the vertical of power, this is what our country needs most of all, “ says Morozov quoting his idol President Putin. The whole spectrum of power – political, spiritual and administrative – is represented in the village and people gather for semi-private meetings with Morozov. They discuss the future of Russia, their ambitions and their goals. For God, Tsar and the Fatherland shows what drives Russian patriotism today and why these citizens are against democracy.

Dunno if it’s a good depiction of Russians in general or just a glimpse of a tiny cult filmed for sensationalist purposes.

Either way it’s scary. And a good thing to watch.

it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses

Somewhere in between, Addison.

Moe Lane (Diary) Friday, March 6th at 6:45PM EST (link)

God only knows where.

What worries me about Putin is that I think that he’s worked out that the Russians want both stability and supermarkets – and if they get them both, they’re not going to worry overmuch about how many journalists come down with sudden cases of polonium poisoning.

*?????*

Addison (Diary) Friday, March 6th at 7:02PM EST (link)

I used to think Putin was ok. The western powers did some things, and attempted a level of control, in Russia that deserved a nationalistic response. Or, at least, the Russians deserved a chance to vote on how they wanted to respond to them. Democracy is what it is, and Russians deserved the chance to vote on the level of foreign interference they desired in their domestic politics. What Putin has done, though, is to completely gut the structures that would allow Russians to say anything one way or the other. That’s my major problem with him, because one would hope — though of course it’s not guaranteed — that a democracy is well-structured enough that it can’t vote itself into a dictatorship.

I’ll note that the desire for stability and supermarkets is probably the most prevalent popular theory of governance among citizens of the worlds’ nations. I mean, the world being what it is, it’s not a terrible thing to strive for in many regions. As a stepping stone if nothing else, it’s a natural thing to want if you have neither stability nor supermarkets.

That said, Russia is gigantic and has nuclear weapons. And the idea that any number of them are striving for dictatorship as a popular movement isn’t helpful for anyone along any time frame. That game has been played before. As for Russians not caring, just from my experience it’s really more about fear than numbers when it comes to some of the more personal effects of a decimated democratic structure.

I assume you’ve seen this: Nashi/????. Shiver.

it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses

RedState does not like Cyrillic, apparently...

Addison (Diary) Friday, March 6th at 7:03PM EST (link)

…a holdover from McCarthyism, no doubt!

it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses

 

No, I somehow missed these guys.

Moe Lane (Diary) Friday, March 6th at 8:21PM EST (link)

Post-Soviet Russia isn’t one of my fields.

Well, at least they’re not going after the Jews. Yet.

They're on Russian news ALL the time...

Addison (Diary) Friday, March 6th at 8:40PM EST (link)

…and as for their lack of conflict with the Jews, well, don’t assume they aren’t.

In any case, congrats, now that you know about Nashi you’ve got enough material for Russia posts for a year. In return for my valuable contribution just make sure that Russians — either in Russia or in the satellite states — are not all painted with the broad “insane fascist” brush. Nashi is a huge movement, but not a catch-all for the totality of Russian (especially not the youth) in the world by any means.

it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses

Please. I only broad-brush antiwar activists...

Moe Lane (Diary) Friday, March 6th at 10:12PM EST (link)

…and the progressive blogosphere. You know this.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The failure of Russia and some of the other Eastern European states...

kyle8 (Diary) Friday, March 6th at 6:18PM EST (link)

Stems directly from the fact that there has never been a reckoning for the crimes of the communist era.

“Nothing works like freedom, Nothing succeeds like liberty”
Kyle

 

The latest in "Smart diplomacy" is Hillary Clinton

septembergurl (Diary) Friday, March 6th at 9:00PM EST (link)

gifting the Russian Foreign Minister with a box containing the “reset” button, a leaden “gag” intended to highlight the new relationship now that Bush has been erased, er, rermoved.

Only problem: the Russian label meant “Overcharge” instead of “reset”. This was pointed out happily by the Russki.

This, incidentally, is exactly what Mikoyan or Molotov would have done in the bad old Cold War days – tried to embarrass us — although in those days they would be smacked back by Nixon or Dulles, true Cold Warriors. Hillary just cackled. Still, you know that someone on the Russia Desk at State is packing his/her bags for an extended tour in Berzerkistan.

But really. This week has been a disaster in the simplest kind of high level relations among leaders. This is not hard! We have a long history with Britain and Russia — this is Diplomacy 101, but Obama and his team of geniuses seem to be flummoxed.

Might have been better to give the reset button to Gordo and the DVDs to the Russki.

Seriously– how long before Obama sends out the call to James Baker? I’m not a fan, I hasten to say, but let’s be honest: Baker could do both Hillary’s job AND Timmy “Home Alone” Geithner’s job, and do them better than they’re being done now.

 

The latest in "Smart diplomacy" is Hillary Clinton

septembergurl (Diary) Friday, March 6th at 9:00PM EST (link)

gifting the Russian Foreign Minister with a box containing the “reset” button, a leaden “gag” intended to highlight the new relationship now that Bush has been erased, er, rermoved.

Only problem: the Russian label meant “Overcharge” instead of “reset”. This was pointed out happily by the Russki.

This, incidentally, is exactly what Mikoyan or Molotov would have done in the bad old Cold War days – tried to embarrass us — although in those days they would be smacked back by Nixon or Dulles, true Cold Warriors. Hillary just cackled. Still, you know that someone on the Russia Desk at State is packing his/her bags for an extended tour in Berzerkistan.

But really. This week has been a disaster in the simplest kind of high level relations among leaders. This is not hard! We have a long history with Britain and Russia — this is Diplomacy 101, but Obama and his team of geniuses seem to be flummoxed.

Might have been better to give the reset button to Gordo and the DVDs to the Russki.

Seriously– how long before Obama sends out the call to James Baker? I’m not a fan, I hasten to say, but let’s be honest: Baker could do both Hillary’s job AND Timmy “Home Alone” Geithner’s job, and do them better than they’re being done now.