wait I mean
>:(
― Force Boxman (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 5 November 2012 21:21 (eleven years ago) link
how does that even work
― mookieproof, Monday, 5 November 2012 21:22 (eleven years ago) link
always loved this one re: Yezhov
http://firstlightforum.files.wordpress.com/2011/05/nikolai-yezhov-nkvd.jpg
― Force Boxman (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 5 November 2012 21:23 (eleven years ago) link
mookie mystified by shakey's nose-becomes-hat move
― iatee, Monday, 5 November 2012 21:24 (eleven years ago) link
xp @ mookie my stepfather was one too. the line they tend to take is that the longer broader view of building communism is one that requires great sacrifice and long-term vision, and that humanism is bullshit, it's a whole huge self-deluding schema that's very hard to penetrate from the outside - like any rigid ideology you sort of have to make a leap of buying into some shit you don't naturally buy into & then you're golden
― Inconceivable (to the entire world) (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Monday, 5 November 2012 21:25 (eleven years ago) link
wow
― mookieproof, Monday, 5 November 2012 21:28 (eleven years ago) link
yeah it's easy really. combine that with "the US propaganda machine is extremely effective" (which is true!) & assorted failures of liberalism and you can wash away lots of death and blood. this is a really close friend and I only have a handful of close friends so it fucking blows but he's been over the bend about other shit before, we just avoid the subject. four years ago he was as over the moon for Obama as anybody you know.
― Inconceivable (to the entire world) (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Monday, 5 November 2012 21:37 (eleven years ago) link
'great sacrifice' in the context of the soviet union always make my heart skip.
― Van Horn Street, Monday, 5 November 2012 21:40 (eleven years ago) link
good thing we don't have kulaks here
― mookieproof, Monday, 5 November 2012 21:42 (eleven years ago) link
I know someone, i can't really call him my friend, but he is in the group of friends I hang up with. he is a huge communist and (apparently) talented philosopher, total fan of both Mao and Stalin. I just don't get it.
― Van Horn Street, Monday, 5 November 2012 21:46 (eleven years ago) link
we keep our kulaks in other countries. it's more civilized that way
― Force Boxman (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 5 November 2012 21:47 (eleven years ago) link
er wait delete that post misreading things argh
i've talked to stalin apologists before, in my experience they tend to cite mysterious 'recently revealed kremlin documents' that prove that stalin didn't really kill anyone except bad guys.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 5 November 2012 22:06 (eleven years ago) link
difficult listening hour to thread
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 5 November 2012 22:10 (eleven years ago) link
All that twaddle about world revolution and the repulsiveness of humanism aside, the attraction to Stalin is a sycophant's to power.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 5 November 2012 22:11 (eleven years ago) link
the Stalin apologists I've known have done the appalling interior work to be OK with outright murder as one of the eggs you gotta break en route to the omelette. Alfred OTM though - "Stalinists" from free market economies are essentially glassy-eyed idol-seekers.
― Inconceivable (to the entire world) (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Monday, 5 November 2012 22:14 (eleven years ago) link
he is a fascinating guy, no doubt -- i'd read another book on stalin before i'd read another book on hitler, no question.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 5 November 2012 22:14 (eleven years ago) link
Better taste in literature than Adolf too.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 5 November 2012 22:16 (eleven years ago) link
Stalin def more interesting/inscrutable. something common and obvious about Hitler's pathologies.
never got around to reading Montefiore's "Young Stalin", I should get that out of the library.
― Force Boxman (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 5 November 2012 22:17 (eleven years ago) link
once again, we note the continuing absence of Bethune from ILX ... and speculate as to the reasons therefor.
― spicy bacon, bitch! (Eisbaer), Monday, 5 November 2012 23:50 (eleven years ago) link
we should just have all his posts mysteriously erased, AS IF HE NEVER EXISTED
― Force Boxman (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 5 November 2012 23:55 (eleven years ago) link
a most fitting fate, i agree.
― spicy bacon, bitch! (Eisbaer), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 00:19 (eleven years ago) link
you can tell comrade yezhov i believe in god after all. because from stalin, i deserve nothing but gratitude for my faithful service. but from god, i deserve the most severe punishment, for having violated his commandments thousands of times. so. look at me, and judge for yourself: is there a god? or not?
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 00:30 (eleven years ago) link
you think that kamenev may not confess?
i don't know. he doesn't yield to persuasion.
you don't know? comrade mironov, how much does our state weigh?
...
with all the factories? the machines? the armies? with all the armaments and the navy? think it over and tell me.
nobody can know that, iosif vissarionovich. it is in the realm of astronomical figures.
well. and can one man withstand the pressure of that astronomical weight?
no.
now then. do not tell me any more that kamenev, or this prisoner, or that prisoner, does not yield to persuasion.
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 00:35 (eleven years ago) link
anyway yeah, single most successful gangster in human history, surprisingly inscrutable, hard to tell whether he really thought (as his apologists do) that his brand of horrifying brute force was What Russia Needed; but then it's hard to tell what caesar was thinking too. not as different from lenin and trotsky as sentimental acolytes of the latter like to think; not as similar as right-leaning historians like to insist; had trotsky and not stalin inherited the state there certainly would have been terror and famine but the latter would probably not have been as bad and the former would certainly not have had the insane unprecedented quality of being designed specifically to allow the gen-sec to crawl inside the paralyzed minds of everyone in the country. a Very Bad Man, no doubt, and no kind of medicine for history no matter how much you believe in the dictatorship of the proletariat, but endlessly fascinating.
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 00:39 (eleven years ago) link
is that Koestler...?
xp
― Force Boxman (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 00:40 (eleven years ago) link
it's supposedly a real transcription, from the (of course suspect but what isn't) memoirs of this guy.
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 00:43 (eleven years ago) link
I've posted it before but it never gets old. Especially for the caption in Robert Conquest's "The Great Terror."
http://thevieweast.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/vikkibird3.jpg
"The next day, Stalin had her father shot."
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 00:44 (eleven years ago) link
DLH what do you think the best books on the russian revolution/soviet history in general are?
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 00:49 (eleven years ago) link
Hitchens got...intemperate over his bro Martin Amis' Koba the Dread but it's an effective intro.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 00:52 (eleven years ago) link
i thought figes' revolution book was outstanding, although later events have suggested dude has some issues
― mookieproof, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 00:56 (eleven years ago) link
i read a bunch of books on the subject --including the figes one and, oddly, the amis one -- in college but most of the details have grown fuzzy. figes is the one who was caught trolling other soviet historians on amazon, right?
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 00:58 (eleven years ago) link
for hard(ish)core social history i am a sheila fitzpatrick person but she is a little Controversial, or at least was; but as near as i can tell this is mostly just because she doesn't remind you of how evil stalin was with sufficient frequency. she has a little book called the russian revolution that despite the title goes all the way to 1932 and covers a combination of political maneuvering and socioeconomic conditions; she focuses on the latter in the stalin years in everyday stalinism which is also terrific. BUT for juicy horrifying tragic epic stalin details you want, yes, still the great terror, which focuses mostly on 36-38; the two montefiore books (young stalin and, waitforit, the court of the red tsar); and (backtracking a little, or rather a lot) bertrand wolfe's rad (geddit) triple-biography three who made a revolution, which covers stalin/trotsky/lenin's early years up to i think only the v beginning of 1917. robert service has written biographies of the Big Three but i do not trust robert service really -- i read his big fat gloss on Modern Russia (1917-putin) and it wasn't bad, it was a gloss, but his biographies, even of stalin, seem a little too infused w the old intellectual resentments of the 60s rightists. (or, you know, the not-leftists.) who were, of course, correct! about the Great Soviet Experiment, i mean. or at least about stalin. (robert conquest, who ran w this crowd himself, suggested for the subtitle of the second edition of the great terror, issued after glasnost/the fall gave us new confirmation of basically everything in the once-controversial original edition, "I Told You So You Fucking Fools", and this is totally fair.) but that doesn't mean service is the best person to write these peoples' biographies.
(and especially trotsky's biography. i like trotsky a lot -- like, a lot -- that doesn't mean i don't think he was a murderous ideologue like the rest of them or that i would like him running my country but... it's complicated. actually i cannot recommend enough his three-volume history of the revolution, which is a totally totally fascinating and brilliant and sometimes actually really funny play-by-play of 1917, to be read in combination w portland favorite son john reed's ten days that shook the world, which i have never actually finished but which trotsky quotes a lot. which must have felt cool.)
also you cannot beat solzhenitsyn and don't listen to anyone who tells you different; he was a grouch and eventually a crank but archipelago (which i have not read in full) gets tears on practically every page i've read without ever much trying for them. his detailed description of Article 34 (i think it is 34), the soviet law under which most of the terror arrests/executions were performed, practically obsoletes catch-22.
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 01:05 (eleven years ago) link
i haven't read the figes book actually! i like its title.
i cannot recommend enough his three-volume history of the revolution, which is a totally totally fascinating and brilliant and sometimes actually really funny play-by-play of 1917, to be read in combination w portland favorite son john reed's ten days that shook the world, which i have never actually finished but which trotsky quotes a lot. which must have felt cool.
^^ this.
― 5-Hour Enmity (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 01:07 (eleven years ago) link
oh and one more stalin anecdote, which i think i got from montefiore: stalin goes for a photo-op visit with his aging georgian mother, who's understandably a little confused about what all the complex and deceptive politburo maneuvering actually means, and asks him, son, what exactly is it that you do? and stalin says, well, you remember the tsar? i am sort of like that.
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 01:08 (eleven years ago) link
the Conquest book and Young Stalin are the only ones I've read -- the former is dry, almost acerbic, and uninterested in Stalin's peculiarities, the latter gets his sociopathic traits plus gets his unaccountable tastes.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 01:11 (eleven years ago) link
the amis book isn't bad but it's a little DID YOU GUYS KNOW ABOUT THIS? I HAD NO IDEA ABOUT ANY OF THIS! WHY DIDN'T YOU TELL ME ABOUT THIS? and for some reason most of the second half is about what a dick christopher hitchens is. also it has that famous part where martin amis compares the cries of his hungry baby in the night to the screams from the lubyanka, which is the definition of :/.
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 01:11 (eleven years ago) link
sure but Amis' book isn't written for Sovietphiles.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 01:12 (eleven years ago) link
yeah the conquest book isn't much about stalin at all; it's about the mechanics of the terror. you know what reminds me of it actually? "the part about the crimes" in 2666. it just goes on and on and numbingly on and you start having really bad dreams.
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 01:13 (eleven years ago) link
you guys can also watch Geoffrey Rush as Trotsky mount Salma Hayek's Frida Kahlo in Frida.
― the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 01:14 (eleven years ago) link
DLH: thanks for that! i think it's time to dive into some of these (some of 'em for the second time -- i actually read 'everyday stalinism' for a class but remember nothing about it).
the amis book is classic for the phone conversation he recounts where the hitch insists (as he never did in print, oddly) that lenin was, all joking aside, a really great man.
richard abraham's book on kerensky is really excellent, tho probably not a good first book for anyone to read given the bewildering nature of the provisional government period. kerensky was always the figure who fascinated me most from this whole era -- at once brave and noble and kind of useless as a leader. he's kind of like napoleon if napoleon had suddenly gotten the jitters about actually hurting anyone. i'd still be more inclined to defend him than trotsky. great article about him here: http://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/magazine/article/?article_id=38883
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 01:25 (eleven years ago) link
the thing about the provisional government is, they didn't end the war. that's both why it's hard to embrace them and why they were successfully overthrown. they should have ended the war. i've never read a dedicated kerensky book and i should (and i should try of course not to be too influenced by how scathing trotsky is about him) -- i will seek out the abraham book, thanks! -- but he has always seemed to me like an intelligent and goodhearted person who could not stand up to the right and to the money. (part, no doubt, out of fear of the alternative, of lenin, but.) basically any revolution stands or falls on the army's decision, and much of the army went w the bolsheviks because they were sick of dying in the trenches for no reason and the provisional govt gave them no relief. kerensky also (although i am fuzzy, now, on the details of this; i wish i could actually fuckin REMEMBER what i read) was not much help at all during the lead-up to kornilov's attempted rightist coup.
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 02:44 (eleven years ago) link
did you ever read Victor Serge's bio of Trotsky? I've got it out from the library but have not started it.
― JoeStork, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 02:49 (eleven years ago) link
i haven't; i've read book 1 of the deutscher trilogy (THE PROPHET etc), which has a reputation for being a hagiography but didn't seem that hagiographic to me, or maybe the problem is i'm inside the cult. honestly, don't listen to me about trotsky.
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 02:51 (eleven years ago) link
Camus can be a self-contradictory, misguided curmudgeon but the gist of his explanation of Stalinism as nihilism in The Rebel is cock on imo
― movember spawned a nobster (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 02:52 (eleven years ago) link
more so than a reactionary cunt like Martin A. because you believe Camus is still a leftist at heart
― movember spawned a nobster (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 02:53 (eleven years ago) link
ooh also, jumping way ahead, william taubman's khrushchev bio is as fun as you'd think a khrushchev bio would be. in one scene he gets drunk w hubert humphrey and says WHERE ARE YOU FROM? and hubert humphrey says oh i'm from minneapolis, it's in the state of minnesota, and khrushchev stands up and looks at the map on his wall and draws a big circle around minneapolis in marker and says
I WILL ORDER THEM TO SPARE IT WHEN THE ROCKETS FLY!
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 02:57 (eleven years ago) link
humphrey says "i'm sorry i can't reciprocate."
― difficult listening hour, Tuesday, 6 November 2012 02:58 (eleven years ago) link
iirc kerensky's defense was that the allies had kind of blackmailed him into staying in the war and he -- foolishly -- thought that a fast victory (the US having just joined the war) would be useful for shoring up the legitimacy of his gov't. then he convinced himself he could somehow inspire the soldiers to fight harder by going to the front dressed up like napoleon (hand tucked in shirt and all) and making speeches -- which, oddly, was exactly what tsar nick had done.
i have a total uncritical teenager's crush on camus which i will never relinquish, haven't read that book though.
― (The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Tuesday, 6 November 2012 02:59 (eleven years ago) link