Sunday, September 25, 2022

On the Topic of Russia - weekly column, 25 September 2022

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

 

On the Topic of Russia

 

“I have seen the future, and it works.”

 

-Lincoln Steffens

 

Letter to Marie Howe, 3 Apr. 1919, quoted in The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations

 

The problem is that Mr. Steffens saw only what the Soviets wanted him to see, not the reality of censorship, oppression, forced labor, and millions of Russians, not to mention their victims, dead through genocide – the Holodomor in Ukraine comes to mind – wars of conquest, mass starvation, mass imprisonment, disease, and 70 years of economic collapse.

 

And let us hear everything about Stalin’s pact with his student Hitler, how the Soviets fed, armed, and supported Hitler’s armies and Hitler’s ambitions for years until Hitler, like Capone, decided his buddy was disposable.

 

Yes, millions of Russians died in Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet Union, but that invasion was possibly only because of Stalin’s economic and technological support and through his collusion with Hitler in the conquest and division of Poland and Czechoslovakia.  The Nazis committed genocide in the nations they conquered, and the Communists committed genocide in all of those lands and within Russia.

 

The Soviet Union lasted seventy years by floating on a sea of its own people’s blood.  The last Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, is wrongly remembered as a liberalizer, but he granted limited freedoms only in order to maintain the Soviet Union, not to free the Russian people. President Reagan, Prime Minister Thatcher, St. John Paul II, a number of uppity Polish shipyard workers, and a few young Germans young gave the several pushes that brought down the rotten construct.

 

From 1905 until 1918 Russia was a constitutional monarchy and then for a few months a democracy before the Bolsheviks infected everything. After seven decades of horror Russia was in 1989 positioned to form a functional representative government and rejoin civilization. Russian families, business people, workers, scientists, artists, engineers, musicians, writers, manufacturers, dancers, film-makers, and the Russian Orthodox faithful would be free to determine their own lives and the life of Russia.

 

But after some sputtering attempts at self-government Russia is again ruled by a degenerate madman whose concept of parliamentary procedure is having people who even appear to disagree with him murdered. Lots of people.

 

The 21st century could have been the Russian Century, for Russia, even with the loss of its subject states, is still a huge land with great wealth in precious metals, oil, gas, coal, agricultural land, a rich cultural heritage which remains a witness to the world, and a diverse and industrious population which could out-work and out-produce any other people in the world if only they were free to do so, free to keep the profits from their own labors, and free of corrupt central and local administrations, false judges, and grasping oligarchs.

 

But thousands of the best young Russian men and women have been killed in insane colonial wars, thousands are in the new gulags for presuming to think for themselves, and yet more thousands have fled, taking their talents and their youthful energy with them to enrich their host nations.

 

Yes, this could have been the Russian century, but neither Mr. P nor his oligarchs nor his jingling generalissimos appear ever to have read Dostoyevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov with fictional Fr. Zosima’s most famous words: “Don’t lie. Above all, don’t lie to yourself. A man who lies to himself and listens to his own lie comes to a point where he does not discern any truth either in himself or anywhere around him…”

 

-30-

 

 

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