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MEMORY HOLE: Why the left wants to forget Uncle Joe
Reason.com ^ | December 2002 | Charles Paul Freund

Posted on 12/02/2002 6:37:04 PM PST by Senator Pardek

Joseph Stalin made Martin Amis laugh four times.

Amis reports that he read "yards" of books about Stalin to write Koba the Dread: Laughter and the Twenty Million (Miramax), a meditation on the monstrousness of Stalin and the consequent historical vulnerability of a left that has never fully dealt with its past complicity in mass murder. Indeed, much of the left is still able to laugh nostalgically about the Soviet Union despite its unspeakably horrific past, and that, thinks Amis, makes it morally guilty.

"Nothing Stalin did makes you laugh," writes Amis. Rather, it’s the things Stalin was capable of saying, "as if he were a comic creation going through his hoops." Amis laughs "undisguisedly and with warmth" when Stalin blames a 1927 grain shortfall on "a kulak strike," because the dictator so sure-handedly combines a pair of scapegoat categories into a single conspiratorial event. He laughs when a rueful Stalin bemoans Hitler’s double cross, saying, "Ech, together with the Germans we would have been invincible." It’s what’s packed into that Ech that gets Amis.

Amis laughs a third time when Stalin speaks of the miserable Pavel Morozov. A teenage peasant, Morozov was a Soviet icon, a hero renowned for turning his father in to the authorities. Stalin himself exalted the boy, though he was heard to say privately, "What a little swine, denouncing his own father."

Finally, Amis cannot help but laugh at Stalin’s reaction to the German invasion of Russia, on learning of "the true dimensions of his own miscalculation, paralysis, willed myopia, and lack of nerve." "Lenin left us a great inheritance," said Stalin, "and we, his heirs, have fucked it all up."

Did you laugh? If not, perhaps your heart is not sufficiently filled with despair. Reading accounts of Stalin by the yard will fix that, and then you can laugh along with Amis. He’s distilled a good deal of the horror he has encountered in the works of Robert Conquest, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, and the many other historians of, and witnesses to, utter dread.

Amis offers the haunting scene of Arctic prison camps where everyone has frozen to death -- prisoners, guards, dogs, everyone. Many of them doubtless perished in a moment known to inmates as "the whispering of the stars," a last breath frozen in midair, the icy cloud breaking audibly on the frozen ground. There is the evocation of the Ukraine withering with intentional starvation. There are even scenes where the Russians, stupefied by the inanity of their lives, are themselves reduced to helpless laughter.

A Stalinist "election," for example, where the "ballots" feature not merely a single "candidate" but even a mark already placed next to the single name. "Voters" emerge from the "polls" doubled over with laughter.

Of course, this laughter of hopelessness contrasts badly with the nostalgic smiles and titters of an aging left that still thinks itself perched on moral high ground. Martin Amis, whose famous novelist father, Kingsley, spent decades as a card-carrying member of the Communist Party, wants to arrest the left’s laughter so as to indict the left’s memory.

It appears to be too late, however, and the evidence is those very shelves of books that Amis studied to prepare his indictment. They’ve been there for years, offering testimony of a sustained brutality that is hard to credit, much less rationalize. But the material of history is one thing; the demands of memory another. Confront Stalin for what he really was, and the superstructure of the left’s intellectual and cultural heroes -- the generation of men and women who served him and rationalized him -- collapses on its base. Thus, when the appalling Black Book of Communism appeared in 1999, it was dismissed as propaganda in such publications as Le Monde and The Atlantic.

Stalin was reportedly fond of a certain saying: "There is a man, there is a problem. No man, no problem." The left, to save the history it wants to embrace, has removed Stalin from it. Despite countless testimonials from Louis Aragon, Lillian Hellman, Pablo Neruda, Jean-Paul Sartre, and others, he wasn’t really of the left, it turns out; he was merely an "aberration." No Stalin, no problem.

Amis is wrong about one thing, however: Some of the things Stalin did can indeed force you to laugh. For example, he’d frequently screen a Hollywood film for himself, commanding the presence of a translator. For years, Stalin watched his favorite movies -- especially Tarzan epics -- as the translator babbled away. Yet in all that time, the translator was so afraid of saying anything that might displease Stalin that he avoided translating anything. Instead, he limited himself to describing the visual action that Stalin could see for himself.

How long do you suppose it was before Stalin caught on? Yet he let it continue. Perhaps even he was laughing.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Philosophy
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 12/02/2002 6:37:04 PM PST by Senator Pardek
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To: Senator Pardek
I hope that the recanting of Horowitz, Amis, the Hitchens brothers may start a mass shift of former intelligent leftists to reality. Don't see much movement among the university faculty, though.
2 posted on 12/02/2002 6:46:16 PM PST by expatpat
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To: Senator Pardek
I may be going out on a limb here, but.....I don't think Steve Allen felt threatened for one second.
3 posted on 12/02/2002 6:51:10 PM PST by hole_n_one
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To: Senator Pardek
Read the book. It makes you realize that the left consists to this day of holocaust deniers. The Russian holocaust, the death of 20 million at the hands of Lenin and Stalin. The complicity of the "intelligentsia" in this, the greatest crime in history, persists to this day. It took the New York Times until the 1990's to admit that this crime took place, and then only after the opening of the KGB archives made denying it any further untenable.
4 posted on 12/02/2002 6:55:32 PM PST by Nubbytwanger
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To: Senator Pardek
A teenage peasant, Morozov was a Soviet icon, a hero renowned for turning his father in to the authorities.

And now, the rest of the story

5 posted on 12/02/2002 7:03:32 PM PST by cornelis
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To: Senator Pardek
Indeed, much of the left is still able to laugh nostalgically about the Soviet Union despite its unspeakably horrific past, and that, thinks Amis, makes it morally guilty.

The American left or right(save for a very few) has any idea what communism is, or what Europe is. America is a good draught horse with blinds on. It only knows the whip that drives it and an occasional pluck of weed for diversion.

6 posted on 12/02/2002 7:08:51 PM PST by cornelis
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To: Nubbytwanger
It wasn't two years ago the NY Times did a "fun, human interest" FRONT page story about a bunch of aging communist sympathasizers living in some old age home in California.

The tone was basically along the lines of "they're the idealists, the sweet old last of the true believers." It portrayed them as a sweet old bunch, longing for the good old days when their cause was still in vogue, and the Times lamented right along with them.

For some reason (though Stalin's gang killed 3x times the number that the Nazis managed to slaughter) the Times sees fit to write about the cute idiosyncracies ("Rachel likes decafinated! John wants to paint his room red!") of their aging loyal supporters. I guess since the Times has the same blood on their hands, they feel a certain comrade-erie.

7 posted on 12/02/2002 7:11:41 PM PST by dead
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To: Senator Pardek
"What a little swine, denouncing his own father."

The best thing Stalin ever said if this is true. I feel the same way about the little s*** who turned his father into the DEA.

8 posted on 12/02/2002 7:16:46 PM PST by weikel
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To: Nubbytwanger
The leftist pigs in our own political arena along with their facilitators in the media are our present day holocaust. To deny truth, to preach lies as truth, to accept the university intelligencia as being anything other than like the leftist Nazi Goebels indoctrinating our youth with their poison, is our holocaust. They have openly murdered more than Adolph during the 8 years of Ex-42, all were young people with less than 9 months to being born. They have murdered the minds of countless millions more in our universities. It is time we called a spade a spade. It is time we called a RAT a Leftist. It is time we called the Leftist professors in our universities Evil. It is time to root out the evil in our midst and stop the holocaust.
9 posted on 12/02/2002 7:35:36 PM PST by GGpaX4DumpedTea
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: Senator Pardek
bttt
11 posted on 12/03/2002 6:52:19 AM PST by dead
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To: dead
Bill Buckley had a great op/ed piece a few years ago entitled something like "What If They Were Nazis?", which outlined the obvious double standard.
12 posted on 12/03/2002 4:15:11 PM PST by Senator Pardek
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