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Reflections on Solzhenitsyn’s Harvard Address
Quillette ^ | October 24, 2020 | Sergiu Klainerman

Posted on 11/01/2020 4:22:36 AM PST by gattaca

In his 1978 Harvard commencement address, A World Split Apart, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, a fierce enemy of the Soviet system, delivered a forceful and insightful critique of the West, a society which he characterized as spiritually weakened by rampant materialism. The man who, when forced to leave his own country four years earlier, encouraged his countrymen to “live not by lies”, gave us a magnificent lesson in how to not be blinded by our own sense of superiority, and urged us to ask hard questions about who we are and where we are going.

When I first heard this speech in 1978 as a young refugee from communist Romania, I was able to appreciate Solzhenitsyn’s address in terms of the competition raging then between the West and the East, but did not comprehend its larger meaning. Rereading it today, in the fall of the horrible year 2020, I find it truly prophetic. It is now painfully clear that, as Solzhenitsyn was able to discern 42 years ago, the West has been gradually losing the will and intellectual ability to defend itself, not so much against foreign armies as it may have appeared in 1978, but against an army of internal critics determined to demolish everything the West used to stand for.

In the central part of the address Solzhenitsyn said:

A decline in courage may be the most striking feature which an outside observer notices in the West in our days. The Western world has lost its civil courage, both as a whole and separately, in each country, each government, each political party, and, of course, in the United Nations. Such a decline in courage is particularly noticeable among the ruling groups and the intellectual elite, causing an impression of loss of courage by the entire society. Should one point out that from ancient times declining courage has been considered the beginning of the end?

A lot has been written lately about the Woke phenomenon, with excellent accounts of its ideology, genesis, and, though not yet complete, its long march through the institutions.

But I have still found myself at a loss to understand how this simplistic, tribalist, intellectually confused, petty, and terribly divisive ideology appears on the verge of displacing our old, magnificent worldview, anchored in the universal “unalienable Rights endowed by our Creator and secured by the Laws of Nature.”

I wrote this essay in the hope that revisiting what Solzhenitsyn had to say in 1978 may provide a clue to why we find ourselves so vulnerable today. I take from his text two important themes which I believe are relevant for this task. One is the growing imbalance between rights and individual obligations, the second is the loss of faith.

Rights and obligations

In his address, Solzhenitsyn says that Western societies place a strong emphasis on freedom and rights. In the US, in particular, these rights are staunchly defended by the Constitution and implemented by a legalistic process, based on specific rules, which studiously avoids making non-legal moral judgements. At the same time, he observes, there has been a notable decline in individual obligations, or personal responsibility. These values are, of course, nowhere to be found in the Constitution but their importance was taken for granted by its founders. Personal responsibility, they thought, was naturally enshrined in an education steeped in tradition, in individual notions of selflessness, self-restraint, self-reliance, truthfulness, honor, personal sacrifice, etc. It is not that the founders left these virtues out of the Constitution because they considered them dispensable—on the contrary, they were keenly aware of their importance and thought that the type of government they were proposing would be unimaginable in their absence. But they felt that imparting these virtues was best left to the traditions and religious beliefs of the people, a view clearly expressed in the Federalist Papers.

The imbalance between rights and obligations in Western societies is constantly growing as the common understanding of rights is expanding, thus strongly undermining any remaining notions of individual obligations. The Left includes among what it calls “human rights” not only those guaranteed by the Constitution but also the rights to free health care, free education, free child care, the right to unrestricted and free abortions, and makes constant political demands in their name. Recently, one hears voices calling for a guaranteed “Universal Basic Income’’ as another human right. Whatever one thinks about the merits of these new rights, when put into practice through vast bureaucratic programs, they reduce personal responsibility and increase the power of the state. One may also ask whether there is any possible limit to this expansion? In Communist countries everybody had the right to work, guaranteed by the state, viewed as the most fundamental human right. In practice, it meant that everybody who was not penalized by the Party could get a wretched job with little hope for advancement. The state could implement such a policy because it controlled all the means of production. Are we heading in the same direction?

This imbalance between rights and responsibilities is not only restricted to individuals, it is also affecting our governmental, societal, and cultural institutions. In a series of lectures at Princeton University two years ago, Yuval Levin decried how these institutions are neglecting their formative responsibilities in favor of performative actions. He provides a thorough analysis of how congressmen, journalists, judges, and university professors prefer to behave, often to the detriment of the institutions they represent, as independent actors on the larger stage provided by the irrepressible, omnipresent, and vastly irresponsible media. The result is an accelerating lack of trust in the institutions they represent and a decline of social capital, which is essential to the health of the republic.

Collapse of faith

But it is not just that our basic institutions are declining by neglecting their essential responsibilities. Far more worrying is the fact that the liberal ideas underpinning these institutions are themselves collapsing under a constant barrage of criticism. In other words, people are losing faith in our foundational liberal values. This fact, barely visible in 1978, is an essential part of the present reality of Wokeness. Examples abound, but I will confine myself to one of the most outrageous. According to a recent graphic display at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, visitors were told that individualism, hard work, stable families, logical thinking, and scientific objectivity are characteristic of “white” people. It follows, by that logic, that any attempt to assert these as universally desirable virtues must be viewed as racist. Needless to say, in the postmodern world of the Woke, logic itself is a social construct to be used only when it advances the political objectives of the movement.

To understand the scope and intensity of this collapse it helps to summarize the origins of this phenomenon.

Marxism has from its inception been very good at detecting and criticizing some of the more obvious deficiencies of capitalism—yet, as we know, terrible at offering any workable solutions.

Marxists were obsessed with taking power, and whenever they did, by insurrection or conquest, their rule descended rapidly into some awful form of totalitarianism. But with the exception of the underdeveloped Russia, and later China, Vietnam, Cambodia, and Cuba, capitalism turned out to be more enduring than the original Marxists envisioned, partly because of its remarkable ability to adapt and reform itself within the cultural traditions and democratic institutions that sit alongside it. That led to a new form of criticism, cultural Marxism, initiated by Gramsci, directed at the “hegemonic culture” through which capitalism maintains its power. The intense focus on criticizing all aspects of Western societies with the ultimate aim of weakening and eventually destroying them was continued by the Frankfurt School, under the name of Critical Theory, and brought to the US where it found a niche in American colleges and universities and from where it soon started its long march through America’s institutions.

Today, various critical theories dominate entire academic departments, such as Gender Studies, African American Studies, Ethnic Studies, Sociology, Education, etc., and provide a growing influence in almost all academic disciplines except maybe STEM—though almost certainly not for long. Take any possible identity group and you can find a critical theory dedicated to it. Critical race theory (CRT), for example, analyzes society from the point of view of race, while critical feminism theory is focused on understanding gender inequalities. Critical pedagogy theory (CPT) criticizes the traditional relationship between teacher and student which, apparently, is like the relationship between a colonizer and the colonized. These theories provide road maps for liberation from the oppressive, dominant power structures. They are also connected to each other by the doctrine of intersectionality, which claims to understand how a person’s various identities (from gender, sex, race, class, to disability, physical appearance, height, weight, etc.) combine to create unique modes of discrimination or privilege. Add to this a contempt for capitalism, an apocalyptic vision of climate change, and the neat trick of combining moral relativism in theory with a large dose of moral absolutism in practice, and you get the main contours of the so-called Woke phenomenon.

According to Yoram Hazony, in a recent article in Quillette, the Enlightenment principles of freedom and equality are too abstract when not supported by other traditions to provide an effective defense against systematic Marxist criticism. Here is how he described the “dance between liberals and Marxists”:

Enlightenment liberals observe that inherited traditions are always flawed or unjust in certain ways, and for this reason they feel justified in setting inherited tradition aside and appealing directly to abstract principles such as freedom and equality.

Liberals declare that henceforth all will be free and equal, emphasizing that reason (not tradition) will determine the content of each individual’s rights.

Marxists, exercising reason, point to many genuine instances of unfreedom and inequality in society, decrying them as oppression and demanding new rights.

Liberals, embarrassed by the presence of unfreedom and inequality after having declared that all would be free and equal, adopt some of the Marxists’ demands for new rights. The dance then continues by iterations, with never-ending new demands by the Marxists.

In a similar vein, Solzhenitsyn asks, prophetically, how could the West “with such splendid historical values” in its past lose the will to defend itself. He goes on to say:

How has this unfavorable relation of forces come about? How did the West decline from its triumphal march to its present sickness? Have there been fatal turns and losses of direction in its development? It does not seem so. The West kept advancing socially in accordance with its proclaimed intentions, with the help of brilliant technological progress. And all of a sudden it found itself in its present state of weakness.

Solzhenitsyn concludes that “the mistake must be at the root, at the very basis of human thinking in the past centuries.” He refers to “the prevailing Western view of the world which was first born during the Renaissance and found its political expression from the period of the Enlightenment. It became the basis for government and social science and could be defined as rationalistic humanism or humanistic autonomy. It could also be called anthropocentricity, with man seen as the center of everything that exists.”

He also observes,

In early democracies, as in the American democracy at the time of its birth, all individual human rights were granted because man is God’s creature. That is, freedom was given to the individual conditionally, in the assumption of his constant religious responsibility.

Faith in God has been gradually displaced by a Faith in Man as a materialistic entity.

Solzhenitsyn again:

The West ended up by truly enforcing human rights, sometimes even excessively, but man’s sense of responsibility to God and society grew dimmer and dimmer.

Solzhenitsyn points out that humanism, divorced from its religious roots, is no match for the current materialism of the Left. In the same spirit as Hazony, he observes:

Liberalism was inevitably displaced by radicalism; radicalism had to surrender to socialism; and socialism could never resist communism.

He also says something we refugees from the East know all too well. It is this same kind of support from intellectual elites today that has allowed the Woke phenomenon to spread:

The communist regime in the East could stand and grow due to the enthusiastic support from an enormous number of Western intellectuals who felt a kinship and refused to see communism’s crimes.

Personal comments

I would like to end with a few personal comments inspired by Solzhenitsyn’s text.

It is a tragic fact of the human condition that important human aspirations and needs such as freedom, justice, equality, personal security, spirituality, and self-expression are, if not exactly in contradiction with each other, in a state of perpetual conflict. Extreme levels of personal insecurity are intolerable—people will accept infringements of all their other aspirations if they feel their lives are endangered. Unfettered personal freedom, on the other hand, may lead to terminal anarchy if it is not accompanied by a legal system designed to protect justice—that is, the rights of all. Radical equality, as envisioned by Marxism and presently by the Woke ideology, is at odds with human nature; it is thus incompatible with both freedom and justice and can only be imposed by force. It is no accident that both private property and bourgeois style families, the greatest sources of inequality in any society, but also great guarantors of individual freedoms, were proscribed by Marx in the Communist Manifesto.

Spiritual aspirations, manifested through organized religion, can also lead to cancellations of freedoms and terrible conflicts. The absence of religion, however, may be even more problematic, as people tend to fill the vacuum created by the disappearance of old religions with new ones, which are often more fanatical and are not constrained by fidelity to ancient, inspiring texts or anchored in tradition. Many observers have pointed out that the Woke phenomenon represents a new, postmodern religion.

Superimposed over this state of conflict is yet another one based on the way people make choices; that is, based on reason, faith, or the sheer assertion of power. Reason and faith are often viewed as polar opposites, and we divide the main eras of Western history into the age of faith, before the Renaissance, and that of reason or the Enlightenment. But can they be so neatly divided? In the absence of reason, faith may lead us astray, but reason without faith seems often to run in circles, sterile and incapable of making choices. People think that science or mathematics are completely based on reason, but this is just wrong. A mathematical theorem is indeed presented as a long sequence of logical arguments but that is not the way mathematicians arrive at their truth. Every new, deep theorem starts with a leap of faith, followed by reasoned arguments and not the other way around. Science is not that different. Kepler, of a strong mystical inclination, was obsessed with his belief that the observable physical world must be explainable by mathematics and so were Copernicus, Galileo, Leibnitz, and Newton. God for them talked through numbers and equations. Einstein was all his life driven by a vision of a unified theory that combined all known forces. Faith in this vision continues to be the driving force in theoretical physics. It is faith that gives purpose and direction, and reason that keeps faith in check. It is telling to note in this sense that the philosophical conceit of modern rationalist thinkers, starting with Descartes, that truth ought to be discoverable by reason alone, has led instead to the opposite conclusion embodied in the radical relativism of postmodern thinkers such as Foucault and Derrida. Note also that faith has a role to play in any human endeavor, good or bad, while reason is often absent

I believe that the extraordinary past successes of Western civilization were due to a very fortunate, naturally evolving, often imperfect, at times broken, balance between the human aspirations enumerated above, facilitated by a precarious equilibrium between reason and faith. Such a fortunate balance was manifest in the democratic systems of governments the West painfully arrived at.

As noted by Solzhenitsyn, various factors, including the new rights, pushed by the Left in the name of expanded notions of personal security, material well-being and equality have reduced the need for self-reliance and altered the balance between freedoms and responsibilities. That process, enhanced by the constant drumbeat of Marxist and Neo-Marxist criticism of cultural values and mores, parroted by the media, Hollywood, etc., led to a manifest depletion of human capital and the collapse of faith. Not just faith in God, as Solzhenitsyn writes, but also faith in our common destiny as Americans.

The Woke movement is taking advantage of the present confusion by trying to impose another version of radical equality, based on the myriad of group identities they can fathom. Their project is obviously self-contradictory and dangerous, yet our leaders seem either determined to go along with it or too cowardly to resist. Many well-intentioned people, especially the young, are confused by an uneasy sense of guilt. This feeling is only exacerbated by a postmodern historical narrative obsessed with finding grievances to the detriment of a measured understanding of the past. The process of deterioration has been going on for a long time but appears now to be moving much faster.

So the question I pose to all of you today is this: Can the process we are witnessing be reversed? Can the old balance be restored? How? Solzhenitsyn himself does not seem to believe that restoration is possible but points instead to some kind of mystical resurrection. Here is how he ends his address:

If the world has not come to its end, it has approached a major turn in history, equal in importance to the turn from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance. It will exact from us a spiritual upsurge: We shall have to rise to a new height of vision, to a new level of life where our physical nature will not be cursed as in the Middle Ages, but, even more importantly, our spiritual being will not be trampled upon as in the modern era.


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1 posted on 11/01/2020 4:22:36 AM PST by gattaca
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To: gattaca
There was a program behind the long march through the institutions of the West. One aspect had to do with the slow deconstruction of Reality, meaning the eternally existing, unchanging, God Who spoke creation into existence, and created mankind in His spiritual image.. This God in Three Persons is the Author of Truth, and Moral Law, the transcendent source of temporal law and rights.

The other aspect was described by Bakunin, Karl Marx's comrade in arms. Bakunin said that for the revolution for the destruction of the Christian West, we will unleash the Devil in mankind. This course of action meant making sin (vice) into Constitutional rights. Pornography---the terrible enslaver of men and even women today, is an example of the deliberate, diabolically conceived enslavement of Americans. Addiction to pornography and other vices makes Americans malleable slaves.

2 posted on 11/01/2020 4:37:14 AM PST by spirited irish
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To: gattaca

Has any Civilization been born from anarchy without religion? We saw how horrible Civilization can be when religion is forcibly removed in the Soviet Union. A common sense of right and wrong enforced by the will of God is the social glue that holds Civilizations together.


3 posted on 11/01/2020 4:59:46 AM PST by Nateman (If the left is not screaming, you are doing it wrong!)
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To: gattaca

Thank you for posting this.

It is, in a way, unfortunate that it is so long and dense, but...to those of who have been paying attention and looking at the roots of many of the issues we have...not so long, and not so dense.

I have books I have read that were transformational for me, in both a political and personal sense. The most powerful of these was “Witness” by Whittaker Chambers. Another was “Atlas Shrugged” by Ayn Rand. A third was Thomas Sowell’s “The Vision of The Anointed” as well as his “Basic Economics-A Citizen’s Guide to The Economy”.

But right up at the top, nearly equal to “Witness” is “The Gulag Archipelago”. It was horrible to read, a dystopian past that has a dystopian present (as an explanation for current events) and a dystopian future (an object warning) inherent in it.

For me, it was nearly impossible to read it and think “That could never happen here” yet...to come to the realization that, it could.

Great article.


4 posted on 11/01/2020 5:01:48 AM PST by rlmorel ("Leftism is the plaything of a society with too much time on its hands." - Candace Owens)
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To: spirited irish

Yes, we now have men and women without souls, Christianity was the rod of steel in their inner being that gave them courage, because when you are a believer, you dont fear death the way others do, and your love and desire to please God is what keeps you under control and self discipline, not heavy and ever more oppressive laws of an atheist state.

And without belief in God, we are completely vulnerable to the lies of Satan, which are manifest constantly by Satan’s mouthpiece, the media.


5 posted on 11/01/2020 5:10:19 AM PST by boxlunch (MSM + Twitter+ FB = post Soviet “Glavit“- Propaganda Arm of the Communist Democrat Party)
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To: rlmorel

I feel really old to have to admit this, but I was actually there for the address.


6 posted on 11/01/2020 5:20:00 AM PST by cgbg (Biden n-2020: Criminal enterprise using cokehead as bagman. Pronounced: Bye Done.)
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To: gattaca

Thanks for the reminder.
bookmark.


7 posted on 11/01/2020 5:27:46 AM PST by Mr Radical (In times of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act)
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To: cgbg

You are lucky. I would love to have been there to see him in person.

He is one of the people who, if I were able to, would like to personally shake his hand and say a heartfelt “Thank You” for writing that powerful book.


8 posted on 11/01/2020 5:41:35 AM PST by rlmorel ("Leftism is the plaything of a society with too much time on its hands." - Candace Owens)
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To: gattaca

For the heck of it take a look at Emerson’s Harvard Divinity School address. If I were on my computer I’d put in a link to it.


9 posted on 11/01/2020 5:54:16 AM PST by cymbeline
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To: cymbeline

Correction:

In an earlier post I meant “The American Scholar”.


10 posted on 11/01/2020 6:24:08 AM PST by cymbeline
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To: rlmorel

A reader!

My son a reading machine, has been pushing this book on me for some time, PDF then hardcover. Because of the copious footnotes, I prefer the paper version.

I’m recycling this comment from another thread.

Like a piece to a large puzzle, this is some of the underlying form and a few of its mechanisms.

A bit out of favor here on FR:
MANUFACTURING CONSENT
by Herman and Chomsky

The first paragraph of the introduction:

THIS BOOK CENTERS IN WHAT WE CALL A “PROPAGANDA MODEL,”
An analytical framework that attempts to explain the performance of the U.S. media in terms of the basic institutional structures and relationships within which they operate. It is our view that, among their other functions, the media serve, and propagandize on behalf of, the powerful societal interests that control and finance them. The representatives of these interests have important agendas and principles that they want to advance, and they are well-positioned to shape and constrain media policy. This is normally not accomplished by crude intervention, but by the selection of right-thinking personnel and by the editors’ and working journalists’ internalization of priorities and definitions of newsworthiness that conform to the institution’s policy.

FREE and you are giving nothing to Noam Chomsky.
Just read the introduction and preface.

https://focalizalaatencion.files.wordpress.com/2012/08/herman-chomsky-2002-manufacturingconsent.pdf

Parallel to what is happening here and now.
Reading of the Glen Greenwald event, it became clear to me, this it.
You may like it.


11 posted on 11/01/2020 6:30:42 AM PST by DUMBGRUNT ("The enemy has overrun us. We are blowing up everything. Vive la France!"Dien Bien Phu last message.)
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To: gattaca

“In his address, Solzhenitsyn says that Western societies place a strong emphasis on freedom and rights. In the US, in particular, these rights are staunchly defended by the Constitution and implemented by a legalistic process, based on specific rules, which studiously avoids making non-legal moral judgements. At the same time, he observes, there has been a notable decline in individual obligations, or personal responsibility.”

Personal freedom without personal responsibility is easily our biggest problem!


12 posted on 11/01/2020 6:48:50 AM PST by aquila48 (Do not let them make you care! Guilting you is how they control you.)
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To: boxlunch

Amen!!!


13 posted on 11/01/2020 7:01:00 AM PST by spirited irish
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To: DUMBGRUNT

Thank you for that warning about Chomsky, because I despise him root and branch, but at your suggestion, I will read the Introduction and preface.

I started to, but after getting a few pages in realized I don’t have the time right now, has to be later. But I have come to depend on my fellow Freepers to provide me with direction that I may not have plotted on my own-I have become a bit hide-bound, and in matters such as this, I appreciate that.

I used to read prodigiously, but about 15 years ago, my eyes began giving me problems, and I simply cannot read printed word for more than a few minutes before my eyes start burning and everything gets blurry. I have been to doctors and tried everything, but...this appears to be something I have to live with.

I listen to audiobooks now, and if I really like a book, I get an eBook.

One of my top three books that influenced me was Hayek’s “The Road To Serfdom”, and I had a hard copy. Unfortunately, I found that I had marked it up so extensively, when I went back to reference it, I could find nothing.

At that point, I decided to try eBooks like the ones from Amazon, and discovered that marking them up was not only really easy to do, finding those markups and quotes was astonishingly easy.

So now, I buy the audiobook. If it is valuable, I get the eBook, and if I REALLY find it valuable, I buy the hardcopy, which my wife doesn’t like but tolerates it...:)


14 posted on 11/01/2020 7:24:53 AM PST by rlmorel ("Leftism is the plaything of a society with too much time on its hands." - Candace Owens)
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To: gattaca
BTTT.

Thanks for posting this.

15 posted on 11/01/2020 8:49:31 AM PST by texas booster (Join FreeRepublic's Folding@Home team (Team # 36120) Cure Alzheimer's!)
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To: gattaca
Outstanding piece!

To this day, non-communist Americans still ridicule the only politician (P.B.) seeking to be the 2000 candidate for President based on the premise that we were engaged (and losing) a Marxist-designed & implemented culture war...

Make no mistake about it, with the communist's endgame now largely complete and virtually unstoppable (at the ballot box), the Fabian & Gramscian Marxists are deeply embedded not only in the Nation's entire education system, but in the GOP itself...

Remember, we now have the communist radicals from the 60's & 70's in political offices all around the Nation successfully pushing the communist/anti-capitalist/hate America agenda...
When you look into the streets today at the communist rioters and criminals, realize that in 15-to-20 years they will be in political positions of power...

One might inclined to say that, with a diagnosis of "terminal", the Nation needs radical/heroic surgery for any hope of survival...

16 posted on 11/01/2020 10:08:17 AM PST by SuperLuminal (Where is Sam Adams now that we desperately need him)
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To: rlmorel

To save time, after the introduction and preface are about half a dozen case studies, they are interesting, no need to read all of them, pick one you are familiar with, and skip to the conclusion(about 10 pages).
Easy peasy!

The last hundred pages are notes, appendix, and the index.


17 posted on 11/01/2020 2:58:31 PM PST by DUMBGRUNT ("The enemy has overrun us. We are blowing up everything. Vive la France!"Dien Bien Phu last message.)
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To: DUMBGRUNT

Thanks...:) That helps...


18 posted on 11/01/2020 4:35:51 PM PST by rlmorel ("Leftism is the plaything of a society with too much time on its hands." - Candace Owens)
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To: rlmorel

“Witness“ was one of the best, if saddest and most depressing books i have ever read. I tried to read Gulag but didnt get very far. I know for my mind and soul I need to challenge myself to read these hard books sometimes, but emotionally it is hard when you see our country pretty far down that road already. Without a religious revival and reformation of our education system top to bottom, even if Trump wins its only putting the emergency brakes on the downward hurtle of our country into the chasm.


19 posted on 11/01/2020 7:04:58 PM PST by boxlunch (MSM + Twitter+ FB = The American Glavit- Propaganda Arm of the Communist Democrat Party)
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To: boxlunch
One of the reasons "Witness" was transformational for me is that it made me recognize that the acts of the Left have not changed...it is not new, and so, it makes me realize it is the same enemy we have grappled with since the end of WWII.

But there was something else even more powerful in that book. I have read it six or seven times.

The first time I read "Witness", it came across as a political story.

The second time I read it, I thought it was a good versus evil story, Americans versus Soviets.

The third time I read it, I realized it was a man's search for God, and this was, for me, the money quote from the book:

“It [Communism] is not new. It is, in fact, man's second oldest faith. Its promise was whispered in the first days of the Creation under the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil: "Ye shall be as gods." It is the great alternative faith of mankind.

Like all great faiths, its force derives from a simple vision. Other ages have had great visions. They have always been different versions of the same vision: the vision of God and man's relationship to God.

The Communist vision is the vision of Man without God.

It is the vision of man's mind displacing God as the creative intelligence of the world. It is the vision of man's liberated mind, by the sole force of its rational intelligence, redirecting man's destiny and reorganizing man's life and the world. It is the vision of man, once more the central figure of the Creation, not because God made man in his image, but because man's mind makes him the most intelligent of the animals.

Copernicus and his successors displaced man as the central fact of the universe by proving that the earth was not the central star of the universe.

Communism restores man to his sovereignty by the simple method of denying God.”

20 posted on 11/01/2020 7:24:41 PM PST by rlmorel ("Leftism is the plaything of a society with too much time on its hands." - Candace Owens)
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