Stuff I like   Books   Movies   Music Other stuff
 
Home
 
The Ubiquitous About Page
 
LGTF
 
The Arkansas Dictionary
 
Weeds'n'thangs
 
Random Thoughts
 
Some More Stuff
 
Enak Quotations
 
MacArthur's Freehold
 
Balance of Power
 
String of Worlds
 
Victims of ACCH


















Sat Dec 11 19:01:40 UTC 2021

Beginning of the end?
This was originally written sometime in 2017 or 2018, soon after the witch-hunts against the new Trump administration began.



Every American should read 'Darkness at Noon'


If you have never read Arthur Koestler's 'Darkness at Noon', or if it has been a while, now would be a good time to read it.  In my case it was probably over 40 years - I read it as a teenager and recently heard it being discussed on a radio talk show.  I was sufficiently intrigued that I dug it of my library and read it a couple of times over a week or two. 

The relevance of the book to current events didn't immediately start me thinking along these lines until some time later when, while driving to work, I found myself being annoyed by the condition of the streets.  That was nothing new - the roads and streets are falling apart faster than they are being fixed, and every time the legislature meets the priorities are new taxes, increases of existing taxes, and regulations.  The taxes are supposed to fix the roads, and yet taxes increase regularly and the roads and other public infrastructure continue to deteriorate. 

But one day, after having just re-read the aforementioned book, while driving to work, I found myself thinking of Rubahov's comment as he is being driven to the prison, that the cars imported at great expense are quickly destroyed by the awful roads.  That was the beginning, the thought that triggered my closer examination of the similarities to today's world. 

If you don't know what 'Darkness' is about, I'll explain shortly.  Just another observation or two. 

Gletkin (one of Rubashov's interrogators) describes torturing peasant farmers who have hidden their crops rather than surrender them to the government to feed the people in the cities and to sell abroad to finance the armed forces.  He further complains that they have small amounts of gold hidden away, and the government needs it. How different is that, may I ask, from the IRS putting people in prison for not paying enough in taxes.  Or having your house taken if you don't pay the property taxes for a while.  Aside from the fact that people are not yet being summarily executed for these offenses, not much. 

At the end, Rubashov confesses to a litany of non-existent crimes, signs the confession, and then confesses again at a public trial.  He knows from the moment he is arrested that he will be executed in the end, no matter how cooperative he is.  And so he was. 

In case you don't know what 'Darkness at Noon' is about: it is a pseudo-fictional work (a term of my invention, perhaps) which is to say it is about real people and events but the actual names of people and places are not used.  As the Russian names suggest, it takes place in Russia.  The main character is a man named Nikolai Salmanovich Rubashov, one of the participants in the Russian Revolution, after which many of them occupied positions in the government.  When Stalin assumed power he removed almost all of them, and most were either sent to the Gulags or, in many cases, coerced into confessing to various non-existent crimes, and then having them confess publicly in a trial, after which they were executed. 

As I observed earlier, I was prompted to revisit this book during the first year or so of the Trump administration.  As time went on the similarities of the Mueller 'investigation' to the Stalin's purges began to become more apparent.  Now, we are not yet at the point where political enemies are being shot in the basements of prisons (as far as anyone knows) but consider a few of the victims of Robert Mueller's search for a crime.  With, no doubt, his chief lieutenant Andrew Weissmann playing the role of Gletkin. 

Paul Manafort was arrested in a spectacular raid involving a dozen FBI agents and went on for hours.  All this to get an old man, nearly seventy years old, from his home to prison.  Stalin held show trials for his enemies, but since people don't watch trials so much, the government stages dramatic raids for public consumption.  He was eventually held without bail, in solitary confinement, until his trial for charges long ago abandoned by investigators as not worthy of prosecution.  His eventual punishment would amount to a death sentence, as a man of his age and physical condition would be unlikely to survive its duration. 

General Mike Flynn was a more literal version of Rubashov, as he was coerced into pleading guilty to a non-existent crime, in part through being impoverished by legal expenses (much of it paid to a law firm that seems to have deliberately acted against his interests) and eventually by threatening his son (a common Communist practice).  Stalin's prosecutors used a variety of methods to extract confessions, including torture, threats (or actual violence) against their families, and often wearing them down through continued imprisonment and interrogations.  And like Stalin's victims, who confessed publicly at their trials, knowing they would be shot with hours of the verdict, General Flynn literally begged the judge to pronounce a sentence and let him begin his prison sentence.  The judge (a solidly credentialed political operative himself) refused, seeking to continue the case, which he does to this day, even after the prosecution has requested the dismissal of the charges. 

And while there are many victims in this case, let us not forget Roger Stone.  In this case, another elderly man was arrested on dubious charges in another sensational operation - dozens of armed personnel and armored vehicles, all to fetch one old man off to prison.  And, denials withal, tipping off one of the most dishonest news outlets (if you can call what CNN, or for that matter the other alphabet soup of broadcasters) does news) so they could produce the television show.  Afterwards, Mr. Stone would be convicted of various crimes in what any intelligent and observant person would regard as a rigged trial.  Of course, for anyone on the wrong side of the political spectrum, any trial in that district is rigged against you.  Even with the revelation that the jury foreman was admittedly biased (and lied under oath during jury selection) his request for a retrial was summarily denied. 

There are numerous others, not only in this case but going back many years.  Lewis 'Scooter' Libby (guilty of being Dick Cheney's chief of staff), Ray Donovan (guilty of being Ronald Reagan's Secretary of Labor - was fortunate enough to be acquitted but then asked "Where do I go to get my reputation back?").  Since the success of the Watergate affair in removing a president, the enemies of the constitution and the rule of law will stop at nothing to achieve their goals of remaking those things to the state they desire. 

The operatives of the Democrat party resemble the enforcement arm of the Russian Communist Party.  Their methodology is embodied in the words of Lavrentiy Beria, Stalin's chief enforcer, who said "Show me the man, and I'll show you the crime." Democrats choose a victim and them manufacture the crime. 

If this is allowed to continue unchecked, we will share the experience of Stalinist Russia soon enough.  And if this nation falls, it will most likely mean centuries of darkness for the entire world.  Our founders knew the republic they built was dependent on the character of its citizens, and that if that was allowed to deteriorate the republic would fall.  And the abysmal depravity of people who will engage in the vicious destruction of the lives of people who have done nothing wrong is beyond the ability of normal people to understand.  However, in the end the republic will be ruined not by the few truly evil characters such as these, but by the millions who do nothing to prevent it. 


Author's notes:

The main character, Nikolai Rubashov, is based largely on Nikolai Bukharin.  Bukharin was a prominent Bolshevik, an associate of Lenin and Trotsky, and part of the new communist government formed after the revolution.  He seems to have had misgivings about numerous things, particularly the purges and genocide but supported the party nonetheless and tried to make the new state a success. 

Beginning to read 'Darkness at Noon' again, I sometimes found myself feeling sympathy for Rubashov.  This is not uncommon when observing a person in such circumstances, and it is important to remember that he was not a nice person.  He was one of the architects of the Russian Revolution, and was, through the establishment of what became the Soviet Union, responsible for the deaths of many people.  On a personal level, he routinely betrayed people when the interests of the Party were more important. 

So it is with the victims of the current witch hunts.  Manafort, Stone, and even General Flynn (who after his retirement became a lobbyist and worked with some unsavory clients) are not especially likable characters.  But to fabricate crimes in order to prosecute them because of their political connections is much more wicked than anything they might have done.  To progress much further down that road is to usher in a new dark age. 



Links
 
Sat Dec 11 19:01:40 UTC 2021
Last updated: Mon 23 Oct 2023 12:17:13 PM CDT : 1698081433
 

  Some favorite blogs
 
Vox Popoli
 
Free Republic
 
RT
 
Citizen Free Press
 
Liberty Daily
 
Hide 5
 
The Daily Mail
 
Legal Insurrection
 
Mark Steyn
 
Infowars
 
Front Page Magazine
 
PJ Media
 
Lew Rockwell
 
James Howard Kunstler
 
Clash Daily
 
Newsmax
 
The Burning Platform
 
The Federalist
 
Conservative Treehouse
 
Valiant News
 
Brownstone Institute
 
Mises Institute
 
Slay News