Posted on 10/24/2006 4:36:44 AM PDT by Chi-townChief
'There aren't any good brave causes left," railed Jimmy Porter in John Osborne's play "Look Back in Anger" on its first night in August 1956. Both the phrase and the play almost immediately established themselves as revolutionary. Osborne's play changed the theater throughout the English-speaking world and opened the way for new dramas exploring themes of social criticism and the absurd. As for the phrase, it captured the mood of a left dissatisfied with the tepid social justice of the postwar welfare state and nostalgic for such grand revolutionary causes as the Spanish civil war.
Two months later such a grand revolutionary cause pushed onto the stage of history in the form of the Hungarian Revolution. This was actually a better, braver cause than the Spanish civil war because it combined a national struggle for Hungary's independence with a political fight for the individual freedom of ordinary Hungarians. The complaint leveled by Hungarians then and by historians later is that the United States and the West held aloof and gave the freedom-fighters no help against Soviet tanks.
The Hungarian Revolution is an instance of a law that has frequently frustrated Marxist plans: the law of unintended consequences. After Stalin's death, his Kremlin successors wanted to create a more liberal communism. Khrushchev began the process with his February 1956 "secret speech" denouncing the crimes of Stalin and his cult of personality.
Discontent, already widespread, began to be openly expressed throughout the Eastern bloc. Riots broke out in Poland and the party shrewdly appointed the relatively popular reformer Wladyslaw Gomulka to head the regime. That quieted things temporarily. Khrushchev sought the same effect in Hungary by informing the hard-line ruler, Matyas Rakosi, that he was ill and needed treatment in Moscow. Instead of calming things down, however, this stimulated demands for greater freedom. On Oct. 23 a march called unofficially by students grew to a quarter of a million people. They pulled down a giant statue of Stalin. Police and army units went over to the people, handing over their weapons. Within the space of four days, the revolutionaries had defeated a first wave of Soviet troops (some of whom went over to the revolution) and forced a dithering Kremlin to appoint the reformer Imre Nagy to head a new government.
But the Soviets themselves soon realized that Hungary would either be brought back under Soviet control or it would become a fully independent democratic nation. On May 4 they surrounded Budapest and crushed the revolution with massive force ruthlessly applied. More than 20,000 Hungarians were killed. Nagy was hanged. Communist gangs roamed Budapest arresting thousands of suspected revolutionaries and deporting them to the gulag. Thousands more Hungarians fled to the West.
Here was a good brave cause if ever there was one. Yet with honorable exceptions -- the Budapest correspondent of the British Daily Worker saw his reports suppressed, left the Communist party and wrote an honest history of the events -- the Jimmy Porters of the left never really rallied to the Hungarians. A revolution against socialism was a crisis and embarrassment for them rather than a cause. Socialism was so economically disastrous that it could not survive without political repression.
Within the West 1956 had several political effects. It extended for about a decade the dominance of what historian David Gress has called the "anti-totalitarian" mind-set over the "anti-fascist" one. Anti-totalitarianism was the doctrine that despotisms of both right and left were to be equally (or almost equally) condemned. Its political effect was to prevent the non-communist left from cooperating with communists against their conservative and liberal opponents.
Its second effect was to midwife a new left. Thousands of members resigned from Western communist parties while not drawing Khrushchev's logical conclusion that a liberal communism was impossible. Their moment came in 1968 with the Prague Spring offering "socialism with a human face." Fortunately for its admirers, this was suppressed by Moscow before the contradictions between socialism and democracy could emerge. It gave the new left a myth to cherish for the next two decades. And because America was fighting in Vietnam at the same moment, it also fostered another myth on the left: that the Cold War was a battle between two equally odious imperialisms.
The freedom revolutions of 1989 demolished both myths once and for all. They were, ironically, caused by Gorbachev's decision to repeat Khrushchev's attempt to install "reform communists" with moderately human faces throughout Eastern Europe. Yet again, once Soviet repression was lifted, the people quickly demanded real liberty rather than its communist imitation. When they did, their newly free societies revealed not only the economic ruins of the planned economy but also mass graves and historical crimes. We in the West finally observed the full reality of "really existing socialism."
Without the sacrifice of thousands of Hungarian patriots, however, the West might have learned that lesson too late and at first hand.
Many of the Hungarian "revolutionaries" were former military who fought on Hitler's side, they killed a lot of their own countrimen with utmost cruelty, many of those killed were, of course, Jews. Then came the Russians. That is why, the Hungarian Jewish community is vehemently opposed to putting up a monument to one of the uprising leaders. Those events were very controversial and require close historical scrutiny from many angles. That said, the Russian invasion was, of course, deplorable.
Yes, history is made up of nuances and "many angles". I used to live in the "evil empire" and our school textbooks and media had no nuances, everything was politically correct and along the party lines. That's why we had an evil empire.
I was born and grew up in that thucking USSR myself. And I came to reject its civilizational underpinning [aka "Russity" since Ivan Kalita and to the present] root, branch, trunk and leaves.
Hi, roomie.
"moral defecativeness".
Man, I noticed you like linguistic excercises -:)))) Now seriously speaking, there is absolutely no need to sugarcoat everyone who partook in 1956 Hungarian revolution/uprising against Stalinism. When revolutions and any other social upheaval start, no matter how honorable the cause is, there are always less than savory characters that do join. The cause that Hungarian Revolutionaries fought for was undoubtely honorable and the Soviet intervention was deplorable. However, quite often we have to be able not to mix completely the cause and those who participate in it.
moral defecativeness = sh*tty morals.
Political psychiatry makes a comeback
Editor: Jonas Bernstein
September 30:Soviet-style forced psychiatry has reemerged in Russia, the Washington Post reports. In March, police and emergency medical personnel in Dubna, 70 miles north of Moscow, seized Marina Trutko, a former nuclear scientist who became a vocal activist and public defender, after injecting her with the powerful tranquilizer haloperidol. She spent six weeks undergoing a daily regimen of injections and drugs to treat what was diagnosed as a paranoid personality disorder. Last year, Nikolai Skachkov, who protested police brutality and official corruption in Omsk, was ordered to undergo a psychiatric evaluation that concluded he was suffering from an acute sense of justice. He spent the next six months in a closed psychiatric facility.
Independent observers say dozens of activists have been wrongfully hospitalized in mental facilities in recent years, and that the number is increasing. Psychiatric abuse has begun to creep back in, and were seeing more cases, Lyubov Vinogradova, executive director of the Independent Psychiatric Association of Russia, tells the Post. Its not on a mass scale like in Soviet times, but its worrying.
These are matters which are not "over". The presumed Democrat presidential nominee for the 2008 election interned under the Communist Treuhaft, used the Soviet apologist Talbott as Deputy Secretary of State. The perceived betrayal by Eisenhower became an actual betrayal when Kennedy sold out the Cuban people, when Carter's weakness invited the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, when the Democrat congress sentenced two million Cambodians to death.
John T. Flynn, The Roosevelt Myth, was republished on the fiftieth anniversary of its first edition (1948) with a foreward by my college's history professor. It reveals the Roosevelt betrayal of eastern Europe to Stalin's rule against which Hungary rose in 1956.
And it will be remembered Hillary (She Who Must Be Oyveyyed) "channelled" Roosevelt's "wife".
The battle against evil is never finalized. Those closest to its vile breath know this. We with the luxury of a lifetime of liberty must awaken to it.
Soon they will be doing lobotomies to get the desired robots!!
Talk about "chilling dissent".
It's very frightening to know this is happening over there.
I recall when Putin visited, talked of religion, wore his Mother's cross -I had higher hopes for him and Russia then.
bump in the night
"Beware of things that go bump in the night!!"
I'll pass on the next line
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