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Home Front: Culture Wars
This Week in Books, March 24, 2019
2019-03-24
Hotel USSR
Memoir of a Soviet 'Non-Artist'

Oleg Atbashian
Copyright 2019 Oleg Atbashian

Mr. Atbashian, author of Shakedown Socialism and host of The Peoples' Cube , has written an account of his experiences growing up in the USSR.

Mr. Atbashian has a very clear, sharp mind, and it is interesting following his memories of coming of age and interpreting his environment, the Communist/Soviet construct. At 200 pages long and a personal narrative, I am going to keep the book quotations to a single entry.

Page 48-49

I could see how, many years ago, the industrial revolution would have resulted in resentment and longing for the idealized certainty of feudalism. Some couldn't accept a society where the free markets allowed uneducated shopkeepers and engine mechanics to wake up millionaires, while refined aristocrats often went penniless. It seemed unfair that money ruled while quixotic passions and heroism became a joke. Poets sold the dream of a bygone era where benevolent overlords took care of loyal peasants. That poetic mirage was more appealing than the prosaic reality of money and profits, where every man was responsible for his own destiny. Eventually some sappy thinkers invented "feudalism with a human face" and called is socialism. If the USSR were one day to go back to capitalism, I thought, we could expect a similar longing for the certainty of the good old days.

I imagined that Marx would have been terrified by the USSR: this surely wasn't what he had intended. He would also be dismayed by all the other Marxist regimes, no matter what continent or cultural background. Perhaps, the flaw was not in the implementation, but in the ideas themselves, consistently failed in practice, it was probably not so great to begin with.

Thinking about it made me draw an eerie specter of Don Quixote, the feudal fossil that haunted the capitalist world. He lurks outside its neon-lit cities and waits for an opportunity to attack its industries that are the updated windmills. I took Picasso's famous ink sketch and redrew it as a literal representation of Don Quixote's skeletal figure in three dimensions.

To the Spanish communist Pablo Picasso, Don Quixote may have been a heroic, if comical, social justice warrior. To Miguel Cervantes, who had created this character four hundred years ago, Don Quixote was an archetypal delirious fruitcake who wanted to change the world by turning the clock back to the idealized era that had never existed.

This bit stuck with me because I have just re-read Don Quixote, the first time being in school for assignment. My instructor and popular opinion would have you believe that Quixote was the epitome of chivalry and how things should be. Cervantes makes it clear at the very beginning that a jack-o-lantern has more light behind its eyes than Don Quixote, and by the time he charged the group of travelers and his horse fell, I was cheering for the dude thrashing him.

Back to the book. At $39.70 it seems a bit much for a short paperback, but you will see the illustrations, such as Don Quixote, that Mr. Atbashian created. This is a quality publication and well worth the $40 dollars. I hope the electron version includes the illustrations, as they are the spine of story.
I checked the Kindle version, It does.
If you have not read Shakedown Socialism, give it a read too.

This Week in Emergency Preparedness

Guess there were some springtime storms in the Texas Panhandle last night, which makes it Spring Tornado Season. Pack accordingly and keep an eye out. Especially you all along the Mississippi river system as the Nebraska flood waters work downstream: that crest meeting with a local storm would cause some flooding real quick, especially if the area is already saturated.

How is your boogie bag? New tech keeps coming out which expands your emergency kit and improves on the tools you have. Example: portable batteries for cell phones, electronics, etc. These things are as small as a deck of cards and will keep your communications up and running. Got an extra charging cord in your kit? Real aid is finally making its way into Nebraska...let's call it T+6 days - are you prepared for you and yours to be on a cot in a gym for that long before substantial help arrives? Emergency blankets take up almost no space. Marine/boating emergency food is highly compact and will get you by.

Take a minute this weekend during sportsball halftime or the walking soap opera and peek through your kit, or get one started. Because one second you may be sheltering from a 50mph blizzard, and the next a wall of water 10' tall is coming towards you. Looking at you, California and your snow pack.
Posted by:swksvolFF

#3  Book is full of lines like that; it was tough to pick a passage.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2019-03-24 13:38  

#2   Eventually some sappy thinkers invented "feudalism with a human face" and called is socialism

Feudalism with a human face, yeah I'm stealing that!
Thanks, swksvolFF.
Posted by: SteveS   2019-03-24 13:17  

#1  Hurrrah, a TWiB!!

Bought Shakedown Socialism on Kindle and downloaded the Kindle sample chapters of Hotel USSR. Trying to stay within my book budget is haaaarrd!
Posted by: trailing wife   2019-03-24 13:15  

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