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Home Front: Culture Wars
PROSPERITY BREEDS IDIOTS
2019-09-10
h/t Instapundit
At the start of Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s novel In the First Circle, a Soviet diplomat on home leave in Moscow tries to make an anonymous call to the U.S. embassy. His purpose: warning the Americans of a Soviet theft of atomic secrets. But he gets a dull-witted, indifferent embassy staffer on the line, and the call goes nowhere. Or almost nowhere. The call is monitored by Soviet security. Arrested and imprisoned at the end of the novel, the diplomat’s final thought about Americans is that "prosperity breeds idiots."

Solzhenitsyn’s diplomat channels views that were clearly held by the author himself. Comfort and safety, enjoyed too long in the West, invite complacency‐and complacency leads to stupidity. As a gulag survivor, Solzhenitsyn had a barely disguised disgust for Western elites with little experience of political murder and repression. Nor could he abide the legion of fools who seemed fascinated, from a secure and prosperous distance, with socialist thought. In his foreword to The Socialist Phenomenon‐an extraordinary book by his friend Igor Shafarevich‐Solzhenitsyn noted "the mist of irrationality that surrounds socialism," and stressed that

The doctrines of socialism seethe with contradictions, its theories are at constant odds with its practice, yet due to a powerful instinct, [these contradictions] do not in the least hinder the unending propaganda of socialism. Indeed no precise, distinct socialism even exists; instead there is only a vague, rosy notion of something noble and good, of equality, of communal ownership, and justice . . .

...A Lenin Prize-winning mathematician and a Soviet math genius of global standing, Shafarevich (like his friend Solzhenitsyn) eventually turned to Russian Orthodox Christianity. He became a leading Soviet dissident, and was a vocal supporter of Andrei Sakharov. He divides his thinking in The Socialist Phenomenon into three parts.
Posted by:g(r)omgoru

#6  More like it breeds laziness and contempt of those that have a lower status.
Posted by: DarthVader   2019-09-10 17:06  

#5  Yeah, so?
Posted by: Skidmark   2019-09-10 15:46  

#4  Not really.

Unearned wealth is though
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2019-09-10 15:18  

#3  What the man said.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2019-09-10 14:45  

#2  "Easy times for individuals, are bad times for the race" Heinlein
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2019-09-10 12:30  

#1  Prophetic words unread in the bubbles of our coastal elites.
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2019-09-10 12:05  

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