this post was submitted on 25 Jan 2026
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Comradeship // Freechat

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The book I am talking about is "The Gulag Archipelago"

See the screenshot (marked text) first. If the book has the power to change your memories so you can't distinguish between what you experienced and what you read, isn't that basically manipulation?

I know that something similar is possible for example with altered photos of you childhood that can trick your memories of the time, for example some object that you were told to have but you didn't.

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[–] LeeeroooyJeeenkiiins@hexbear.net 27 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

my favorite part about the gulag archipelago is how Ernest Mandel's refutation of the gulag Archipelago mentions that several of the examples Solzhenitsyn gives of the terrible authoritarianism are actually examples of the Soviet State stepping in to PREVENT the abuse of authority

Two trials cited by Solzhenitsyn himself perfectly illustrate the basic difference between the Bolshevik revolution and the Stalinist counterrevolution.

V.V. Oldenberger, an old apolitical engineer who was chief technician of the Moscow waterworks, was persecuted by a communist cell that wanted to remove him because he was so apolitical. He was driven to suicide. Solzhenitsyn waxes indignant about the corrupt, ignoble, communist plotters in this factory. It’s not until you read to the end of Solzhenitsyn’s account that you find out that the trial he is talking about was organized by the Soviet state to defend Oldenberger, a trial organized against the communist cell that had persecuted him, a trial that ended by sentencing his persecutors, a trial that proved that the workers in the plant had been able to freely elect Oldenberger to the Soviet against the unanimous pressure of the communist cell.

The second trial involved a Tolstoyan, a determined opponent of bearing arms who was condemned to death at the height of the civil war for conscientious objection. That trial ended in an even more dramatic fashion. The soldiers assigned to guard the condemned man justifiably considered the verdict monstrous. So they organized a general assembly in the barracks and sent a motion to the city soviet demanding that the verdict be overturned. And they won!

So we hove workers who can elect an apolitical technician to the soviet despite the opposition of a communist cell composed of members who were at best ultrasectarians and at worst totally corrupted careerists. We have soldiers who revolt against the verdict of a court, organize a general assembly, interfere in the “great affairs of state,” and save the life of their prisoner. Solzhenitsyn – without realizing it – is describing the real difference between an era of revolution and an era of counterrevolution. Let him cite similar examples from the Stalin era to prove that basically it was all the same under Lenin and under Stalin!

https://www.marxists.org/archive/mandel/1974/05/solzhenitsyn-gulag.html

[–] AmarkuntheGatherer@lemmygrad.ml 21 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Using Solzhenitsyn's words against him is good and all, but the rest of this is Trot-trot-trot. It's only the most extreme Khrushchovite claims strung together in an attempt to, what? Defend the practices of the first few years to undermine the following 3 decades?