this post was submitted on 25 Jan 2026
66 points (98.5% liked)

Comradeship // Freechat

2681 readers
249 users here now

Talk about whatever, respecting the rules established by Lemmygrad. Failing to comply with the rules will grant you a few warnings, insisting on breaking them will grant you a beautiful shiny banwall.

A community for comrades to chat and talk about whatever doesn't fit other communities

founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
 

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.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] cfgaussian@lemmygrad.ml 21 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

There are better ways to debunk Solzhenitsyn than to say "everything was fine under Lenin, it's actually under Stalin that things became bad".

You do far more damage to the communist cause when you say nonsense like "Stalinist counterrevolution" than you undo by pointing out a few inconsistencies in a work of anti-communist propaganda fiction.

In drawing a false distinction between the "good Lenin" and the "bad Stalin", in denying the continuity of the revolution and socialist construction between the two periods, this text implicitly gives credence to everything Solzhenitsyn writes about the Stalin era Gulag.