Russia: Built on the "Banality" of Evil

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The Search in Sochi: Hannah Arendt where are you?

By Jonah Goldberg

Hannah Arendt coined the term "the banality of evil" to describe the galling normalcy of Nazi mass murderer Adolf Eichmann. Covering his trial in Jerusalem, she described Eichmann as less a cartoonish villain than a dull, remorseless, paper-pushing functionary just "doing his job."

The phrase "banality of evil" was instantly controversial, largely because it was misunderstood. Arendt was not trying to minimize Nazism's evil, but to capture its enormity. The staggering moral horror of the Holocaust was that it made complicity "normal." Liquidating the Jews was not just the stuff of mobs and demagogues, but of bureaucracies and bureaucrats.

Now consider the stunted and ritualistic conversation ("controversy" is too vibrant a word for the mundane Internet chatter) about the Soviet Union sparked by the Winter Olympics. The humdrum shrugging at the overwhelming evil of Soviet Communism leaves me nostalgic for the Eichmann controversy. At least Arendt and her critics agreed that evil itself was in the dock; they merely haggled over the best words to put in the indictment.

What to say of the gormless press-agent twaddle conjured up to describe the Soviet Union? In its opening video for the Olympic Games, NBC's producers drained the thesaurus of flattering terms devoid of moral content: "The empire that ascended to affirm a colossal footprint; the revolution that birthed one of modern history's pivotal experiments. But if politics has long shaped our sense of who they are, it's passion that endures."

To parse this infomercial treacle is to miss the point, for the whole idea is to luge by the truth on the frictionless skids of euphemism.

In America, we constantly, almost obsessively, wrestle with the "legacy of slavery." That speaks well of us. But what does it say that so few care that the Soviet Union was built -- literally -- on the legacy of slavery? The founding fathers of the Russian Revolution -- Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky -- started "small," merely throwing hundreds of thousands of people into kontslagerya (concentration camps).

By the time Western intellectuals and youthful folk singers like Pete Seeger were lavishing praise on the Soviet Union as the greatest experiment in the world, Joseph Stalin was corralling millions of his own people into slavery. Not metaphorical slavery, but real slavery complete with systematized torture, rape and starvation. Watching the opening ceremonies of the Olympics, you'd have no idea that from the Moscow metro system to, literally, the roads to Sochi, the Soviet Union -- the supposed epitome of modernity and "scientific socialism" -- was built on a mountain of broken lives and unremembered corpses.

To read Anne Applebaum's magisterial "Gulag: A History" is to subject yourself to relentless tales of unimaginable barbarity. A slave who falls in the snow is not helped up by his comrades but is instantly stripped of his clothes and left to die. His last words: "It's so cold."

Hava Volovich, a once-obscure newspaper editor turned slave laborer, has a baby, Eleonora, in captivity. Eleonora spends her first months in a room where "bedbugs poured down like sand from the ceiling and walls." A year later, Eleonora is wasting away, starving in a cold ward at slave "mothers' camp." She begs her mother to take her back "home" to that bedbug-infested hovel. Working all day in the forest to earn food rations, Hava manages to visit her child each night. Finally, Eleonora in her misery refuses even her mother's embrace, wanting only to drift away in bed. Eleonora dies, hungry and cold, at 15 months. Her mother writes: "In giving birth to my only child, I committed the worst crime there is."

Multiply these stories by a million. Ten million.

"To eat your own children is a barbarian act." So read posters distributed by Soviet authorities in the Ukraine, where 6-8 million people were forcibly starved to death so that the socialist Stalin could sell every speck of grain to the West, including seed stock for the next year's harvest and food for the farmers themselves. The posters were the Soviet response to the cannibalism they orchestrated.

If it is conventional wisdom that the Nazi Holocaust was worse than the Soviet Terror, you would at least think earning the silver in the Devil's Olympics would earn something more than feckless wordsmithery and smug eye-rolling from journalists and intellectuals. Imagine if instead of Sochi these games were in Germany, and suppose the organizers floated out the swastika while NBC talked of the "pivotal experiment" of Nazism. Imagine the controversy.

But when the hammer and sickle float by, there's no outrage. There is only the evil of banality.
 

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Love me some Cossacks. They only murdered 11 of my family members in the 1900s (that I know about)



SOCHI, Russia (AP) -- Cossack militia attacked the Pussy Riot punk group with horsewhips on Wednesday as the artists - who have feuded with Vladmir Putin's government for years - tried to perform under a sign advertising the Sochi Olympics.

Six group members - five women and one man - donned their signature ski masks and were pulling out a guitar and microphone as at least 10 Cossacks and other security officials moved in. One Cossack appeared to use pepper spray. Another whipped several group members while other Cossacks ripped off their masks and threw the guitar in a garbage can.
Police arrived and questioned witnesses, but no one was arrested.
The Cossacks violently pulled masks from women's heads, beating group member Nadezhda Tolokonnikova with a whip as she lay on the ground.
The incident lasted less than three minutes and one Pussy Riot member, a man wearing a bright yellow tank top, was left with blood on his face, saying he had been pushed to the ground.
Krasnodar region governor Alexander Tkachev, who has been advancing Cossacks' interests for years, promised on Wednesday to conduct a "thorough probe" into the incident and prosecute the attackers. Tkachev said in comments carried by the Interfax news agency that the views of Pussy Riot "are not supported by the majority of people in the region" but stressed the importance of abiding the law.
Pussy Riot, a performance-art collective involving a loose membership of feminists who edit their actions into music videos, has become an international flashpoint for those who contend Putin's government has exceeded its authority, particularly restricting human and gay rights.
The group gained international attention in 2012 after barging into Moscow's main cathedral and performing a "punk prayer" in which they entreated the Virgin Mary to save Russia from Putin, who was on the verge of returning to the Russian presidency for a third term.
Two members of the group, Tolokonnikova and Maria Alekhina, were sentenced to two years in prison, but were released in December under an amnesty bill seen as a Kremlin effort to assuage critics before the Olympics.
Later on Wednesday, Tolokonnikova, Alekhina and two others held another surprise mini-performance in central Sochi, this time next to Olympic rings in front of the City Hall.
Jumping up and down, one playing a plastic guitar, they sang-shouted in Russian: "Putin will teach you how to love the motherland!" A person dressed as one of the Olympic mascots joined them for a moment in an apparent joke.
Police were watching but did not intervene. A few passersby heckled them and yelled at onlookers, saying they should be ashamed to watch.
A few of Pussy Riot's opponents showed up later, one dressed like a chicken and the others with pieces of paper bearing crude sexual slurs against the band.
On Tuesday, Tolokonnikova and Alekhina were briefly detained in Sochi, but not arrested.
The group has called for a boycott of the Sochi Olympics and has insisted that any world leader coming to Sochi would be giving tacit approval of Putin's policies.
The Cossacks have been used since last year as an auxiliary police force to patrol the streets in the Krasnodar province, which includes the Winter Olympic host city. Patrol leader Igor Gulichev compared his forces to the Texas Rangers, an elite law-enforcement body that has power throughout that state.
Cossacks trace their history in Russia back to the 15th century. Serving in the czarist cavalry, they spearheaded imperial Russia's expansion and were often used as border guards. Under communism, they virtually disappeared, but have since resurfaced, particularly in the south.
 

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article-2563041-1BA3515400000578-545_634x475.jpg



Russian punk group Pussy Riot were attacked with horsewhips today by Cossack militia as they tried to perform under a sign advertising the Sochi Olympics



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Six group members - five women and one man - donned their signature ski masks and were pulling out a guitar and microphone as at least 10 Cossacks and other security officials moved in



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The incident lasted less than three minutes and one Pussy Riot member, a man wearing a bright yellow tank top, was left with blood on his face, saying he had been pushed to the ground
 

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Fucking Shithole! Good thing good ole American technology was used to get the story out.
 

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Olympic Spoiler Alert:





















Russia Eliminated By Finland In Olympic Men's Hockey Tournament, 3-1


Fuck You, Comrades!
 

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Olympic Spoiler Alert:





















Russia Eliminated By Finland In Olympic Men's Hockey Tournament, 3-1


Fuck You, Comrades!



poor Mother Russia :). Has Putin called an emergency hockey summit ?:) or is he still in the fetal position filled with shame ? On home soil!!

hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahah!!!



bye bye 'stacked ' Russia
 

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How long before, Ukraine Presidents asks Russia for assistance in restoring law and order. This is what Putin wants, an invite for assistance, in marches Russia.
 

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[h=1]Moment suspected Ukrainian SNIPER was dragged by the hair and beaten by anti-government protesters as president reportedly flees capital[/h]
  • Ukrainian protesters said they had taken control of the presidential administration building in central Kiev
  • Unclear whether former Ukrainian prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko has been released from prison
  • Viktor Yanukovych also says he has no intention of resigning or leaving the country

This is the moment an alleged sniper and member of the pro-government forces was beaten by anti-government protestors in Kiev, as protestors took control of the presidential administration building.
As Ukrainian protesters said they had taken control of government offices and President Viktor Yanukovich fled the city, angry civilians kicked and shouted at members of the government, and could be seen tussling with an alleged sniper.
'He's (Yanukovich) not here, none of his officials or anyone linked directly to the administration are here,' Ostap Kryvdyk, a protest leader inside the grounds of the administration building, said.
Crowds of people swarmed the streets of Kiev as the under-fire president said he had no intention of stepping down, despite calls for him to give up his seat.

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An alleged sniper and member of the pro-government forces is beaten by anti-government protestors in Kiev


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The regime of Ukraine's president appeared close to collapse on February 22 as the emboldened opposition took control of central Kiev


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The opposition has taken control of key government and parliament positions and voted to immediately free its jailed leader Yulia Tymoshenko


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An alleged sniper has a crucifix shoved in his face as a crowd grabs him. Thousands have people have swarmed Kiev's streets as their president has allegedly fled the country

It is being reported that the former Ukrainian prime minister and opposition icon Yulia Tymoshenko has been released from prison.

Protesters in the Ukrainian capital claimed full control of the city Saturday following the signing of a Western-brokered peace deal aimed at ending the nation's three-month political crisis.


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  • their president and attacking politicians, a move which Mr Yanukovych branded 'a coup' and likened it to the rise of Nazis in the 1930s.

Viktor Yanukovych also says he has no intention of resigning or leaving the country. Hours after he and opposition leaders signed an agreement aimed at resolving the country's turmoil yesterday, Mr Yanukovych went to Kharkiv in eastern Ukraine, the heartland of his support.

Today, he made the coup accusation in a televised statement.

The opposition has demanded a new election be held by May 25, as the pro-Russian leader's grip on power rapidly eroded following bloodshed in the capital.

The nation's embattled president, Viktor Yanukovych, reportedly had fled the capital for his support base in Ukraine's Russia-leaning east.
Ukraine's border guard service saif that a leading governor and a mayor from the president's eastern base have fled to Russia.

A spokesman for the border guard service, Oleh Slobodyan, said Kharkiv regional governor Mikhaylo Dobkin and Kharkiv Mayor Hennady Kernes left Ukraine across the nearby Russian border.

Both are top allies of President Viktor Yanukovych, whose rule appeared increasingly under question after protesters took over the capital and parliament voted to remove him.

There are fears that Ukraine might split in two, creating a Russian-leaning east and Europe-leaning west.

Police abandoned posts around the capital, and protesters took up positions around the presidential office and residence.
Parliament discussed voting on impeaching Yanukovych and setting a quick date for new elections to end a crisis over Ukraine's identity and future direction.




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Anti-government protesters stand front of a poster showing jailed Ukrainian opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko in the Independence Square in Kiev



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The offices of Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych have been left unguarded, with the protesters in full control of the streets surrounding the government district


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Ukrainian opposition leader and head of the UDAR (Punch) party Vitaly Klitschko addresses anti-government protesters outside the Ukrainian Parliament building in Kiev


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A suspected supporter of Ukraine's embattled president Viktor Yanukovych, center, is assaulted by anti-government protesters in Kiev


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Anti-government protesters attack a deputy of the Party of Regions Vitaly Grushevsky (centre) outside the Ukrainian Parliament building

Yanukovych's whereabouts were unclear Saturday morning. Media outlets reported that he left Kiev for his native eastern Ukraine after surrendering much of his powers and agreeing to early elections by the end of the year.
But despite the promise of an election and significant concessions, protesters blame him for police violence and amassing too many powers and want him ousted immediately.

At a special parliament session today, Oleh Tyahnybok, head of the nationalist Svoboda party, called for discussion of impeachment.
The parliament speaker — Yanukovych ally Volodymyr Rybak — announced resignation, citing ill health as the reason.

The president's representative in parliament warned against splitting the country in two, an outcome that worries many but is increasingly seeming a possibility.
The country's western regions want to be closer to the EU and have rejected Yanukovych's authority in many cities, while eastern Ukraine — which accounts for the bulk of the nation's economic output — favors closer ties with Russia.

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The opposition have called for elections to take place on May 25 and demanded that President Yanukovych stand down immediately


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People gather at Independence Square during a funeral procession for anti-government protesters killed in clashes with the police in Kiev


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Anti-government protesters sing the Ukrainian national anthem at the Independence square in central Kiev


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People walk by a police water cannon brought by protesters to the Independence square

The president's concessions came as part of a deal intended to end violence that killed scores and left hundreds wounded in Kiev this week as snipers opened fire on protesters. It was the worst violence in Ukraine's modern history.
Andriy Parubiy, a leader of the protest camp on Independence Square, known as the Maidan, was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying that Yanukovych fled for Kharkiv, the center of Ukraine's industrial heartland. Kharkiv was the capital of Soviet Ukraine from 1919-1934.
The claims of the president's departure could not be immediately confirmed, however.
A group of protesters in helmets and shields stood guard at the president's office today, with few police in sight.

Protesters booed opposition figures who took to a stage last night to present their deal with the president, which cuts Yanukovych's powers.
"Death to the criminal!" some chanted, referring to Yanukovych.
 

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My grandfather was arrested in Kiev when he was 12 years old. His family was dirt poor and he stole bread from a street vendor. A guard let him out. He fled on a ship to America when he was 14. He never saw his mother again although he sent her money, but isn't sure whether she ever received it. He struggled for a few years boxing cigars before becoming a paper hanger. When my Dad was born 3 generations of my grandmother's family shared the same house in a neighborhood that I wouldn't dare walk through today. I know my Dad had to fight after school everyday. Eventually granddad started his own wallpapering business and they moved to NE Philly. His 3 sons became a pharmacist, a doctor who served in the army, and another army vet who works for the State of NJ (no, not Chris Christie's Supervisor of Lane Closures)! My Dad also had 3 sons, a doctor, a lawyer who quit to work as an airline consultant, and a gambler. Just thought I'd share a bit, while watching the odds screen do what it's been doing all year, NOTHING :)
 

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  • Back into an Embrace with the Russian Bear - Zvi Mazel
    By pressuring the new regime in Cairo to demonstrate its commitment to democracy, the U.S. is driving it straight into the willing embrace of one of the least democratic countries in Europe. An unprecedented arms deal is about to be concluded in which Moscow will supply Cairo with $3 billion worth of such sophisticated weapons as MiG-29 warplanes, anti-aircraft systems, Kornet anti-tank guided missiles and combat helicopters. It follows that Russian experts will be sent to Egypt to train and advise in the use of these weapons, as well as help with maintenance. Egyptian officers and technicians will be sent to Russia. Members of the intelligence services of Egypt will probably be next.
    The new regime in Cairo, which has its hands full fighting radical Islam, desperately wants closer ties with the West but has to be content with the embrace of the Russian bear - an embrace which is not limited to military assistance. Russians make up most of the tourists coming to Egypt these days, and Egypt feeds its masses on mainly Russian wheat. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has offered help in building the first nuclear plant in Egypt. Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy said that Egypt had submitted to the U.S. several detailed proposals for greater dialogue - and was still waiting for an answer. The writer, a fellow of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs, is a former Israeli ambassador to Romania, Egypt and Sweden. (Jerusalem Post)
 

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Crazy John McCain says we need boots on the ground in Ukraine.John McCain Went To Ukraine And Stood On Stage With A Man Accused
Of Being An Anti-Semitic Neo-Nazi. McCain was repeatedly photographed with Oleh Tyahnybok, the leader of the right wing nationalist party Svoboda.

'McCain has sometimes revealed a simplistic, Cold War viewpoint of Russia. You have to wonder if,
by going to Ukraine and standing on stage with a man accused of being an anti-Semitic neo-Nazi,
he may have shown that trait again."

I give Obama an F+ as Potus but I'm almost glad McCain was defeated in 2008.
 

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Crazy John McCain says we need boots on the ground in Ukraine.John McCain Went To Ukraine And Stood On Stage With A Man Accused
Of Being An Anti-Semitic Neo-Nazi. McCain was repeatedly photographed with Oleh Tyahnybok, the leader of the right wing nationalist party Svoboda.

'McCain has sometimes revealed a simplistic, Cold War viewpoint of Russia. You have to wonder if,
by going to Ukraine and standing on stage with a man accused of being an anti-Semitic neo-Nazi,
he may have shown that trait again."

I give Obama an F+ as Potus but I'm almost glad McCain was defeated in 2008.

Sadly, McCain has become nothing more than a fool.
 

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