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20 Lessons on Tyranny

auntiehill

The Blooness
Premium Member
Important lessons we need to reiterate.

From Open Culture
...as read by John Lithgow.


In 2017, historian Timothy Snyder wrote the concise book On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century, which went on to become a New York Times bestseller. A historian of fascism (then at Yale, now at U. Toronto), Snyder wanted to offer Americans a useful guide for resisting the country’s drift towards authoritarianism. It was handy then and even handier now–especially as the feds bear down on different institutions undergirding American civil society. Law firms, universities, corporations, media outlets–they’re all getting squeezed, and many have already violated the first of Snyder’s 20 lessons: “Do not obey in advance.” Actor John Lithgow reads a condensed version of Snyder’s lessons:

1. Do not obey in advance
2. Defend institutions
3. Beware the one-party state
4. Take responsibility for the face of the world
5. Remember professional ethics
6. Be wary of paramilitaries
7. Be reflective if you must be armed
8. Stand out
9. Be kind to our language
10. Believe in truth
11. Investigate
12. Make eye contact and small talk
13. Practice corporeal politics
14. Establish a private life
15. Contribute to good causes
16. Learn from peers in other countries
17. Listen for dangerous words
18. Be calm when the unthinkable arrives
19. Be a patriot
20. Be as courageous as you can

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"Believe in truth" :lol: Good one!

"Listen for dangerous words" :guffaw:
( this coming from people who find the truth dangerous )



I think there are indeed dangerous words--not the words themselves but how often tyrants use them.
How often does Cheeto Voldemort use the word "criminal?" Harvard is full of criminals, migrants are criminals and all that other BS. The idiots hear this and really believe it.
 
Sadly, the Intimates in my life lack the desire, awareness and agreement with numbers 4, 12, 16 and 20.
 
"Defend institutions" seems pretty unthinkingly verging on authoritarianism in name of being anti-authoritarian (defend right to disagree, dissent, criticize seems a lot more practically beneficial).

Few people are openly outright pro-one-party state, that's considered pretty unacceptable, and yet it's also very common for people to think their party is the right one that should be getting its way a lot more of the time or even pretty much always.

Really not sure what he means by paramilitaries, I think those are indeed widely seen as pretty bad/unacceptable, unless he means sub-national law enforcement which I think aren't thought of as paramilitaries but are widely thought of as very necessary.

Don't think most Americans will ever be real enthusiastic about learning from, let alone deferentially, people from other countries, to consider them peers, there may be some admiration on a few issues like health care provision, union rights but that pretty limited to those few issues rather than really widespread.
 
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