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  • Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, reflecting on the Soviet Union's descent into totalitarian

  • rule in the mid-20th century, and all the things that could have been done to prevent

  • it, wrote the following:

  • Ifif

  • We didn't love freedom enough.

  • And even morewe had no awareness of the real situation.

  • . .we hurried to submit.

  • We submitted with pleasure!

  • We purely and simply deserved everything that happened afterward.”

  • Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago The 20th century clearly shows that totalitarianism

  • is not a solution to any problem, but a social ill of the most horrific kind.

  • More innocent men, women, and children were killed by the totalitarian regimes of the

  • 20th century than by natural disasters, pandemics or even the two world wars.

  • If, therefore, we are unfortunate enough to be living in a world flirting with the sickness

  • of totalitarianism, what can we do to escape?

  • In this video, relying on the insights of those who studied, and lived under totalitarian

  • rule, we are going to explore what is called a forward escape from the control of the cruel

  • and twisted minds of would-be totalitarians.

  • To understand what this form of escape entails we will contrast it with two other ways to

  • escape from the hardships of living through an attempted totalitarian takeoverthe

  • backward escape and the physical escape.

  • The backward escape, entails dulling one's awareness of the reality and precariousness

  • of one's situation through the use of drugs and alcohol or by zoning out in front of screens

  • for hours on end.

  • The backward escape can provide short-term relief to feelings of anxiety, depression

  • and boredom, but the more one relies on such activities the more one's mental health

  • deteriorates.

  • Furthermore, the backward escape does nothing to prevent the rise of totalitarianism as

  • it promotes docility, passivity, and apathy, all traits that make people more manipulable

  • and controllable, or Dr. Joost Meerloo wrote in his book on totalitarianism:

  • The cult of passivity and so-called relaxation is one of most dangerous developments of our

  • times.

  • Essentially, it represents a camouflage pattern, the double wish not to see the dangers and

  • challenges of life and not to be seen.

  • . .Silent, lonely relaxation with alcohol, sweets, [or] the television screen.

  • . .may soothe the mind into a passivity that may gradually make it vulnerable to the seductive

  • ideology of some feared enemy.

  • Denying the danger of totalitarianism through passivity, may gradually surrender to its

  • blandishments those who were initially afraid of it.

  • Joost Meerloo, The Rape of the Mind An alternative to backward escape, is the

  • physical escape which is to relocate to a place that offers more freedom.

  • This form of escape has many benefits, for given that we have one chance at life, why

  • not live somewhere absent the stifling control of corrupt and power-hungry politicians and

  • bureaucrats?

  • But there are problems with this form of escape.

  • Firstly, for many people it is not practical to pack up and move to a new land.

  • Furthermore, if we live at a time when the rise of tyranny is a global phenomenon the

  • practicality of the physical escape diminishes further, as the sought after pockets of freedom

  • are few and far between.

  • What is more, if totalitarianism is permitted to proliferate the places that are free now,

  • may not remain so for long.

  • Running away, like escaping backward, is not the ideal solution to the rise of totalitarianism,

  • instead the solution is to escape forward into a new and better reality.

  • What does the forward escape entail?

  • To answer this question we need to dispel with the notion that totalitarianism can be

  • defeated through compliance.

  • Many people cede to the commands of would-be totalitarians because they believe that so

  • doing is the quickest means to return to some semblance of normality.

  • But this is a cowardly and ignorant way to act.

  • For compliance only emboldens totalitarian regimes, a point emphasized by the political

  • philosopher Hannah Arendt in her book The Origins of Totalitarianism:

  • “. . .the most characteristic aspect of totalitarian terror [is that] it is let loose

  • when all organized opposition has died down and the totalitarian ruler knows that he no

  • longer need be afraid.

  • . . Stalin started his gigantic purges not in 1928 when he conceded, “We have internal

  • enemies,” . . .but in 1934 when all former opponents hadconfessed their errors,”

  • and Stalin himself, at the Seventeenth Party Congress . . .declared “. . .there is nothing

  • more to prove and, it seems, no one to fight.””

  • Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism Compliance is the food that feeds totalitarians.

  • Compliance is not, and never will be, the path back to some form of normality.

  • Rather non-compliance and civil disobedience are essential to counter the rise of totalitarian

  • rule.

  • But in addition to resistance, a forward escape into a reality absent the sickness of totalitarian

  • rule requires the construction of a parallel society.

  • A parallel society serves two main purposes: it offers pockets of freedom to those rejected

  • by the totalitarian system, or who refuse to participate in it, and it forms the foundation

  • for a new society that can grow out of the ashes of the destruction wrought by the totalitarians.

  • Or asclav Havel, a dissident under the communist rule of Czechoslovakia, explains

  • in his book The Power of the Powerless:

  • When those who have decided to live within the truth have been denied any direct influence

  • on the existing social structures, not to mention the opportunity to participate in

  • them, and when these people begin to create what I have called the independent life of

  • society, this independent life begins, of itself, to become structured in a certain

  • way.

  • . . .[these] parallel structures do not grow . . .out of a theoretical vision of systemic

  • change (there are no political sects involved), but from the aims of life and the authentic

  • needs of real people.”

  • clav Havel, The Power of the Powerless There are innumerable ways to contribute to

  • the construction of a parallel society.

  • One can build technologies that promote freedom or agoristic economic institutions that further

  • voluntary exchange.

  • One can run a business that resists implementing unjust laws or mandates, or one can create

  • media or educational institutions that counter the lies and propaganda of the state.

  • Or one can create music, literature or artwork that counters the staleness of totalitarian

  • culture.

  • The parallel society is a decentralized and voluntary alternative to the centralized and

  • coercive control of the totalitarian society and as Havel explains:

  • One of the most important tasks the 'dissident movements' have set themselves is to support

  • and develop [parallel social structures].

  • . . What else are those initial attempts at social self organization than the efforts

  • of a certain part of society to . . . rid itself of the self-sustaining aspects of totalitarianism

  • and, thus, to extricate itself radically from its involvement in the [totalitarian] system?”

  • clav Havel, The Power of the Powerless And as he explains further:

  • “…it would be quite wrong to understand the parallel structures and the parallel [society]

  • as a retreat into a ghetto and as an act of isolation, addressing itself only to the welfare

  • of those who had decided on such a courseThe ultimate phase of this process is the situation

  • in which the official structuressimply begin withering away and dying off, to be

  • replaced by new structures that have evolved from 'below' and are put together in a

  • fundamentally different way.”

  • clav Havel, Living in Truth The construction of a parallel society, however,

  • is not merely a long-term solution to totalitarian destruction, but also serves to counter the

  • rise of totalitarian rule.

  • For the act of building parallel social structures reveals that not everyone will just roll over

  • and submit to total state control and as was noted by Hannah Arendt, this helps keep the

  • would-be totalitarians in check.

  • This process also counters the social atomization that comes with totalitarian rule by promoting

  • voluntary communal bonds between those who cherish freedom.

  • And as an added benefit, for those who partake in this process, it can serve as a healthy

  • vehicle to escape the day-to-day feelings of anxiety, boredom and depression that accompany

  • living in a world teetering with a descent into totalitarianism.

  • For if we pick a goal to help in the construction of the parallel society, and work towards

  • it in a disciplined and focused manner, we give our life more meaning and we open up

  • the possibility of attaining the peak experiential states of flow and Rausch.

  • Flow is an optimal state of consciousnessin which attention is so narrowly focused

  • on an activity that a sense of time fades, along with the troubles and concerns of day-to-day

  • life.”

  • (Natasha Dow Schüll, Addiction by Design )Rausch, on the other hand, is the word Nietzsche

  • used for a peak cognitive state similar to flow.

  • What is essential in Rausch is the feeling of increased strength and fullness.”

  • Nietzsche, Twilight of the Idols Rausch is an emergent by-product of focused

  • attempts to effectuate real-world change and when in Rausch, as in flow, we perform at

  • our best, or as John Richardson explains in Nietzsche's New Darwinism:

  • In Rausch the organism feels its capacities at a peak, and takes pleasure in this heightened

  • potency.

  • These capacities are drives to work on the world, and in Rausch one feels oneselfoverfull

  • with them, bursting to change things to fit oneself.”

  • John Richardson, Nietzsche's New Darwinism Both flow and Rausch are healthy ways to escape

  • from the day-to-day miseries of living in a sick and corrupted society.

  • Unlike the numbing experiential zones of the backward escape which weaken us in body and

  • mind, flow and Rausch strengthen us and increase our feelings of power.

  • The more people who experience flow and Rausch the harder it is for those in power to herd

  • a populace into the chains of totalitarian servitude and as Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn warned:

  • No weapons, no matter how powerful, can help the West until it overcomes its loss

  • of willpower.”

  • Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, A World Split Apart To attempt the forward escape by contributing

  • to the creation of a parallel society and in the process attaining the states of flow

  • and Rausch comes with risks, and success is not guaranteed, but it is a far better option

  • than merely sitting passively by just hoping things will get better.

  • Hope in reality is the worst of all evils because it prolongs the torments of man

  • Nietzsche, Human all too Human In place of mere hope, courageous action from

  • as many people as possible is needed to prevent the rise of totalitarian rule.

  • And the sooner people act in defiance of would-be totalitarians, the greater the chance of success.

  • For the mistake that was made over and over again in the totalitarian countries of the

  • 20th century was that people didn't act soon enough.

  • Milton Mayer, in his book They Thought They Were Free, interviews an individual who lived

  • through Hitler's rule and his words should serve as a warning for those who live in a

  • world at risk of being engulfed by the life-destroying machinery of totalitarian rule:

  • You wait for one great shocking occasion, thinking that others, when such a shock comes,

  • will join with you in resisting somehow

  • But the one great shocking occasion, when tens or hundreds or thousands will join with

  • you, never comes.

  • . . If the last and worst act of the whole regime had come immediately after the first

  • and smallest, thousands, yes, millions would have been sufficiently shockedBut of

  • course this isn't the way it happens.

  • In between comes all the hundreds of little steps, some of them imperceptible, each of

  • them preparing you not to be shocked by the next

  • And one day, too late, your principles, if you were ever sensible of them, all rush in

  • upon you. . . and you see that everythingeverythinghas changedNow you live

  • in a world of hate and fear, and the people who hate and fear do not even know it themselves;

  • when everyone is transformed, no one is transformed…”

  • Milton Mayer, They Thought They Were Free

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, reflecting on the Soviet Union's descent into totalitarian

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