“The Permanent Lie”

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s description of “the permanent lie” in The Gulag Archipelago is eerily similar to how one can describe the lies by Big Pharma, the Biden administration, corporate medicine, and legacy media about COVID-19 so-called “vaccines” and the adverse events resulting from those shots, as well as about lockdowns, masks, and social distancing. The permanent lie …

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn on Good and Evil

Look at what Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn wrote in The Gulag Archipelago about good and evil. For a good person even a crust is healthy food, and to an evil person even meat brings no benefit. The Gulag Archipelago, Volume 2, p 610 Gradually it was disclosed to me that the line separating good and evil passes not through …

How Gulag Camps Proved Economically Profitable

Look at what Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn wrote in The Gulag Archipelago about how Gulag camps proved economically profitable. The reason why the camps proved economically profitable had been foreseen as far back as Thomas More, the great-grandfather of socialism, in his Utopia. The labor of the zeks was needed for degrading and particularly heavy work, which …

Communists putting children above adults? Say it isn’t so!

For adults, fathers and grandfathers, these boisterous games of the kids in the crowded conditions of camp could cause more anguish and be more hurtful than their robbing and their rapacious greed. It proved to be one of the most sensitive forms of humiliation for an elderly person to be made equal with a young …

USSR Criminal Code of 1926 vs. Canadian Criminal Code of 2023

In the Criminal Code of 1926 there was a most stupid Article 139 — “on the limits of necessary self-defense” — according to which you had the right to unsheath your knife only after the criminal’s knife was hovering over you. And you could stab him only after he had stabbed you. And otherwise you …