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Live Not by Lies

Page 21

by Rod Dreher

Lenin, Vladimir, 27

  letters, from Benda, V., 140–41

  Lewis, C. S., 213

  liberalism, classical, 29, 50

  liberals

  elite, x

  secular, 175, 176

  liberty, 212

  lies, 14

  . See also specific topics

  confronting, 108–9

  dictatorship of, xiv, 16, 107–8, 122

  evading, 18

  useful, 35–38

  Wittner on, 104–5

  life apart from the crowd, 100–103

  Lindsay, James A., 60

  “Live Not by Lies!” (Solzhenitsyn), xiv, 214

  living in truth, 17–19, 99, 101

  loneliness, 31–32, 178–79, 181

  The Lord of the Rings (Tolkien), 138

  love, 131, 182, 203

  loyalty, society valuing, 39–41

  Mac Donald, Heather, 73–74

  Malick, Terrence, 188, 189

  mania for ideologies, 38–39

  Mao Zedong, 84

  marginalization, 146, 185

  Margolius Kovály, Heda, 35–36, 38

  marriage

  commitments to, 129

  difficulties, 133

  gifts of, 131–32

  martyrs, 123, 147, 148, 194, 204, 206

  Marx, Karl, 24–25, 30, 52, 54

  Marxism, 24–25, 26, 29, 43, 55, 61

  materialism, 156

  Maurin, Peter, 64

  Mechev, Alexei, 178

  meditation, 154

  memory, 122, 125

  Connerton on, 114

  cultural, 114, 115, 116, 117, 126–27, 145

  fortresses of, 117–20

  historical, 113, 124

  mental-health crisis, 92

  mercy, 199–201

  Mikeladze, Evgeni, 177

  Mikeladze, Vakhtang, 177–78

  Mikloško, František, 169–70, 175, 176

  militancy, progressive, xiii

  Mill, John Stuart, 52

  Miłosz, Czesław, 9, 15, 16, 17, 41–42

  miracles, 160–61

  mobs, x, xii

  modernity, 50–53, 115

  moral courage, 136–37

  moral imaginations, 137–39

  Moscow, Russia, 21, 47, 123, 156–57, 158–59

  Mounk, Yascha, 34

  movies, 144, 145

  Murray, Douglas, 81

  Myth of Progress, 46, 48, 49–50, 51, 54

  myths, political, 67

  Nazism, 189

  New Testament, 153

  new totalitarianism, 7, 185

  New York Times, The, 36

  Nicholas II (tsar), 22, 23

  Nicolae, Laura, 112, 115

  1917 Revolution, xv, 21, 27, 66, 117

  Nineteen Eighty-Four (Orwell), 111, 114, 120

  Notes from the Underground (Scruton), 122

  Obama, Barack, 50

  offset printing machine, 166

  Ogorodnikov, Alexander, 111, 157, 158, 160–61, 195–98

  openness, 149

  oppression, Soviet, 21

  Oprisan, Constantine, 201–4

  organizing, 179–80

  The Origins of Totalitarianism (Arendt), 30–31

  Orwell, George, 14–15, 75–76

  Nineteen Eighty-Four by, 111, 114, 120

  Palko, Vlado, 66–67

  parallel polis, 120–22

  pariahs, xii, 87

  Parkinson, Patrick, 155–56

  Pastor, Judit, 106–7

  pastoral lifeline, small groups as, 171–74

  pastors, 172

  patience, 170

  PayPal, 80, 89

  Permanent Record (Snowden), 82–83

  persecution, 106, 107, 162

  “the personal is political,” 39

  Philistines, 55

  phobias, 57–58

  Pill of Murti-Bing, 14, 15–16

  Pink Police State, 10–11, 83, 184

  Piteşti Experiment, 199–204

  pizzeria, x

  plays, 118

  Poglajen, Tomislav, 3

  Poland, 74, 118, 147

  political correctness, 8, 56, 108

  political myths, 67

  politics

  identity, 61, 65

  of surveillance, 79–83

  Popiełuszko, Jerzy, 147–48, 176

  Popkov, Viktor, 158–59

  pornography, 44–45

  positivism, 52–53

  post-Christian world, xiii, 162, 163

  Postman, Neil, 88

  postmodern mode of existence, 10–13

  power, 60–61, 155–60

  Prague, Czech Republic, 129–30

  prayer, 154, 161, 196–97

  preachers, 172

  pre-conditions of totalitarianism, 93

  pressures, 102

  pre-totalitarian culture, 36, 38, 44, 93

  prison experiences of Ogorodnikov, 195–98

  privacy, 69–70, 71, 83, 90–91

  progress, 48, 49

  modernity as, 50–53

  as religion, 54–56

  progressive militancy, xiii

  progressives, xi–xii, 48

  progressivism, 55–56

  Prometheanism, 23, 44–45

  propaganda, 35–38, 37, 108–9, 119

  prophets, 3

  prudence, 105–7, 205

  Putnam, Robert, 31, 32

  radicalism, 25, 26

  Rand, Ayn, 72

  Ratzinger, Joseph, 116

  Reagan, Ronald, 195

  reality, 62–63, 120

  Red Terror, 58–59

  rejecting doublethink, 103–5

  relativism, dictatorship of, 116

  religion, 44, 51, 117

  American dream held by, 53

  hope of, xv

  progress as, 54–56

  rival, 162, 163, 188–89

  “see, judge, act” motto and, 162–63

  totalitarian resistance through, 151–52

  repentance, 197

  resistance to soft totalitarianism, xv, 213–14

  revolutionaries, 13, 26, 42, 43

  revolutionary class, intellectuals as, 41–43

  Rieff, Philip, 11, 34

  rival religions, 162, 163, 188–89

  Romania, 199

  Romaszewski, Zbigniew, 179–80

  Romaszewska, Zofia, 179–80

  Rusanova, Olga, 103

  Russia, 21–23, 47–48, 145–46, 173

  appeal of communism in, 24–27

  Day of Remembrance in, 123

  KGB of, 159, 198

  Moscow, 21, 47, 123, 156–57, 158–59

  saboteurs of God, 212–14

  sacramental theology, 204

  sacrifices

  for greater good, 140–41

  honoring, 210

  sacrilege, 200

  saints, 99, 100, 178, 200–201

  Saint-Simon, Henri de, 52

  salons, 144

  Sályi, Tamás, 49, 105–6, 116–17

  samizdat (underground literature), 166, 167, 168

  sanctuary cities, 120–22

  science, 25, 52, 53

  Scripture, 153–54, 192

  Scruton, Roger, 56–58, 121, 122, 179

  secret police, 69–70, 135, 159, 170, 177, 198

  secret room, 166–67

  secret seminars, 121, 122

  secular liberals, 175, 176

  “see, judge, act” motto

  families and, 149–50


  history and, 126–27

  Kolaković using, 5, 19

  religion and, 162–63

  solidarity and, 180–82

  suffering and, 205–7

  truth and, 107–9

  self-destructive behavior, 187

  self-fulfillment, 184

  self-sacrifice, 201

  seminars, 121, 122, 144, 157–58, 159

  sensualism, 44

  Seraphim of Sarov (saint), 99

  sermons, 159–60

  service

  to Christ, 134

  to others, 143–45

  sexuality, 35, 64

  shelter from gathering storm, 93–94

  Silicon Valley, 80–81

  Šimulčik, Ján, 165–66, 167–68, 170

  Sipko, Yuri, 102, 146–47, 172–74, 185–86

  1619 Project, 36–37

  SJWs. See social justice warriors

  Skibiński, Paweł, 117, 118–20

  Slezkine, Yuri, 25–26, 50, 55–56

  Slovak Catholicism, 4

  small groups, 179, 181

  fellowship of, 150, 182

  as pastoral lifeline, 171–74

  smart home, 79

  smartphones, 78–79

  smart speakers, 69, 76

  Smith, Christian, 184

  Snowden, Edward, 70, 82–83

  social atomization, 31–32

  social control, 89–90

  social credit systems

  of China, 86–87

  Westernized version of, 92

  social importance of families, 145–48

  social justice

  Christianity and, 63–65

  cult of, 9–10, 42–43, 59–60

  ideologies of, xv, 94

  intersectionality of, 62

  social justice warriors (SJWs), 10, 42–43, 46, 59–61, 62–63

  social media, x, 37, 41, 79–80, 82

  social responsibility, corporate, 73–74, 75

  society

  communist, 97–98

  fear of weirdness in, 139

  loyalty compared with expertise in, 39–41

  soft totalitarianism, xiii, xiv, 10–11, 56, 58

  gentleness of, 9–10

  ideologies and, 15

  resistance to, xv, 213–14

  solidarity, 155, 163

  Christianity and, 174–77, 181

  of Krčméry, 192–93

  “see, judge, >act” motto and, 180–82

  Solidarity (trade union), 147

  solitary confinement, 196, 197

  Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr, 17–18, 23–24

  Gulag Archipelago, xiv, 165, 193–94, 199

  “Live Not by Lies!” essay of, xiv, 214

  Soviet Bloc, xii, xiv

  Soviet communism, 7, 22, 28–29

  Soviet oppression, 21

  spiritual exercises of Krčméry, 152–55

  StB (Czechoslovak secret police), 135

  stories, 108–9, 126, 138

  The Stranger (Camus), 158

  strength from weakness of others, 201–4

  Strittmatter, Kai, 87, 88

  suffering, 182, 183–84

  accepting, 210, 211

  without bitterness, 191–93

  as gift, 193–99

  Kaleda on, 194–95

  Komáromi on, 186–87

  “see, judge, act” motto and, 205–7

  as testimony to truth, 185–88

  surveillance, 11, 68, 69–71

  capitalism, 75–79, 93

  China using, 84, 85–86

  politics of, 79–83

  surveys, on communism, 112

  Suslova, Marina Nikonovna, 125–26

  Taylor, Flagg, 66

  technology, 52, 53

  facial recognition, 86

  information, 71, 125

  telling truth, 105–7

  temptation of totalitarianism, 29

  Tertullian, 148

  theology, sacramental, 204

  therapeutic culture, as postmodern mode of existence, 10–13

  This Saved Us (Krčméry), 153

  thoughtcrimes, 57–58

  Tolkien, J. R. R., 138

  torture, 23, 153, 192, 193, 199–200

  totalitarianism, ix, x–xi, 3, 8, 28

  . See also soft totalitarianism

  Arendt on, 30–31, 32, 39, 42, 45–46

  definition of, 30

  families and, 130–35

  new, 7, 185

  pre-conditions of, 93

  religion as resistance to, 151–52

  temptation of, 29

  traditional families, 132–33

  traditions, 116, 117, 126, 127

  transgression, desire for, 34–35

  The Triumph of the Therapeutic (Rieff), 11

  Trump, Donald, 39–40

  truth, 61, 213

  living in, 17–19, 99, 101

  “see, judge, act” motto and, 107–9

  suffering as testimony to, 185–88

  telling, 105–7

  Twenge, Jean, 91–92

  Twitter, 80, 82

  tyranny, 17, 67, 184, 212–13

  Uhl, Petr, 143

  Ukraine, 125

  The Unbearable Lightness of Being (Kundera), 91

  underground church, 6, 130, 165, 171

  Mikloško on, 169–70

  power of, 155–60

  Šimulčik on, 167–68

  useful lies, 35–38

  values, Christian, 211

  Vaško, Václav, 5

  Velvet Revolution, 6, 90, 140, 155, 209

  Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, 112

  voting, 18, 51, 98

  Vox party (Spain), 82

  weakness of others, strength from, 201–4

  We Have Been Harmonized (Strittmatter), 87

  weirdness, fear of, 139

  Westernized version of social credit system, 92

  wider movements, 142–43

  Witkiewicz, Stanisław, 15

  Wittner, Mária, 104–5, 187–88

  Wojtyła, Karol, 117–18

  woke capitalism, 71–75

  wokeness, 8, 17

  Wurmbrand, Richard, 155, 199–201, 204

  Xi Jinping, 87

  young people, 91–92, 183, 184

  Young Pioneers (communist youth league), 102

  YouTube, 80

  Zionist Imperialist Conspiracy, 57

  Zuboff, Shoshana, 76, 77, 79, 81

  ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

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