I haven't ever read this before, but so far it is pretty much what I expected. Page 13 is the money quote that everyone knows. I actually disagree with it in part.
and had boldly set up in the downstairs hall an ambush of half a dozen people with axes, hammers, pokers, or whatever else was at hand?
This at best gets you a 1:1 KDR. To really have a chance at survival one would have to go and eliminate them at their residence. Defense does not stop the enemy. The reward for a successful defense is another defense attempt. The reward for a successful attack is never having to attack or defend again.
On page 69 and 70 Solzhenitsyn relates a story about applauding for Stalin, but that story can just as well be applied to the PoX and fags: it is not enough to merely allow their existence, they must be applauded, and who ever applauds the least is destroyed.
And on page 71, if we read between the lines, we learn the origin of the jew soap myth.
Telegrams transmitting instructions of this kind were sent via ordinary channels in a very rudimentary code. In Temryuk the woman telegrapher, in holy innocence, transmitted to the NKVD switchboard the message that 240 boxes of soap were to be shipped to Krasnodar the following day. In the morning she learned about a big wave of arrests and guessed the meaning of the message! She told her girl friend what kind of telegram it was-and was promptly arrested herself.
Some person involved with the creation or use of that code was later reassigned to create propaganda against Germany.
On pages 81 and 82 we see what they will do to occupied areas.
To arrest all such persons would have been, from the economic point of view, irrational, because it would have depopulated such enormous areas. All that was required in order to heighten the general consciousness was to arrest a certain percentage--of those guilty, those halfguilty, those quarter-guilty, and those who had hung out their footcloths to dry on "the same branch as the Germans. After all, even one percent of just one million fills up a dozen full-blooded camps.
They will not arrest everyone, as they cannot, they want to rule people, not ashes. But you will not be one of the "lucky ones" as everyone reading this is their enemy, even the glowie feds.
However there is one way to avoid being arrested, as mentioned on page 85: "They did not touch those who had lived a purely vegetable existence." Of course anyone who has posted here, for any reason, does not qualify for that.
And finally we find out on page 92 what could stop the madness: daring to arrest the Chosen ones. If Stalin had followed the advice of Cato the Elder regarding doctors he might have lived to see his plan though.
Those are the soulless masses who live their lives according to social convention.
Go to school, play sports, get a degree in whatever, work a meaningless job. Every day do no more than is expected. Sports team won! Celebrate! Did well in work, promotion to meaningless managerial position. Happy!
Never question. Never wonder. Never explore.
It's an older description of the classic NPC. Those who exist yet are not alive. Robots who simply and surely follow all instructions without question.
I haven't ever read this before, but so far it is pretty much what I expected. Page 13 is the money quote that everyone knows. I actually disagree with it in part.
This at best gets you a 1:1 KDR. To really have a chance at survival one would have to go and eliminate them at their residence. Defense does not stop the enemy. The reward for a successful defense is another defense attempt. The reward for a successful attack is never having to attack or defend again.
On page 69 and 70 Solzhenitsyn relates a story about applauding for Stalin, but that story can just as well be applied to the PoX and fags: it is not enough to merely allow their existence, they must be applauded, and who ever applauds the least is destroyed.
And on page 71, if we read between the lines, we learn the origin of the jew soap myth.
Some person involved with the creation or use of that code was later reassigned to create propaganda against Germany.
On pages 81 and 82 we see what they will do to occupied areas.
They will not arrest everyone, as they cannot, they want to rule people, not ashes. But you will not be one of the "lucky ones" as everyone reading this is their enemy, even the glowie feds.
However there is one way to avoid being arrested, as mentioned on page 85: "They did not touch those who had lived a purely vegetable existence." Of course anyone who has posted here, for any reason, does not qualify for that.
And finally we find out on page 92 what could stop the madness: daring to arrest the Chosen ones. If Stalin had followed the advice of Cato the Elder regarding doctors he might have lived to see his plan though.
What does that mean?
Those are the soulless masses who live their lives according to social convention.
Go to school, play sports, get a degree in whatever, work a meaningless job. Every day do no more than is expected. Sports team won! Celebrate! Did well in work, promotion to meaningless managerial position. Happy!
Never question. Never wonder. Never explore.
It's an older description of the classic NPC. Those who exist yet are not alive. Robots who simply and surely follow all instructions without question.