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Discontent with a
Capital "D"
We
use a capital "D" because this discontent is one toward which all
regional and national, economic and cultural discontent converge. Having
accumulated in the Soviet world for many decades, this discontent is
represented in the indolent and tragic apathy of someone who disagrees with
everything but is physically restrained from speaking out, moving freely,
protesting, in short, from externalizing an effective disagreement. This has
been the total discontent‑albeit mute and paralytic‑of each
individual in his house, hut or hovel, where many times the family no longer
exists, marriage having been frequently replaced by concubinage. This has been
the discontent of someone whose children were taken more than once from the
"home" and coercively given to the State which took charge of their
entire education. This has been the discontent in the workplace, where
laziness, inaction and boredom prevail most of the time and where paltry wages
barely suffice to buy the scant and shoddy goods and merchandise‑which
are the typical products of state‑owned industry in a regime of state
capitalism. Comments on the total lack of quality and quantity of everything
are whispered all along the lines of people formed outside the shops, where
nearly empty shelves shamelessly reveal the misery. There has been discontent,
above all, because everywhere there are cases of religious worship being
forbidden, churches being closed, and religious instruction being restricted.
In the schools the teaching of materialism, of atheism, in short, of communist
irreligion is mandatory.
These
evils are even more pitiful when considered as a whole than when considered
individually. In other words, if complaints have been made against this or that
aspect of Soviet reality, recent events evidently attest to the existence of an
outburst of real furor against the whole. And, because this furor is directed
against the whole, it affects the regime and inflames a the human capacities of
indignation. Thus, it becomes an all encompassing discontent against the
communist regime, state capitalism, despotic atheism, and, finally, against
everything which is a product of Marxist ideology and its application to all
the countries now in turmoil.
It
is, then, truly the case to speak of Discontent. It is probably the most
encompassing and total discontent of all time.
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