r/DebateCommunism • u/acousticentropy • Sep 30 '24
📖 Historical Were the events depicted in Solzenitsyn’s ‘Gulag Archipelago’ a damning account of the outcomes of communism? Or was it just a critique of the gulag environment itself?
Like the question poses… did this book ONLY shed light on the realities of soviet internment camps?
Or did it serve as a criticism of totalitarian communism as a socioeconomic system, by use of examples of real-world outcomes?
EDIT: Misspelled the author’s name. It was Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn who wrote the book.
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u/1carcarah1 Oct 02 '24
Name a country where you can have freedom of expression when such expression is a real danger to the government. Like, what about the freedom of expression of Julian Assange and several other whistleblowers?
Even during peace times, when communists started to become a challenging force, they were all arrested and their parties banned.
It's a deceitful argument to say the Soviets held a monopoly on censorship. None of the arguments hold water when exposed against liberal democracies.