| The Big Lie Continues | ||
| By George J. Marlin | ||
We hear a little about Muslim  persecution of Christians these days, though not much. But is anyone  aware of the much larger and continuing evil presence that violates the  rights and very lives of Catholics and other believers in our world?  It’s called Communism, and in China, Vietnam, Cuba, and a gaggle of  wannabe Marxist dictatorships, this murderous ideology continues to  generate high body counts and gulags for the Christians of the world  while the mainstream media and prominent intellectuals hardly seem to  notice.
There is ample precedent for this  lack of interest going back even before the fall of the Berlin Wall and  the dissolution of Communism in Eastern Europe. Throughout the twentieth  century, the progressive intelligentsia was sympathetic to the idea  that Marxist-controlled states would eventually give birth to an  international utopian community. To maintain this view, they defended,  denied, or overlooked the crimes against humanity committed by Lenin,  Stalin, Mao, Castro, Pol Pot, and their henchmen.
Even as the very foundations of  the Iron Curtain were crumbling in the late 1980s, many leftist thinkers  continued to promote Communist “truth.” For instance, one year before  the fall of the Berlin Wall, America’s oldest left-wing journal, The  Nation, refusing to face the harsh facts about the Soviet  totalitarian menace, toed the party line by condemning the Center for  Democracy, created by U.S. citizens, to aid the only independent  publication in the U.S.S.R., Glasnost. 
One European who had the courage  to expose the lies was the late French philosopher-journalist  Jean-Francois Revel (1924-2006). This World War II resistance fighter  and Social Democrat fearlessly fought the ideological bullies of his  time. For him, they functioned “as a machine to destroy information even  at the price of making assertions in clear contradiction of the  evidence.” And they still do. As Paul Valery, a French poet, once  observed, “everything changes but the avant-garde.”
Revel swam against the French  intellectual tide by arguing that evil is inherent in Communism’s DNA.  History, he believed, proved that as a governing system, it was never  economically viable and retarded social justice: “Incarceration camps  and prisons, show trials, murderous purges and deliberately induced  famines have accompanied each and every Communist regime from beginning  to end, without exception.” 
The global left, of course,  despised Revel. In a series of trenchant works, The Totalitarian  Temptation (1976), How Democracies Perish (1983), The  Flight From Truth (1991), and Anti-Americanism (2003), Revel  assaulted those “who openly and on principle allow the annihilation of  whole masses of humanity. . .to secure the realization of the Communist  ideal.” He denounced leftists who, in the name of progress, yielded to  the totalitarian temptation and became accomplices to political  crimes.
In Last Exit to Utopia, a  book of his just translated and published posthumously, Revel gives  socialist apologists his last dig. Revel makes the case that many  leftist intellectuals have been in a state of denial since the death of  the Soviet leviathan. They cannot admit they were intellectually wrong  or morally compromised. Communism, they still insist, was an engine of  social justice that and had good intentions. Genuine Communists tried to  create a good society that would save the masses from “enslavement to  consumerism.” Revel calls this behavior “voluntary blindness;”  ideologues ignoring or deforming truth to rationalize their apriori  schemes.
To maintain the fiction and to  take the spotlight off their short-comings these leftists have  aggressively pursued a “take no prisoners” offensive strategy. The root  of all evil they insist is “savage capitalism” and the devils who  promote this depraved system are Americans. Critics of Communist regimes  are “simplistic” and “obsessive” mean-spirited right-wing reactionaries  or just plain old fascists.
Scholarly works that document  Communist oppression are dismissed as “nostalgia for the Cold War.” “Why  drag out that old stuff” is the typical reaction from the leftist  chorus. “Haven’t we heard it all before? Let’s move on.” American  leftist elites employed this approach in their failed attempt to stop  the acclaimed Yale University Press Annals of Communism series  which publishes previously inaccessible documents from Soviet state and  party archives.
The most vicious outcry was  against the 800-page compendium detailing the crimes of Communist  regimes worldwide, The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror,  Repression. Furious leftists used every vicious tactic to discredit  the findings of the five French authors that over 100-million people  were murdered for belonging to political parties, churches, or some  hated social class. Critics pressured and intimidated the contributors—even threatening to get them fired  from their academic posts—if they  did not recant.
One delusional protester, the  Marxist Jacques Rossi, who actually served time in the Gulag, defended  the prison system claiming these Soviet camps were fine institutions  that “served as a laboratory for the Soviet regime in order to create an  ideal society: to compel obedience and indoctrinate.”
Revel boldly rejected these  cover-ups. Western ideologues, he declared, “may have no blood on their  hands; but their pens are dripping with it.” Contrary to their claims,  totalitarian states, unlike capitalist democracies, must commit  crimes to survive. Recent actions by remaining Marxist regimes confirm  his thesis: North Korea’s Communist masters have systematically starved  over 3 million of their people. In Tibet 1.2 million people—20 percent of the total population—have been eliminated under China’s  occupation of that nation. And in China itself, the regime has set up a  subservient Patriotic Catholic Church to keep Catholics from following  the real Church with its head in the Vatican.
Communism writes Revel “promises  abundance and engenders misery; promises liberty and imposes servitude. .  .promises respect for human life and then perpetuates mass executions;  promises the creation of a ‘new man,’ but instead fossilizes him.” Yet,  by using “evil in the name of good” Revel observes, this failed  experiment tragically continues to attract “angelic accomplices, in the  name of ideals they have shamelessly trampled underfoot.”George J. Marlin is an editor of The Quotable Fulton Sheen
 
 
 
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