I am reading a book by Victor Sebestyn called "Revolution 1989 - The Fall of the Soviet Empire". If you lived through the astonishing collapse of communism in the late '80s I highly recommend it.
What has struck me is the description of life under Communism in the six Soviet satellite states of East Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria.
Here is a couple of paragraphs that really stood out to me as a possible parallel to the current climate in the regime of JW.org.
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Once idealism or revolutionary fervour had disappeared - certainly by the Soviet invasion of Czechosloakia in 1968 - the system stagnated. The talent pool in the various Parties dimished. Advancement was not on merit, but on obedience and loyalty to the Party. Discretion was rewarded, initiative, originality and brainpower frowned upon. Occasionally some highly intelligent, creative and efficient apparatchiks reached senior positions but they were exceptions. Cynicism ate into the soul of communism. Belief grew irrelevent to Communist functionaries. 'Little by little it became a more or less theoretical thing...like the second coming of Christ,' said Oleg Troyanovsky, who had been a diplomat in several of the satellite states after 1945. 'You preach it, you are supposed to believe in it, but no one really takes it seriously. Ideology took second place to national interests, sometimes it was just a cover for national interests.'
The Party had to protect itself from the people. In 1917 the first thing Lenin did was set up a secret police force, the Cheka. Upon Soviet 'liberation' after World War Two, each of the new Communist regimes had established within weeks similar organisations, all carbon copies of the Soviet model....The Stasi in East Germany was called the 'sword and shield of the Party'. Erich Honecker was fond of telling its officers later: "We did not seize power in order to give it up". Over time the methods of all these agencies became less violent. Torture chambers were turned into filing rooms. The task was still essentially the same, though: to ensure the supremacy of the Party. But there were subtle differences. For the most part, the secret police and their political masters ceased to think they could make people believe in communism. All citizens had to do was pretend they believed and outwardly conform. It became an increasingly spiritless charade.
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I was blown way by the similarities. What do you think?
It also bodes very well for the Watchtower's demise. More to come...