June 17, 2008
Was it jokes that defeated Communism?
From The Telegraph:
Poor Mr Gorbachev. Every time he met Ronald Reagan at a summit, he was subjected by the American President to a stream of Russian jokes. Or rather, to be precise, Soviet jokes - the point of which was always to satirise some aspect of life under communism. What made it worse was that some of them really were very funny. like the one, for example, about the man who goes to buy a car in Moscow, pays for it, and is told by the salesman that he can collect it on a particular date in 10 years' time. The buyer thinks for a moment and then asks: 'Morning or afternoon?' The salesman, astonished by the question, asks: 'What difference does it make?' And the buyer answers: 'Well, the plumber is coming in the morning.'
As Gorbachev was well aware, these jokes had not been manufactured by some sinister department of the CIA; they were real ones, as told by real Russians. He was probably also aware that although people in the West told jokes about the frustrations of ordinary life, there was no such thing as a whole category of jokes about the capitalist system as such. If there had been, we can be sure that his aides would have been feeding them to him, contributing to an ever-escalating jokes race between the superpowers. For some commentators in the 1980s, the existence of this type of humour in the communist world took on a profound significance. It demonstrated the indomitable nature of the human spirit under oppression; the fact that communism produced such a huge quantity of jokes showed how hugely oppressive it was; and the stubborn persistence of this humour played a major role in undermining Soviet rule. In the end, they said, communism was laughed out of existence.
More here.
Posted by Azra Raza at 06:32 AM | Permalink










Comments
I know one good joke about capitalists:
Two neo-liberal, market capitalists fall into a pit and can't get out. They sit in the pit for an hour, two hours, a day, but they still can't get out and no one is there to help them. They don't despair, though, as they know that their rapidly increasing demand for food and water will eventually, according to the rules of the market, create enough supply.
Posted by: klauscore | Jun 19, 2008 9:05:34 PM
Milton Freidman and Hayek were on a flight from New York to London, when the pilot came on ad stated that one engine was lost, but everything would be ok , as the plane had two engines, the flight would just take a bit longer.
Friedman stated to Hayek "I hope we don't lose the other one, we will never get down"
Posted by: Dave Ranning | Jun 20, 2008 12:24:29 AM
Klauscore, shouldn't one of the capitalists eat the other one, then phone his publisher to make a deal for his best-selling book: "I Was A Cannibal" ?
Posted by: aguy109 | Jun 20, 2008 4:37:57 AM
..."This book is dedicated to the memory my good, if rather stringy, friend ___ ___, whose very cute young widow I am helping in every way possible."
Posted by: aguy109 | Jun 20, 2008 5:42:15 AM
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