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The Road to Unfreedom
The Road to Unfreedom: Russia, Europe, America | Timothy Snyder
35 posts | 17 read | 28 to read
With the end of the Cold War, the victory of liberal democracy was thought to be final. Observers declared the end of history, confident in a peaceful, globalized future. This faith was misplaced. Authoritarianism returned to Russia, as Putin found fascist ideas that could be used to justify rule by the wealthy. In the 2010s, it has spread from east to west, aided by Russian warfare in Ukraine and cyberwar and information war in Europe and the United States. Russia found allies among nationalists and oligarchs everywhere, and its drive to dissolve Western institutions, states, and values found resonance within the West itself. The rise of populism, the British vote against the EU, and the election of Donald Trump were all Russian goals, but their achievement reveals the vulnerability of Western societies and the uncertain character of Western political order. This threat to Western democracy presents an opportunity to better understand the pillars of our own political order. In this forceful and unsparing work of contemporary history, based on vast research as well as personal reporting, Snyder goes beyond the headlines to expose the true nature of the threat to democracy and law. By showcasing the stark choices before us between equality or oligarchy, individuality or totality, truth and falsehood Snyder restores our understanding of the basis of our way of life, offering a way forward in a time of terrible uncertainty.
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DyAnne
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We were without power for five nights after the bomb cyclone hit western WA. Treated myself to a visit at my favorite local indie. I‘ve earned it.

LiteraryinPA That sounds awful! I‘m glad you‘re on the other side now and hope you love the books. 3w
5 likes1 comment
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Cathyloves2read
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Mehso-so

How does one rate a book like this? I read it at the suggestion of a friend.The authors political views are the polar opposite of mine,but this book got me thinking.After reading it,it‘s hard to decide what to believe. The author seems very knowledgeable and definitely made a point. I‘d like to read a book telling the story from the opposite point of view. It‘s definitely going to be a crazy time between now and the ‘24 election!

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Pinta
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Pickpick

Talk from Putin‘s camp of “denazification” & “desatanization” of Ukraine seemed so bizarre & laughable, but Snyder offers serious origins of Russian mythology & ideology behind the lies. Ivan Ilyin. Kleptocracy. The “innocent nation.” Historical narratives of inevitability & eternity. Russia=sacred idea rather than nation state w/ clear borders. But Snyder‘s arguments can resemble the aggrandizing, sweeping claims he associates with Putin… 2018

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ravenlee
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Pickpick

Managed to finish during kiddo‘s violin and then swim lessons today (#momlife). This was fascinating, enlightening, terrifying, brutally honest, and so much more. Another one I need to add to my collection and track down more of the author‘s work. Highly recommend this to understand how the Trump presidency happened and what‘s going on in Ukraine (this was published in 2018 but deals with the 2014 invasion and makes current events clearer.

Suet624 This author puts out great and frightening work. 2y
29 likes1 stack add1 comment
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ravenlee
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Russians knew Trump for what he was: not the “VERY successful businessman” of his tweets but an American loser who became a Russian tool.

TheBookHippie 💯💯💯💯 3y
Ruthiella I suspect Russians are historically better at interpreting Doublespeak and Doublethink than most Americans. 3y
ravenlee @Ruthiella this book is actually making me question that idea. I‘d like to think they‘ve seen enough to be aware of what they‘re being fed, but the way Snyder is explaining Putin‘s rise and the transition from Soviet to Russian existence makes it seem harder to believe. When you live in a world that‘s made of lies and all you hear and see all the time is lies, how can you not believe? 3y
29 likes3 comments
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ravenlee
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For #DeadPhilosophersSociety #ThisLife peeps: “And this is what eternity means: the same thing over and over again, a tedium exciting to believers because of the illusion that it is particularly theirs.”

GingerAntics YES!!! I‘ve been seeing a lot of this in books lately. Inevitably 😏, there is always a Christian ready to wax poetic about eternity and it‘s many (supposed) merits. 3y
TheBookHippie THIS 💯. It‘s so toxic and frustrating. 3y
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ravenlee
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Just starting this one and already it‘s very good, a little confusing, and very, very real.

HeyT Oooh I just did this one a couple weeks ago in audio and it was so fascinating. Like even though it covers the Crimean War it‘s very insightful about the current war of Russian aggression. 3y
30 likes1 stack add1 comment
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jenniferw88
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jenniferw88
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I want EVERYONE to read this book - it really opened my eyes up to Putin (& Trump!)

Also, Snyder became an autobuy author for me after reading it, and I now want to read ALL the books about modern day Russia!

#integrateyourshelf @ChasingOm @Emilymdxn

Lchnessmnstr Zinn‘s book was the first one I read that made me question how U.S. History was taught in school... 4y
53 likes1 stack add1 comment
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ImperfectCJ
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"If all the federal government did was maximize inequality and suppress votes, at some point a line would be crossed. Americans, like Russians, would eventually cease to believe in their own elections; then the United States, like the Russian Federation, would be in permanent succession crisis, with no legitimate way to choose leaders. This would be the triumph of the Russian foreign policy of the 2010s..."

review
jenniferw88
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Pickpick

I learnt a lot about elections, Putin & Trump from this book! 5 🌟 and another square on #bookspinbingo @TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks Great progress!! 4y
56 likes1 comment
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jenniferw88
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#weeklyforecast @Cinfhen

Basically continue all of these, maybe finish tagged and A Year in Provence.

HannaPolkadots The Road to Unfreedom is so good, but also kind of scary when you see the direction some countries seem to be taking. But I've read it twice and learnt a lot, and will probably revisit it again in the near future. Hope you enjoy it. 4y
Cinfhen Nice mix of genres 🥰 4y
70 likes2 comments
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jenniferw88
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#bookreport week 8/8/20 @Cinfhen

Good week this week!

Finished
Bunny
Dark Days
An Almond for a Parrot
Other Minds
Drawdown

Continued
Pride and Prejudice

Started
A Year in Provence
The Road to Unfreedom

TrishB A good week 👍🏻 4y
Cathythoughts Well done ! I‘m looking forward to Bunny 😊 4y
Cinfhen Amaze-balls!!! 4y
See All 6 Comments
Crazeedi 👏👏 great job!! 4y
squirrelbrain So many books! 📚📚📚 4y
BarbaraBB Great week! 4y
79 likes6 comments
review
BarbaraTheBibliophage
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Pickpick

If you want to better understand Putin‘s Russia, and the invasion of Crimea and Ukraine, this is a book you should try. Snyder spends most of the book discussing those and adjacent topics. But the last third ties it all to what‘s happening in the US. Yes, Trump. But also many policies that have been introduced in the last 20ish years.

Full review http://www.TheBibliophage.com
#thebibliophage2020
#nonfictionchallenge2020 #aboutcurrentwartornarea

91 likes3 stack adds
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BarbaraTheBibliophage
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For more about those two things (politics of eternity and inevitability), see two quotes in my blog post review. But this passage about inequality really hit home for me.

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BarbaraTheBibliophage
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So much food for thought here. What is freedom in a democracy? Or anywhere else? This article from WaPo gave me pause this morning (apologies for the paywall): https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/03/04/new-report-shows-freedom-is-d... I‘ll add a quote from it in the comments.

BarbaraTheBibliophage From the article link above, and not the book. “The “Freedom in the World 2020” survey, released Wednesday by Freedom House, reports that 2019 saw the 14th year in a row of political deterioration, with 64 countries experiencing a loss of liberties, while only 37 experienced improvements.” 5y
BarbaraTheBibliophage And that ⬆️ is why the Snyder book is relevant and important, although not easy. 5y
65 likes2 comments
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BarbaraTheBibliophage
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This whole passage gave me some interesting insights into the impact of the changing media landscape on our lives. A lot of local papers have closed their doors, and they are the most relevant sources for individuals.

When we stop reading about things that affect our own lives, and just reading news for entertainment, this weakens the press. And a weaker, less local press, also means we are vulnerable to entertainers pushing their perspectives.

58 likes2 stack adds
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BarbaraTheBibliophage
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There are so many great passages in this book. My review is posted on my blog, and I‘ll add my review post here soon. For now, I‘ll just flood your feed with some quotes.

56 likes1 stack add
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BarbaraTheBibliophage
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That last sentence ... “The very idea of impartiality assumes that there are truths that can be understood regardless of perspective.”

It‘s taking me a while to get through this - mostly via audio - and I‘m glad I have the book for reference, too.

#nonfictionchallenge2020
#aboutawartornarea
#russiavsukraine

RaimeyGallant I'm doing a difficult audiobook right now too. I keep having to go back and listen again. It's over my head. 5y
BarbaraTheBibliophage @RaimeyGallant For sure, physics is complex. I read a book years ago about quantum physics. It wasn‘t long, but it took me months. And I was SO proud when I finished. Can‘t remember much of it though ... LOL. 5y
73 likes2 comments
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BarbaraTheBibliophage
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Started trying to make my way through this ... not an easy listen or read.

77 likes1 stack add
review
ImperfectCJ
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Pickpick

Snyder argues that the US, as a country of increasing inequality, has made itself ripe for oligarchy and vulnerable to foreign influence toward the destabilization of our democracy, as seen by the ongoing cyberattacks by Russia and the complicity and complacency of US elected officials who stand to gain from such attacks. This book puts into context the history we're living right now and provides a general roadmap towards recovering our democracy.

ImperfectCJ The butterfly is just to help provide counterbalance to the desolation lurking in the background as I read this book. 5y
24 likes1 comment
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ImperfectCJ
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Restless and not enjoying The Testaments, I have turned to audio-crocheting, with the book-book by my side for underlining purposes. This one isn't technically in my #24B4Monday stack, but it's the audiobook I have at hand. Dystopian nonfiction instead of dystopian fiction.

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ImperfectCJ
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"The greater and the more obvious the lie, the more his subjects demonstrate their loyalty by accepting it..."

17 likes1 comment
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RenatoR
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Pickpick

A disquieting examination of the maligned forces at play in the current presidency.

ImperfectCJ I'm enjoying this one, if that's the right word for appreciating a book that puts me in a bad mood whenever I read it. 5y
2 likes1 comment
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ImperfectCJ
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“To distract from their inability or unwillingness to reform, eternity politicians instruct their citizens to experience elation and outrage at short intervals, drowning the future in the present.“

(And don't worry...this isn't a library book. I bought a copy specifically so I could underline and write in the margins.)

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ImperfectCJ
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Picked up a new horror story. Hopefully it has a happy ending.

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Weaponxgirl
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Kindle daily deal alert in the uk! 99p!
I bought as soon as I saw bbc history magazine book of the year winner and I loved his book on tyranny.

review
nofutureparttwo
Pickpick

A rigorous intellectual history of the slow subversion of post-Cold War democracy, written with a graceful clarity that‘s Orwellian in the best sense. The politics of eternity and inevitability, exhibited respectively by Russia and the West, are a dialectic; Snyder shows how eternity politics takes root in the cracks of Western liberalism. His formulation of Trump‘s “sadopopulism” is also deeply insightful. Essential reading.

6 likes1 stack add
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nofutureparttwo

“Of course, citizens play their part in creating a totalitarian atmosphere. [...] Citizens are curious: surely what is hidden is most interesting, and surely the thrill of revelation is liberation. Once all that is taken for granted, the discussion shifts from the public and the known to the secret and the unknown. Rather than trying to make sense of what is around us, we hunger for the next revelation.”
———
So much here is hitting home for me.

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nofutureparttwo

“The temptation to believe what feels right assails us at all times from all directions. Authoritarianism begins when we can no longer tell the difference between the true and the appealing. [...] To seek the truth means finding a way between conformity and complacency, towards individuality. [...] When inequality is too great, the truth is too much for the miserable, and too little for the privileged.”

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nofutureparttwo

“Inevitability and eternity are not history but ideas within history, ways of experiencing our time that accelerate its trends while slowing our thoughts. To see, we must set aside the dark glass, and see as we are seen, ideas for what they are, history as what we make it. [...] As institutions are destroyed, virtues reveal themselves. A history of loss is thus a proposal for restoration.”

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nofutureparttwo

On sadopopulusm: “The politics of eternity converts pain into meaning, and then meaning back into more pain. [...] Under Trump, Americans came to expect the administration of pain and pleasure, the daily outrage or triumph. For supporters and opponents alike, experience of politics became an addictive behavior, like time spent online or on heroin: a cycle of good and bad moments spent all alone.”

Probably the most important passage in this book.

review
HannaPolkadots
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Pickpick

This was really good and, just like Snyder's Black Earth, taught me a lot. I've already had the school librarian order it, and recommended it to several of my students. If you're interested in politics, Russia's influence in American (and European) affairs and the media, this is a great book to read.

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Lreads

I borrowed this from the library and find it really interesting but also overwhelming due to all the info that goes along with a nonfiction book. I'm getting frustrated with myself for not being able to concentrate on it or absorb the info like I think I should. Sometimes I think I'm just not smart enough.

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Lreads
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Yesterday I made a special trip to the library for this book despite having an upset stomach. It's "current history" about Russia and its machinations over the last few years.
#librarybook #nonfiction #CurrentHistory

JoScho Hope you feel better ❤️ 7y
CouronneDhiver Thinking about you. ❤️ 7y
Lreads @JoScho Thank you. I do feel better today. It was a combination of nerves and unexpected cheese consumption that made me unwell. 7y
See All 9 Comments
Lreads @CouronneDhiver Thank you. I appreciate all the good thoughts! 7y
CouronneDhiver Were you able to do your planned outing with mom today? 7y
Lreads @CouronneDhiver Thank you for asking! Our outing is tomorrow morning. I would go no matter what as it's important to me to honor my Dad. 7y
LauraBeth Glad you‘re feeling better! We‘ll all honor your dad tomorrow 💕 7y
LauraBeth Also - 📚 7y
Lreads @LauraBeth Thank you! That is so nice of you! Litsy is such a wonderful place. ❤ 7y
38 likes1 stack add9 comments