Interestingly, there are many similarities between the history of communist governance in the Soviet Union and with the events of George Orwell's Animal Farm. If you haven't read it, it's a great book.
For those that still do not believe George Orwell's novel Animal Farm was a criticism of communist governance, this page is for you. The famous phrase "All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others," is not directed at the contemporary capitalist state. (Some have interpreted this statement to have been in reference to the necessary economic inequality in modern liberal democracies.) It was directed at communist governance, and, in particular, the communist governance of the U.S.S.R. before its downfall. In the former Soviet Union, the Nomenklatura gained for itself not only economic superiority, but legal superiority as well. While the people were subjected to a perpetual reign of terror, the communist Nomenklatura thrived. It was Soviet communism that Orwell attacked, not superlative Western democracy. But, I will provide the evidence in spades for the benefit of the stubborn and iconoclastic. These people, places and events from Orwell's Animal Farm directly equate with the people, places and events in the history of the Soviet Union:
Animal Farm | The USSR | Animal Farm |
The USSR |
Napoleon |
Stalin | Napoleon's Reign |
The Reign of Terror of the 1930's |
Snowball |
Trotsky | Manor Farm |
Czarist Russia |
Old Major |
Marx and Lenin | Animal Farm |
Communist Russia |
Jones |
Czar Nicholaus III | Rebellion of Animals |
Communist Revolution |
Squealer |
Pravda (Propaganda) | Frederick of Pinchfield |
Hitler of Germany |
Dogs |
Stalin's Secret Police | Pilkinton of Foxwood |
Churchill of the United Kingdom |
Boxer |
The average loyal, hard-working peasant | Windmills |
Stalin's 5-Year Economic Plans |
Mollie |
The Land of Russia | The Slaughter |
The Great Purge |
Return to The Right Ideology | The New Right Ideology | E-mail Wolcenfrea