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Simon Baddeley's avatar

Thanks, as ever. This writing is why you are one of the very few I'll pay money to read. In an account of her early life in Mao's China, Jung Chang wrote, in 'Wild Swans', of her reaction as she began to grasp that her's, her imprisoned family's and her fellow citizens' revered hero was not the figure in whom she'd been taught since birth to have faith. Her first reaction was panic - not at being mistreated in the ingeniously unpleasant ways the Chinese Communist Party treated (and still treats) its dissidents. Hers was the alarm that accompanied waking from a dream; of abruptly comprehending the depth of her indoctrination and the duplicity in which she had innocently cooperated. Nietzsche wrote 'Madness is rare in the individual - but with groups, parties, peoples, and ages it is the rule'. Charles Mackay, about the same time, wrote in his 'Extraordinary Popular Delusions' [1841] 'Men, it is said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses more slowly, and one by one.' I've been a centrist dad much of my life, growing up within a woke ascendancy. Finding myself thinking as you do (though not so eloquently) still comes as a surprise.

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Sarah Gellner's avatar

Argh! That's my dad you're talking about there! About which I harbour far too much to attempt to address here.

But suffice to say my trajectory initiated partly by teenage rebellion has been very similar to yours (though I must be a couple of decades older). To the extent that I'm sure my father and I would agree on many points nowadays.

Have forwarded your link to my siblings . .

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