During a recent stay in Berlin, I visited the old headquarters of the East German Ministry of State Security, better known as the Stasi. The building, in a suitably bleak part of what used to be East Berlin, is now a museum devoted to the communist surveillance state. The upper floors display some of the tools of that surveillance -- miniature cameras, listening devices, files on everything -- that the German Democratic Republic used to control every aspect of its citizens' lives.
But the first floor of the Stasi Museum is not about spying. Instead, it is devoted to the propaganda that East German bureaucrats used to foster socialist consciousness in an unwilling public. One display explains the GDR's efforts in the 1950s to politicize what in the past had been family and religious occasions. The state sought to transform weddings, confirmations, and other personal events into "socialist celebrations," to be "committed collectively and aimed at a confession to socialism," according to the awkward English translation of the exhibit.
The exhibition informs visitors that the project "did not gain popular acceptance." Amazingly enough, people didn't want to turn their family holidays into socialist celebrations.
Here at home, this Thanksgiving brings an effort by the Obama administration to turn a day of giving thanks into a day of discussion about the virtues of national health care. On Wednesday afternoon, just hours before Thanksgiving, President Obama's Twitter account -- which has more than 40 million followers -- sent out this message: "Make sure everyone who sits down with you for #Thanksgivukkah dinner is covered." ("Thanksgivukkah" refers to this year's rare overlap of Thanksgiving and Hanukkah.)
The president's tweet linked to a photo of a young man sitting at a table with a turkey and a menorah. The accompanying text: "Celebrating Thanksgiving. Lighting the Hanukkah candles. Talking about health insurance. Gotta love dinners like these."
Now is the time to state definitively: The United States is not communist East Germany. It's not in any way close to being communist East Germany. So why is the Obama administration seeking to politicize Thanksgiving? And Hanukkah, too? At the very least, why invite the ridicule and derision that inevitably follow?
ZitatNow is the time to state definitively: The United States is not communist East Germany. It's not in any way close to being communist East Germany.
Really Byron? This lame proviso in your column shows you are just another beltway hack looking not to offend anyone. Zerocare was forced an unwilling public lust like many of the programs the East Germans enacted. We also have an NSA that makes the Stazi look like the Three Stooges. Artificially high gas prices, insane restrictions on air travel and an economy intentionally tanked restricts travel the same way a wall did.
"Here at home, this Thanksgiving brings an effort by the Obama administration to turn a day of giving thanks into a day of discussion about the virtues of national health care."
He's such a turd! The one pushing "the effort" and the one carrying the water for the One. Both turds.
There's no longer an anti-war Left. There's only an anti-Right Left
ZitatNow is the time to state definitively: The United States is not communist East Germany. It's not in any way close to being communist East Germany.
Really Byron? This lame proviso in your column shows you are just another beltway hack looking not to offend anyone. Zerocare was forced an unwilling public lust like many of the programs the East Germans enacted. We also have an NSA that makes the Stazi look like the Three Stooges. Artificially high gas prices, insane restrictions on air travel and an economy intentionally tanked restricts travel the same way a wall did.
Yes, and the fact that this turd York feels there's a need to state this comparison isn't valid, is evidence that it is valid.
There's no longer an anti-war Left. There's only an anti-Right Left