tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6789188.post112713921605355879..comments2024-03-27T17:15:37.606-04:00Comments on Triablogue: A cesspool full of barbed wireRyanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17809283662428917799noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6789188.post-8127343151611717262007-07-03T10:12:00.000-04:002007-07-03T10:12:00.000-04:00What is it called when someone posts a text by a w...What is it called when someone posts a text by a well-known author but changes a key passage? <BR/><BR/>Here is what Orwell actually says in his conclusion (according to the source cited!):<BR/><BR/>Mr Aldous Huxley's Brave New World was a good caricature of the hedonistic Utopia, the kind of thing that seemed possible and even imminent before Hitler appeared, but it had no relation to the actual future. What we are moving towards at this moment is something more like the Spanish Inquisition, and probably far worse, thanks to the radio and the secret police. There is very little chance of escaping it unless we can reinstate the belief in human brotherhood without the need for a ‘next world’ to give it meaning. It is this that leads innocent people like the Dean of Canterbury to imagine that they have discovered true Christianity in Soviet Russia. No doubt they are only the dupes of propaganda, but what makes them so willing to be deceived is their knowledge that the Kingdom of Heaven has somehow got to be brought on to the surface of the earth. We have not to be the children of God, even though the God of the Prayer Book no longer exists.<BR/><BR/>The very people who have dynamited our civilization have sometimes been aware of this, Marx's famous saying that ‘religion is the opium of the people’ is habitually wrenched out of its context and given a meaning subtly but appreciably different from the one he gave it. Marx did not say, at any rate in that place, that religion is merely a dope handed out from above; he said that it is something the people create for themselves to supply a need that he recognized to be a real one. ‘Religion is the sigh of the soul in a soulless world. Religion is the opium of the people.’ What is he saying except that man does not live by bread alone, that hatred is not enough, that a world worth living in cannot be founded on ‘realism’ and machine-guns? If he had foreseen how great his intellectual influence would be, perhaps he would have said it more often and more loudly.Susan Hardinghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16579570440639267435noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6789188.post-1127529139535851192005-09-23T22:32:00.000-04:002005-09-23T22:32:00.000-04:00I'd loved to see the wasp taking in the jam, only ...I'd loved to see the wasp taking in the jam, only to have it leave his esophagus.jchttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17018982835839534854noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6789188.post-1127529073375443562005-09-23T22:31:00.000-04:002005-09-23T22:31:00.000-04:00This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.jchttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17018982835839534854noreply@blogger.com