Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Monica Nicolau's avatar

Half a century ago, as a child, I moved to New York from behind the Iron Curtain. (Translation for American youngsters: the land behind the Iron Curtain was a collection of police states ruled by the Soviet Union, which is what we used to call communist Russia when it pretended not to be an expansionist empire.) It was a wonderful time in America, where my generation enjoyed the luxury of believing that the threat of communism was a silly bit of paranoid propaganda. The McCarthy era was long over and forgotten, antisemitism was a thing of the past, and nobody had time to remember how many of the black listed just happened to have been Jews.

I was ecstatic to find myself in such a free society and I fit in immediately. Except...occasionally, when I mentioned in passing to my free-thinking friends that, actually, it wasn't completely crazy to worry about the Soviet threat, where, as it happened, school children were indeed taught that communism was destined to spread to the whole world.

I soon learned to turn a blind eye to my own worries.

It is sobering to realize now how many warnings we all learned to ignore. Life becomes too heavy when every warning must be heeded. If we want to understand how a society can be gently herded to disaster, we might remember that our need for optimism and hope is so powerful that it can blind us to the most glaring forms of evidence.

Expand full comment
Chris Nathan's avatar

Ayaan, it’s so great to have you here on Substack! You have always been a voice for what is decent, true and best in people. Your commitments and purpose are a fit for this place. In any case Substack is more than technology; it is incubation and sustenance for people engaged in finding or making the path forward.

The challenge of restoration must include institution building. You make that goal clear above. But it also must include the invention of new language for describing the world and the future, a language that calls forth what is best and highest in human beings, and that speaks to both rising and passing generations. The best example most Americans have of such an invention – in living memory for some - is probably the visionary and aspirational poetry of the civil rights movement. It is confusing to call it poetry, because it's not about poems, but poetry it is. Its next incarnation will come forth if we work and strive and listen to bring it forth. This is one of the places where that can begin to happen. As I wrote above, Substack is more than just technology. It’s one place where people who continue to love the world in spite of everything can strive to remember and say what the world can still become.

Expand full comment
8 more comments...

No posts