- Joined
- Jul 18, 2017
This isn't just done by nobodies. The chief narrator is the last Commie Prime Minister of Hungary.
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True. It is of course a puff piece narrated by Miklos Nemeth. But honestly it came across as heartfelt. Especially the scene where he recalls his own father viewing him as Judas for joining the communist party. Hard to fake that sort of thing. The man was presiding over the frontiers of a dying empire and faced with horrendous moral choices. He chose correctly, even when the choice at the time quite literally put him at risk of death. Its a rather inspirational story.I liked it, shows that some people in power know that the system they work in is crumbling and are willing to let it go to bring in the new. While others will cling on to whatever they can to keep the decaying system afloat.
Drawing comparisons to modern America, I don't think we are to the levels of the 1980's Warsaw Pact but I hope that when the system starts to rot like a bloated corpse, some in power will let it go so something better and/or needed can replace it.