Lex Fridman Podcast - #248 – Norman Naimark: Genocide, Stalin, Hitler, Mao, and Absolute Power
Episode Date: December 13, 2021Norman Naimark is a historian at Stanford, specializing in the history of genocide. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Coinbase: https://coinbase.com/lex to get $5 in free Bit...coin - Quip: https://getquip.com/lex to get first refill free - Eight Sleep: https://www.eightsleep.com/lex and use code LEX to get special savings - NetSuite: http://netsuite.com/lex to get free product tour - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod and use code LexPod to get 3 months free EPISODE LINKS: Norman's Website: https://history.stanford.edu/people/norman-naimark Stalin's Genocides (book): https://amzn.to/3oO0Hzb Stalin and the Fate of Europe (book): https://amzn.to/3pLbWrk Books & resources mentioned: The Origins of Totalitarianism (book): https://amzn.to/3oNDSvA Man's Search for Meaning (book): https://amzn.to/3pMzs7d Radio Majdanek (Research Paper): https://bit.ly/3GxPEAb PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (07:08) - Stalin and absolute power (21:05) - Dictators and genocide (45:31) - What is genocide (55:38) - Human nature and suffering (1:25:23) - Mao's Great Leap Forward (1:32:37) - North Korea (1:36:30) - Our role in fighting against atrocities (1:45:26) - China (1:49:35) - Hopes for the future and technology (2:04:28) - Advice for young people (2:07:15) - Love and tragedy
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The following is a conversation with Norman Neymarck, a historian at Stanford specializing
in genocide, war, and empire.
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This is the Lex Friedman podcast and here is my conversation with Norman Neymark.
The Stalin believed that communism was good, not just for him, but for the people of the Soviet Union and the people of the world.
Oh, absolutely.
I mean, Stalin believed that socialism was the be all and end all of human existence. He was a true lennonist and in Lennon's tradition, this was what he believed.
I mean, that said, a belief didn't exclude other kinds of things he believed or thought
or did.
But no, the way he defined socialism, the way he thought about socialism, he absolutely
thought it was an interest of the Soviet Union and over the world.
And in fact, that the world was one day going to go socialist, in other words, I think he believed in
eventually in the international revolution. So given the genocide in the 1930s that he described
30s, the Describe was Stalin, evil, delusional or incompetent. Evil, delusional or incompetent.
Well, evil is one of those words, which has a lot of religious and moral connotations.
And in that sense, yes, I think he was an evil man.
I mean, he eliminated people absolutely unnecessarily.
He tortured people, had people tortured.
He was completely indifferent to the suffering of others.
He couldn't have cared a wit.
You know, that millions were suffering.
And so yes, I consider him an evil man. I mean, you know, historians don't
like to use the word evil. Use the word evil. It's, you know, it's a word for moral philosophers,
but I think it certainly fits who he is. I think he was delusional. And there is a wonderful
historian, Princeton, a wonderful historian,
Princeton, a political scientist,
actually named Robert Tucker, who said he suffered
from a paranoid delusional system.
And I always remember that of Tucker's writing,
because what Tucker meant is that he was not just paranoid,
meaning, I'm paranoid, I'm worried
you're out to get me, right? But that he constructed a whole plots of people, a whole systems
of people who were out to get him. So in other words, his delusions were that there were all
of these groups of people out there who were out to
diminish his power and remove him from his position and undermine the Soviet Union in his view.
So yes, I think he did suffer from delusions and this had a huge effect because whole groups then were destroyed by his activities,
which he would construct based on these delusions. He was not incompetent. He was an extremely
competent man. I think most of the research that's got on, especially since the Stalin
archive was opened at the beginning of the
century.
I think almost every historian who goes in that archive comes away from it with the feeling
of a man who is enormously hardworking, intelligent, you know, in the cute sense of politics,
who really excellent sense of, you know, political rhetoric, a fantastic editor, you know, in a kind of
agitational sense. I mean, he's a real agitator, right? And of a, you know, a really hard worker.
I mean, somebody who works from morning till night, a micromanager in some ways. So his
competence, I think, was really extreme.
Now there were times when that fell down, you know, times in the 30s, times in the 20s,
times during the war, where he made mistakes.
It's not as if he didn't make any mistakes.
But I think, you know, you look at his stuff, you know, you look at his archives, you look
what he did.
I mean, this is an enormously competent man who in many,
many different areas of enterprise because he, you know, he had this notion that he should
know everything and did know everything. I remember one archive, Dielad's called, you know,
a kind of folder that I looked at where he actually went through the wines that were produced in his native Georgia and
wrote down how much they should make of each of these wines, how many barrels they should
produce of these wines, which grapes were better than the other grapes, sort of correcting.
In other words, what people were putting down there. So he was, you know,
his competence ranged very wide, or at least he thought his competence ranged very wide. I mean,
both things, I think, are the case. If we look at this paranoid delusional system, Stalin was in
power for 30 years, he has many arguments, most powerful men in history Did in his case absolute power corrupt them or did it reveal the true nature of the man and maybe just in your sense as we kind of build the
Romance genocide of the early 1930s
This paranoid delusional system did it get built up over time?
Was it always there? It's it's kind of a question of
was it always there? It's kind of a question of did the genocide was that always inevitable essentially in this man or did power create that? That's a great question and I don't think
you can say that it was always inherent in the man. I mean, the man without his position and without his power,
you know, wouldn't have been able to accomplish what he eventually did in the way of
murdering people, you know, murdering groups of people, which is what genocide is.
So, you know, I don't, I, I, it wasn't sort of in him. I mean, they were, and again, you know,
the new research has shown that, you know,
he had his childhood was, you know, not a particularly nasty one. I mean, people used to say, you
know, the father beat him up and it turns out actually it wasn't the father. It was a mother
once in a while. But, but basically, you know, he was not an unusual young Georgian kid or student even.
And it was the growth of the Soviet system
and him within the Soviet system,
I mean, his own development within the Soviet system,
I think that led to the kind of mass killing
that occurred in the 1930s.
He essentially achieved complete power by the early 1930s.
And then as he rolled with it, as you would say, you know, or people would say,
you know, it increasingly became murderous. And there was no, you know, there were no checks and balances, obviously, on that murderous system.
And not only that, people supported it in the NKVD and elsewhere.
He learned how to manipulate people.
I mean, he was a superb political manipulator of those people around him. And we've got new transcripts, for example, of, you know,
a Politburo meetings in the early 1930s. And you read those things. And you know, he uses
humor and he uses sarcasm, especially he uses verbal ways to undermine people,
to control their behavior and what they do.
And he's a real, I guess manipulator is the right word.
And he does it with a kind of skill.
But on the one hand is admirable.
And on the other hand, of course, is terrible,
because it ends up creating the system of terror that he creates.
I mean, I guess just the linger in it. I just wonder how much of it is a slippery slope
in the early 20s and 1920s that he think he was going to be murdering
even a single person, but thousands and millions.
I just wonder, maybe the murder of a single human being, just to get them, you know, because
you're paranoid about them potentially
threatening your power, does that murder and open a door? And once you open the door,
you become a different human being. A deeper question here is the Soul Genets and, you know,
the line between good and evil runs in every man are all of us, once we commit one murder
in the situation. Does that open a door for all of us?
And I guess even the further deeper question is how easy it is for human nature to go
on this slippery slope that ends in genocide? There are a lot of questions in those questions.
And the slippery slope question, I would answer, I suppose, by saying, you know, Stalin wasn't the most likely successor of Lenin.
There were plenty of others. There were a lot of political contingencies that emerged in the 1920s that made it possible for Stalin to seize power. I don't think of him as, you know, if you would just know him in 1925, I don't think anybody
would say much less himself that this was a future mass murderer.
I mean, Trotsky mistrusted him and thought he was, you know, a mindless bureaucrat.
You know, others were less mistrustful of him,
but you know, he managed to gain power
in the way he did through this bureaucratic
and political maneuvering that was very successful.
You know, the slippery slope as it were,
doesn't really begin until the 1930s in my view.
In other words, once he gains complete
power and control of the Politburo, once the programs that he institutes of the five-year
plan and collectivization go through, once he reverses himself and is able to reverse
himself or reverse the Soviet path, to give various nationalities their
ability to develop their own cultures and internal politics. Once he reverses all that,
you have the Ukrainian famine in 32, 33, you have the murder of Kirov, who is one of the leading
figures in the political system, you have the suicide of hisirov, who is one of the leading figures in the political system.
You have the suicide of his wife.
You have all these things come together in 32, 33 that then make it more likely, in other
words, that bad things are going to happen.
And people start seeing that too around him. They start seeing that
it's not a slippery slope. It's a dangerous situation which is emerging and some people
really understand that. So I really do see a differentiation then between the 20s. I mean,
it's true that Stalin during the Civil War, there's a lot of good research on that. It shows that he already had some of these
characteristics of being, as it were murderous and being dictatorial and pushing people
around and that sort of thing. That was all there. But I don't really see that as kind of the necessary stage
for the next thing that came, which was the thirties,
which was really terror of the worst sort,
where everybody's afraid for their lives,
and most people are afraid for their lives,
and their families' lives, and where torture,
and that sort of thing becomes a common part of you know, of who what people had to face.
So it's a different world.
And people will argue, they'll argue this kind of Lenin-Stalin continuity debate, you know, that's been going on since I was an undergraduate, right?
That argument, you know, was Stalin the natural sort of next step from Lenin, or was he something
completely different? Many people will argue, because of Marxism, Leninism, because the ideology
that it was a natural next step. I don't think so. I would tend to lean the other way, not absolutely. I
won't make an absolute argument that what Stalin became had nothing to do with Lenin
and nothing to do with Marxism then. There's only had a lot to do with it. But he takes
it one major step further. And again, that's why I don't like the slippery slope metaphor
because that means the lead is slow and easy.
It's a leap.
And we call, you know, I mean historians talk about the Stalin revolution, you know,
in 28 and 29, you know, that he in some senses creates a whole new system, you know, through
the five-year plan collectivization and seizing political power the way he does. Can you talk about the 1930s? Can you describe what happened and how the more the Soviet
terror famine in Ukraine in the 32 and 33? Yes. I killed millions of Ukrainians.
Right. It's a long story, you know, but let me try to be as succinct as I can be. I mean, the holode more, the terror famine of 3233 comes out of in part,
an all-union famine that is the result of collectivization. Collectivization was a catastrophe.
You know, the more or less of the so-called kulaks, the more or less richer farmers, I mean,
they weren't really rich, right?
Anybody with a tin roof and a cow was considered a kulak, you know, and other people who had
nothing were also considered kulaks if they opposed collectivization.
So these kulaks were talking millions of them, right?
And Ukraine, it's worth recalling, and I'm you know, this was a, you know, heavily agricultural area, and Ukrainian peasants, you know, were on in the countryside and resisted a collectivization more than even Russian peasants resisted a collectivization
suffered during this collectivization program. And they burned sometimes their own houses,
they killed their own animals.
They were shot, you know, sometimes on the spot.
Tens of thousands and others were sent into exile.
So there was a conflagration in the countryside.
And the result of that conflagration in Ukraine was terrible famine. And again,
there was famine all over the Soviet Union, but it was especially bad in Ukraine, in part,
because Ukrainian peasants resisted. Now, in 32, 33, a couple of things happen. I mean,
I've argued this in my writing, and I've also worked on this.
I continue to work on it, by the way, with a museum in Kiev that's going to be about
the Hullo de Moore.
They're building the museum now and it's going to be a very impressive set of exhibits
and talk with historians all the time about it.
So what happens in 32, 33, a couple of things?
First of all, the Stalin develops
an even stronger, I say even stronger
because he already had an antipathy for the Ukrainians
and even stronger antipathy for the Ukrainians in general.
First of all, they resist collectivization.
Second of all, he's not getting all the grain
he wants out of them, in which he needs. And so he sends in then people to expropriate
the grain and take the grain away from the peasants. These teams of people, you know, some
policemen, some urban thugs, some party people, some poor peasants, you know, take part too.
Go into the villages and forcibly seize grain and animals from the Ukrainian peasantry.
They're seizing it all over. I mean, let's remember again, this is all over the Soviet Union in 32,
especially. Then, you know Then in December of 1932, January of 33, February of 33,
Stalin is convinced the Ukrainian peasantry needs
to be shown whose boss, that they're not
turning over their grain, that they're resisting
the expropriators, that they're resisting the expropriators, that
they're hiding the grain, which they do sometimes, right?
That they're basically not loyal to the Soviet Union, that they're acting like traders,
that they're ready, and he says this, you know, to, I think it's Kaganovitch, he says
it to, you know, they're ready to kind of pull out of the Soviet Union and join Poland.
I mean, he thinks Poland is, you know, out to get you out to get Ukraine.
And so he's going to then essentially break the back of these peasantry.
And the way he breaks their back is by going through another expropriation program, which
is not done in the rest of the Soviet Union.
So he's taking away everything they have, everything they have. Their new laws
introduced where they will actually punish people, including kids with death if they steal any grain.
You know, if they take anything from the, you know, from the fields. So, you know, you can shoot
anybody, you know, who is looking for food. And then he introduces measures in Ukraine, which are not introduced in the rest of the
Soviet Union.
For example, Ukrainian peasantry are not allowed to leave their villages anymore.
They can't go the city to try to find something.
I mean, we've got pictures of, you know, Ukrainian peasants dying on the sidewalks and
Kharkiv and then Kiev and places like that who've managed to get out of the village and get to the cities.
But now they can't leave.
They can't leave Ukraine to go to Belorussia or Belarus today or to Russia to get any food.
There's no, he won't allow any relief to Ukraine. A number of people offer relief, including the polls, but also the Vatican offers relief.
He won't allow any relief to Ukraine.
He won't admit that there's a famine in Ukraine.
And instead, what happens is that Ukraine turns into the Ukrainian countryside, turns into
what my now-pass past colleague who died several
years ago, Robert Conquest called a vast belson. And by that, you know, the images of bodies
just lying everywhere, you know, people dead and dying, you know, of hunger, which is,
by the way, I mean, as you know, I've spent a lot of time studying
genocidal, I don't think there's anything worse
than dying of hunger from what I have read.
I mean, you see terrible ways that people die, right?
But dying of hunger is just such a horrible, horrible thing.
And so, for example, we know there were many cases
of cannibalism in the countryside because
there wasn't anything to eat.
People were eating their own kids, right?
And Stalin knew about this.
And again, you know, we started with this question a little bit earlier.
He doesn't, he, there's not a sign of remorse, not a sign of pity, right?
Not a sign of any kind of human emotion that normal people would have.
What about the opposite of joy for teaching them a lesson? I don't think there's joy. I'm not sure
Stalin really understood emotion, or the way he directioned. No, I think he felt it was necessary to get those SOBs, right, that they deserved it.
He says that several times.
This is their own fault, right?
This is their own fault.
And as their own fault, you know, they get what they deserve, basically.
How much was the calculation? How much was the reason versus emotion?
In terms of you said he was competent, was there a long-term strategy or was this strategy
based on emotion and anger? No, I think actually the right answer is a little of both.
I mean, usually the right answer in history is something like that.
A little bit.
No, you can't.
It wasn't just, I mean, first of all, the Soviets had it in for Ukraine and Ukrainian nationalism,
which they really didn't like.
And by the way, Russians still don't like it, right?
So they had it in for Ukrainian nationalism.
They feared Ukrainian nationalism.
As I said, Stalin writes, you know, we'll lose Ukraine,
if these guys win.
So there's a kind of long-term determination, as I said,
to break the back of Ukrainian national identity and Ukrainian nationalism
as any kind of separatist force whatsoever.
And so there's that rational calculation.
At the same time, I think Stalin is annoyed and pieved and angry on one level with the Ukrainians for resisting collectivization and for
being difficult and for not, you know, not conforming, you know, to the way he thinks
Peasant should act in this situation.
So you have both things.
He's also very angry at the Ukrainian party and
eventually purges it for not being able to control Ukraine and not be able to control
the situation. Ukraine isn't theory of the bread basket, right? Of Europe. Well, how
come the bread basket isn't turning over to me all those grains so I can sell it abroad
and build new factories and support the workers in the cities.
So there's a kind of nuance.
When things fail, and this is absolutely typical of Stalin,
when things fail, he blames it on other people,
and usually groups of people, right?
Not individuals, but groups, again.
So a little bit of both, I think, is the right answer.
This blame, it feels like there's a playbook that dictators follow.
I just wonder if it comes naturally or just kind of evolves.
Because blaming others and then telling these narratives and then creating the other and
then somehow at least to hatred and genocide, it feels like there's too many commonalities
for it not to be a naturally emergent strategy
that works for dictatorships.
I mean, it's a good, it's a very good point.
And I think it's one, you know, that, you know, has its merits.
In other words, I think you're right that there's certain kinds of strategies by dictators
that, you know, are common to them.
A lot of them do killing, not all of them, of that sort
that Stalin did. I've written about Mao and Paul Pot and Hitler. There is a sort of, as you say,
a kind of playbook for political dictatorship, also for a kind of communist totalitarian way of
so for a kind of communist totalitarian way of functioning. And that way of functioning was described already by Hannah Rant early on when she wrote
the origins of totalitarianism.
And she more or less writes the playbook.
And Stalin does follow it.
The real question, it seems to me, is to what extent?
And how deep does this go?
And how often does it go in that direction?
I mean, you can argue, for example, I mean, Fidel Castro was not a nice man, right?
He was a dictator.
He was a terrible dictator.
But he did not engage in mass murder.
Ho Chi Minh was a dictator, a communist dictator who grew up in the communist
movement, went to Moscow, spent time in Moscow on the 30s and went to find found the Vietnamese
Communist Party. He was a horrible dictator. I'm sure he was responsible for a lot of death
and destruction. But he wasn't a mass murderer. And so you get those.
I mean, I would even argue, others will disagree that Lenin wasn't a mass murderer.
You know, that he didn't kill the same way that Stalin killed, or people after him.
They're communist dictators too, after all.
Khrushchev was a communist dictator, but he stopped this killing.
And you know, he's still responsible for a gulag and people setting off,
sent off into a gulag and imprisonment and torture, and that sort of thing.
But it's not at all the same thing.
So there are some, you know, like Stalin, like Mao, like Paul Pot, you know,
who commit these horrible, horrible atrocities, extensively engaging in my view in genocide, and there's some who don't.
And what's the difference? Well, the difference is partly in personality, partly in historical
circumstance, partly in who is it that controls the reigns of power? How much do you connect the ideas of communism or Marxism or socialism to Hollywood or
to Stalin's rule?
How natural is it kind of alluded to does it lead to genocide?
That's also, I mean, in some ways, I've just addressed that question by saying it doesn't
always lead to genocide.
You know, in the case again, Cuba is not pretty, but it well didn't have, there was no genocide in Cuba. Same thing in North Vietnam. You know, even North Korea is awful as it is. It's a terrible
dictatorship, right? And people's rights are totally destroyed, right? They have no freedom whatsoever.
You know, it's not as far as we know genocidal, who knows whether it could be or whether if they
took over South Korea, you know, mass murder wouldn't take place. And that kind of thing. But my point
is, is that the ideology doesn't necessarily dictate genocide.
In other words, it's an ideology I think that makes genocide sometimes too easily possible,
given the way it thinks through history as being, you're on the right side of history
and some people are on the wrong side of history, and you have to destroy those people who are
on the wrong side of history, and you have to destroy those people who are on the wrong side of history. I mean, there is something in Marxism, Leninism, which has that kind of language and
that kind of thinking. But I don't think it's necessarily that way. There's a wonderful historian
in that Berkeley named Martin Malia, who has written a number of books on this subject.
And he was very, very, he was convinced that the ideology itself played a crucial role
in the murderousness of the Soviet regime.
I'm not completely convinced. When I, when I say not completely convinced,
I think that you could argue with different ways.
Equally valid arguments.
I mean, there's something about the ideology of communism
that allows you to decrease the value of human life,
almost like this philosophy, if it's okay to crack
a few eggs to make an omelette.
So maybe that, if you can reason like that, then it's easier to take the leap of for the
good of the country, for the good of the people, for the good of the world, it's okay to
kill a few people.
And then that's where I wonder about the slippery slope.
Yeah, no, no. Again, you know, I don't think it about the slippery slope.
Yeah, no, no, again, I don't think it's a slippery slope.
I think it's dangerous.
No, I think it's dangerous,
but I don't consider,
I don't like Marxism alone as many better than the next guy.
And I've lived in plenty of those systems
to know how they can beat people down
and how they can beat people down and how they can, you
know, destroy human aspirations and human interaction between people. But they're not necessarily
murderous systems. They are systems that contain people's autonomy, that force people to into work and labor and
lifestyles that they don't want to live.
I spent a lot of time with East Germans and Poles who lived in any even in the Soviet
Union, you know, in the post-Style period, where people lived lives, they didn't want to
live, you know, and didn't have the freedom to choose. And that was terrifying in and of itself,
but these were not murderous systems. And they, and they, and they, you know,
ascribed to Marxism alone. So I suppose it's important to draw the line between mass murder
it's important to draw the line between mass murder and genocide and a mass murder versus just mass violation of human rights.
Right.
Right.
And the leap to mass murder, you're saying maybe easier in some ideologies than others,
but it's not clear that somehow one ideology definitely leads to mass murder and not exactly.
I wonder how many factors, what factors, how much of it is a single charismatic leader, how much of it is the
Conferration of multiple historical events, how much of it is just dumb the opposite of luck.
Do you have a sense where if you look at a moment in history,
predict looking at the factors, what there's something bad's going to happen here.
When you look at Iraq, when Saddam Hussein first took power,
well, you could, or you can, you know, go even farther back
in history, would you be able to predict? So you said, you're already kind of answered
that was Stalin saying, there's no way you could have predicted that in the early 20s.
Was that always the case? You basically can't predict.
It's pretty much always the case. In other words, I mean, history is a wonderful discipline and way of looking at life in the world in retrospect,
meaning it happened, it happened, and we know it happened.
And it's too easy to say sometimes it happened because it had to happen that way.
It almost never has to happen that way. And you know, things, so I very much am of the school, of the emphasizes,
you know, contingency and choice and difference and different paths and not, you know, not necessarily
a path that has to be followed.
And sometimes you can warn about things.
I mean, you can think, well, something's going to happen.
And usually, usually the way it works, let me just give you one example.
And I'm thinking about an example right now, which was the war in Yugoslavia,
which came in the 1990s and eventually ventuated in genocide and Bosnia.
And I remember very clearly the 1970s, 1980s in Yugoslavia
and people would say, there's trouble here,
and something could go wrong.
But no one, in their wildest imagination,
thought that there would be outright war between the little.
Then the outright war between the middle.
Then the outright war happened, genocide happened.
And afterwards people would say, I saw it coming.
So you get a lot of that, especially with pundits and journalists.
And I saw it coming.
I knew it was happening.
Well, I mean, what happens in the human mind, and it happens in your mind, too, is, you
know, you go through a lot of alternatives.
Think about January 6th in this country, and all the different alternatives, which people
had in their mind, or before January 6th, after the lost election.
Things could have gone in lots of different ways, and there were all kinds of people choosing
different ways it could have gone.
But nobody really knew how it was going to turn out. Wasn't it smart people really understood
that there'd be this kaka me me uprising on January 6th, you know, that almost caused this enormous
grief. So all of these kinds of things in history, you know, are deeply contingent. They depend on,
you know, factors that we cannot predict.
And it's the joy of history that it's open.
You think about how people are now,
I mean, let me give you one more example
and then I'll shut up.
But the environmental example, we're all threatened.
We know it's coming.
We know there's trouble.
We know there's going to be a catastrophe, some point.
But when?
What's the catastrophe?
Yeah, what's the nature of the catastrophe?
Everyone's the catastrophe.
And what's the nature of it?
Right, right.
Is it going to be wars because resource constraints is going to be hunger, is it going to be mass
migration of different kinds, at least to some kind of conflict and immigration.
And maybe it won't be that big of a deal and a total other catastrophic
event will completely challenge the entirety of the human soul.
That's my point.
That's my point.
That's my point.
You know, we really don't know.
I mean, there's a lot we do know.
I mean, the warming business and all this kind of stuff, you know, scientifically there,
but how it's going to play out. And everybody's saying, you know, different things.
And then you get somewhere in 50 years or 60 years, which I won't see.
And people say, aha, I told you it was going to be X or it was going to be Y or it was
going to be Z.
So I just don't think in history, you can...
Anyway, you can't predict.
You simply cannot predict what's going to happen.
It's kind of when you just look at Hitler in the 30s for me, oftentimes when I kind of
read different accounts, it is so often certainly in the press, but in general, me just reading
about Hitler, I get the sense like, this is a clown. There's no way this person will gain power.
Which one?
Hitler or Stalin?
Hitler, Hitler.
No, no, no, no, Stalin, you don't get a sense.
He's a clown.
He's a really good executive.
You think you don't think it leads to mass murder,
but you think he's going to build a giant bureaucracy,
at least.
With Hitler, it's like a failed artist who keeps screaming about
stuff. There's no way he's gonna, I mean, you certainly don't think about the atrocities,
but there's no way he's going to gain power, especially against communism. There's so many
other competing forces that could have easily beat him. But then you realize like, you know, event after event where this clown keeps dancing
and all of a sudden he gains more and more power and just certain moments in time he makes
this strategic decisions in terms of cooperating or gaining power over the military, all those kinds
of things that eventually give him the power. I mean, this this clown is one of the military, all those kinds of things, that eventually give them the power.
I mean, this clown is one of the most impactful and negative sense human beings in history.
Right.
And even the Jews who are there and are being screamed at and discriminated against and
who's, you know, there's a series of measures taken against them incrementally during the
course of the 1930s.
And very few who leave. Yeah. series of measures taken against them incrementally during the course of the 1930s.
At very few who leave?
I mean, some pick up and go and say, I'm getting hell out of here. You know, and you know, some Zionists, you know, tried to leave too and go to the United States and
stuff, but go to Israel and Palestine at the time, but or to Britain or France.
But in general, you know, even even the Jews who should have been very sensitive
to what was going on didn't really understand the extent of the danger.
And it's really hard for people to do that.
It's almost impossible.
In fact, I think.
So most of the time in that exact situation, nothing would have happened,
or there'd be some drama and so on,
there'd be some bureaucrat,
but every once in a while in human history,
there's a kind of turn,
and maybe something catalyzes something else,
and it accelerates, accelerates, escalates,
and then war breaks out, or totally un...
Revolutions break out.
Right. Can we go to the big question of genocide? What is genocide? What are the defining characteristics of genocide?
Dealing with genocide is a difficult thing when it comes to the definition. There is a definition, December 1948, UN Convention on the Prank Prevention and Punishment
of Genocide is considered the sort of major document of definition, and the definitional
sense of genocide.
It emphasizes the intentional destruction of an ethnic, national, racial, or religious group.
Those are the four groups again, comma as such.
What that means basically is destroying the group as a group.
There's a kind of beauty in human diversity and different groups of people, you know, Estonians,
you know, tribe of Native Americans, South African tribes, you know, the Rohingya in Myanmar.
There's a kind of beauty. Humanity recognizes in the distinctiveness of those groups.
You know, this was a notion that emerges merges really with Romanticism after the French revolution
in the beginning of the 19th century with Herder mostly.
And this beauty of these groups then, you know, is what is under attack in genocide.
And it's with intent.
You know, the idea is that the, it's intentional destruction.
So this is a kind of, you know, analogy to first degree, second degree, and third degree
murder, right?
First degree murder, you know, you're out to kill this person and you plan it and you
go out and you do it, right?
That's intent, right?
Man's slaughter is not intent. You
end up doing the same thing, but it's different. So, you know, the major person
behind the definitions, a man named Raphael Lemkin, I don't know if you heard his name or
not, but he was a Polish Jewish jurist who came, you know, from Poland, came to the United States during the war, and had been a kind of
crusader
for recognizing genocide. It's a word that he created, by the way, and he coined the term in
1943 and then published it in 1944 for the first time
Genome meeting people inside meeting killing, right? And so Lemkin then had
this term and he pushed hard to have it recognized, and it was in the UN convention. So that's
the rough definition, the problem with the definition, the problems with the definition are several.
You know, one of them is, is it just these four groups, racial, religious, ethnic
or national? See, this comes right out of the war. And what's in people's minds in 1948,
are Jews, Poles, Russians, Yugoslavs, sometimes who were killed by the Nazis. That's what's
in their mind. But there are other groups too, if you think about it, you know, who are killed, social groups or political groups. And that was
not allowed in the convention, meaning for a lot of different reasons, the Soviets were
primary among them. They didn't want other kinds of groups, let's say Kulaks, for example, to be considered. That's a social group, or
peasants, which is a social group. So, or a political group, I mean, let's take a group,
you know, communist-killed groups of people, but non-communists also killed groups of people
in Indonesia in 1965, 66, they killed, you know, no exactly, but roughly 600,000
Indonesian Communists. Well, is that genocide or not? You know, and my point of view, it is
genocide, although it's Indonesians killing Indonesians. And we have the same problem with the
Cambodian genocide. I mean, we talk about a Cambodian genocide, but most of the people killed
in the Cambodian genocide where other Cambodians,
they give it to name, they're ready to recognize this genocide because they also killed some other people's, meaning the Vietnamese,
a ham people who are, you know, Muslim
Muslim, smaller Muslim people in the area and a few others. So the question then becomes
people in the area and a few others. So the question then becomes, well,
does it have to be a different nationality,
ethnic group or religious group for it to be genocide?
And my answer is no.
You need to expand the definition.
It's a little bit like with our constitution.
We got a constitution.
But we don't live in the end of the 18th century, right?
We live in the 21st century.
And so you have to update the Constitution over the centuries.
And similarly, the genocide convention needs updating too.
So that's how I work with the definition.
So this is this invention.
Was it an invention?
This beautiful idea, romantic idea that there's groups of people, and the group is united
by some unique characteristics.
That was an invention in human history, this idea,
not the CSK's individuals.
In some senses, it was, I mean, it's not,
you know, there are things that are always constructed
at one fashion or another, and that in the construction,
you know, more or less represents the reality.
And what the reality is always much more complicated
than the construction or the invention of a term or a concept
or a way of thinking about a nation, right?
And this way of thinking of nations, you know, as, again, you know,
groups of religious, linguistic, not political necessarily about cultural entities is something
that was essentially invented. Yes. Yes, I mean, you know, if you look at it. They're no Germans in the 17th century.
They know Italians in the 17th century, right? They're only there after, you know, the invention of the nation, which comes, again,
mostly as out of the French Revolution, in the Romantic movement, a man named Johann Gottfried
von Herger, right? Who was the really the first one who sort of went around, collected people's
languages and collected their sayings and their dances and their folkways and stuff and said,
isn't this cool, you know, that they're Estonians and that they're Lothians and that they're these other,
these interesting different peoples who don't even know necessarily that they're different peoples.
That comes a little bit later.
Once the concept is invented, then people start to say, hey, we're nations too.
You know, and the Germans decide they're a nation, and they unify. And the Italians discover
they're a nation, and they unify instead of being, you know, the Florentines and Romans
and, you know, Sicilians. But then beyond nations, there are political affiliations, all
those kinds of things. It's fascinating that you start looking at the early homo sapiens and then there's obviously
tribes. Right. And then that's very concrete. That's a geographical location. It's a small group of
people. And the of warring tribes probably connected to just limited resources. But it's fascinating to think that that is then taken
to the space of ideas, to where you can create a group at first
to appreciate its beauty.
You create a group based on language,
based on maybe even political philosophical ideas,
religious ideas, all those kinds of things.
And then that naturally then leads to getting angry groups
and making them the other and then hatred.
Right.
That comes more towards the end of the 19th century,
you know, with the influence of Darwin.
I mean, you can't blame Darwin for it,
but neo-Darwin, Darwinians, you know,
who start to talk about, you know,
the competition between nations, the natural
competition, the weak ones fall away, the strong ones get ahead. You get this combination
also with modern anti-Semitism and with racial thinking, the racial thinking at the end
of the 19th century is very powerful. So now, at the end of the 19th century versus the beginning
of the, you know, the middle of the 19th century, you know, you can be a German and be a Jew,
and there's no contradiction. Yeah. As long as you speak the language, and you, you know, you
dress and think and act and share the culture, by the end of the 19th century, people say, no,
you know, they're not Germans. They're Jews, they're different, they have different blood, they have different, they don't
say genes yet.
But, you know, that's sort of a sense of people, and that's when, you know, there's this sense
of superiority too, and inferiority, you know, that they're inferior to us, you know.
And, and that we're the strong ones, and we have to, you know, and Hitler, by the way, just adopts this
hookline and sinker. I mean, there are a whole series of thinkers at the end of the 19th
and beginning of the 20th century, who he cites in mind-conf, which is written in the early 1920s,
that basically pervades this racial thinking. So nationalism changes, so nationalism in and of itself is not bad.
It's not bad, you know, to share culture and language and, you know, folk ways and sense of common belonging.
Nothing bad about it inherently. But then what happens is it becomes, you know, frequently is used and becomes especially on fascism
becomes
dangerous and
then it's especially dangerous when the two conflicting groups
share geographical location. That's right. So like with Jews
You know, I come you know, I'm a Russian Jew and
It's always interesting. I take pride in um, in, you know, I love the tradition of the Soviet Union of Russia. I love America. So
I love these countries. They have a, they have beautiful tradition and in literature and science
and art and all those kinds of things. But it's funny that people
not often, but sometimes correct me that I'm not Russian. I'm a Jew.
And it's a it's a nice reminder, yes, that that is always there, That desire to create these groups
and then when they're living in the same place,
for that division between groups,
that hate between groups can explode.
And I just, I wonder why is that there?
Why does the human heart tend so easily towards this kind of hate?
You know, that's a big question this kind of hate.
You know, that's a big question in and of itself.
You know, the human heart is full of everything, right? It's full of hate, it's full of love,
it's full of indifference, it's full of apathy,
it's full of energy.
So, I mean, hate is something, you know, that,
I mean, hate is something that, I think, and along with hate, the ability to really hurt and injure people is something that's within all of us.
It's within all of us.
And it's just something that's part of who we are and part of our society.
So, you know, we're shaped by our society
and our society can do with us often what it wishes.
You know, that's why it's so much nicer
to live in a more or less beneficent society
like that of a democracy in the West,
then to live in the Soviet Union, right?
I mean, because, you. Because you have more or less the freedom to do what you wish, and not to be forced into
situations in which you would have to then do nasty to other people.
Some societies, as we talked about, or more have proclivities towards asking of its people to do things they don't want to do
and forcing them to do so. Freedom is a wonderful thing. They'll be able to choose not to do evil
as a great thing. Whereas in some societies, you feel in some ways for not so much for the NKVD bosses, but for the
guys on the ground in the 1930s or not so much for the Nazi bosses, but for the guys in
the police battalion that were told to go shoot those Jews. You know, and you do it not necessarily because they force you to do it, but because your
social, you know, your social situation, you know, encourages you too and you don't have
the courage not to.
Yeah, I was just as I often do rereading Victor Frankl's Mansage for Meeting. And he said something, not just high
often pull out sort of lines, the mere knowledge that a man was either a camp guard or a prisoner
tells us almost nothing. Human kindness can be found in all groups, even those which
as a whole, it would be easy to condemn. So that's speaking to you feel for those people at the lowest level, implementing the orders of those above.
And also you were yourself, what will happen if you were given those same orders, you know, I mean, what would you do?
You know, what kind of reaction would you have in the similar situation?
And, you know, you don't know.
I could see myself in World War II while fighting for almost any country that I was born in.
Almost any country that I was born in.
There's a love of community.
There's a love of country that's just, um, at least to me, it comes naturally. Just love of community and countries want such community.
Yeah.
And I could see fighting for that country, especially when you're sold a story
that you're fighting evil.
And I'm sure every single country will solve that story effectively.
And then when you're in the military and you have a gun in your hand or you're in the police force
and you're ordered, go to this place
and commit violence. It's hard to know what you would do.
It's a mix of fear, it's a mix of maybe you convince yourself, you know, what can one
person really do.
And over time, it's again, that's slippery slope.
Because you could see all the people who protest, who revolt, they're ineffective.
So like, if you actually want to practically help somehow, you're going to convince yourself
that you can't, one person can't possibly help.
And you have a family, so you want to make, you know, you want to protect your family.
You tell all these stories and over time, it naturally convinced yourself to dehumanize
the other.
Yeah, I think about this a lot, mostly because I worry that I would be a good
German. Yeah, no, that's right. That's right. And one of the, you know, one of my tasks
as a teacher, right, are students. And I have, you know, classes on genocide. I have one
now. And another one, by the way, on Stalin. But the one on
genocide, one of my tasks is to try to get the students to understand this is not about weird
people who live far away in time and in place, but it's about them. And that's a hard lesson.
But it's an important one, that this is in all of us, you know,
it's in all of us.
And there's nothing, you know, and you just try to gird yourself up, you know, to try to figure
out ways that maybe you won't be complicit, and that you learn how to stand by your principles,
but it's very hard.
It's extremely difficult.
And you can't, the other interesting thing about it is not predictable.
Now, there's a lot of studies of Poles, for example, who during the war saved Jews.
Well, who are the Poles who saved Jews versus those who turned them in?
It's completely unpredictable. Sometimes it's the worst anti-Semites who protect them,
because they don't believe they should be killed.
And sometimes, it's not predictable. It's not as if the humanists among us
are the ones who consistently show up
and experience danger, in other words,
and are ready to take on danger,
to defend your fellow human beings, not necessarily take on danger, to defend, you know,
your fellow human beings, not necessarily. I mean, sometimes simple people do it, and
sometimes they do it for really simple reasons. And sometimes people you would expect to
do it don't. And you got that mix, and it's just not predictable.
One thing I've learned in this age of social media is it feels like the people with
integrity and the ones who would do the right thing are the quiet ones.
In terms of humanists and in terms of activists, there's so many points to be gained of declaring
that you would do the right thing.
It's a simple quiet folks because I've seen quite on a small obviously much smaller scale
just shows of integrity and character. When they were sacrificed to be made and it was done quietly.
Now this sort of the small heroes, those are you're right there, it's surprising but they're often quiet.
That's why I'm distrustful of people who kind of proclaim that they would do the right thing.
Right. Right. Right.
And there are different kinds of integrity, too. I mean, I edited a memoir of a Polish,
you know, Underground Fighter, a member of the Underground, who was in my dynamic in the concentration camp of my dynamic. You know, when it, a member of the underground who was in my donnic in the concentration
camp of my donnic, you know, when he was just an interesting mix of different kinds of
integrity.
You know, on the one hand, you know, he really bothered him deeply when Jews were killed
or sent to camp or so that sort of thing.
On the other hand, he was something of an anti-Semite.
He would sometimes, if Jews were his friends, he would help them. And if they weren't, sometimes he was really mean to them. And they're various levels. A concentration camp is
a terrible social experiment in some ways, right? But you learn a lot from how people behave. And what you
see is that people behave sometimes extraordinarily well in some situations and extraordinarily poorly
in others, and that it's mixed and you can't predict it. And it's hard to find consistency. I mean,
that's the other thing. I think we claim too much consistency for the people we study and the people we think
about in the past.
They're not consistent.
Any more than we are consistent, right?
Well, let me ask you about human nature here on both sides.
So, first, what have you learned about human nature from studying genocide?
Why do humans commit genocide? What lessons, first of all, why is there a difficult question, but what insights do you
have into humans that genocide is something that happens in the world?
That's a really big and difficult question, right?
And it has to be parsed, I think, into different kinds of questions.
Why does genocide happen?
Which the answer there is frequently political, meaning
why Hitler ended up killing the Jews?
Well, it had a lot to do with the political history
of Germany and wartime history of Germany, right?
In the 30s.
And, you know, it's traceable to then.
No, like you mentioned it yourself.
You can't imagine Hitler.
And in the mid-20s, turning into anything
of the kind of dictator he ended up being
in the kind of murderer, mass murderer he ended up being.
So, and the same thing goes, by the way,
for Stalin and Soviet Union and Paul Pot.
I mean, these are all essentially political movements
where the polity state has seized, you know,
by ideological or, you know,
party, single party movement,
and then has moved in directions
where mass killing takes place.
The other question, separate that question out.
The other question is why do ordinary people participate?
Because the fact of the matter is just ordering genocide is not enough.
Just saying, go get them, is not enough.
There have to be people who
cooperate and who will do their jobs, you know, both at the kind of mezzo level, the middle level of
a bureaucracy, but also at the everyday level. You know, people who have to pull the triggers and
that kind of thing. And, you know, force people into the gas chamber and grab people, you know, and
Kiev in September 1941 at Bob and Yar and push them, you know,
towards the ravine where the machine gunners are going to shoot them down. You know, and those
are all sorts of different questions. The question of, you know, especially the lower level people who
actually do the killing is a question which I think we've been talking about, which is that within all of us, you know, is the capability of being murderers, and mass murderers, I mean,
to participate in mass murderers. I won't call them laws of social psychology, but the
character of social psychology, you know, we will do it in most cases. I mean, one of
the shocking things that I learned just a few years ago,
studying the holocaust is that you could pull out. In other words, if they order a police battalion to go shoot Jews, you didn't have to do it. You could pull out. They weren't going to,
they never killed anybody. They never executed anybody. They never even punished people for saying,
no, I'm not going to do that.
So people are doing it voluntarily. They may not want to do it.
You know, they give them booze to try to, you know, numb the pain of murder because they know there is pain. I mean, people experience pain when they murder people. But they don't pull out.
And so it's the character of who we are in society, in groups.
And we're very, very influenced.
I mean, we're highly influenced by the groups
in which we operate.
And who we talk to and who our friends are
within that group and who is the head of the group.
And I mean, you see this even,
I mean, you see it in any group,
whether it's in the academy, right? That that that Stanford or whether it's, you
know, in a labor union or whether it's in a church group in, in Tennessee or wherever,
you know, people pay attention to each other and they, and they are unwilling frequently
to say, no, this is wrong. Even though all of you think it's right, it's wrong.
I mean, they just don't do that usually, especially in societies that are authoritarian or totalitarian,
right?
Because it's harder because there's a backup to it, right?
There's the NKVD there, or there's the Gestapo there, and there are other people there.
So you just, you know, they may not be forcing you to do it.
But, but your social being plus this danger in the, in the distance, you know, you do it.
But then if you go up the hierarchy at the very top, there's a dictator presumably, you know, you go to like middle management at the bureaucracy.
The higher you get up there, the more power you have to change the direction of the Titanic.
Right. Right. Right. But nobody seems to do it. Right. Or what happens? And it does happen.
It happens in the German army. I mean, it happens in the case of the Armenian genocide,
where we know they're governors who said, no, I'm not going to kill Armenians.
What kind of businesses is this?
They're just removed.
They removed.
And you find a replacement very easily.
So you know, you do see people who stand up.
And again, it's not really predictable who it will be.
I would maintain.
I mean, I haven't done the study of the Armenian governors who
said no. I mean, the Turkish governors who said no to the Armenian genocide. But, you know,
there are people who do step aside every once in a while in the middle level. And again,
they're German generals who say, wait a minute, what is this business in Poland when they
start to kill Jews or in Belarus? And, you? And they're just pushed aside. If they don't do their job, they're pushed
aside. Or they end up doing it, and they usually do end up doing it.
What about on the victim side? I mentioned Mancerd for meaning, what can we learn about
human nature, the human mind, from the victims of genocide?
So Victor Frank will talk about the ability to discover meaning and beauty, even in suffering.
Is there something to be said about in your studying of genocide that you've learned
about human nature. Well, again, I don't, I have to say I come out of the study
of genocide with a very pessimistic view of human nature, a very pessimistic view, even
on the victim side, even on the victim side. I mean, the victims will eat their children,
right? Ukrainian case. They have no choice. You know, the victims will rob each other.
The victims will form hierarchies within victimhood.
So you see, let me give you an example.
Again, I told you I was working on my Donek.
And there's, in my Donek, at a certain point in 42, a group of Slovak Jews were arrested and sent to my Donek.
Those Slovak Jews were a group somehow they stuck together, they were very competent, they were
many of them were businessmen, they knew each other. And for a variety of different reasons within the camp.
And again, this shows you the diversity of the camps.
And also, these images of black and white in the camps are not very useful.
They ruled the camp.
I mean, they basically had all the important jobs in the camp, including jobs like beating
other Jews and persecuting other Jews and persecuting other Jews and
persecuting other peoples which they did. And this Polish guy who I mentioned to
you that who wrote this memoir hated them because of what they were doing to
the Poles, right? And he you know he's he's incensed because aren't he supposed to be the Intermenciate? He says,
and look what they're doing. They're treating us, you know, like dirt. And they do, they treat
them like dirt. So, you know, in this kind of work on my Donek, there's certainly parts of it
parts of it that you know we're inspiring. You know people helping each other, people trying to feed each other, people giving warmth to each other. You know there's some very heroic
Polish women who end up having a radio show called Radio Midonic which they put on every night
in the women's camp which which is, you know,
to raise people's spirits, and they, you know, sing songs and do all this kind of stuff, you know,
to try to keep themselves from, you know, the whores that they're experiencing around them.
And so you do see that, and you do see, you know, human beings acting in support of each other. But, you
know, I mean, Primo Levi is one of my favorite writers about the Holocaust and about the camps.
And, you know, I don't, I don't think Primo Levi saw anything. He had pals who he helped and who helped him.
But he describes this terrible and human environment, which no one can escape. He ends up
committing suicide, too, because of his sense of, we don't know exactly why, but probably because of his
sense of what happened in the camp. I mean, later he goes back to Italy, becomes a writer
in that sort of thing. So I don't, I don't, especially in the concentration camps, it's
really hard to find places like Vickell Franktel where you can say, I am moved in a positive way by what happened.
There were cases, there's no question.
People hung together, they tried to help each other,
but they were totally caught in this web of genocide.
See, so there are stories, but the thing is I have this sense, maybe
it's a hope that within most, if not every human heart, there's a kind of like flame of
compassion and kindness and love that waits, that longs to connect with others, that ultimately unmasse overpowers everything
else.
If you just look at the story of human history, the resistance to violence and mass murder
and genocide feels like a force that's there, and it feels like a force that's more powerful than whatever the dark momentum
that leads to genocide is, it feels like that that's more powerful. It's just quiet. It's
hard to tell the story of that little flame that burns within all of our hearts, that longing
to connect to other human beings. And we, there's something also about human nature and us,
the storytellers, that we, we're not very good at telling the stories of that little flame.
We're much better at telling the stories of atrocities.
No, you know, I, I think maybe I fundamentally disagree with you.
I think maybe I fundamentally, I don't disagree that there is that flame.
I just think it's just too easily
doused. And I think it's too easily goes out in a lot of people. And I mean, I like I say,
I come away from this work, a pessimist. You know, there is this work by a Harvard such
psychologist. Now I'm forgetting it's even pinker. Yes, yes, Stephen Pinker that shows over time, you know,
and you know, initially I was quite skeptical of the work,
but in the end I thought he was quite convincing
that over time, the incidence of homicide, you know,
goes down, the incidence of rape goes down,
the incidence of genocide, except for the big blip, you know, in the middle of the 20th century, it goes down. The incidence of rape goes down. The incidence of genocide, except for the
big blip, you know, in the middle of the 20th century, goes down. Not markedly, but it goes down
generally, that, you know, more, that norms, international norms are changing how we think about
this and stuff like that. I thought he was pretty convincing about that. But think about, think about,
you know, we're modern people. I mean, we, we've advanced
so fast in so many different areas. I mean, we should have eliminated this a long time ago,
a long time ago. You know, how is it that, you know, we're still facing this
business of genocide in Myanmar and Xinjiang and in Tigray and Ethiopia, the potentials of
genocide there, and all over the world. We still have this thing that we cannot handle, that we
can't deal with. And again, electric cars and planes that fly from here to Beijing, think about the differences
between 250 years ago or 300 years ago, and today, but the differences in genocide are
not all that great.
I mean, the incidence has gone down.
I think Pinker is demonstra.
I mean, there are problems with his methodology, but on the whole, I'm with him on that book.
I thought in the end, it was quite well done.
You know, I have to say I'm not an optimist about what this human flame can do.
And you know, I once, someone once said to me, when I posed a similar kind of question to a seminar, a friend of mine at Berkeley
once said, remember original sin, Norman? Well, I don't, you know, that's very Catholic,
and I don't really think in terms of original sin. But in some ways, you know, her point
is we carry this with us. You know, we carry with us a really potentially nasty
mean streak that can do harm to other people.
But we carry the capacity to love too.
Yes, we do. And so as we do, that's part of the deal.
You have a bias in that you have studied some of the darker aspects of human nature
and human history.
So it is difficult from the trenches,
from the muck to see a possible sort of way out through love. But it's not obvious that that's not
the case. You mentioned electric cars and rockets and airplanes. To me, the more powerful thing
cars and rockets and airplanes. To me, the more powerful thing is Wikipedia, the internet,
only 50% of the world currently has access to the internet,
but that's growing and information and knowledge
and wisdom, especially among women in the world.
As that grows, I think it becomes a lot more difficult
if love wins.
It becomes a lot more difficult for somebody
like Hitler to take power for genocide to occur
because people think
and the masses, I think, the people have power when they when they're able to think and they can see the full kind of
First of all, when they can study your work
They can know about the fact that genocide happens, how it occurs, how the promises of great
charismatic leaders lead to great destructive mass genocide. And just even studying the fact that the
Holocaust happened for a large number of people is a powerful preventer of future genocide.
Like one of the lessons of history is just knowing that this can happen.
Learning how it happens that normal human beings, leaders that give big promises can also become
evil and destructive. Knowing that that can happen is a powerful preventer that. And then you kind of wake up from this haze of believing everything you hear
and you learn to just in your small local way
to give more love out there in the world.
I believe it's not too good.
Sort of to push back.
I'm not, it's not so obvious to me
that in the end, I think in the end, love wins. That's
my intro. It's headed by money on it. I have a sense that this genocide thing is more
and more going to be an artifact of the past.
Well, I certainly hope you're right. I mean, I certainly hope you're right. And you know, it could be you are, we don't know.
But the evidence is different. The evidence is different. And you know, the capacity of human beings
to do evil to other human beings is repeatedly demonstrated.
You know, whether it's in massacres in Mexico or, you know, ISIS and the Aziti Kurds
or, you know, you can just go on and on, Syria.
I mean, look what, I mean, Syria used to be a country, you know?
And now it's a, you know, it's been a mass grave
and people then have left in the millions for other places.
I'm not saying the Turks have done nice things for the Syrians and the Germans welcomed
in a million or so and actually reasonably absorbed them.
I'm not saying bad things only happen in the world.
They're good and bad things that happen. You're absolutely right. But I don't think we're on the path
to eliminating these bad things, really bad things from happening. I just don't think we are. And I
don't think there's any, I don't think the facts demonstrated. I'm at hope. I hope you're right.
I don't think the facts demonstrate it. I'm at hope.
I hope you're right.
But I think otherwise, it's just an article of faith.
Well, you know, which is perfectly fine.
It's better to have that article of faith and to have an article of faith which says,
you know, things should get bad or things like that.
Well, it's not, it's not just fine.
It's the only way if you want to build a better future.
So optimism is a prerequisite for build a better future. So optimism
is a prerequisite for engineering a better future. So like, okay, so a historian has to see clearly
into the past. Right. An engineer has to, has to imagine a future that's different from the past
that's better than the past, because without that, they're not going to be able to build a better future.
So there's a kind of saying like you have to consider the facts.
Well, at every single moment in history, if you allow yourself to be too grounded by the facts of the past,
you're not going to create the future.
So that's kind of the tension that we're living with.
To have a chance, we have to imagine that the better future is possible. But one of the ways to do that is to study
history. Which engineers don't do enough of it. They do not do it. It's a real problem.
You know, it's a real problem. Or basically a lot of disciplines in science and so on,
don't do enough of. Right. Can you tell the story of China from 1958 to 1962, what was called the Great Leap Forward?
Orchistrated by Chairman Mao Zedong that led to the death of tens of millions of people
making it arguably the largest famine in human history?
Yes. famine in human history. Yes, I mean, it was a, you know, a terrible set of events that led to the death.
You know, people will dispute the numbers. 15 million, 17 million, 14 million, 20 million people
died in the great 30, 40, 50 million.
Some people will go that high too.
That's right.
That's right.
Essentially, Mao and the Communist Party leadership,
but it was mostly Mao is doing,
decided he wanted to move the country into communism.
And part of the idea of that was rivalry with the Soviet Union.
Mao was a good Stalinist or at least felt like Stalin was the right kind of communist leader
to have and he didn't like Khrushchev at all and he didn't like what he thought were Khrushchev's
reforms and also Khrushchev's pretensions to moving the Soviet Union into Communists.
So Khrushchev started talking about giving more power to the party, less power to the state, of pretensions to moving the Soviet Union into Communism.
So Khrushchev started talking about giving more power
to the party less power, to the state,
and if you have more power to the party versus the state,
then you're moving into Communism quicker.
So what Mao decided to do was to engage
in this vast program of building
what we're called people's communes.
And these communes, we're called people's communes.
And these communes, you know,
were enormous conglomerations of essentially collective farms.
And what would happen on those communes
is there would be places for people to eat
and there would be places for the kids to be raised
and essentially kind of separate homes and they would be
schooled.
Everybody would turn over their metal, which was one of the actually turned out to be terribly
negative phenomenon.
Their metal pots and pans to be melted to then make steel.
These big communes would all have little steel plants and they would build steel and the whole
countryside would be transformed. Well, like many of these sort of, I'm a true megalomaniac
project, you know, like some of Stalin's projects too. And this particular project then,
you know, the people had no choice. They were forced, you know, to do this.
It was incredibly dysfunctional for Chinese agriculture and ended up, you know, creating,
as you mentioned, a terrible famine that everybody understood was a famine as a result of this.
I mean, there were some, there were also some problems of nature at the same time,
and some flooding and bad weather, and that's everything.
But it was really a man-made famine.
And now, set at one point, you know, who cares?
You know, if millions die, it just doesn't matter.
We've got millions more left.
I mean, he would periodically say things like this that show that like Stalin, he had a totally different, you know, to
the fact that people were dying in large numbers. It led again to cannibalism and to terrible
wastage all over the country and millions of people died. And there was just no stopping it.
You know, there were people in the party who began to kind of edge towards telling my
old, this wasn't a great idea, you know, and that he should back off, but he wouldn't
back off.
And the result was, you know, catastrophe in the countryside and all these people dying.
And then they, you know, compounding the problem was the political elite, which then, you know,
if peasants would object or if certain people would say,
no, they'd beat the hell out of them, you know,
they would beat people, you know, who didn't do
what they wanted them to do.
So it was, it was really, really a horrific set of events
on the Chinese, the Chinese countryside.
I mean, and people wrote about it.
I mean, we learned about it.
There were people who were keeping track of what was going on
and eventually wrote books about it.
So, you know, so we have, I mean, we have pretty good documentation,
not so much on the numbers.
Numbers are always a difficult problem.
You know, I'm facing this problem, by the way, this is a little bit separate, with a
Holo Demore, where, you know, Ukrainians are now claiming 11.5 million people died in
Holo Demore. And, you know, most people assume it's somewhere in the neighborhood of 4 million,
4.5 million maybe. So you have wildly different numbers that come out. And we have different kinds of numbers, as you mentioned, too, with the Great Leap Forward.
So it was a huge catastrophe for China, and now only backed off when he had to.
And then, you know, revived a little bit with the, you know, Red Guards movement later
on when, you know, he was upset that the bureaucracy was resisting him a little bit
when it came to the Great Leap, but he had to, he had to back off.
It was such a, such a terrible catastrophe.
So one of the things about numbers is that usually talk about deaths,
but with, with the family with starvation,
the, the thing I often think about that's impossible to put into numbers is the number of
people and the degree to which they were suffering. The number of days spent in suffering.
Oh yeah. And so I mean death is...
I
Death is just one of the consequences of suffering to me it feels like
one two three years of months and then years of
Of not having anything to eat
Is worse and it's sort of those those aren't put into numbers often That's right. And the effect on people long-term,
in terms of their mental health,
in terms of their physical health,
their ability to work, all those kinds of things.
I mean, Ukrainians are working on,
people working on this subject now,
the long-term effect of the hunger famine on them.
And I'm sure there's a similar kind of long-term effect
on Chinese peasantry of what happened.
You know, I mean, you're destroying multi-generational.
Yes, multi-generational, that's right. That's right.
And, you know, it's a really, you're absolutely right. This is a terrible, terrible way to die.
And it lasts a long time. And sometimes you don't die, you survive, but in the kind of shape
where you can't do anything, I mean,
you can't function, your brain's been injured.
You know, I don't know, it's a really,
these famines are really horrible.
So when you talk about genocide,
it's often talking about murder.
Where do you place North Korea in this discussion?
We kind of mentioned it.
So in the, what is it it the Arduous March?
Of the 1990s
Where it was mass starvation many people describe mass starvation going on now in North Korea
And you think about genocide when you think about
Atrocities going on in the
world today, where do you place North Korea?
So take a step back when they were all these courts that were set up for Bosnia and for
Wanda and for other genocides in the 1990s. And then the decision was made by the international community, you end basically
to set up the International Criminal Court, which would then try genocide in the more modern
period and the more contemporary period. And the ICC lists three crimes, basically. You know, the genocide crimes against humanity and war crimes,
and subsumed to crimes against humanity are a lot of the kinds of things you're talking about
with North Korea. I mean, it's torture, it's artificial, sometimes artificial famine or famine,
It's artificial, sometimes artificial famine or famine, you know, that is not necessary, right?
Not necessary to have it.
And other, there are other kinds of, you know, mass rape and stuff like that.
There are other kinds of things that fit into the crimes against humanity.
And that's sort of where I think about North Korea as committing crimes against humanity, not genocide. And again, remember, genocide is meant to be, I mean,
some people, there's a disagreement among scholars and jurists about this. Some people think
of genocide as the crime of crimes, the worst of the three that I just mentioned. But
some think of them as co-equal. And the ICC, the International Criminal Court,
is dealing with them more or less as co-equal,
even though we tend to think of genocide as the worst.
So I mean, what I'm trying to say is that,
I don't want to split hairs.
I think it's sort of morally and ethically unseemly.
The split hairs about what is genocide, what is a crime against humanity? You know, this is for lawyers, not for historians.
A terminology wise.
Yeah, yeah, you know, that you don't want to get into that because it, I mean, what happened
with Darfur a little bit where the Bush administration had declared that the Darfur was a genocide.
The UN said, no, no, it wasn't genocide, it was a crime against humanity.
And that confused things versus clarified them.
I mean, we damn well knew what was happening.
People were being killed and being attacked.
And so, you know, on the one hand, I think the whole concept in the way of thinking about
history using genocide as an important part of human history is crucial. On the other
hand, I don't like to get involved in the hair splitting of what's genocide and what's
not. So that, you know, North Korea, I tend to think of, like I said, as committing crimes
against humanity and, you know, forcibly incarcerating people torturing them, that kind of thing.
You know, routinely incarcerating and depriving them of certain kinds of human rights
can be considered a crime against humanity. but I don't think of it in the
same way I think about genocide, which is an attack on a group of people. Let me just leave
it at that.
What in this, if we think about, if it's okay, can we loosely use the term genocide here?
Let's not play games with terminology, just bad crimes against humanity. Right. Of particular interest are the ones that are going on today still, because it raises the
question to us, what do people outside of this, what role do they have to play?
So what role does the United States or what role do I as a human being who has food today,
who has shelter, who has a comfortable life?
What role do I have when I think about North Korea,
when I think about Syria, when I think about maybe the weaker population in China?
Well, I mean the role is the same role I have,
which is to teach and to learn and to
get the message out that this is happening, because the more people who understand it,
the more likely it is that the United States government will try to do something about
it, you know, within the context of who we are and where we live, right? And so, you know, I write books, you do shows, you know?
Yeah, but maybe you write books too.
I don't know, but I do not write books, but I tweet.
You tweet.
Okay, that's good.
And eloquently.
But that's not the, I guess that's not the voice.
Yes, so certainly this is true.
And in terms of a voice, in terms of words, in terms of books, you are in it. I would say a rare example of somebody that has powerful
reach with words. But I was also referring to actions in the United States government.
What are the options here? So war has cost. And war seems to be, as you have described, sort of potentially increase
the atrocity, not decrease it.
If there's anything that challenges my hope for the future, is the fact that sometimes
we're not powerless to help, but very close to powerless to help, because trying to help can often lead to, in the near-term,
more negative effects than positive effects. That's exactly right. I mean, the unintended
consequences of what we do can frequently be as bad, if not worse, than trying to relieve
the difficulties that people are having.
So I think you're caught a little bit, but it's also true I think that we can be more
forceful. I think we can be more forceful without necessarily war. There is this idea of
the so-called responsibility to protect, and this was an idea they came up after Kosovo,
which was what, 1999.
And when the Serbs looked like they were gonna engage
in a genocidal program in Kosovo,
and it was basically a program of ethnic cleansing,
but it could have gone bad and gotten worse,
not just driving people out, but it could have gone bad and gotten worse, not just driving people
out, but beginning to kill them.
And the United States and Britain and others intervened.
And Russians were there too, as you probably recall.
And I think correctly, people have analyzed this as a case in which genocide was prevented or stopped.
In other words, the Serbs were stopped in their tracks.
I mean, some bad things did happen.
We bombed Belgrade in the Chinese embassy and things like that.
But, you know, it was stopped.
And following upon that, then there was a kind of international consensus that we needed
to do something. I mean, because of Rwanda, Bosnia, and the positive example of Kosovo, right?
That genocide did not happen in Kosovo.
I think that argument has been substantiated anyway.
And this notion of the doctrine or whatever of the responsibility to protect them was adopted by the UN in 2005 unanimously.
And what it says is, there's a hierarchy of measures that should be, well, let me take a step back. It starts with the principle that sovereignty of a country
is not, you don't earn it just by being there
and being your own country.
You have to earn it by protecting your people.
So this was all agreed with all the nations
of the UN agreed, you know. Chinese and then Russians too.
Sovereignty is there because you protect your people against various depredations, including
genocide, crimes against humanity, forced imprisonment, torture, and that sort of thing.
If you violate that justification for your sovereignty, that you're protecting your people,
that you're not protecting them, the international community has the obligation to do something
about it.
All right?
Now, then they have a kind of hierarchy of things you can do, you know, starting with,
I mean, I'm not quoting exactly, but starting with
kind of push and pull, trying to convince people, don't do that, to Myanmar, don't do
that to the Rohingya people, right?
Then it goes down the list, and you get to a little sanctioned.
To a threatening sanction, so then sanctions, like we have against Russia, but you go down the list, right? You go down
the list and eventually you get to military intervention at the bottom, which they say is the last thing.
You know, and you really don't want to do that. And not only do you not want to do it, but it hit
just as you said, this is you pointed out, it can have unintended consequences.
And we'll do everything we can short of military intervention,
but if necessary, that can be undertaken as well.
And so the responsibility to protect,
I think, is not implementable.
Oh, one of the things it says in this last category, right?
The military intervention is that the intervention cannot create more damage than it relieves, right?
And so for Syria, we came to the conclusion, you know, that, I mean, the international
community in some ways said this in so many
words, even though the Russians were there, obviously, we ended up being there.
That sort of thing.
But the international community basically said, there's no way you can intervene in Syria.
It's just no way without causing more damage than you would relieve.
In some senses, that's what the international community is saying about.
Shinjong and the Uyghurs too. You can't even imagine what hell would break loose if there was
some kind of military trouble to threaten the Chinese with. But you can go down that list with
with. But you can go down that list with the military leadership of Myanmar and you can go down that list with the Chinese Communist Party and you can go down the list with others
who are threatening with Ethiopia and what it's doing in Tigray. and you can go down that list and start pushing. I think what happened,
there was more of a willingness in the 90s, and in the right at the turn of the century
to do these kinds of things. And then when Trump got elected, and he basically said, America
first and out of the world, we're not going to do any of this kind of stuff. And now Biden has the problem of trying to rebuild
consensus on how you deal with these kinds of things. I think it's not impossible. I mean,
here I tend to be maybe more of an optimist than you. You know, I know, I think it's not impossible that the international community can muster some internal fortitude
and push harder, short of war to get the Chinese and to get the Myanmar and to get others
to back off of violations of people's rights the way they are routinely doing it.
So that's in the space of geopolitics.
That's the space of politicians and you on and so on.
The interesting thing about China,
and this is a difficult topic,
but there's so many financial interests
that not many voices would power and would money speak up, speak out against China.
Because it's a very interesting effect because it costs a lot for an individual to speak up.
Because you're going to suffer, I mean China just cuts off the market like if you have a product if you have a company
And you say something negative China just says okay, well then they knock you out of the market
And so any person speaks up they get shut down immediately
Financially it's a huge cost sometimes millions or billions of dollars, right?
And so what happens is everybody of consequences
dollars. And so what happens is everybody of consequence, so financially, everybody with a giant platform
is extremely hesitant to speak out.
It's a very, it's a different kind of hesitation, it's financial in nature.
I don't know if that was always the case.
It seems like in history, people were quiet because of fear, because of threat of violence. Here, there's almost like a self-interested preservation
of financial of wealth.
And I don't know what to do that.
I mean, I don't know if you can say something there.
Like, genocide going on because people
are financially self-interested.
Yeah, I think the analysis is correct, but it's not only corporations, but it's the American
government that represents the American people that also feels compelled not to challenge
the Chinese on human rights issues.
But the interesting thing is it's not just, you know, I know a lot of people from China
and first of all, amazing human beings and a lot of brilliant people in China, they also
don't want to speak out and not because they're sort of quote unquote like silenced, but
more because they're going to also lose financially.
They have a lot of businesses in China. They, you know, they're running, in fact, the Chinese
government and the country has a very interesting structure because it has a lot of elements that
enable capitalism within a certain framework. So you have a lot of very successful companies
and they operate successfully.
And then the leaders of those companies, Mania Fum, have either been on this podcast,
I want to be on this podcast, they really don't want to say anything negative about the government.
And the nature of the fear, I sense, is not the kind of fear you would have in Nazi Germany. It's a very kind of, it's a mellow,
like why would I speak out when it has a negative effect on my company, on my family, in terms of
finance, strictly financially. And that's, that's difficult. That's a different problem to solve. That feels solvable. It feels like
it's a money problem. If you can control the flow of money where the government has less
power to control the flow of money, it feels like that's solvable. And that's where capitalism
is good. That's where it free markets is good. So it's like, that's where a lot of people
in the cryptocurrency space, I don't know if you follow them. They kind of say, okay
Take the monetary system and the power to control money away from governments
Let me get a distributed like a lot of technology to help you with that
That's a hopeful
Message there in fact a lot of people argue that kind of Bitcoin these cryptocurrencies can help
Deal with some of these
can help deal with some of these authoritarian regimes that lead to violations of basic human rights. If you can control, if you can give the power to control the mind to the
people, you can take that away from governments. That's another source of hope where technology
might be able to do something good. That's something different about the 21st century and
the 20th is there's technology in the hands of billions of people?
I mean, I have to say, I think you're a naive when it comes to technology. I mean, I'm not someone
who understands technology, so it's wrong of me to argue with you because I don't really spend
much time with it. I don't really like it very much. And I'm neither a fan or a connoisseur.
So I just don't really know.
But what human history has shown basically,
and that's a big statement.
I don't want to pretend I can tell you
what human history has shown.
But technology and bomb, I mean, that's a perfect example of technology. You know,
what happens when you discover new things? It's a perfect example. What's going on with
Facebook now? Well, absolutely perfect example. And, you know, I once went to a lecture by
Eric Schmidt about the future, you know, and about all the things that were going to happen
and all these wonderful things like, you things. You wouldn't have to translate yourself anything. You wouldn't have to read
a book. You wouldn't have to drive a car. You don't have to do this. You don't have to do
that. What kind of life is that? So, my view of technology is it's subsumed to the
political, social, and moral needs of our day, and should be subsumed to that day,
it's not going to solve anything by itself. It's going to be you and me that solve things.
If they're solved, or our political system that's solved things,
tent technology is neutral on one level. It is simply a human, I mean, they're talking now about
how artificial intelligence is going to do
this and is going to do that.
I'm not so sure there's anything necessarily positive or negative about it, except it
does obviously make work easier and things like that.
I mean, I like email and I like, you know, word processing and that sort of all that stuff
is great. But actually solving human relations in and of itself, or international relations, or conflict
among human beings.
I mean, I see technology as causing as many problems as it solves. And maybe even more. You know, the
maybe. Maybe. Maybe. Yeah. The question is, so like you said, technology is neutral. I
agree with this. Technology is a toolkit, is a tool set that enables humans to have wider
reach and more power, the printing press. The the rare reason I can read your books is I would argue so first of all, the printing
press and then the the internet Wikipedia I think has immeasurable effect on humanity.
Technology is a double-edged sword.
It allows bad people to do bad things,
and good people to do good things.
It ultimately boils down to the people,
and whether you believe the capacity for good
outweighs the capacity of bad.
And so you said that I'm naive, it is true.
I'm naively optimistic.
I would say you're a naively cynical about technology.
Here we have one overdressed naive optimist and one brilliant, but nevertheless technologically
naïve cynic.
And we don't know.
We don't know whether the capacity for good or the capacity for evil wins out in the
end.
And like we've been talking about, the trajectory of human history seems to pivot on a lot of
random seeming moments so we don't know but I I remain as a builder of technology I
Remain optimistic and I should say kind of
When you are optimistic it is often easy to sound naive. And I'm not sure
what to make of that small effect. And not to linger on specific words, but I've noticed
that people who kind of are cynical about the world, somehow some more intelligent.
No, no, the issue is how, how can you be realistic
about the world?
It's not optimistic or pessimistic, it's not cynical.
The question is how can you be a realist?
And that's a good question.
You know, realism depends on a combination of knowledge
hands on a combination of knowledge and wisdom and good instincts and that sort of thing. And that is what we strive for.
You know, is a kind of realism.
We both strive for that kind of realism.
But I mean, here's an example.
I would give you, you know, what about, again, we've got this environmental issue, right?
And technology has created it.
It's created it.
I mean, the growth of technology, I mean, we all like to be heated well in our homes and
we want to have cars that run quickly and fast on, you know, gas and that certain, we
all, I mean, there's all, we're all consumers and we all profit from this.
I don't, I don't, not everybody profits from it, but, you know, but, but we want to be comfortable.
And technology is provided us with a comfortable life.
And it's also provided us, you know, with this incredible danger, which it's not solving,
at least not now.
Okay.
But it may solve, but it may, it's only my view is, you know, what's going to, what's going to happen?
A horrible catastrophe.
It's the only way, it's the only way we will direct ourselves to actually trying to do
something about it.
We don't have the wisdom and the realism and the sense of purpose. You know, what's your name? Greta goes blah blah blah, something like that in her last talk we're hit upside the head really, really hard.
And then maybe, you know, the business with nuclear weapons.
You know, I think somehow we got hit upside the head and we realized, oh man, you know,
this could really do it to the whole world.
And so we started, you know started serious arms control stuff. And you know, but up to that point, you
know, I mean, there was just something about, you know, Christoph's big bomb, his big hydrogen
bomb, which he exploded in the times, I think it was the anniversary or something like that.
You know, I mean, just think what we could have done to each other.
Well, that's the double edge of technology.
Yeah. I agree. It's a technology. Yeah. I agree.
There's a lot of people.
There's a lot of people that argue that nuclear weapons is the reason we haven't had
a World War III.
So nuclear weapons, the Mature Assure Destruction leads to a kind of like, we've reached a certain
level of destructiveness with our weapons where we were able to catch ourselves, not to create, like you said, hit really hard.
This is the interesting question about kind of hard, hard, and really hard upside the head.
With the environment, I would argue, see, we can't know the future, but I would argue as the pressure builds, there's already, because
of this created urgency, the amount of innovation that I've seen that sometimes is unrelated
to the environment, but kind of sparked by this urgency.
It's been humongous, including the work of Elon Musk, including the work of just, you could argue that the SpaceX and the
new exploration of space is kind of sparked by this environmental like urgency.
I mean, connected to Tesla and everything that they're doing with electric vehicles and
so on.
There's a huge amount of innovation in the space that's happening.
I could see the effect of climate change resulting in more positive innovation
that improves the quality of life across the world than the actual catastrophic events
that we're describing, which we cannot even currently predict.
It's not like there's going to be more extreme weather events.
What does that even mean?
There's going to be a gradual increase of the level of water. What does that even mean in
terms of catastrophic events? It's going to be pretty gradual. There's going to be migration up
heat. We can't predict what that means. And in response to that, there's going to be a huge amount
of innovators born today that have dreams and they will build devices and inventions and
that have dreams and that will build devices and inventions and
From from space the vehicles through in the software world that enable education across the world all those kinds of things that will
En masse on average increase the quality of life on an average across the world. So it's not at all obvious that these
the things that the technologies that are creating climate change, global warming, are going to have a negative, negative effect. We don't know this. And I'm kind of inspired by
the dreamers, the engineers, the innovators, and the entrepreneurs that build
that the wake up in the morning see problems in the world and
dream that they're going to be the ones who solve those problems. That's the human spirit.
And that I'm not exactly it is true that we need those deadlines, we need to be freaking out about
stuff. And the reason we need to study history and the worst of human history is that we can say,
oh shit, this too can happen.
It's a slap in the face. It's a wake up call that if you're, if you get complacent, if you get lazy, this is going to happen. And that, listen, there's a lot of really intelligent people, ambitious
people, dreamers, skilled dreamers that build solutions that make sure this stuff doesn't happen anymore.
So, I think there's reason to be optimistic about technology not in naive way.
There's an argument to be made in a realistic way that with technology,
we can build a better future.
And then Facebook is a lesson in the way Facebook has been done.
It's a lesson how not to do it.
And that lesson serves as a guide of how to do it better, how to do it right, how to
do it in a positive way.
And the same, every single sort of field technology contains the lessons of how to do it better. I mean, without that, what's the source of hope for human civilization? You know, that,
I mean, that by way of question, you have truly studied some of the darkest moments in human
history. Put on your optimism, is that where? Yes. There are the rivers of it. Yes. What is your source of hope
for the future of human civilization? Well, I think it resides in some of what you've been saying,
which is in the persistence of the civilization over time, despite the incredible
setbacks, two enormous world wars, the nuclear standoff, the horrible things we're experiencing
now with climate change and migration and stuff like that. But despite these things, we are persisting and we are continuing.
And like you say, we're continuing to invent and we're continuing to try to solve these
problems.
And we're continuing to love as well as hate.
And you know that I'm basically, I mean, I have children and grandchildren and I think
they're going to be just fine.
You know, I'm not a doom and gloom or, you know, I'm not a Cassandra saying the world
is coming to an end.
I'm not like that at all.
You know, I think that, you know, things will persist.
Another, by the way, source of tremendous optimism
on my part, the kids I teach,
I teach some unbelievably fantastic young people,
who are sort of like you say, they're dreamers
and they're problem solvers,
and they have enormously humane values in ways of thinking about the world.
And they want to do good.
If you take the kind of, I mean, this has probably been true all the way along, but the percentage of do-goaters, you know, is really enormously large. Now, whether they end up working for some kind of shark law firm or something, or, or,
you know, that, that kind of thing, or whether they end up human rights lawyers, is they all
want to be, right?
You know, is a different kind of question, but, but certainly, you know, these young people are talented,
they're smart, they're wonderful values, they're energetic, they work hard, you know, they're focused.
And of course, it's not just Stanford, I mean, it's all over the country, you know, you have
young people who really want to contribute. And they want to contribute. I mean, it's true some of them end up, you know,
working to get rich.
I mean, that's inevitable, right?
But the percentages are actually rather small,
at least at this age, you know,
maybe when they get a mortgage and a family
and that sort of thing, you know,
financial well-being will be more important to them.
But right now, you know, you well-being will be more important to them. But right now, you know,
you catch this young generation and they're fantastic. They're fantastic. And they're not
what they're often portrayed as being, you know, kind of silly and naive and
knee jerk leftists and they've not at all liked them. You know, they're really
they're really fine young people. So that's a source of optimism to me too.
What advice would you give to those young people today, maybe in high school and college,
as Stanford, maybe to your grandchildren, about how to have a career they can be proud of,
have a life they can be proud of? Pursue careers that are in the public interest,
you know, in one fashion or another,
and not just in their interests.
And that would be, I mean, it's not bad to pursue a career
in your own interests.
I mean, as long as it's something that's useful and positive
for the, you know, for families or whatever,
but yeah, so I mean, I try to advise kids
to find themselves somehow.
Find it who they want to be and what they want to be
and try to pursue it.
And the NGO world is growing, as you know,
and a lot of young people are kind of throwing themselves
into it and human rights watch and that kind
of stuff. And they want to do that kind of work. And it's very admirable.
I tend to think that even if you're not working in human rights, there's a certain way in which if you live with integrity, the...
I believe that all of us or many of us have a bunch of moments in our lives
when we're posed with the decision. It's a quiet one. Maybe you'll never be written about or talked about. When you get to choose, do you? there's a choice that
Is difficult to make may require sacrifice, but it's the choice that
The best version of that person would make
This best way I can sort of say how to act with integrity is the very thing that would resist the early days in NASA Germany. It sounds dramatic to say, but those little actions, and I feel like the best you can do
to avoid genocide on scale is for all of us to live in that way, within those moments.
Unrelated potentially to human rights, to anything else, is to take those actions.
I believe that all of us know the right thing to do.
I know, that's right.
I think that's right.
You put it very well.
I couldn't have done it better myself.
No, no, I agree.
I agree completely that there are, you know, to live with truth, which is what Vassal
Hovel used to say that famous Czech dissident talked about living in truth, which is what Vassal Hovel used to say, this famous Czech dissident,
you know, talked about living in truth, but also to live with integrity. And that's
really super important.
Well, let me ask you about love. What role does love play in this whole thing in the human
condition? In all the study of genocide, it does seem that hardship in moments brings out
the best in human nature and the best in human nature's express to love.
Well, as I already mentioned to you, I think hardship is not a good thing for, you know,
it's not the best thing for love. I mean, it's better to not have to suffer and not have to,
yes, I think it is.
I think it's, you know, as I mentioned to you,
you know, studying concentration camps, you know,
this is not a place for love.
It happens.
It happens, but it's not really a place for love.
It's a place for rape.
It's a place for torture. It's a place for rape, it's a place for torture,
it's a place for killing and it's a place for
enhuman action, one to another, you know, and also, as I said, among those who are suffering,
not just between those who are, and then their whole gradations, you know, the same thing in the gulac,
you know, their gradations, you know, the same thing in the Goulot. You know, there are gradations all the way from the criminal prisoners who beat the hell out of the political prisoners, you know, who then have others below them, who they beat them.
You know, so everybody is being the hell out of everybody else.
So I would not idealize in any way, suffering as a, you know, a source of beauty and love. I wouldn't do that. But I think it's
a whole lot better for people to be relatively prosperous. I'm not saying super prosperous,
but to be able to feed themselves and to be able to feed their families and house their
families and take care of themselves, you know, to foster loving relations between people. And, you know, I think it's
no accident that, you know, poor families have much, you know, worse records when it comes
to crime and things like that, you know, and also to wife beating and to child abuse
and stuff like that. I mean, you just, you know, you don't want to be poor and indigent and not
have a roof over your head, be homeless. I mean, it doesn't mean again, you know, homeless people
are mean people. That's not what I'm trying to say. What I'm trying to say is that, you know,
what we want to try to foster in this country
and around the world.
And one of the reasons, you know,
I mean, I'm very critical of the Chinese
in a lot of ways, but I mean, we have to remember
they pulled that country out of horrible poverty, right?
And I mean, there's still poor people in the countryside,
there's still problems, you know,
with want and need among the Chinese people.
But, you know, there were millions and millions of Chinese who were living at the bare minimum
of life, which is no way to live, you know, and no way, again, to foster love and compassion
and getting along.
So I want to be clear, I don't speak for history, right? I've given you,
it used to be historians, you know, in the 19th century, who really thought they were speaking
for history, you know? I don't think that way at all. I mean, I understand I'm a subjective human
being with my own, my own points of view and my own opinions, but I'm trying to remember in this
conversation that you're despite the
fact that you're brilliant, you've written brilliant books that you're just human.
Well, I am within an opinion. That's it. Yeah, no, no, that's absolutely true. And I tell my
students that too, I mean, I make sure they understand this is not history speaking. You know,
this is me in Norman, and I'm not, you know, and this is, this is what it's about.
I mean, I spent a long time studying history and, and have enjoyed it enormously. But,
you know, I'm an individual with my points of view. And one, and one of them is that I've developed
over time is that, you know, you, you know, human want is a real, is a real tragedy for people and it hurts people and it also causes
up people's and difficulties and stuff. So I feel for people, I feel for people in Syria, I feel for
people in Ethiopia and Tigray when they don't have enough to eat. And, you know, what that does, I mean, doesn't mean they don't love each other, right?
And doesn't mean they don't love their kids.
But it does mean that it's harder, you know, to do that and to, and to.
I'm not so sure.
It's obvious to me that it's harder.
It's, there's suffering.
There is suffering.
But the numbers we've been talking about deaths, we've been talking about suffering, but the numbers we're not quantifying,
the history that you haven't perhaps been looking at, is all the times that people
have fallen in love deeply with friends, with a romantic love,
the positive emotion that people have felt. And I'm not so sure
that amidst the suffering, those moments of beauty and love can't be discovered,
and if we look at the numbers, I'm not so sure the story is obvious.
I suppose you made this agree with Victor Franco.
I mean, too, maybe depending on the day, he says that if there's meaning to this life
at all, there's meaning to the suffering too because suffering is part of life. There's something about accepting the ups and downs, even when the downs go very low.
And within all of it, finding a source of meaning, I mean, he's arguing for the perspective
of psychology, but just this life is an incredible gift, almost no matter what. And I'm not, it's easy to look at suffering
and think, if we just escape the suffering, it will all be better. But we all die. There's
beauty in the whole thing. And it is true that it's just from all the stories I've read, especially in famine and starvation,
it's just horrible. It is horrible suffering. But I also just want to say that there's love amidst
it and we can't forget that. No, no, I don't, I don't forget it. I don't forget it. But and I think
it's from the stories. Now, I don't want to make that compromise or that trade, but the
intensity of friendship in war, the intensity of love in war is very high. So I'm
not sure what to make of these calculations, but if you look at the stories,
some of the people I'm closest with and I've never experienced anything even
close to any of this, but some of the people I'm closest with, this people have
gone through difficult times with. There's something about that. There, there's society
or a group where things are easy. The intensity of the connection between human beings is not
as strong. I don't know what to do with that calculus because I too agree with you. I want
to have as little suffering in the world as possible, but we have to remember
about the love and the depth of human connection and find the right balance there.
No, there's something to what you're saying. There's clearly something to what you're saying.
I was just thinking about Soviet Union, you know, when I lived there and people on the streets
were so mean to one another, and they never smiled. And you grew up there?
No, if you were you're too young to know.
No, I remember well.
I came here when I was 13.
Okay, so anyway, I remember living there
and just how hard people were on each other
on the streets.
And when you got inside people's apartments,
when they started to trust you,
the friendships were so intense and so wonderful.
So in that sense, I mean, they did live a hard life, but there
was enough food on the table, and there was a roof over their heads.
There's a certain line. There are lines. I don't think there's one line, but it's kind
of a shading. In the other story, I was thinking of as you were talking with, it's not a story, it's a history, a book by a friend of mine who wrote about love in the
camps, in the refugee camps for Jews in Germany after the war. So these were Jews who had come
mostly from Poland, and then some survived the camps, came from awful circumstances,
and then they were put in in these camps, which were not joyful places. I mean, they were guarded sometimes
by Germans, even, but they're basically under the British control, and they were trying
to get to Israel, you know, trying to get to Palestine, right after the war, and how many
pairs there were, how many people coupled up. But remember, this is after being in the concentration.
Yes.
It's not being in the concentration camp.
And it's also being free, to more or less free,
to express their emotions and to be human beings
after this horrible thing which they suffered.
So I wonder whether there's, as you say,
some kind of calculus
there where, you know, the level of suffering is, is such that it's just too much for humans to bear.
And, you know, which I would suggest I haven't studied this myself. I'm just giving you my point of
view, you know, my, off the cuff remarks here, but it was
very inspiring to read about these couples who had met, right, in these camps and started to
couple up, you know, and get married and and try to find their way to Palestine, which was a
difficult thing to do then. When did you live in Russia and so union, what's your memory of the
time? Well, so a number of different times.
So I went there, I first went there in 6970.
Wow.
A long time ago.
And then I lived in Leningrad mostly, but also in Moscow in 1975.
So it was daytime time, but it was also a time of political uncertainty and also hardship
for Russians themselves, standing in long lines.
I mean, you must remember this for food and for getting anything was almost impossible.
It was a time when Jews were trying to get out.
In fact, I just talked to a friend of mine from
those days who I helped get out and get to Boston and the lovely people who managed
to have a good life in the United States after they left. But it wasn't an easy time.
It wasn't an easy time at all. I remember people set fire to their doors and their daughter
was persecuted in school. Once they declared that they wanted to their doors and their daughter was persecuted in school.
Once they declared that they wanted to immigrate and that sort of thing, so it was a very
ambivalent anti-Semitism.
So it was a tough time.
Dissidents hung out with some dissidents and one guy was actually killed.
We think by the way, nobody knows exactly by the KGB,
but his art studio was, he had a separate studio
in Leningrad, St. Petersburg today.
You know, just a small studio where he did his art
and somebody said it on fire.
And we think it was KGB, but you know, you never really know.
And he died in that fire.
So, you know, it was not, it was a tough time.
And, you know, you knew you were followed,
you knew you were being reported on as a foreign scholar,
as I was, there was a formal exchange
between the United States and the Soviet Union.
And, you know, they let me work in the archives,
but then, you know, Yvonnev got to work in the
physics lab at Rochester or something like that. So it was an exchange which sent
historians and literary people and some social scientists to Russia, and they sent all scientists here to grab what they could from MIT and
those places.
How is your Russian?
Do you have any knowledge of Russian language that helps you to understand?
Oh, yeah.
I mean, I can read it fine.
And the speaking comes and goes, depending on whether I'm there or whether I've been
there recently or if I spend some time there,
because I really need, you know, I have Russian friends who speak just Russian. So,
you know, when I'm there, I then, you know, I can communicate pretty well. I can't really
write it, unfortunately, I mean, I can, but it's not very good. But I get long-finding.
What's your fondest memory of the Soviet Union of Russia?
Friends.
Friends.
It's friends.
You know, vodka involved, there's just vodka involved.
There's a little bit, you know, I'm not much of a drinker.
So I would, you know, they just make fun of me.
I think I make fun of myself.
It was easy enough.
I don't really like heavy drink.
I've done a lot of that.
Not a lot. I've done some of heavy drink. I've done a lot of that. Not a lot. I
done some of that, but I never really enjoyed it. And we'd get sick and stuff. But no, it's friends.
One friend I made in the dormitory. It was a dormitory for foreigners, but also
Siberians who had come to Leningrad to study.
And so I met a couple of guys, and one in particular from Omsk became a wonderful friend,
and we talked and talked and talked outside.
You know, we would go walk outside because we both knew they were, you know, people were
listening and stuff, and he would say, well, this is, it was an historian, you know,
and so we would talk history.
And he'd say, well, this was the case, wasn't I said, no, I'm sorry, Sasha, it wasn't the
case.
It was, you know, we think Stalin actually had a role in killing Kira.
I mean, we're not sure, but, you know, it's, no, I said, yeah.
You know, so, you know, we had these conversations and he was, he was, what I would, I don't know
if he would agree with me or not.
I mean, we're still friends.
So he was, he's going to check in with me.
Maybe he'll listen to the blog or I'll send it to him or something.
He was a kind of naive Marxist-Leninist.
And he thought I was, you know, I was, you know, I had this capitalist ideal.
He would say what ideology you have.
And I said, I don't have an ideology.
You know, I try to just put together kind of reason and facts and accurate stories and try
to tell them in that way. No, no, no, no, you must do, you know, you're a bourgeois, you
know, this or that. I said, no, I'm really not. And so we would have these talks and these
kind of arguments. And then I mean sure enough, you know, we
corresponded for a while. And then he had to stop corresponding
because he became a kind of local official in Omsk. And he sort
of migrated more and more to being a Democrat. And he was then
in the, you know, Democratic movement under Gorbachev. And, you
know, and the council people's deputies, which they set up, which was
elected as a Democrat from OMSC and had a political career through the Eltson period.
And once Putin came along, it was over. He didn't like Putin and Putin didn't like the Elson people who tried to be some
of them, tried to be Democrats. And Sasha was one who really did. He just publishes
my Mars in Russia, by the way, which are very good. I think of the name of it.
Commanded off-gift of last. That's what it's called. It's hard to translate in English. Come on,
they're off-gift of last. But I mean, I translated this one. This is so beautiful. Like,
do you find that the translation is a problem or no? It's such a difference.
Yes. Translation is very difficult. With the Russian language, I mean,
the only language I know deeply except, except English. and it seems like so much is lost of the pain of
the poach of the beauty of the people.
And translators are to be treasured and good ones to be true to us.
Those who do the translations, when you read things in translation, sometimes they're
quite beautiful.
Whether it's Russian or Polish or German or anything French.
Yeah, I'm actually traveling to Paris.
Talk to the famous translators that does the Ascii Tolstoy.
And I'm just going to do several conversations with them about, like, you can just sometimes
just grab a single sentence and just talk about the translation, that's right.
That's, yeah.
And also, as you said, I would love to be a fly in the wall with some of those friends they had because the perspective on history, non-academic sort of without just as human
beings is so different.
From the United States versus Russia, when you talk about the way the World War II is perceived
and all those kinds of things, it's fascinating.
It's a history also has an opinion and perspective.
And so sometimes tripping that away is really difficult.
And I guess that is your job and at its highest form, that is what you do as a historian.
Well, Norman, especially by Shurish, to see when you're something like a lady.
I really appreciate your valuable time.
It's truly not to talk to you.
Thank you for taking us through a trip
through some of the worst parts of human history
and talking about hope and love at the end.
So I really appreciate your time today.
Great. Thank you.
Thank you for having me.
Thanks for listening to this conversation
with Norman Neymark.
To support this podcast,
please check out our sponsors in the description. And now, let me leave you with some words from Stalin.
A single death is a tragedy. A million deaths is a statistic. Thank you for listening,
and hope to see you next time. Thank you.