Adam S. Rust
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asrust.bsky.social
Adam S. Rust
@asrust.bsky.social
Lawyer, writes on law things, writings have appeared in Liberal Currents and Balls & Strikes, based in the SF Bay Area.
I am so excited to read this book.
November 18, 2025 at 12:52 AM
I assume he is the secret subject of all of these movies and Scorsese is his John the Baptist.
November 13, 2025 at 4:07 PM
Arendt, after warning us that totalitarianism will now always be with us "as a potentiality and ever-present danger" ends her book by reminding us we can always begin again. It is the foundational thing that makes us human. There are no Final Solutions to human life.
November 7, 2025 at 5:16 AM
It really is noteworthy that in Genesis, God pronounces everything in Creation good except one thing — "it is not good that the human is alone."
November 7, 2025 at 5:08 AM
We need solitude to know ourselves, we need community to confirm it. Totalitarianism denies us both the privacy of our thoughts and the community of equals necessary for full selfhood.
November 7, 2025 at 5:00 AM
The fact that we inhabit the world with others gives us confidence of its existence. Hence totalitarianism's reliance on loneliness. Our sense of reality can be destroyed if we are not permitted to connect with others.
November 7, 2025 at 4:54 AM
Totalitarianism feeds on, and perpetuates, loneliness — the feeling that one is not at home in the only world we know for certain we have.
November 7, 2025 at 4:51 AM
Totalitarian thinking is taking a pure idea seriously and to its logical conclusion in this world.
November 7, 2025 at 4:38 AM
All ideologies are totalitarian regimes in waiting. Which ideologies become totalitarian is a matter of historical contingency.
November 7, 2025 at 2:48 AM
"Ideologies are never interested in the miracle of being."
November 7, 2025 at 2:43 AM
"The aim of totalitarian education has never been to instill convictions but to destroy the capacity to form any."
November 7, 2025 at 2:36 AM
The world of modernity conspires to create the conditions which make the totalitarian call for elimination of the superfluous seem like a difference of degree rather than type. If we do not come up with ways to ameliorate these problems the totalitarian risk is always present.
November 6, 2025 at 8:44 PM
The supersense of ideological coherence required for totalitarianism necessitates the eradication of those in the way of that vision. To allow them to exist means admitting an alternative world can exist to the totalitarian one. Totalitarianism cannot admit this and remain total.
November 6, 2025 at 8:35 PM
For the totalitarian "nothing matters but consistency" from the starting premises.
November 6, 2025 at 8:31 PM
Totalitarianism emerges when absurd premises are treated with complete logical seriousness, independent of the facts on the ground.
November 6, 2025 at 8:30 PM
The concentration camp, and totalitarianism generally, runs on the premise that all humans are superfluous. But non-totalitarian modernity produced that feeling in the people attracted to totalitarianism already.
November 6, 2025 at 8:26 PM
The concentration camp transforms the human individual "into specimens of the human animal". We have a human nature only when given the ability to become fully human, an "unnatural" condition.
November 6, 2025 at 8:13 PM
Totalitarian regimes destroy the moral human by forcing moral questions to which there are only immoral answers.
November 6, 2025 at 7:59 PM
Arbitrary mass murder means martyrdom is impossible. The victims are not imprisoned for their principles but for the purpose furthering and illustrating the fundamental fictions of the totalitarian regime.
November 6, 2025 at 7:54 PM