TWENTY LESSONS FROM THE TWENTIETH CENTURY

VESTLANDSKONFERANSEN: What is expected of me?
There are some important books to understand our time and our role in it as individuals, and then there are a very few paramount books that every decent individual must read; ditto – Timothy Snyder’s On Tyranny is one of those. A starstruck PM Jonas Gahr Støre interviews Timothy Snyder in Grieghallen, Bergen.
HISTORY DOES NOT REPEAT, BUT IT DOES INSTRUCT.
In the twentieth century, European democracies collapsed into fascism, Nazism, and communism. These were movements in which a leader or a party claimed to give voice to the people, promised to protect them from global existential threats, and rejected reason in favour of myth. European history shows us that societies can break, democracies can fall, ethics can collapse, and ordinary people can find themselves in unimaginable circumstances.
History can familiarise, and it can warn. Today, we are no wiser than the Europeans who saw democracy yield to totalitarianism in the twentieth century. But when the political order seems imperilled, our advantage is that we can learn from their experience to resist the advance of tyranny.



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