Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
A how-to guide for opposing totalitarianism: A review of ‘On Tyranny’
A how-to guide for opposing totalitarianism: A review of ‘On Tyranny’
May 13, 2025 5:21 AM

The Book:On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century by Timothy Snyder

The Gist: Snyder, the Levin Professor of History at Yale University, presents twenty brief and practical lessons on how we can avoid tyranny in the future by learning from the totalitarianism of the twentieth century.

The Quote: ”It is institutions that help us to preserve decency. They need our help as well. Do not speak of ‘our institutions’ unless you make them yours by acting on their behalf. Institutions do not protect themselves. They fall one after the other unless each is defended from the beginning. So choose an institution you care about—a court, a newspaper, a law, a labor union—and take its side.” (p. 22)

The Good: The brevity of the book (its only 130 small pages) helps to keep the focus on an important message about the dangers of political authoritarianism.

The Blah: Although he never mentions Trump by name, Snyder spends an inordinate amount of time using the current president as an example of the dangers he is warning us about. This weighs down a timeless message by tying it too closely to current partisan conflicts.

The Verdict: We are not even two decades into the new century and yet Americans are already forgetting the atrocities of the twentieth century. More than one-in-four Americans (26 percent) have never been taught munism in any education or professional setting. Only half of our fellow citizens can identify Cuba as munist country, and 41 percent of Americans do not consider North munist. It’s probably not surprising then that more than half of millennials (52 percent) say they would prefer to live in a socialist (46 percent) munist (6 percent) country than a capitalist (40 percent) one.

For those who’ve forgotten or who never knew, Snyder provides a reminder of the wreckage totalitarian regimes imposed on mankind, and offers helpful lessons in how America can avoid such a fate in the future. While he is not friendly to the political right (did I mention he’s a professor at Yale?), Snyder harkens back to an era when Americans recognized that opposing totalitarianism was a bipartisan affair. His lessons—such as “Do not obey in advance,” “Remember professional ethics,” “Be reflective if you must be armed”—are the type of practical political wisdom that should be embraced by everyone.

“History does not repeat,” says Snyder, “but it does instruct.” Indeed, recent history has much to teach us if we’ll only listen. We can begin by heeding the instruction of this little book to ensure the lessons of the previous century are remembered before it’s too late.

The mendation: If they can get past Snyder’s animosity toward Trump (and the people who elected him), those on the political right will find much they can appreciate. The lessons will be of particular value, though, for progressives, who likely won’t hear such anti-totalitarian warnings anywhere else. Highly mended as a book old conservatives can give to young liberals to develop a starting point for political engagement and agreement.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Should Prisons Be Purgatorial?
“If Christians cannot help prisoners find meaning behind bars,” wonders Stephen H. Webb, “how can they expect the Gospel to find an audience among those never convicted of a crime?” At First Things, Webb argues that revival of Christianity will e when we reform America’s prisons: Prisoners are test cases of how Christians deal with sinners in extremis. I don’t just mean passion for the imprisoned can serve as a corroboration of Christian charity, although that is surely true. I...
Black Ribbon Day and the Victims of Communism
Lord Acton’s famous dictum, “Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely,” has been proven true time and time again throughout history, most vividly in totalitarian systems. The worldwide destruction caused munism is perhaps the prime example. According to The Black Book of munist regimes, inspired by Marxist-Leninist ideology, are responsible for nearly 100 million deaths (and counting). However, in contemporary times there seems to be a tendency to ignore this reality. In The Daily Beast article, “Communism’s Victims...
Video: Todd Huizinga on Russia and Ukraine.
Todd Huizinga, Acton Institute’s director of international outreach, was a guest analyst recently on Newsmakers, a public affairs program produced by WGVU television in Grand Rapids, Mich. Episode description from Aug. 22: “As tensions heighten between Russia and Ukraine, what is Russian President Vladimir Putin’s worldview and what role does Ukraine play in it? How has the shoot down of Malaysia Airline flight 17 killing 298 on board changed the dynamics of the conflict? We explore the internal and external...
Why We Need To Get ‘Community’ Right
What is a munity?” What are the boundaries of munity or organization? And – most important – why munity important? Andy Crouch, writer, musician and Acton University plenary speaker, says we need to ask and answer these questions. He begins his discussion with the recent Supreme Court decision regarding Hobby Lobby and Conestoga Woods. While the decision was sound, Crouch says it speaks to something beyond the law: It reminds us that fewer and fewer of our neighbors understand how...
How to Turn Corn into Cars
Imagine if a scientist was able to create technology that turns corn into cars. As economist Bryan Caplan explains, we already have such an innovation: foreign trade. Caplan argues that foreign trade is a form of technology that lowers our cost of living and increases our standard of living. In fact, claims Caplan, from a broader perspective trade is even better than most technology since it not only makes us better off, it makes foreigners better off too. ...
Helping No One By Being Socially Aware And Active
If you were told by your doctor to lose weight, you’d likely do what most people do: exercise more and eat healthier food. Jason Scott Jones and John Zmirak have a better plan in mind: Step 1: Start a fitness blog, collecting the best arguments you can find against obesity. Step 2: Comb the Bible, Pope Francis’ Tweets, and the work of your fellow bloggers, for the choicest quotes on the deadly sin of Gluttony. Then post them in ments...
‘Helping Families:’ Let The Government Have Your Kids
Universal daycare. Universal preschool. Regulations on school lunches. Bans on bake sales. Don’t bring ibuprofen to school. The government knows all about keeping your kids safe and educated. (And the underlying note is that you don’t know enough.) In yesterday’s New York Times, law professor Clare Huntington extols the virtues of government child-rearing. While she does acknowledge that families are the “ultimate” preschool, she quickly recovers by adding that our society just makes things too darn hard for parents to...
Where Have All The Children Gone?
Journalist Sharyl Attkisson, on Newsmax TV’s “The Steve Malzberg Show,” discusses how the Obama Administration has refused to release information regarding the tens of thousands of illegal immigrant children who have entered the U.S. recently. These children are being sent to munities across the country for shelter and education, but Attkisson says that facts about where the children are going, how much its costing, and other pertinent public information is hard e by. Attkisson discusses the situation in the clip...
Orthodoxy and Economic Liberty
In the most recent issue of The City, I have an essay on Orthodoxy and ordered liberty. I argue that Orthodox theological anthropology, which distinguishes between the image and likeness of God and two forms of freedom corresponding to them, fits well with the classical understanding of ordered liberty. In particular, I examine these freedoms with regards to the family, religious liberty, political liberty, and economic liberty, arguing that the Orthodox ascetic tradition has much to offer to modern Christian...
Radio Free Acton: Jordan Ballor on the Dignity of Our Work
In this week’s edition of Radio Free Acton, Paul Edwards es Acton Institute Research Fellow Jordan Ballor to the microphone for a discussion on the dignity of our work. Is it more Christian to be a minister than a muck farmer? Does the work of the farmer have spiritual value? Ballor and Edwards explore these questions and more in this podcast, which you can listen to via the audio player below. And if you haven’t done so already, check out...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved