Lesson of the Plucked Chicken
During
those final days of the collapsing Marxist experiment in the Soviet
Union, Soviet novelist Chingiz Aitmatov retold the following story,
which has been paraphrased here.
On one occasion,
so it was narrated, Stalin called for a live chicken and proceeded to
use it to make an unforgettable point before some of his henchmen.
Forcefully clutching the chicken in one hand, with the other he began to
systematically pluck out its feathers. As the chicken struggled in vain
to escape, he continued with the painful denuding until the bird was
completely stripped. “Now you watch,” Stalin said as he placed the
chicken on the floor and walked away with some bread crumbs in his hand.
Incredibly, the fear-crazed chicken hobbled toward him and clung to the
legs of his trousers. Stalin threw a handful of grain to the bird, and
it began to follow him around the room, he turned to his dumbfounded
colleagues and said quietly, “This is the way to rule the people. Did
you see how that chicken followed me for food, even though I had caused
it such torture? People are like that chicken. If you inflict inordinate
pain on them they will follow you for food the rest of their lives.”
No comments:
Post a Comment