On dictatorship

By Lex, Posted on June 23rd, 2007

Peruvian novelist and one-time presidential candidate Mario Vargas Llosa is interviewed by Maria Parker in a featured opinion piece – his first point is how completely dictatorships poison civil life:

“This is a story that often repeated itself,” Mario Vargas Llosa says. “If a father was a businessman, he was a man who had to be complicit with the dictatorship. It was the only way to prosper, right? And what happens is that the son discovers it, the son is young, restless, idealistic, believes in justice and liberty, and he finds out that his vile father is serving a dictatorship that assassinates, incarcerates, censors and is corrupted to the bone.”

Mr. Vargas Llosa could have plucked this scenario from his personal recollections of living under dictatorial rule in Peru. But he tells this story to make a more universal point: Dictatorships poison everything in their grasp, from political institutions right down to relationships between fathers and sons.

And the first victim? Almost always the women, he says:

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